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SOVIETS LEAD IN LASER BEAM WEAPONS FOR SPACE SHIELD

Document Type: 
CREST [1]
Collection: 
General CIA Records [2]
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP91-00587R000100030044-2
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 8, 2011
Sequence Number: 
44
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 10, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP91-00587R000100030044-2.pdf [3]126.96 KB
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STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/08: CIA-RDP91-00587R000100030044-2 STAT r,,,. ^ WASHINGTON TIMES ARTtCLEA ; PEAis' ED 10 February 198 ON PIPE Kill - __ lead Soviets in laser beam weapons for space shield "Things are progressing at a rather incredible rate:' Lt. Gen. James A. Abrahamson, director of the Strategic Defense Initative Of- fice, said in a recent interview. Many U.S. officials are confident that America can build an effective missile shield before the end of the century. But their official public forecasts are hedged by caution. "There's a lot of science yet that we have to do, and even more en- gineering:" Gen. Abrahamson said at a November press conference. "But I'm confident that the job can be done. The real question is just how fast and what is the best way." The enthusiastic reports have First of f ve parts done little to quell the debate over By Tom Diaz THE WASHINGTON TIMES Soviet labor battalions have worked for years in the cold clear air of the high mountain near Dushanbe in the Thjik Socialist People's Republic, patiently hacking a giant military facility out of the rock at 7,000 feet. Just as patiently. U U.S. soy satellites orbiting overhead have photographed the progress of the work. Its significance only recently has become clear to intelligence analysts. There at the top of the world, where the Soviet Union bor- ders Afghanistan, the Soviets are building what U.S. officials now believe will be a powerful laser-beam weapon capable of knocking down U.S. satellites and perhaps ballistic missiles. A senior administration of- ficial, who asked not to be identified, said the Dushanbe site underscores the lead the Kremlin enjoys in key areas of the high technology that is be- ing explored by the U.S. Stra- tegic Defense Initiative, the missile defense program pro- posed by President Reagan in March 1983. "They have some very in- teresting facilities right now which we do not fully understand, but which have the potential in a few years of giving them at the very least, strong ground- based, directed-energy [laser] capabilities against satellites, if not a beginning and emerging capability against ballistic mis- siles:' the source said. The site at Dushanbe, he said, "hasn't yet put out a single photon." "But it's a big, big construction site that has been under way for a long time:' he said. "It appears to be a major directed- energy facility composed of multiple elements, and our best estimate today is that it could well be a ground-based laser." He and other U.S. officials believe the Soviets will be the first to deploy a working laser weapon, despite the great pro- gress the United States has made in its SDI research program, popularly known as "star wars." SDI. Powerful political voices oppose the very idea of ballistic missile de- fense and some scientists remain skeptical of the claimed scientific advances. Their skepticism contrasts sharply with the optimism of the March 1983 speech in which Mr. Reagan called upon scientists "to turn their great talents to the cause of mankind and world peace, to give us the means of rendering these nu- clear weapons impotent and obso- lete." Four prominent opponents of SDI ripped into Mr. Reagan's proposal in, an article appearing in the winter 1984-85 issue of "Foreign Affairs," that has become holy writ in the anti. SDI ranks. The authors were former National Security Adviser McGeorge Bundy, Sovietologist and former Ambassa- dor George F Kennan, former De- fense Secretary Robert S. McNa- mara and Gerard Smith, chairman of the Arms Control Association and chief negotiator of the 1972 SALT I treaty. "We believe the president's initia- tive to be a classic case of good inten- tions that will have bad results be- cause they do not respect reality," they wrote. "What is centrally and fundamentally wrong with the president's objective is that it cannot be achieved:' The core of their case was that a 100 percent effective missile de- fense shield is technically impossi- ble. A shield less than perfect is worse than no shield at all, because it will encourage the Soviets to build more missiles to overwhelm it, and deal arms control a fatal blow. But supporters of SDI say a mis- sile defense need not be perfect to be effective. In any case, they say, the et missile defense program is roaring ahead. The SDI program has proven its worth in the arms control field by spurring the Soviets to re- turn to stalled talks in Geneva, the supporters argue. Eventually, it will lead to massive reductions in offen- sive nuclear arms, phased in while both sides are sheltered behind de- fensive shields. For now, most opponents concede, the pro-SDI forces are ahead in the debate. Congress has approved an ambitious research program, orig- inally scheduled to spend $27 billion between 1985 and 1990 but pruned by about one-fifth in each of the last two fiscal years. SDI critics say the president has the edge only because he hasn't put a specific system for deployment on the table. That won't happen until the early 1990s. Once specific pro- posals are made, opponents say, the debate will get much hotter. The American people then will have to decide two grand questions: Can it be done? Should it be done? Americans already have seen a cartoon version of the debate in tele- vision ads produced by SDI proponets and opponents. But the arguments that will ultimately de- termine the fate of SDI involve not cartoons, but the world of nuclear strategy and arms control. In that dark and mysterious world, two basic camps are power- fully divided by widely different views on two key issues: ? The nature of the Soviet Union, its military force and its intentions for the use of that force. ? The reach and grasp of modern science and technology. The camps drew battle lines over these two issues long before Mr. Rea- gan's 1983 speech. Many of the same people slugged their way through a similar debate in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The opponents of ballistic missile defense won that debate. Their vic- tory is enshrined in the 1972 SALT I Anti-ballistic Missile [ABM] Treaty, which forbids either country to de- velop, test or deploy a national ABM system - the kind SDI envisions - or any of its components. Tb understand the ABM treaty, one must refer to the grim logic of nuclear deterrence, and the concept of "mutually assured destruction" (known as "MAD") on which it is based. For a decade after World War II, the United States held an effective Continued Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/08: CIA-RDP91-00587R000100030044-2

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