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The ABM Treaty
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22168 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
10 / 1987 |
7,480 Words |
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Sam Nunn, Morton A. Kaplan, James Hackett, and Thomas Moorer
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A 'Narrow' Interpretation
by Sam Nunn
In his article, Morton Kaplan advances a reading of the ABM Treaty even broader than that proclaimed by the Reagan administration in October 1985. Whereas the administration claims that the treaty permits the unrestricted development and testing of space-based or otherwise mobile ABM systems or components based on "other physical principles" (that is, "exotic" ABMs), Kaplan argues that exotic ABMs can be developed, tested, and even deployed.
It is interesting to note that this is not the first time that such a permissive interpretation of the treaty has been put forward. In fact, this view was considered and formally rejected by both the Carter and Reagan administrations.
Carter Administration Views
As I noted in part III of my report to the Senate on the ABM interpretation issue (March 13, 1987), Raymond Garthoff, the executive officer of the U.S. SALT I delegation, published an article in 1977 in International Security on the ABM Treaty negotiations. In this article, he made a cryptic reference to the treaty's limitations on exotic ABMs, noting only that they were banned.
In a letter to the editor published in the next issue of this periodical, a RAND Corporation analyst, Abraham Becker, argued that a reasonable reading of Agreed Statement D indicated that there were no limitations on exotic ABMs, including no ban on
... (1997 of 45449 Characters)
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