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| NEWSMAKER: DONALD RUMSFELD | |
August 16, 2001 |
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Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld returns from Moscow to discuss the Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty as well as his review of the U.S. military. |
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RAY SUAREZ: Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld recently returned from Moscow. He discussed with Russian leaders the Anti-Ballistic Missile, or ABM Treaty, as well as cuts in strategic offensive nuclear weapons. The Secretary is also in the midst of a major review to determine the future size and shape of the U.S. military. Mr. Secretary, welcome. DONALD RUMSFELD: Thank you very much. RAY SUAREZ: Well, define for us the tone of your meetings with the Russians in Moscow earlier this week. How did they go?
RAY SUAREZ: And differences remain between the U.S. and Russia over nuclear missile defense, for instance. DONALD RUMSFELD: Among other things certainly. If you think about it, we've had 50 years of hostility between the United States and the old Soviet Union, and we've had ten years since the Russian Federation has existed. And we've seen an improvement in the relationship that's really dramatic. And on the security side we've seen enormous changes. If you think of Western Europe and the old Warsaw Pact and NATO, there's no reason we can't make the same kind of progress on the strategic nuclear side.
DONALD RUMSFELD: Well, it's hard for people who have spent all those decades in a hostile relationship and have a whole set of treaties and arrangements that are structured on hostility -- an acknowledged hostility between the two parties -- and suddenly to find themselves in a situation where they're not enemies. They have to live in this world together. They each still have a great many nuclear weapons. And what we need to do is to find different structures and agreements and understandings so that we can move forward in a less hostile and more rational relationship going forward. And that means politically, economically and militarily. |
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| Some movement in negotiations | ||||||||||||||||||||
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RAY SUAREZ: Well, President Bush has called the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty a relic, a product of another time in the Russian-U.S. relation. But the Russian leaders for their part say, well, maybe so, but it provided stability-- stability, which it could still provide. What's the American answer to that?
If your concern is that countries like Iraq or North Korea or Iran or other countries are developing those capabilities and you want to be able to defend against them, then a treaty that's 30 years old with a country that doesn't exist and the new country does not have a hostile relationship ought not to stand in the way of protecting the population centers of the United States and of our deployed forces and friends and allies around the world. Most people think we already have missile defenses, but of course we don't. We don't have the ability to defend against incoming ballistic missiles with nuclear weapons. And a policy of vulnerability in the 21st century, when we know the extent of proliferation of weapons of mass destruction is, I think, would be a terrible mistake. So President Bush's approach is very rational. RAY SUAREZ: Has there been any movement in these conversations? I know when the subject was first broached when the new administration came to Washington, there was a lot of digging in of heels in Moscow. DONALD RUMSFELD: Well, I think there's been some movement. I wouldn't characterize it as a great distance. But we've established discussions that are going forward. The President's met with President Putin, President Bush has. Secretary Powell has met with his counterpart. I've been meeting with my counterpart. We have senior level expert groups that are taking place. One took place in Washington a couple of weeks ago.And another will take place in early September in Moscow. And I think that all of that helps. What it does is it enables us to understand their perspective and what are the things that are really concerning them as opposed to just rhetoric and what are the things that concern us, and so that they can understand that as well. And I think it's all a useful part of a process. It is a process. It's not an event. It's not you sit down and agree. It's a matter of coming to some common understandings.
DONALD RUMSFELD: Well, what President Bush has said and what I think makes sense is to try to establish a new relationship with them and a set of understandings that will enable us to move beyond the ABM Treaty. A number of people who use the phraseology you've just used characterizing the Russian position of wanting negotiations, obviously you negotiate with an enemy. You negotiate a treaty to try to control hostility between two parties. So if you can still consider the United States and Russia to be enemies, then obviously it would be natural to go into negotiations and establish ways that you can prevent each other from hurting each other. If you don't consider each other enemies... We don't have negotiations like that for treaties to not be hostile with Mexico or Canada or France or England or any number of countries in the world. Russia is still, I think, captured to a certain extent by the old Cold War mentality and fear and apprehension and concern about the West. And our country, of course, is a country that is open, it's transparent. We have free political systems, free press, free... We covet no other nation's land in the face of the Earth. And they know that. |
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| Treaty prevents proper defense | ||||||||||||||||||||
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RAY SUAREZ: Well, earlier this week on the NewsHour, Alexei Arbatov, a member of the Duma, someone who is an expert on these kinds of questions as his committee assignment reflects said that if the United States were to unilaterally back out of the ABM or broach it through testing, that his colleagues in the Duma have talked about mirving existing warheads, that is, adding multiple warheads to weapons controlled under earlier treaties with the United States because suddenly everything would seem negotiable. How do you respond to that?
With respect to mirving, meaning to put multiple warheads on a single missile, both countries are drawing down their offensive nuclear weapons. We announced within the last several weeks that we were going to retire the so-called peacekeeper missile, which is about 500 warheads, plus or minus, and to convert some nuclear submarines to... Cruise missile submarines with non-nuclear warheads. So we're going ahead in reducing ours. They intend to go ahead and reduce theirs. Now, with respect to mirving, it sounds bad. Gee, what if the Russian mirv? But if, for example, each side had 20 missiles and one side had one warhead on each missile, 20 missiles, one warhead, they have 20 warheads. And the other side had 20 warheads and one on each missile but they decided to mirv and they kept the same number and they reduced down to five warheads per missile and four missiles, they'd still have 20 warheads and it would make no difference. The idea when Mr. Arbatov talks about mirving, what he's really saying is that their force structure probably could be most cost effectively managed if they mirved and that they would like to do that because they want to reduce the total number of missiles to save themselves some money. But what really counts is not whether or not a country mirvs, what really counts is the total number of weapons and is it going to be reduced? The answer is, of course, it is. President Bush has said he wants to have the lowest number of warheads -- intercontinental ballistic missile warheads -- that is appropriate for our national security circumstances. RAY SUAREZ: But apart from the numbers, might it also reflect a view in the Russian Duma that if the United States backs away from ABM, that suddenly other things-- like Start II-- become negotiable, become revisitable in a way that we hadn't thought they were before?
And the Russian position is that they want to be free to have us not develop a ballistic missile capability-- although they have a missile defense capability around Moscow with nuclear-tipped interceptors right now. They're about the only city in the world that has that kind of a ballistic missile defense at the present time. But that position that Mr. Arbatov articulates is basically, "look, America, you establish a policy of remaining vulnerable to ballistic missiles while we are protected by a missile defense system in Moscow and while we continue to work with other countries like China and Iran and Iraq and various other countries with respect to proliferating some technologies that are not very helpful to the rest of the world." Now that's an awkward position, it seems to me, for them to be in. I know they make an argument about whether or not it is proliferation of certain types of weapons, but there's no question they're working with Iran on their nuclear capability. |
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| Reviewing the military | ||||||||||||||||||||
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RAY SUAREZ: Let's turn to the quadrennial defense review, the review of all the United States forces, how they're deployed, what the country spends money. How is that going? DONALD RUMSFELD: It's a fascinating process. The Congressman mandated this be done every four years. Unfortunately it happens early in a new administration. And, as you may recall, we had practically no new people brought into the administration until, oh, just a month, a month-and-a-half ago. So it was... It's been a very difficult thing to do although we're making good progress. We've been... The senior military and the senior civilian officials that are now on board have been meeting regularly. We're making progress to the point where I think we'll end up meeting the deadline in September for the quadrennial defense review. It is a process that forces people to think together about these important issues and they're terribly important. And they're particularly important in a time when the world is changed, and when we see technologies advancing, we see the end of the Cold War, and it is... So it's been a useful thing. I've found it to be very interesting. RAY SUAREZ: There have been a lot of published reports in the last four to six weeks about how far apart the civilian officials and the uniformed officials are at the Pentagon over how to spend money and what to spend it on.
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| Making sequential changes | ||||||||||||||||||||
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RAY SUAREZ: So those reports, quoting unidentified sources and various unnamed officers, they're simply not true? DONALD RUMSFELD: Well, sure. I mean, any time you want to change anything, it's hard for people. It creates uncertainties. When that happens, when people hear something being discussed that amounts to change, a different weapon system, a different force structure, a different way of approaching things, changes in the personnel systems, all of which are being discussed quite openly in this group, and then those individuals go down and talk to their staffs, why, the staffs listen and then they get nervous because they understand the way things are now, and the thought of change can make some people quite, quite nervous. But it seems to me that it's been... I was told the last time it was done in 1997 that it was done while the same administration stayed in with full complement of people on board and the difficulties they had among the various people, military and civilian, were really quite severe. So I feel like we're kind of making pretty good progress.
DONALD RUMSFELD: Well, of course, it happens sequentially. First of all, we're going to have our legacy forces, our existing forces for decades. These weapon systems last for 20, 30, 40 years. All you can change by way of transformation is really the leading edge. And so what we need to do is to go through the quadrennial defense review and the nuclear posture review and then we will be building the budget for the 2003 budget that the President will submit in January of next year, and all of those things will come together. There's no question there will be changes. There will be things that will be different. We are very seriously considering a somewhat different strategy. We're very seriously considering a somewhat different force sizing mechanism, a construct, to decide how to size our forces -- the reason being is that we haven't had the force structure to fit our strategy for four or five years.
RAY SUAREZ: Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, thanks for coming by. DONALD RUMSFELD: Thank you. |
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