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Obama’s missile defense word games

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
April 7, 2009

President Barack Obama addresses a crowd in Prague, Sunday, April 5, 2009. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

In Prague on Sunday, Barack Obama boldly proclaimed that as long as there is a potential nuclear threat from Iran, the United States "will go forward with a missile defense that is cost-effective and proven."  Many observers saw that as a statement of toughness from a president determined to counter Tehran.  It turns out it was a carefully-worded dodge from a president with little desire to build a strong American missile defense.  Here is the story behind the story:

A few months before the January 2008 Iowa caucuses, a left-leaning group called Caucus4Priorities asked Obama and other Democratic presidential candidates to spell out their positions on defense issues.  Caucus4Priorities was an offshoot of a bigger group, the Priorities Action Fund, created by Ben Cohen, the peace activist and co-founder of Ben & Jerry's ice cream. The organization hoped to divert billions of dollars in spending from the Pentagon to education, health care, job training, world hunger, and other causes.  One of its goals was to put an end to missile defense.

Candidate Obama made a video in response to Caucus4Priorities.  "I will cut investments in unproven missile defense systems," Obama said.  "I will not weaponize space. I will slow our development of future combat systems…"

To Democrats on the left side of the spectrum, "unproven missile defense systems" had a specific meaning. "Our position would have been that, at least at the time, any kind of missile defense system was unproven," Peggy Huppert, who was Iowa state director for Caucus4Priorities, told me. "We thought it should be discontinued, that it was not a fiscally responsible program -- ineffective, not proven, too expensive."  Therefore, when Obama told Democrats that he would stop "unproven missile defense systems," he was saying he would stop all missile defense systems.

When Obama won the party's nomination for president, his platform promised he would "support missile defense, but ensure that it is developed in a way that is pragmatic and cost-effective, and, most importantly, does not divert resources from other national security priorities until we are positive the technology will protect the American people." Worded the way it was, Obama's pledge could have meant anything from robust, across-the-board support of missile defense to a complete abandonment of the program.

Now Obama is president and faces two problems for which missile defense is a possible solution.  The first is North Korea's launch of a ballistic missile which might someday carry a nuclear warhead.  The second is Iran's continuing effort to build a nuclear weapon.  With that in the news, Obama pledged in the Czech Republic that, "as long as the threat from Iran persists," the U.S. "will go forward with a missile defense system that is cost-effective and proven."

In light of Obama's history on the subject, what was he saying? Why would he go out of his way to tell an audience in the Czech Republic that a missile defense system must be cost effective? And since he said that he will go forward, but only with a system that is "cost-effective and proven," was he saying that such a system exists today?

I posed the question to the White House, and a spokesman was as artful with words as his boss. "There is a provision in the defense authorization law for the last two years that establishes a process whereby such technology will be 'proven' technologically capable," he said. What the White House left unsaid is that the missile defense system to be installed in Europe has not been established to be "proven."  

So what does the president's statement mean? I asked Lawrence Korb, the former Reagan Defense Department official who is now a senior fellow at the left-leaning think tank Center for American Progress.  Korb, who ran the Obama campaign's military-policy team, recently wrote a report recommending the European missile-defense system be "halted until it has proven itself in realistic operational tests." Korb told me he believed Obama said "basically the same thing" in Prague that Korb and his colleagues wrote in their report.  "When it's cost effective and proven, we'll do it," Korb said. "But it's not ready yet."

That's not how the untrained ear would interpret Obama's latest remarks.  So here is the lesson.  When the president says he will "go forward with a missile defense," don't assume that he will go forward with a missile defense. Don't listen to what he said in Prague.  Listen to what he said in Iowa.

Byron York, The Examiner’s chief political correspondent, can be contacted at byork@washingtonexaminer.com. His column appears Tuesday and Friday, and his stories and blog posts can be read daily at ExaminerPolitics.com.

 



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

gommygoomy

Apr 7, 2009

'You go to WAR with the Military you have.' What Rumsfeld SHOULD have said was; 'WE go to War with the Military that we are left with, after a Democrat Administration gets through with DECIMATING it.' But we're never supposed to say that they're WEAK ON DEFENCE. What is it, about The United States Armed Forces, that Democrats HATE? Because they DO hate our Military.

 

GWS

Apr 7, 2009

GWS: "Gingrich said he would use laser technology to shoot the missile down. I did not know it was perfected and he would used failed or untested technology to shoot down a missile that was going to fail anyway. This would had caused strained relations with China, Russia and the Middle East. Yeah, North Korea laughs at America's empty heads. As I recall, President Reagan called for the elimination of nuclear weapons way back in the 1980 similar to what President Obama is talking about. I don't recall Reagan being called the leader of fantasy diplomacy then." Of course the Republican Chicken Hawks love war as long as they don't have to fight personally nor their children. No, let the poor folks fight. We spend more on our military than all the world combined.

 

Democratic Defense Spending Makes More Sense

Apr 7, 2009

Dear gommygommy, which a perfect name for you -- There was no bigger advocate of a smaller defense budget that Rumsfeld and the neocons in the Bush administration, you moron. Democratic lawmakers love defense pork just as much as Republicans, you idiot. What we really need is better readiness, which is poor right now, and COST EFFECTIVE military spending. Don't write about things you can't understand

 

Confused

Apr 7, 2009

I don't understand the point of this article. It takes a vague Obama quote from over a year ago, and attaches meaning to it without any evidence whatsoever as to why it might mean that. Mr. York writes, "Therefore, when Obama told Democrats that he would stop 'unproven missile defense systems,' he was saying he would stop all missile defense systems." Where is your proof? All you provide is your own say-so, and the year-old words of a woman who in no way, shape, or form represents either the Democratic party or the liberal voting block at all.

 

PCR

Apr 7, 2009

GWS why are posting here? the NYT is more to your liking. How much does China spend on its military. Get your facts straight on the "poor folk" who fight our wars. I'm sure you were not one of them.

 

GWS

Apr 7, 2009

Unlike you,PCR, I read and listen to different sources not just sources that appease me. You should try it sometimes. Funny how they loved the NYT when it was helping to promote the lies of the Bush folks to invade Iraq. I know lots of "poor folks" over there. You know, the ones that have a hard time making ends meet, could not afford college and joined the National Guard. Of course there are patriotic folks too so do start that Hannity mess. Here's the military spending by country. United States 651,163,000,000 2009 European Union 312,259,000,000 People's Republic of China 70,242,645,000 2009 France 61,571,330,000 2008-2009 United Kingdom 61,280,890,000 2008 Russia 50,000,000,000 2009 Japan 48,860,000,000 2008 Germany 45,930,000,000 2008 Italy 40,050,000,000 2008 India 32,700,000,000 2009-2010 Saudi Arabia 31,050,000,000 2008

 

ThunderingTiger

Apr 7, 2009

I find it interesting how Obama had no problem signing a stimulus bill which was nothing more than a pork barrel of waste along with a budget of the same, not to mention the bail outs where billions were lost to only God knows where, but yet he wants to cut spending on our military as well as our defense projects. When this country is nothing more than one big European style welfare state I would imagine the thought process is, we will not need a military or any defense systems in place because no one would want to take on the cost of feeding and providing shelter for all of us if they invaded us.

 

Max

Apr 7, 2009

I'm not clear on how putting in place an unproven system makes for a strong missile defense. It almost seems like that stereotypical hysterical family member in the hospital. "We have to do SOMETHING!" We already have the most powerful military in the world. Noone can match us. More can come from promoting global free trade than from raising shields that work primarily to promote a false sense of security.

 

JW

Apr 7, 2009

If it isn't proven now, but that is the criterion for spending money on it, then that is a way of saying it's dead because they are unwilling to spend money on an unproven system.

 

Apr 7, 2009

OSTED Apr 7, 2009 ThunderingTiger: "I find it interesting how Obama had no problem signing a stimulus bill which was nothing more than a pork barrel of waste along with a budget of the same, not to mention the bail outs where billions were lost to only God knows where, but yet he wants to cut spending on our military as well as our defense projects. ******************************** My goodness. Did you not see what we are spending already on the military. Gates is trying to control the waste and waste in the military procurement procedures. Remember the 100 dollar toilet seat?

 


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