Posts Tagged ‘nuclear defense’

California Democrat: We Must Prevent Iran From Producing Nuclear Arms

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

During a markup of the Iran Refined Petroleum Sanctions Act, Rep. Howard Berman (D-Calif.) says, “In marking up H.R. 2194, I have one transcendent goal in mind: To maximize the chances that Iran, the leading state sponsor of terrorism, will be prevented from acquiring the capacity to produce nuclear arms. That capacity would pose perhaps the most serious strategic threat to our nation.” (:23)

 
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US nuclear arsenal is safe for now, but will need to be modernized soon

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

“Our [nuclear] weapons are safe, reliable, and secure,” said Secretary of Defense Robert Gates at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; “the problem is the long term prognosis, which I would characterize as bleak.” Gates spoke of the United States’ effort to reduce its nuclear arsenal while at the same time maintaining a modern nuclear stockpile to deter enemies and enable allies to depend on the United States and not seek nuclear weapons of their own.

Gates spoke extensively on the United States’s effort to reduce its massive, aging Cold War nuclear stockpile. “Within a few years, we will have 75 percent fewer nuclear weapons than at the end of the cold war,” said Gates. He added that the United States must maintain a deterrent capacity in order to prevent rogue states such as Iran and North Korea from threatening their neighbors and US allies with nuclear, biological and chemical attacks. A large number of countries rely on United States’ arsenal of weapons for protection, and without the US deterrent these countries would seek to develop their own nuclear weapons.

The United States’s nuclear arsenal is badly dated, however. “No one has designed a new nuclear weapon since the 1980s, and no one has built a new one since the early 1990s,” said Gates; “…currently the United States is the only declared nuclear power that is neither modernizing its arsenal nor has the capability of producing a new warhead.” The nuclear weapons the US currently possesses were designed to have a limited shelf life, and while it is possible to extend the shelf life for a period, this method is not as effective as building new weapons.

The nuclear development program in the US is also experiencing a brain drain, as old scientists are retiring and young scientists have little experience designing and building nuclear weapons. “By some estimates within the next several years three quarters of the work force in nuclear engineering at the national laboratories will reach retirement age,” said Gates.

To try to improve the state of the US arsenal, the Department of Defense and the Department of Energy are pursuing a replacement warhead program, but Congress has refused to fund the program beyond its conceptual phase. “Let me be clear,” said Gates; “the program we propose is not about new nuclear capabilities…it is about safety, security and reliability.”

Secretary Gates: Long term prognosis of nuclear weapons is bleak

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates speaks about the current state of the United States’s nuclear arsenal. (1:46)

 
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Secretary Gates: We need to modernize our nuclear arsenal

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates speaks about the need to update the United States’s nuclear arsenal and the funding required to do so. (1:40)

 
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Loren Thompson: Deterring enemy attacks with nuclear defense

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

Loren Thompson of the Lexington Institute talks about the use of nuclear defense in the U.S. Thompson explains the idea that the best way to protect the nation is to make it “inescapably clear” to any enemy that if they attack, it will be last thing they will do. The enemy would therefore be deterred from attacking due to the unavoidable consequences of their own actions. (1:02)

 
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Nuclear defense more feasible and more desirable for the U.S.

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

A Ballistic Missile Defense Conference was held by the Lexington Institute in order to discuss the positive developments of U.S. missile defense since the Cold War, as well as future strategies. Loren Thompson of the Lexington Institute said that nuclear defense is more feasible and more desirable for the U.S. Thompson explained that the United States’ ability to defend itself has improved and the nation is more nuclear capable, therefore making nuclear defense more feasible. The character and ideology of the nation’s enemies has also changed, Thompson said, creating more chances of misunderstandings between them and the U.S. and making nuclear defense more desirable.

Dr. Daniel Goure, the Vice President of the Lexington Institute, talked about the future of missile defense. Goure said that the U.S. needs to recognize that there is no longer a bipolar relationship with the Soviets, and that rationality on behalf of U.S. enemies cannot be assured. He said that the nation needs missile defense systems that deploy globally but act locally. Goure also said that the U.S. needs more programs that work on the offensive instead of continually focusing on the defensive.

Baker Spring of the Heritage Foundation talked about the increasing importance in the overall role of missile defense. Spring said that the U.S. needs to modernize defense missile strategies, creating a mix of both the offensive and defensive capabilities. In order to accomplish this, Spring explained that U.S. missile defense needs to meet stability requirements and operational capabilities.

Defense Deputy David Sedney speaks about Chinese missile capabilities

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for East Asia, David Sedney speaks about new missiles being developed by China and how most of these missiles are being aimed at Taiwan. (0:57)

 
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