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Introduction: America's Defense: How Much Is Enough Now?
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16931 |
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CURRENT ISSUES
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4 / 1990 |
623 Words |
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Hardly a day passes without a fresh pronouncement that a new era of peace has arrived and the United States needs to rethink its security needs and spending priorities. Both conservatives and liberals agree that some change is warranted, but the questions of how much and in what direction are very much in dispute.
These questions focus on the U.S. defense budget now being debated in Congress. The budget submitted by the Bush administration has come under heavy fire. Whatever the outcome, the debate is likely to continue in the years to come as events shape our perceptions of the threats this country faces.
To help us understand the complex issues at stake, THE WORLD & I asked noted experts to assess the impact of the changes taking place in the Warsaw Pact on U.S. defense needs.
Ken Adelmen, former director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, warns against over optimism that "eternal peace" has arrived. He calls for a "grand assessment of U.S. capabilities vis-à-vis realistic threats today." The United States needs to "begin to match our actual military capabilities and our objectives," he says, and offers a number of concrete suggestions.
Most critics of the president's budget proposal suggest further cuts in spending for the Strategic Defense Initiative, but James Hackett, a member of the President's General Advisory Committee on Arms Control, outlines a number of reasons why SDI should be retained. "The chance of Moscow launching a major attack is diminishing," Hackett acknowledges, "but the danger of an accidental attack
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