- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 110
Blindspot said:I can imagine what is sounds like to Ukraine right about now. How about Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, etc.?
That's not western Europe.
Blindspot said:I can imagine what is sounds like to Ukraine right about now. How about Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, etc.?
Disillusioned said:If the U.S. had the ability to shoot down a Russian or Chinese missile, so you think they would wait until Canada gave them permission to shoot it down? Do you think they would wait until it was over American territory if we said no? :
Ah, no. It is infact not "radioactive". It is actually a stable form of uranium.Disillusioned said:Depleted uranium may not be a nuclear weapon, but it is quite radioactive,
Disillusioned said:Depleted uranium may not be a nuclear weapon, but it is quite radioactive, which doesn't exactly dissipate overnight. I wouldn't want to be a . soldier near where the stuff was used.
a_majoor said:(The CF uses DU shells on Canadian warships equipped with the PHALANX anti-missile system).
U.S. missile-defence test fails
Associated Press
POSTED AT 5:19 AM EST Wednesday, Dec 15, 2004
GlobeandMail.com
Washington â †An interceptor missile failed to launch early Wednesday in what was to have been the first full flight test of the U.S. national missile defence system in nearly two years.
The Missile Defense Agency has attempted to conduct the test several times this month, but scrubbed each one for a variety of reasons, including various weather problems and a malfunction on a recovery vessel not directly related to the equipment being tested.
A target missile carrying a mock warhead was successfully launched as scheduled from Kodiak, Alaska, at 12:45 a.m. EST, in the first launch of a target missile from Kodiak in support of a full flight test of the system.
However, the agency said the ground-based interceptor â Å“experienced an anomaly shortly before it was to be launchedâ ? from the Ronald Reagan Test Site at Kwajalein Atoll in the central Pacific Ocean 16 minutes after the target missile left Alaska.
An announcement said the interceptor experienced an automatic shutdown â Å“due to an unknown anomaly.â ?
The agency gave no other details and said program officials will review pre-launch data to determine the cause for the shutdown.
The military is in final preparations to activate missile defences designed to protect against an intercontinental ballistic missile attack from North Korea or elsewhere in eastern Asia.
Wednesday's test was to have been the first in which the interceptor used the same booster rocket that the operational system would use.
In earlier testing of tracking and targeting systems, which critics derided as highly scripted, missile interceptors went five-for-eight in hitting target missiles.
Acorn said:The guys who say "that'll never work" are usually the ones forgotten by history.
Excerpt from Kenneth N. Waltz's article "Peace, Stability, and Nuclear Weapons"
"Despite the variety of nuclear motivations, an American consensus has formed on why some states want their own weapons - to help them pursue expansionist ends. "The basic division in the world on the subject of nuclear proliferation," we are authoritatively told,"is not between those with and without nuclear weapons. It is between almost all nations and the very few who currently seek weapons to reinforce their expansive ambition." Just as we feared that the Soviet Union and China would use nuclear weapons to extend their sway, so we now fear that the likes of Iraq, Iran, and Libya will do so. The fear has grown depsite the fact that nuclear capability added little to the Soviet Union's or China's ability to pursue their ends abroad, whether by launching military attacks or practicing blackmail.
The fear that new nuclear states will use their weapons for aggressive purposes is as odd as it is pervasive. Rogue states, as we now call them, must be up to no good, else we would not call them rogues. Why would states such as Iraq, Iran and North Korea want nuclear weapons if not to enable them to conquer, or at least to intimidate, others? The answer can be given in one word: fear. The behavior of their rulers is often brazen, but does their bluster convey confidence or fear? Even though they may hope to extend their domination over others, they first have to maintain it at home.
What states do conveys more than what they say. Idi Amin and Muammar Qaddafi were favorite examples of the kinds of rulers who could not be trusted to manage nuclear weapons responsibly. Despite wild rhetoric aimed at foreigners, however, both of these "irrational" rulers became cautious and modest when punitive actions against them seemed to threaten their continued ability to rule. Saddam Hussein further illustrated the point during, and even prior to, the war of 1991. He invaded Kuwait only after the United States gave many indications that it would acquiesce in his actions. During the war, he launched missiles against Israel, but they were so lightly armed that little risk was run of prompting attacks more punishing than Iraq was already suffering. Deterrence worked once again.
Many Westerners write fearfully about a future in which the Third World countries have nuclear weapons. They seem to view their people in the old imperial manner as "lesser breeds without law." As ever with ethnocentric views, speculation takes the place of evidence. How do we know that a nuclear-armed and newly-hostile Egypt, or a nuclear-amred and still-hostile Syria, would not strike to destroy Israel? Yet we have to ask whether either would do so at the risk of Israeli bombs falling on some of their cities? Almost a quarter of Egypt's people live in four cities: Cairo, Alexandria, El-Giza, and Soubra el-Kheima. More than a quarter of Syria's live in three: Damascus, Aleppo, and Homs. What government would risk sudden losses of such proportion, or indeed of much lesser proportion? Rulers want to have a country that they can continue to rule. Some Arab country may wish that some other Arab country would risk its own destruction for the sake of destroying Israel, but why would one think that any country would be willing to do so? Despite ample bitterness, Israelis and Arabs have limited their wars and accepted constraints placed on them by others. Arabs did not marshal their resources and make an all-out effort to destroy Israel in the years before Israel could strike back with nuclear warheads....
Despite North Korea's exposed position, Americans especially have worried that the North might invade the South and use nuclear weapons in doing so. How concerned should we be? No one has figured out how to use nuclear weapons except for deterrence. Is a small and weak state likely to be the first to do so? Countries that use nuclear weapons have to fear retaliation. Why would the North once again invade the South? It did so in 1950, but only after prominent American Congressmen, military leaders, and other officials proclaimed that we would not fight in Korea. Any war on the peninsula would put North Korea at severe risk. Perhaps because the South Koreans appreciate this fact more keenly than Americans do, relatively few of them seem to believe that North Korea will invade. Kim Il Sung at times threatened war, but anyone who thinks that when a dictator threatens war we should believe him is lost wandering around somwhere in a bygone conventional world. Kim Il Sung was sometimes compared to Hitler and Stalin. Despite the similarities, it is foolish to forget that the capabilities of the North Korea he ruled in no way compared with those of Germany and the Soviet Union under Hitler and Stalin.
Nuclear weapons make states cautious, as the history of the nuclear age shows. "Rogue states," as the Soviet Union and China were once thought to be, have followed the pattern. The weaker and the more endangered a state is, the less likely it is to engage in reckless behavior. North Korea's external behavior has sometimes been ugly, but certainly not reckless. Its regime has shown no inclination to risk suicide. This is one good reason why surrounding states counseled patience. "
Glorified Ape said:I don't see much point in spending god knows how much money on a system to protect against an ever-decreasing type of threat. If nuclear attack comes, it's not likely to come from another state and even less likely to come in the form of a missile. The cliche "suitcase bomb" is far more likely, imo. States, be they North Korea or Britain, tend to guard their nuclear weapons quite closely, as they're their primary assurance of security while also being their greatest potential liability if they should be stolen or clandestinely sold to groups willing to use them. The money that would be spent on the program would be better spent on beefing up intelligence services and domestic security, not to mention our armed forces, as far as I'm concerned.
That's to say nothing of the detrimental effect nuclear defense programs have on MADD. If a country believes itself capable of surviving (acceptably) a nuclear attack, it's that much more likely to be willing to launch one, the US included. I was under the impression that this is what the ABM treaty was intended to guard against. As someone else here said, arms races are always happening in response to the "arms race" argument against the shield. Agreed, though that hardly means we should encourage or initiate them.
The program would only heighten the tension between the US and other semi-friendly nuclear countries, not to mention the downright unfriendly ones. The more the US and North America take initiatives to secure the continent from ballistic attack, the more these countries are going to worry about aggressive foreign policy stemming from our sense of security and take measures, be they weapons programs or diplomatic opposition, to counter us. In essence, I think that in this case the absence of security is a better means of achieving security.