Tag Archives: Bill Clinton

‘High Crimes and Misdemeanors’? The Huang Caper Reinforces Concerns about Clinton Malfeasance on Security Matters

(Washington, D.C.): For some time href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=96-D_109l#N_1_”>(1),
there has been reason to be concerned
that the Clinton Administration’s neglect
of the most fundamental measures for
protecting sensitive information bearing
on the national security would translate
into vulnerabilities that would be
exploited by America’s enemies and/or its
commercial competitors. As the Center for
Security Policy noted on 25 October:

“There is a ticking
time-bomb — one that may well
explode on the watch of the next
President of the United States.
While it is difficult to say with
certainty at this point precisely
where and with what impact the
Clinton Administration’s
systematic disregard for the most
basic personnel, physical and
information security practices

will manifest itself, one thing
seems certain: Someone,
somewhere will seek to take
advantage of these self-inflicted
vulnerabilities to do grave harm
to the Nation’s interests.

Enter John Huang

Recent disclosures about John
Huang
— the Chinese-born former
Taiwanese fighter pilot, Indonesian
businessman and Democratic fundraiser who
served as a Principal Deputy Assistant
Secretary for International Economic
Policy in the Bill Clinton/Ron Brown
Commerce Department — offer disturbing
insights into how such vulnerabilities
might have been exploited. Consider the
following known facts:

  • Prior to joining the Commerce
    Department, Mr. Huang was an
    employee of the Indonesia-based
    Lippo Group and several of its
    subsidiary companies and banks.
  • One of Lippo’s enterprises is the
    Hong Kong Chinese Bank,
    Ltd.
    Mr. Huang’s
    biography indicates that he was
    the bank’s Vice President for
    International Banking between
    March 1985 and September 1986.

The Chinese Connection

  • On 7 November 1992, four days
    after Bill Clinton’s election in
    1992, the Lippo Group sold 15% of
    its interest in the Hong Kong
    Chinese Bank to China
    Resources (Holdings) Company Ltd.

    — the commercial arm of
    Communist China’s Ministry of
    Foreign Trade and Economic
    Cooperation. China Resources is
    used by Beijing to control its
    investments and trade abroad. It
    has been called one of the PRC’s
    largest and most influential
    enterprises in Hong Kong.
  • The Hong Kong Chinese Bank
    transaction was reportedly
    structured in such a way as to
    avoid the requirement to obtain
    approval from the Hong Kong Stock
    Exchange. On 17 July 1993, China
    Resources increased its holdings
    from 15% to 50%
    paying a 50% premium over the net
    asset value and realizing a cool
    $164.8 million profit for Mr.
    Huang’s employer at the time,
    Mochtar Riady, chairman of Lippo
    Group.
  • As noted by William Safire in his
    28 October column in the New
    York Times
    , China
    Resources also has another
    important function: providing a
    cover for Chinese espionage.

    In 1994, Nicholas Eftimiades, a
    former naval and State Department
    intelligence officer now employed
    as a Defense Intelligence Agency
    analyst, authored a book entitled
    Chinese Intelligence
    Operations
    . In it, Mr.
    Eftimiades wrote:
  • “[Chinese
    intelligence] case
    officers make extensive
    use of commercial covers.
    For example, a
    vice president of the
    China Resources
    (Holdings) Company Hua
    Ren Jituan
    in Hong
    Kong is traditionally a
    military case officer
    from Guangzhou.

    This officer coordinates
    the collection activities
    of other intelligence
    personnel operating under
    Hua Ren
    cover.”

  • Mr. Safire calls attention to an
    alarming op.ed. article that
    appeared in the Toronto Globe
    and Mail
    on 5 September
    1995. Entitled “Beware the
    Threat of Chinese Spy Games”
    and authored by David
    Harris
    , a former chief
    of strategic planning with the
    Canadian Security Intelligence
    Service, this article describes
    the multifaceted effort being
    made by Chinese agents to: divert
    Western high technology, acquire
    other militarily relevant and
    commercial secrets, cultivate
    agents of influence and coerce
    overseas Chinese students to
    serve as “sleeper
    agents.”
  • While aimed at a Canadian
    audience, the following excerpt
    from the Harris op.ed. just
    as easily applies to the United
    States
    — and is of
    particular interest in the
    present context:

    “In dealings with
    Chinese officials,
    Canadians should
    understand that PRC
    diplomatic, cultural and
    intelligence activity is
    a seamless
    web….Canadians of
    Chinese ancestry must be
    warned of the
    PRC’s strong preference
    for recruiting ethnic
    Chinese using leverage
    and ‘help China’ appeals
    .
    China’s use of guanxi
    networks — social
    relationships built on
    favors — is the bedrock
    of Chinese intelligence
    collection. The approach
    reflects [Beijing’s]
    tendency to rely on a
    great many sources, each
    collecting small — and
    not very incriminating —
    amounts of
    information.”

  • Mr. Harris also makes a point of
    spotlighting China Resources
    (Holdings) Company as a front for
    Chinese intelligence. “U.S.
    intelligence even says Hong
    Kong’s China Resources Holding
    Company traditionally reserves
    one vice-presidential position
    for a Military Intelligence
    Department (MID) intelligence
    officer.” Mr. Harris
    has described the China Resources
    involvement with the Hong Kong
    Chinese Bank as a “textbook
    Communist Chinese influence
    operation.”

What Background Check?

  • Given U.S. intelligence’s
    knowledge of the nature and
    activities of China Resources,
    one would have thought that a
    Commerce Department request to
    grant a Top Secret security
    clearance to an ethnic Chinese
    who, although a naturalized
    American citizen, was formerly
    employed by organization in
    partnership with China Resources
    (Holdings) Company would have
    triggered red flags. In fact, it
    appears that no foreign
    background check was conducted on
    Mr. Huang at all before he was
    issued an “interim Top
    Secret clearance
    .” href=”96-D109.html#N_2_”>(2)
  • Instead, on 31 January
    1994, Mr. Huang received a
    “waiver of background
    investigation prior to
    appointment”
    from
    the Commerce Department’s
    security office. This was done on
    the grounds that “there
    was a critical need for his
    expertise in the new [sic]
    Administration for Secretary
    Brown.
  • Although “final
    clearance” was “held in
    abeyance pending the results of
    Huang’s background
    investigation,” according to
    congressional experts, it appears
    that no overseas checks
    were ever conducted
    of
    Mr. Huang’s extensive
    international travel, his
    extended stays abroad, his family
    overseas or his foreign employers
    either during the five-months
    between his waiver and his first
    day on the job (18 July 1994) or
    in the subsequent three months
    until his final clearance was
    adjudicated (18 October 1994).

Business As Usual in the
Clinton Administration?

  • The Washington Times on
    31 October 1996 quoted Commerce
    spokeswoman Anne Luzzatto as
    saying that a “foreign
    background check was not required
    under security rules because Mr.
    Huang did not reside abroad in
    the previous five years before he
    took the Commerce Department
    position.” This appears to
    be inconsistent with a 1991
    directive signed by
    then-President George Bush
    requiring foreign background
    checks on anyone who has lived
    overseas within the previous ten
    years — which Mr. Huang
    certainly did. House Intelligence
    Committee Chairman Larry Combest
    (R-TX), has written the late
    Secretary Brown’s successor,
    Mickey Kantor, saying “[The
    approach taken to streamline Mr.
    Huang’s clearance] was contrary
    to standard procedures
    .”
    (Emphasis added.)
  • Commerce and Office of Personnel
    Management representatives
    nonetheless told the Baltimore
    Sun
    on 30 October 1996 that
    Mr. Huang’s “background
    investigation was as thorough as
    it was required to be.” The Sun
    said Ms. Luzzatto claimed
    “investigators were able to
    gain the needed information
    without interviews
    overseas.”
  • David Harris, however,
    has described the placement of a
    person with Mr. Huang’s
    background in a position of
    Deputy Assistant Secretary of
    Commerce without an FBI security
    clearance as
    “horrendous” and
    something that “sends
    shudders through any intelligence
    officer’s body.”
  • Interestingly, according to the
    31 October Wall Street
    Journal
    , the Commerce
    spokeswoman also averred that
    “Mr. Huang couldn’t have
    used
    his security clearance
    before he officially joined the
    agency as a top international
    trade policy official in July
    1994.” (Emphasis added.) In
    view of the “critical
    need” Secretary Brown
    apparently had for Mr. Huang’s
    expertise, it stands to
    reason that he may have been
    involved in meetings,
    conversations, briefings, etc. in
    which he was exposed to
    classified information while
    still on the Lippo Group’s
    payroll.
  • There is no dispute, however,
    that Mr. Huang was exposed to
    highly sensitive intelligence
    data and competition sensitive
    trade information once he
    collected his $900,000 severance
    package from Lippo and joined the
    Commerce Department, becoming
    what Mr. Riady called “my
    man in the Clinton
    Administration.”

Guess Who’s Coming to
Dinner?

With the notable exceptions of the
aforementioned journals, the security
implications of the Huang Affair have
generally received less media scrutiny
than has his ready access to the White
House complex — including the Oval
Office — both during and after his
service at the Commerce Department.
Obviously, such access (which, by some
accounts, translated into as many as 78
visits this year alone, some involving as
many as four trips in a single day and
some of several hours duration) can only
reinforce concerns about the nature of
the sensitive information to which Mr.
Huang might have been exposed.

Such concerns are further intensified
by the apparent inability of the White
House to identify with whom Mr. Huang was
meeting or the subject of such meetings.
The most innocuous, if implausible,
explanation is that these were mostly
social occasions. But even
Clinton social occasions can have ominous
overtones.
Consider the case of Jorge
Cabrera
, the convicted drug
dealer who was entertained at a Clinton
fund-raiser despite a criminal record
that should have made him personna
non grata
at, if not inadmissable
to, events with the President.

Then there is the matter of Grigori
Loutchansky
, the founder of
NORDEX — a firm based in Moscow and
Vienna that U.S. intelligence has linked
to “Russian criminal activity”
— who was invited not once, but twice,
to meet with President Clinton for
private fund-raising dinners. Exposes in Time
Magazine and other American publications,
indicate that NORDEX was created by the ancien
Soviet regime for the purpose of earning
and laundering hard currency needed to
support Russian intelligence activities
in the West. It is also reputed to be
engaged in smuggling operations involving
nuclear materials and missiles.

The Bottom Line

While it is not clear whether Mr.
Loutchansky (through NORDEX or one of its
cut-outs), like Mr. Huang and Mr.
Cabrera, proved to be a source of large,
dubious (if not positively illegal)
campaign contributions for Mr. Clinton’s
benefit(3),
one thing should be self-evident: Individuals
who there is reason to believe may be
engaged in activities like nuclear
proliferation, drug-trafficking or
associating with personnel of hostile
intelligence agencies have no business
being associated with the President of
the United States.
Such
associations can only serve to legitimate
such individuals, and possibly create
pernicious quids pro quo for
services rendered to him politically.

If not a basic sense of morality and
sheer political prudence, then out of
deference to responsible security
procedures the President and his
government should be shielded from such
relationships. The Clinton
Administration’s wholesale disregard for
such security procedures may ultimately
cost the Nation — and perhaps Mr.
Clinton, himself — quite dearly.

– 30 –

1. See the Center
for Security Policy’s Decision
Briefs
entitled The
Real ‘Snafu’ in the Clinton File Scandal

(No. 96-D 57,
17 June 1996), ‘No Aldrich
Ameses at the White House’: Are You Sure?
Real Care In Order As the NSC Reorganizes
‘C.I.’
( href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=94-D_45″>No. 94-D 45,
1 May 1994) and The Clinton
Security Clearance Melt-Down: ‘No-Gate’
Demonstrates ‘It’s the People, Stupid’

(No. 94-D
32
, 25 March 1994).

2. Experienced
hands in the security business have told
the Center that an “interim
Top Secret clearance” is unusual, if
not unprecedented. Ordinarily, the
highest clearance provided without a
background investigation is at the
“Secret” level; a final
“Top Secret” clearance is only
adjudicated after a full-field
investigation is completed. On
exceptional occasions, an interim
“Top Secret” clearance is
issued to someone holding a fully vetted
“Secret” clearance, pending an
update to their background investigation.
This was, of course, not the case with
Mr. Huang.

3. Published
reports do, however, indicate that
Loutchansky received a letter from
President Clinton thanking him for his
“support.”

‘High Crimes and Misdemeanors’? The Huang Caper Reinforces Concerns about Clinton Malfeasance on Security Matters

(Washington, D.C.): For some time href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=96-D_109l#N_1_”>(1),
there has been reason to be concerned
that the Clinton Administration’s neglect
of the most fundamental measures for
protecting sensitive information bearing
on the national security would translate
into vulnerabilities that would be
exploited by America’s enemies and/or its
commercial competitors. As the Center for
Security Policy noted on 25 October:

“There is a ticking
time-bomb — one that may well
explode on the watch of the next
President of the United States.
While it is difficult to say with
certainty at this point precisely
where and with what impact the
Clinton Administration’s
systematic disregard for the most
basic personnel, physical and
information security practices

will manifest itself, one thing
seems certain: Someone,
somewhere will seek to take
advantage of these self-inflicted
vulnerabilities to do grave harm
to the Nation’s interests.

Enter John Huang

Recent disclosures about John
Huang
— the Chinese-born former
Taiwanese fighter pilot, Indonesian
businessman and Democratic fundraiser who
served as a Principal Deputy Assistant
Secretary for International Economic
Policy in the Bill Clinton/Ron Brown
Commerce Department — offer disturbing
insights into how such vulnerabilities
might have been exploited. Consider the
following known facts:

  • Prior to joining the Commerce
    Department, Mr. Huang was an
    employee of the Indonesia-based
    Lippo Group and several of its
    subsidiary companies and banks.
  • One of Lippo’s enterprises is the
    Hong Kong Chinese Bank,
    Ltd.
    Mr. Huang’s
    biography indicates that he was
    the bank’s Vice President for
    International Banking between
    March 1985 and September 1986.

The Chinese Connection

  • On 7 November 1992, four days
    after Bill Clinton’s election in
    1992, the Lippo Group sold 15% of
    its interest in the Hong Kong
    Chinese Bank to China
    Resources (Holdings) Company Ltd.

    — the commercial arm of
    Communist China’s Ministry of
    Foreign Trade and Economic
    Cooperation. China Resources is
    used by Beijing to control its
    investments and trade abroad. It
    has been called one of the PRC’s
    largest and most influential
    enterprises in Hong Kong.
  • The Hong Kong Chinese Bank
    transaction was reportedly
    structured in such a way as to
    avoid the requirement to obtain
    approval from the Hong Kong Stock
    Exchange. On 17 July 1993, China
    Resources increased its holdings
    from 15% to 50%
    paying a 50% premium over the net
    asset value and realizing a cool
    $164.8 million profit for Mr.
    Huang’s employer at the time,
    Mochtar Riady, chairman of Lippo
    Group.
  • As noted by William Safire in his
    28 October column in the New
    York Times
    , China
    Resources also has another
    important function: providing a
    cover for Chinese espionage.

    In 1994, Nicholas Eftimiades, a
    former naval and State Department
    intelligence officer now employed
    as a Defense Intelligence Agency
    analyst, authored a book entitled
    Chinese Intelligence
    Operations
    . In it, Mr.
    Eftimiades wrote:
  • “[Chinese
    intelligence] case
    officers make extensive
    use of commercial covers.
    For example, a
    vice president of the
    China Resources
    (Holdings) Company Hua
    Ren Jituan
    in Hong
    Kong is traditionally a
    military case officer
    from Guangzhou.

    This officer coordinates
    the collection activities
    of other intelligence
    personnel operating under
    Hua Ren
    cover.”

  • Mr. Safire calls attention to an
    alarming op.ed. article that
    appeared in the Toronto Globe
    and Mail
    on 5 September
    1995. Entitled “Beware the
    Threat of Chinese Spy Games”
    and authored by David
    Harris
    , a former chief
    of strategic planning with the
    Canadian Security Intelligence
    Service, this article describes
    the multifaceted effort being
    made by Chinese agents to: divert
    Western high technology, acquire
    other militarily relevant and
    commercial secrets, cultivate
    agents of influence and coerce
    overseas Chinese students to
    serve as “sleeper
    agents.”
  • While aimed at a Canadian
    audience, the following excerpt
    from the Harris op.ed. just
    as easily applies to the United
    States
    — and is of
    particular interest in the
    present context:

    “In dealings with
    Chinese officials,
    Canadians should
    understand that PRC
    diplomatic, cultural and
    intelligence activity is
    a seamless
    web….Canadians of
    Chinese ancestry must be
    warned of the
    PRC’s strong preference
    for recruiting ethnic
    Chinese using leverage
    and ‘help China’ appeals
    .
    China’s use of guanxi
    networks — social
    relationships built on
    favors — is the bedrock
    of Chinese intelligence
    collection. The approach
    reflects [Beijing’s]
    tendency to rely on a
    great many sources, each
    collecting small — and
    not very incriminating —
    amounts of
    information.”

  • Mr. Harris also makes a point of
    spotlighting China Resources
    (Holdings) Company as a front for
    Chinese intelligence. “U.S.
    intelligence even says Hong
    Kong’s China Resources Holding
    Company traditionally reserves
    one vice-presidential position
    for a Military Intelligence
    Department (MID) intelligence
    officer.” Mr. Harris
    has described the China Resources
    involvement with the Hong Kong
    Chinese Bank as a “textbook
    Communist Chinese influence
    operation.”

What Background Check?

  • Given U.S. intelligence’s
    knowledge of the nature and
    activities of China Resources,
    one would have thought that a
    Commerce Department request to
    grant a Top Secret security
    clearance to an ethnic Chinese
    who, although a naturalized
    American citizen, was formerly
    employed by organization in
    partnership with China Resources
    (Holdings) Company would have
    triggered red flags. In fact, it
    appears that no foreign
    background check was conducted on
    Mr. Huang at all before he was
    issued an “interim Top
    Secret clearance
    .” href=”96-D109.html#N_2_”>(2)
  • Instead, on 31 January
    1994, Mr. Huang received a
    “waiver of background
    investigation prior to
    appointment”
    from
    the Commerce Department’s
    security office. This was done on
    the grounds that “there
    was a critical need for his
    expertise in the new [sic]
    Administration for Secretary
    Brown.
  • Although “final
    clearance” was “held in
    abeyance pending the results of
    Huang’s background
    investigation,” according to
    congressional experts, it appears
    that no overseas checks
    were ever conducted
    of
    Mr. Huang’s extensive
    international travel, his
    extended stays abroad, his family
    overseas or his foreign employers
    either during the five-months
    between his waiver and his first
    day on the job (18 July 1994) or
    in the subsequent three months
    until his final clearance was
    adjudicated (18 October 1994).

Business As Usual in the
Clinton Administration?

  • The Washington Times on
    31 October 1996 quoted Commerce
    spokeswoman Anne Luzzatto as
    saying that a “foreign
    background check was not required
    under security rules because Mr.
    Huang did not reside abroad in
    the previous five years before he
    took the Commerce Department
    position.” This appears to
    be inconsistent with a 1991
    directive signed by
    then-President George Bush
    requiring foreign background
    checks on anyone who has lived
    overseas within the previous ten
    years — which Mr. Huang
    certainly did. House Intelligence
    Committee Chairman Larry Combest
    (R-TX), has written the late
    Secretary Brown’s successor,
    Mickey Kantor, saying “[The
    approach taken to streamline Mr.
    Huang’s clearance] was contrary
    to standard procedures
    .”
    (Emphasis added.)
  • Commerce and Office of Personnel
    Management representatives
    nonetheless told the Baltimore
    Sun
    on 30 October 1996 that
    Mr. Huang’s “background
    investigation was as thorough as
    it was required to be.” The Sun
    said Ms. Luzzatto claimed
    “investigators were able to
    gain the needed information
    without interviews
    overseas.”
  • David Harris, however,
    has described the placement of a
    person with Mr. Huang’s
    background in a position of
    Deputy Assistant Secretary of
    Commerce without an FBI security
    clearance as
    “horrendous” and
    something that “sends
    shudders through any intelligence
    officer’s body.”
  • Interestingly, according to the
    31 October Wall Street
    Journal
    , the Commerce
    spokeswoman also averred that
    “Mr. Huang couldn’t have
    used
    his security clearance
    before he officially joined the
    agency as a top international
    trade policy official in July
    1994.” (Emphasis added.) In
    view of the “critical
    need” Secretary Brown
    apparently had for Mr. Huang’s
    expertise, it stands to
    reason that he may have been
    involved in meetings,
    conversations, briefings, etc. in
    which he was exposed to
    classified information while
    still on the Lippo Group’s
    payroll.
  • There is no dispute, however,
    that Mr. Huang was exposed to
    highly sensitive intelligence
    data and competition sensitive
    trade information once he
    collected his $900,000 severance
    package from Lippo and joined the
    Commerce Department, becoming
    what Mr. Riady called “my
    man in the Clinton
    Administration.”

Guess Who’s Coming to
Dinner?

With the notable exceptions of the
aforementioned journals, the security
implications of the Huang Affair have
generally received less media scrutiny
than has his ready access to the White
House complex — including the Oval
Office — both during and after his
service at the Commerce Department.
Obviously, such access (which, by some
accounts, translated into as many as 78
visits this year alone, some involving as
many as four trips in a single day and
some of several hours duration) can only
reinforce concerns about the nature of
the sensitive information to which Mr.
Huang might have been exposed.

Such concerns are further intensified
by the apparent inability of the White
House to identify with whom Mr. Huang was
meeting or the subject of such meetings.
The most innocuous, if implausible,
explanation is that these were mostly
social occasions. But even
Clinton social occasions can have ominous
overtones.
Consider the case of Jorge
Cabrera
, the convicted drug
dealer who was entertained at a Clinton
fund-raiser despite a criminal record
that should have made him personna
non grata
at, if not inadmissable
to, events with the President.

Then there is the matter of Grigori
Loutchansky
, the founder of
NORDEX — a firm based in Moscow and
Vienna that U.S. intelligence has linked
to “Russian criminal activity”
— who was invited not once, but twice,
to meet with President Clinton for
private fund-raising dinners. Exposes in Time
Magazine and other American publications,
indicate that NORDEX was created by the ancien
Soviet regime for the purpose of earning
and laundering hard currency needed to
support Russian intelligence activities
in the West. It is also reputed to be
engaged in smuggling operations involving
nuclear materials and missiles.

The Bottom Line

While it is not clear whether Mr.
Loutchansky (through NORDEX or one of its
cut-outs), like Mr. Huang and Mr.
Cabrera, proved to be a source of large,
dubious (if not positively illegal)
campaign contributions for Mr. Clinton’s
benefit(3),
one thing should be self-evident: Individuals
who there is reason to believe may be
engaged in activities like nuclear
proliferation, drug-trafficking or
associating with personnel of hostile
intelligence agencies have no business
being associated with the President of
the United States.
Such
associations can only serve to legitimate
such individuals, and possibly create
pernicious quids pro quo for
services rendered to him politically.

If not a basic sense of morality and
sheer political prudence, then out of
deference to responsible security
procedures the President and his
government should be shielded from such
relationships. The Clinton
Administration’s wholesale disregard for
such security procedures may ultimately
cost the Nation — and perhaps Mr.
Clinton, himself — quite dearly.

– 30 –

1. See the Center
for Security Policy’s Decision
Briefs
entitled The
Real ‘Snafu’ in the Clinton File Scandal

(No. 96-D 57,
17 June 1996), ‘No Aldrich
Ameses at the White House’: Are You Sure?
Real Care In Order As the NSC Reorganizes
‘C.I.’
( href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=94-D_45″>No. 94-D 45,
1 May 1994) and The Clinton
Security Clearance Melt-Down: ‘No-Gate’
Demonstrates ‘It’s the People, Stupid’

(No. 94-D
32
, 25 March 1994).

2. Experienced
hands in the security business have told
the Center that an “interim
Top Secret clearance” is unusual, if
not unprecedented. Ordinarily, the
highest clearance provided without a
background investigation is at the
“Secret” level; a final
“Top Secret” clearance is only
adjudicated after a full-field
investigation is completed. On
exceptional occasions, an interim
“Top Secret” clearance is
issued to someone holding a fully vetted
“Secret” clearance, pending an
update to their background investigation.
This was, of course, not the case with
Mr. Huang.

3. Published
reports do, however, indicate that
Loutchansky received a letter from
President Clinton thanking him for his
“support.”

CENTER INAUGURATES BRADLEY DEBATE SERIES WITH THE QUESTION: DOES THE UNITED STATES NEED BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSES?

(Chicago, Illinois): One of the most
serious national security problems facing
the Nation is the fact that the
American people are utterly undefended
against the growing danger of ballistic
missile attack
. Fortunately,
this vulnerability, and the need promptly
to begin eliminating it, are issues that
have received a good bit of attention in
the course 1996 political campaign — and
that may feature prominently in the
presidential and vice presidential
debates beginnning this weekend
.

After all, there are few topics on
which the differences between the
Republican and Democratic tickets are
more pronounced: Bob Dole has declared
his determination as one of his first
acts as President to begin defending
America; Bill Clinton maintains that
there is no need to take such a step for
at least three years, if not for
considerably longer.

As a non-partisan organization
dedicated to preserving and promoting
U.S. national security, the Center for
Security Policy welcomes all such
opportunities to educate the American
people about major challenges facing
America and its global interests. Indeed,
toward this end, the Center last night
sponsored the first of its Bradley
National Debate Series
— a
forum made possible by a generous grant
from the Lynde and Harry Bradley
Foundation to facilitate rigorous
exchanges of ideas on critical foreign
and defense policy topics. Hosted by the
University of Chicago’s prestigious
Harris School of Public Policy and
featuring nationally renowned experts in
the field, this debate considered
the proposition that national missile
defenses should be promptly deployed, and
previewed the sorts of arguments that
should be heard in the course of this
Sunday’s debate and the two succeeding
sessions
.

The first Bradley Debate was moderated
by Professor Charles Lipson
of the University of Chicago’s Department
of Political Science. Arguing that the
United States does need to
deploy effective missile defenses at the
earliest possible moment were the
Center’s Director, Frank J.
Gaffney, Jr.
— who also serves
as the Coordinator of the Coalition to
Defend America — and Dr. William
R. Graham
, former Science
Advisor to President Reagan. Arguing that
such a deployment could not or should not
be undertaken at this time were Dr.
John Mearsheimer
, the R. Wendell
Harrison Distinguished Service Professor
of political Science at the University of
Chicago, and Dr. Gerald Marsh,
a physicist at the Argonne National
Laboratory and former consultant to the
Office of the Chief of Naval Operations
on strategic nuclear policy and
technology.

Among the important topics addressed
were: the reliability of traditional
means of deterrence in
the present and prospective strategic
environments; the nature and maturity of the
threat
posed by ballistic
missile-borne weapons of mass
destruction; the past experience with
U.S. efforts to build effective
anti-missile systems
and the
prospects for doing so today — both in
terms of technical performance to be
expected and the associated financial
outlays; and the effect that the
1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty

has had on such technological
developments previously and the costs
versus benefits of allowing it to do so
in the future.

An edited
transcript
of the first Bradley
Debate may be obtained by contacting the
Center. For more information about this
exciting series, please contact the
Center’s Chief of Staff, Rinelda Bliss
Walters.

– 30 –

Summit Postmortem: If Only Clinton Were Half As Resolute As Netanyahu In Safeguarding U.S. Interests In The Mideast

(Washington, D.C.): The clear winner
in the aftermath of the just-concluded
Middle East summit was the interest the
United States shares with Israel and —
one would hope — the entire civilized
world in upholding the principle
that Palestinian Arab violence will not
be condoned, let alone rewarded.

Regrettably, it fell virtually
exclusively to Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu to produce that
result. Mr. Netanyahu’s courage and
determination were sorely tried as not
only the PLO’s Yasser Arafat and Jordan’s
King Hussein but also President
Clinton
hammered Israel’s premier to
make concessions on one or more fronts in
the name of appeasing Palestinian Arab
nationalists.

Where Was Bill Clinton?

Particularly appalling was Mr.
Clinton’s failure to use the summit as a
bully pulpit for establishing that
Arafat’s incitement of rock throwing and
automatic weapons fire was utterly
unacceptable.
Even inviting
Arafat to the White House under the
circumstances can reasonably be
interpreted as a success of sorts for the
PLO chairman’s “war card”
strategy so brilliantly dissected by
Charles Krauthammer in today’s Washington
Post
(see attached).
If the Palestinian Arabs opt to resume
mob action and lethal attacks against
Israelis, a contributing factor may be
the belief that such steps will, at a
minimum, entitle Arafat to the
international attention and influence
that goes along with obtaining a
practically immediate audience with the
President of the United States.

This danger is only compounded by the
fact that President Clinton apparently
did not make clear to Arafat that,
hereafter, Palestinian Arab demands can
only be addressed through negotiations,
that further violence in the future would
preclude relations between the
United States and the Palestinian leader
— with implications for future aid
flows, official visits to Washington,
etc.

To the contrary, Mr. Clinton dedcided
to abstain rather than veto a U.N.
Security Council resolution that was, in
its sympathetic treatment of the PLO’s
grievances, all too reminiscent of that
organization’s rabidly anti-Israeli past.
He also declined to use his post-summit
press conference to condemn the practice
of violence as a negoiating technique.
Instead, he offered the appearance of
moral equivalence between the parties, a
posture that may or may not be conducive
to mediation but that surely signals an
American indifference toward the security
needs of a key ally that can only invite
new efforts to divide the U.S. and
Israel.

In this regard, it is instructive to
consider the message sent by Egypt’s
refusal to participate in the Washington
summit meeting. Egypt is, after all, a
country that receives some $2 billion per
year in U.S. taxpayer funds. Since
neither this affront nor a host of other
invidious actions(1)
appear to change Washington’s attitude of
moral equivalence between Israel and
Egypt or otherwise entail any costs
for Cairo
, more such behavior must
be expected.

To be sure, President Clinton did not
engage in the sort of Israel-bashing that
characterized the Carter and Bush
Administrations’ policy toward the Jewish
State. Mr. Clinton and his subordinates
reserved their pressure on Israel for
private sessions; although the backbiting
backgrounding has begun, the President’s
refusal to find public fault with Prime
Minister Netanyahu’s stance was
refreshing. Unfortunately, it is unclear
whether this relatively supportive
conduct will survive the U.S.
presidential election season.

The Bottom Line

Prime Minister Netanyahu deserves
kudos for his refusal to accomodate those
demanding his appeasement of Yasser
Arafat. He conducted himself in a
statesmanlike manner that puts his
government in a strong position to deal
with the turmoil that lies ahead. It can
only be hoped that Mr. Netanyahu’s own
statements about the summit having
“increased the degree of mutual
trust” between himself and Arafat
and his description of the latter as his
“partner and friend” will not
come back to haunt him as the PLO
chairman is shown yet again to be utterly
untrustworthy, a most unreliable partner
and no friend of Israel.

It behooves the United States to use
the negotiations it will broker starting
next Sunday in Erez to communicate the
message Mr. Clinton failed to convey in
Washington. If Arafat and his followers
harbor any illusions that those
negotiatoins will be made more productive
or can be circumvented by renewed armed
action against Israel, these talks are
certain to prove futile at best. At
worst, they will advance the very
peace-without-security-for-Israel agenda
that has come to characterize the
so-called “peace process” and
that Mr. Netanyahu so ably resisted in
Washington. These outcomes would be in
neither America’s interest nor Israel’s.

– 30 –

1. These include,
notably: the virulently anti-Netanyahu
propaganda issued in recent weeks by
Egyptian state media; Cairo’s pursuit of
improving relations with Qaggafi’s Libya
— including its apologizing for the
Libyan chemical weapons program; and
Egypt’s importing of Scud missiles,
threatening military movements and
efforts to sabotage U.S.-led efforts to
extend the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty.

IS CLINTON HIDING EVIDENCE OF SADDAM’S CHEMICAL WARFARE ATTACKS ON U.S. TROOPS IN ORDER TO SELL THE C.W.C.?

(Washington, D.C.): In the course of
Bill Clinton’s address to the UN General
Assembly yesterday, the President
announced that — despite the U.S.
Senate’s refusal to approve ratification
of the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC)
two weeks ago — he “will not let
this treaty die.” A report published
last week by the New York Times
engenders suspicion that Mr.
Clinton may, however, be prepared to let
American military personnel
suffer
grave illnesses, and perhaps in the
future actually die, rather than
disclose evidence of past chemical
weapons attacks against U.S. forces —
evidence that might prove inconvenient to
the Administration’s sales job on the
CWC.

The Times’
Revelations

On 20 September 1996, the Times
gave front-page treatment to a superb and
quite lengthy piece of investigative
reporting by Philip Shenon entitled,
“Many Veterans of the Gulf War
Detail Illnesses From Chemicals.”
Under the subheadline “Soldiers
Stories at Odds With Pentagon
Account,” appeared, among others,
the following, disturbing revelations:

“While the Pentagon
continues to insist that it has
no evidence that American troops
were made sick from exposure to
Iraqi chemical weapons during the
Persian Gulf war in 1991, more
than 150 veterans of a Naval
reserve battalion have come
forward with details of what many
of them describe as an Iraqi
chemical attack that has left
them seriously ill
.”

“Members of the unit, the
24th Naval Mobile Construction
Battalion, say something exploded
in the air over their camps in
northern Saudi Arabia early on
the morning of January 19, 1991,
the third day of the gulf war. In
minutes, many say, their skin
began to burn, their lips turned
numb and their throats began to
tighten. Several say
chemical alarms began to sound as
a dense cloud of gas floated over
their camps.”

“Pentagon officials continue
to insist that they have no
evidence of other large-scale
exposures. They said they had
reviewed the incident involving
the 24th Battalion in Saudi
Arabia and found no sign of
unusual illnesses.”

“In a statement prepared in
response to a reporter’s
questions, the Pentagon
confirmed that a review of its
battle records showed that the
loud noise heard by members of
the 24th Battalion on Jan. 19,
1991, was probably the explosion
of an Iraqi Scud missile.

That contradicts initial reports
from battalion officers who
insisted in 1991 that the noise
had been a sonic boom produced by
a jet fighter or bomber passing
overhead.”

“Chemical weapons
were detected in the camps in
northern Saudi Arabia on January
19, in the areas around the city
of Jubail, where the 24th
Battalion was stationed. Newly
declassified combat logs
maintained by an officer working
for Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf,
the American commander in the
war, reported a ‘chemical
attack at Jubail’

early on the morning of January
19. A separate entry shows that a
British soldier reported that
night that chemical-detection
paper had registered ‘mustard
positive,’ a reference to mustard
gas.”

“Harold J. Edwards, a
reservist who was a member of the
24th Battalion, remembered using
three chemical detection devices,
which are known as M-256 kits, to
measure the air after he heard
the explosions that morning. Two
of the three tests, Mr. Edwards
said, showed that mustard
gas was wafting over the
reservists
. ‘It’s damn
hard to mess up those tests,’ he
said.”

“Mr. Edwards said he
immediately reported the
mustard-gas detection to his
superiors in the camp. But the
next morning, he said, the word
came back from the officers that ‘nothing
had happened, forget it, don’t
say anything.'”

“Other members of the
battalion say they quickly came
to suspect that the military was
trying to hide the truth of what
had happened that morning. Their
suspicions began, they said, when
officers in the 24th Battalion
told them that the blast that
morning had been caused by a
sonic boom from a jet fighter of
bomber passing overhead. The
reservists said they were ordered
not to discuss the matter
again.”

If commanders deliberately misled
their troops about the nature of the
threat they faced, that action might be
understandable, if not justifiable, in
the interest of preventing wholesale
panic under enemy attack. It is an
altogether different thing, however, if
civilian and military authorities persist
in misrepresenting the facts years
afterwards for any reason whatsoever.

There Goes a Pillar of the
Clinton Case for the CWC

Particularly insidious is the
possibility that the motivation for such
misrepresentations may be the Clinton
Administration’s high priority effort to
sell the Chemical Weapons Convention.
After all, the CWC’s proponents have long
argued that Desert Storm proved that it
was not necessary to have an in-kind
deterrent in order to dissuade chemically
armed adversaries from using toxic agents
against American forces. While the
rationale for this contention varied —
with some arguing that an overwhelming
conventional capability did the trick
while others maintained that the threat
of nuclear attack was the U.S. hole card
in deterring chemical attack — the
bottom line was consistent: Saddam
Hussein’s forces did not use chemical
weapons against Coalition personnel.

This spring, the party line began to
crack. Five years after the end of
Operation Desert Storm, the
Administration was obliged to acknowledge
that American forces were inadvertently
exposed to chemical agents in the course
of destroying Saddam’s bunkers and
stockpiles. This admission was itself
something of a problem for the Chemical
Weapons Convention: It established that
the sorts of covert chemical arsenals
that will abound, with or without the
CWC, will pose a threat to U.S. personnel
even if such weapons are not used
offensively against U.S. forces
.
That danger will only be compounded as
the CWC creates a false sense of
security, encouraging reduced investment
in chemical defensive equipment and
technology.

Disclosure of the fact that
chemical weapons were actually employed
in attacks on American forces,

however, would be a body blow to CWC.

Specifically, it would undercut claims by
the treaty’s advocates that the
effectiveness of other forms of
deterrence permit the United States
safely to deny itself the right to
maintain a modest chemical retaliatory
capability.

In light of the latest evidence, an
honest debate should be held to consider
whether or not an in-kind deterrent
provides the only reliable means of
dissuading first-use of chemical weapons
against American and allied forces.

Such a debate may well conclude that the
decision to liquidate the entire
U.S. chemical stockpile must be
revisited. The very fact that such a
debate is now in order, however, is a
further argument against a Chemical
Weapons Convention that would permanently
deny the U.S. a chemical retaliatory
deterrent.(1)

The Bottom Line

President Clinton’s stated
determination to resume the fight over
the CWC suggests that, if he is
reelected, this issue will be back before
the Senate next year. Against that
eventuality, the Senate would be
well-advised to get to the bottom of the
emerging story of offensive chemical
weapons use against U.S. forces in the
Gulf War — and the implications of that
story for the Chemical Weapons
Convention.
In the process, it
should determine whether a
deliberate effort has been made to
suppress information directly relevant to
an evaluation of the wisdom of this
accord, and hold fully accountable any
and all government officials deemed
responsible
.

– 30 –

1. For detailed
discussions of other arguments against
the CWC — including its unverifiability,
lack of global coverage, ineffectiveness
and unjustifiable costs to U.S.
businesses — see, for example, ‘Inquiry
Interruptus’: Will the Senate Get to the
Bottom of the Chemical Weapons
Convention’s Fatal Flaws?
( href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=94-P_83″>No. 94-P 83,
19 August 1994) and Center-Sponsored
Debate Helps to Illuminate the Chemical
Weapons Convention’s Fatal Flaws

(No. 96-P 77, 1
August 1996).


The missiles pointed at America

The Washington Times, September 24, 1996

“The democracies are in a greater danger than they have been at any time since Stanley Baldwin lied to the English people about the Luftwaffe and Hitler’s Germany.” House Speaker Newt Gingrich’s warning last week in a speech before the Center for Security
Policy was a rare public comment on the gravity of post-Cold War threats that the Clinton administration is covering up.

The timid spirit of the British prime minister who preceded Neville Chamberlain now occupies the Oval Office. As he has fought to undermine even the most basic defenses against foreign nuclear missiles, President Clinton has told the American public scores of times that the Cold War nuclear threat is gone.

As proof, he cited a 1994 agreement with Russian President Boris Yeltsin in which each side would “de-target” their strategic missiles away from one another’s country, and re-target them harmlessly over the Pacific Ocean.

To Russia’s hard-line military leaders, the agreement is militarily meaningless. On Jan. 22, 1995, CBS broadcast a “60 Minutes” program from the war room of Colonel-General Igor Sergeyev, commander in chief of the Strategic Rocket Forces.

Gen. Sergeyev told host Ed Bradley that his missiles can be “retargeted and launched from this war room . . . most in a matter of minutes.”

Two days later, in his annual speech to the nation, Mr. Clinton claimed, “This is the first State of the Union address ever delivered since the beginning of the Cold War when not a single Russian missile is pointed at the children of America.”

The very next day, on Jan. 25, President Yeltsin received a chilling message: Russia’s early warning system detected a possible surprise attack from the United States. For the first time, the seldom-sober Yeltsin activated his nuclear “black box” to place his strategic forces on alert -a move toward re-targeting the warheads to American soil. “I immediately contacted the defense minister and the generals,” Mr. Yeltsin told Interfax, “and we kept track of that missile from beginning to end.”

The “surprise attack” was a Norwegian meteorological rocket. Oslo had informed the Russian foreign ministry in advance, but the notice never reached the defense ministry. ]

John B. Stewart, former Director of the Office of Foreign Intelligence at the Department of Energy, later cited an authority who described Moscow’s miscalculation as “coming closer to a Russian nuclear launch than at any previous time during the Cold War, including during the Cuban missile crisis.”

Mr. Clinton said nothing, and nobody challenged him.

Five weeks later, he assured the public in an address at the Nixon Center for Peace and Freedom that Moscow’s missile arsenal not only posed no threat, but was actually disappearing. “Both our countries are dismantling the weapons as fast as we can,” Mr. Clinton said. “And thanks to a far-reaching verification system, including on-site inspections which began in Russia and the United States today, each of us knows exactly what the other is doing.”

Yet he told the public nothing about Russia’s ongoing retrofitting of its massive Typhoon submarines so they could house the new SS-N-24/26 strategic nuclear missile. He gave no hint of the secret Sukhoi-T60S strategic bomber and air-launched cruise missiles under
development.

And he was silent about the new Topol-M intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) the military was then preparing for its first test launch.

Mr. Clinton pretended that these modernization programs didn’t exist. He repeatedly certified to Congress that Russia was doing nothing beyond its “legitimate” defense needs – even as he doled out hundreds of millions of dollars to help dismantle obsolete parts of the former Soviet nuclear arsenal that the Russians were doing away with anyway.

Addressing the Air Force Academy graduating class of 1995, Mr. Clinton claimed, “We are dramatically reducing the nuclear threat. For the first time since the dawn of the nuclear age, there are no Russian missiles pointed at the people of the United States.”

Two days before, Russian television broadcast the unveiling of the new MAZ-79-221, an eight-axle mobile launcher for the Topol-M ICBM, designed to be capable of launching a first strike against the United States.

The day after Mr. Clinton’s Air Force speech, the Russian newspaper Rossiyskaya Gazeta
published Atomic Energy Minister Viktor Mikhailov’s revelation that his shop was producing a next-generation nuclear warhead. On Sept. 5, the Military Space Forces announced the first successful test-launch of the Topol-M from Plesetsk.

The Topol-M would replace the old SS-18, slated to be dismantled with resources from the American taxpayer. Said the Military Space Forces spokesman, “Russia hopes to replace all its outdated missiles in the coming years.”

Then, on Oct. 4, the Strategic Rocket Forces began a massive nuclear exercise that included more test-launches of missiles designed to destroy the United States.

In the middle of this week-long operation, Mr. Clinton addressed a Freedom House conference (co-sponsored by the American Foreign Policy Council), declaring for the 55th time, “Russian nuclear missiles are no longer pointed at our citizens and there are no longer American missiles pointed at their citizens.” Clinton glanced at his audience and made eye contact with me. Then he went back to his TelePrompTer.

Russia’s doomsday drill continued for another four days without comment from the White House.

President Clinton has implied that not even the People’s Republic of China has missiles targeted at the United States, even though Beijing spurned his offer of a de-targeting agreement. In at least 23 of his statements surveyed, he contradicted his own military chiefs on this score. Visiting Des Moines, Iowa, last October, he proclaimed to a cheering
crowd, “there is not a single, solitary nuclear missile pointed at an American child tonight. Not one. Not one. Not a single one.”

That’s not what the Chinese Communists think. Early last January, after returning to Washington from talks in Beijing with senior Chinese leaders, former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense Chas. W. Freeman briefed National Security Adviser Anthony Lake about an ominous development.

According to the New York Times, Mr. Freeman informed Mr. Lake that a Chinese official told him that Beijing could attack Taiwan without fear of U.S. intervention because American
leaders “care more about Los Angeles than they do about Taiwan.” According to the report, Mr. Freeman described the statement “as an indirect threat by China to use nuclear weapons against the United States.”

A week after the report appeared, Mr. Clinton visited students, parents and teachers in Concord, New Hampshire. Yet he was as unequivocal as ever, assuring the audience, “there is not a single nuclear missile pointed at an American city, an American family, an American child. That is not being done any more.”

He repeated the line again in Washington, in Iowa City and again in Des Moines, in New York City and twice again in New Hampshire, in New Orleans and Coral Gables. Few Americans challenged him.

But the former Soviet officer now in charge of Russia’s strategic missile-firing submarines did.

Rear Adm. Viktor Vasilyevich Patrushev, chief of the Operations Directorate of the Russian
Navy General Staff, said in the May 15 issue of Ogonek magazine, “Yes, the presidents of the United States and Russia have signed the document according to which our missiles are not targeted at each other’s countries any more.” But it was just a public relations gimmick: “I know that the missiles can be re-targeted in an hour even without returning [our submarines] to their bases.”

Yet the feel-good defense strategy of Bill Clinton and his Senate allies wouldn’t let Adm. Patrushev’s facts get in their way. Two weeks after the article appeared, Senate Democrats filibustered to kill a final Senate initiative of presidential candidate Bob Dole instructing the Pentagon to deploy a system to defend the American people from foreign missile attack. The filibusterers succeeded.

Two days later, Moscow announced it had conducted its 26th ICBM test since 1991, and that all six dummy warheads had hit their targets. Then, on June 28 in the Sea of Okhotsk just north of Japan, came the largest and most expensive submarine-launched ballistic missile test in Russian naval history. Three Delta-class subs fired multiple missiles westward across the Eurasian landmass and into the Barents Sea northeast of Norway.

It was no simple readiness drill or simulation against China; had the missiles flown eastward, they would have struck the American heartland.

But Mr. Clinton continued as if nothing had happened – in speeches to a Democratic Party gala in San Francisco, at the Armand Hammer Museum of Art in Santa Monica and in his Chicago speech accepting his party’s nomination for re-election as president of the United
States – for a total of at least 84 claims that Americans were safe from missile attack.

This week, the Senate is scheduled to hold two hearings on defense against ballistic missiles. Perhaps they will shed further light on the dangers of which Mr. Gingrich warned – and the comparison between Bill Clinton and the pathetic Stanley Baldwin.

J. Michael Waller is author of “Secret Empire: The KGB In Russia Today” (Westview Press, 1994).

WHAT ‘REAGAN DEMOCRATS’ REALLY CARE ABOUT: SAFEGUARDING AMERICA’S INTERESTS IN A DANGEROUS WORLD

(Washington, D.C.): Amid mounting
evidence that Bill Clinton has made a
first-class hash-up of U.S. security
policy, his Republican challenger has yet
to capitalize on this evident
vulnerability. By so doing, Mr. Dole
risks repeating an error that contributed
to George Bush’s defeat four years ago.
Worse yet, he is denying the
Nation an urgently needed opportunity for
stock-taking and course-correction in
areas certain adversely to affect vital
national interests in the years — and
possibly even the weeks and months —
ahead.

It’s Not Just the Economy,
Stupid

In 1992, President Bush’s handlers
persuaded him that foreign and defense
policy were not politically potent
issues. Instead, Mr. Bush found himself
waging the campaign almost entirely on
his opponent’s terms — notably the
Clinton campaign’s contention that
“It’s the economy, stupid.” To
the extent that security policy questions
featured at all, Governor Clinton
shrewdly portrayed his positions as being
to the right of the Bush
Administration, notably with respect to
its “coddling” of dictators
from China to Iraq to Yugoslavia. Only
after the election did the insincerity of
those Clinton stances become apparent.

Today, Senator Dole is clearly trying
to stay “on message” with
respect to tax-cuts and the war on drugs.
In the process, however, he is not
adequately making the case that in an
increasingly dangerous world, he would be
a more competent guardian of U.S.
national interests — to say nothing of
Commander-in-Chief — than the incumbent.
As a result, the myriad problems
besetting American security policy are
going largely unremarked and the
alternative approaches that Mr. Dole
would adopt as President are not being
laid fully before the public.

Ticking Time Bombs

Consider three ticking time-bombs that
the Clinton Administration has put
squarely in the laps of the U.S. armed
forces but would prefer not to discuss
this fall:

  • Iraq: The
    Clinton Administration’s inept
    handling of Saddam Hussein’s
    latest aggressive behavior
    invites more of the same — if
    not before the United
    States’ November election, then
    surely afterwards. The American
    people should be offered a clear
    alternative to the present policy
    of muddling along with symbolic,
    if expensive, U.S. responses to
    Iraqi actions that are
    symptomatic in nature and certainly
    not the cause
    of the problem
    there. Specifically, a strategy
    must be enunciated that would
    have as its aim the destruction
    of the police-state apparatus
    that keeps Saddam Hussein’s
    brutal dictatorship in power.
  • Bosnia: This
    weekend’s elections in Bosnia
    were neither free nor fair. Their
    principal effect seems to have
    been to legitimate and empower
    three of the most xenophobic
    leaders of the Muslim, Serb and
    Croat factions. The unworkability
    of the co-presidency arrangement
    is giving rise to a not-so-secret
    Clinton plan to extend the U.S.
    troop deployment in Bosnia well
    beyond its promised end-point of
    1996.
  • In fact, such an outcome was
    inevitable given the profound
    defects of the Dayton Peace
    Accord, notably its failure to
    bring to justice those like
    Serbian dictator Slobodan
    Milosevic who were responsible
    for initiating the conflict and
    who profited most from its
    genocidal “ethnic
    cleansing.” President
    Clinton needs to be held
    accountable for the part he has
    played in this tragedy and for
    the costs that will be incurred
    when, inevitably, those who have
    gone unpunished and/or those who
    seek revenge will cause the
    region to explode in a renewed
    spasm of violence.

  • Haiti: The
    tenuous nature of the democracy
    installed in Haiti two years ago
    by thousands of American
    “peacekeepers” is
    evident in the fact that U.S.
    troops have now been returned to
    Port au Prince to serve as a
    Praetorian Guard for the recently
    elected president. While this
    action may have served
    temporarily to keep a lid on the
    festering Haitian crisis, it must
    not be confused with the creation
    of a viable and durable
    democracy. The American people
    deserve the truth about not only
    the billions that have been spent
    to postpone the day of reckoning
    in Haiti but what will be the
    U.S. response when it comes.

Meanwhile, the United States faces
emerging challenges from Russia to Iran,
from North Africa to North Korea, from
China to Cuba — challenges that may well
jeopardize important American equities.
Similarly, it refuses to reckon with the
need for effective, near-term
anti-missile defenses in light of the
global proliferation of ballistic
missile-borne weapons of mass
destruction. The Clinton
Administration has seriously
under-invested in the military resources
that may be required to meet these
potential problems, let alone deal
with them
in addition to those that
are already in evidence.

The Clinton Response? Cut
Defense

In fact, Leon Panetta, the
White House Chief of Staff, is demanding
that Congress reduce the FY1997 Defense
appropriations bill by some $2.5 billion
if it is to enjoy Mr. Clinton’s support.

While it is not clear at the moment just
where the Administration would like the
legislative branch to make such cuts,
chances are that it will have to come out
of discretionary funding added by the
Congress to rectify identified shortfalls
in the Pentagon’s readiness, research and
development and procurement accounts. The
upshot will be to exacerbate present
deficiencies that affect the fighting
trim and morale of today’s forces and to
degrade the ability of tomorrow’s forces
to perform their missions safely and
effectively.

The Bottom Line

The Clinton Administration has set the
United States up for a series of falls
around the world. That reality is a
legitimate subject for debate and
national decision-making at the polls
this November. In order for it to be so,
however, the Republican nominee
will have to engage Mr. Clinton on these
subjects frontally, repeatedly and
forthwith
.
While Mr. Dole’s
call today for a national missile defense
capability and the critique of what
passes for a U.S. Iraq policy offered
last week by his running mate, Jack Kemp,
are welcome, they are no
substitute for making security policy a
major campaign focus
.
Not
least, Mr. Dole should be heard from on
the question of President Clinton’s
latest bid to reduce military spending
even as his Administration is busily
committing the U.S. armed forces to
various expensive and often dangerous
missions around the world.

As a non-partisan organization, the
Center for Security Policy believes that
it is imperative that security policy be
given the prominence in this election
cycle that it deserves. To the extent
that swing voters President Clinton has
identified as “Reagan
Democrats” continue to recognize
peace requires American strength, the
candidates’ respective records and
positions in this area may even prove to
be determinative of the outcome.

– 30 –


Made in China

by Frank Gaffney Jr.
The Washington Times, July 23, 1996

At this writing, the precise cause of the
destruction of TWA Flight 800 remains frustratingly
elusive.

Among the possible explanations that has yet to be
conclusively ruled out is an alarming hypothesis: The 747
could have been shot down by a surface-to-air missile
(SAM) as it climbed to cruising altitude after take-off
from New York’s JFK Airport.

Based upon what is now known about the fate of this
flight, the SAM scenario seems an unlikely one. The sorts
of man-portable surface-to-air missiles that could
conceivably have been fired from a small boat (for
example, the U.S.-made Stinger or the Soviet SAM-7) would
have had a hard time causing severe damage to a large
aircraft at 13,000 feet with wing-mounted engines and an
admirable record of operating with one or two engines out
of commission. Still, several eye-witnesses describe
seeing arcs of light and an initial explosion that was
followed by the massive fireball — evidence that could
fit a surface-to-air missile hypothesis.

Whether a SAM proves to have been involved in this
episode or not, the mere fact it might have been is a
cause for alarm to every air traveler. No amount of
airport identity checks, sophisticated screening devices
or access controls will prevent terrible losses of life
if terrorists acquire the means to shoot down commercial
airplanes at will.

Incredibly, communist China is evidently prepared to
make such a nightmare a reality. On May 23, federal
authorities announced they had broken up a Chinese
smuggling ring that had sold thousands of lethal, fully
automatic AK-47 machine guns to West Coast street gangs.
In the course of an undercover sting operation, however,
U.S. agents were offered — among other formidable
ordinance — shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles.

That revelation is made even more alarming by the
reported involvement of senior Chinese government
officials in this extremely unfriendly act. One of these,
Maj. Gen. He Ping, is the son-in-law of China’s fading
leader, Deng Xiao-ping. He heads Poly Group, a company
that reports directly to the Central Military Commission
of the People’s Liberation Army. But for what appears to
have been a deliberate effort to sabotage the
investigation, Customs and the ATF believe they would
have been able to arrest Gen. He on U.S. soil and make
him a material witness in their case against the Chinese
smugglers. A formal investigation of the Treasury,
Justice and State Departments has reportedly been
launched in the hope of determining who in the Clinton
administration might have blown this critical sting
operation.

Unfortunately, the sale of surface-to-air missiles to
gangs, drug lords, terrorists or other comers is hardly
the only cause for concern about the Chinese communists.
In the recent past, they have also been caught selling
ring magnets — a key ingredient in the enrichment of
uranium for nuclear weapons purposes — to Pakistan, an
action that even the appeasement-minded Undersecretary of
State Lynn Davis has acknowledged is a violation of the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. In addition, Pakistan
has received Chinese-made M-11 ballistic missiles, now
believed to be operational and capable of delivering
nuclear warheads against India.

What is more, Beijing has been doing a lot of
proliferating with Islamic revolutionary Iran. According
to press reports, this includes the transfer of a
complete poison gas facility and an array of missile
technology. The latter involves not only advanced
ballistic missiles. It also entails the transfer of large
numbers of C-802 cruise missiles. These modern devices
are believed to be powered by U.S.-designed turbofan
engines. If salvo-launched from the fleet of fast patrol
boats also being sold to Iran by China, these C-802s have
the potential to inflict grave harm on international
shipping in the Persian Gulf and/or on U.S. naval vessels
operating there. Such a possibility is of sufficient
concern to the on-the-scene commander, Vice Adm. Scott
Redd, that he has courageously held no fewer than three
press conferences to warn about the danger posed by
Iran’s Chinese missiles.

The Clinton administration has essentially chosen to
ignore these ominous developments. It is, ironically,
even ignoring the requirements of the Gore-McCain act –
legislation co-sponsored by then-Sen. Al Gore before he
became vice president. It requires sanctions against
countries providing missile technology to the likes of
Iran and Iraq.

To be sure, President Clinton has recently threatened
sanctions against China, but only to defend the
intellectual property rights of his friends in Hollywood
and Silicon Valley. Never mind the rights of all other
Americans to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness –
rights that could be, to say the least, severely
compromised if they are murdered by one form of
Chinese-supplied malevolence or another. If protecting
those rights might interfere with trade relations,
though, it is pretty clear that, in the interest of
promoting the latter, the administration will confine
itself with respect to the former to rhetorical
hand-wringing and what Richard Perle calls diplomatic
“demarchemellows.”

The Clinton administration’s shameful, shortsighted
and increasingly dangerous policy toward China offers
Republican nominee Bob Dole one of his few opportunities
to differentiate his platform from that of the incumbent.
Interestingly, in July 1988, then-Senate Minority Leader
Dole helped fashion a denunciation of China’s missile
proliferation policy that was adopted by unanimously by
his colleagues. An equal show of determination now with
respect to the sale of Chinese missiles and related
technology that could be used to attack U.S. allies, the
15,000 naval and other personnel in the Persian Gulf and
perhaps even American airliners would offer a concrete
example of what is wrong with Bill Clinton’s foreign
policy — and what could be right about a Dole
presidency’s management of this critical portfolio.

‘YOU CAN FOOL SOME OF THE PEOPLE SOME OF THE TIME…’

(Washington, D.C.): A stunning insight into the Clinton
Administration’s foreign policy (as well as its more general modus
operandi
) was provided yesterday following Vice President Al
Gore’s meeting with Russian President Boris Yeltsin in a
sanitorium near Moscow. This session took place after Mr. Yeltsin
canceled at the eleventh hour a long-scheduled appointment in the
Kremlin — claiming that he had hastily decided to take a
two-week vacation.

The Gore-Yeltsin meeting was anxiously awaited because it
offered the first occasion for Western observers to lay eyes on
the Russian President in person since he mysteriously dropped
from public view on 26 June midstream in a hotly contested
election campaign. The fact that it was scrubbed at the very last
minute was nearly universally interpreted as evidence that
Yeltsin’s health crisis is serious, if not intensifying.

The pool reporter covering the Gore visit to Mr. Yeltsin’s
sanitarium, Reuters White House correspondent Laurence McQiullan,
described the event this way:

The scene was shocking for
someone who had seen the Russian leader at the Kremlin in
April during a visit by President Clinton. Then Boris
Yeltsin was full of vigor, confidently joking and showing
no sign of physical limitation. This time, his
face was pale, he had lost a considerable amount of
weight and he had a hard time walking.

(Emphasis added.)

McQiullan’s account of Mr. Yeltsin’s wooden, tenuous condition
was powerfully confirmed by the edited television footage of the
Yeltsin-Gore handshake and seated conversation.

After the meeting, however, Vice President Gore gave
an astoundingly different assessment of Mr. Yeltsin’s well-being.
He announced: “To me, he looks good. On every
score, President Yeltsin was actively engaged and seemed in very
good shape
to me.”

Lifeless Al Gore, Meet Lifeless Boris Yeltsin

Now there are two possible explanations for Mr. Gore’s view
that Mr. Yeltsin is the picture of health. One is that Mr.
Gore’s own wooden demeanor makes him a poor judge of others’
vital signs.

A second and, unfortunately, more plausible explanation for
Mr. Gore’s Magoo-like characterization of Mr. Yeltsin’s physical
condition is that the Vice President fully understands
the dire implications for the Clinton Administration’s Russia
policy if Mr. Yeltsin is understood to be incapacitated
.
After all, Messrs. Clinton, Gore and Talbott, among others, have
gone to great lengths to make U.S. relations with the Kremlin
conform to a cult of personality built around Boris Yeltsin. His
disappearance from the scene would not only set the stage for
instability and possibly momentous changes in Russia. It would
also leave Washington’s Russia policy adrift.

‘Seeing No Evil’ in Belgrade

Yet another example of the Clinton Administration’s propensity
to ignore inconvenient facts is in evidence as Ambassador Richard
Holbrooke — called back from Wall Street retirement to try to
salvage his misbegotten Dayton Peace accords — paid court today
to Serbian despot Slobodan Milosevic.

According to today’s Washington Post, “Holbrooke’s
main task will be to attempt to orchestrate the final removal
from power of [Bosnian Serb leader Radovan] Karadzic — twice
indicted by the court in the Hague on charges of genocide and
crimes against humanity.” The international community has
suddenly become seized with the need to oust Karadzic, lest he
disrupt already problematic elections scheduled for September.

Hence Amb. Holbrooke’s recall and his pilgrimage to Belgrade:
Slobodan Milosevic is seen as the man who will deliver the head
of Radovan Karadzic. By treating with the Butcher of
Belgrade once more, the Clinton Administration believes, it can
get the Serbs to serve up a man neither NATO nor the OSCE nor the
UN nor the Clinton Administration are willing to take by force.

This latest diplomatic mission adds further ignominy to the
Dayton process, which already stands as one of the most
opprobrious acts of appeasement since Chamberlain’s deal with
Hitler at Munich. Milosevic is indisputably the architect of the
Bosnia conflict; he was the prime mover behind the ethnic
cleansing and other acts of genocide; and he is the ultimate
Balkan war criminal. To be sure, as the Wall Street Journal
editorialized today, he generally used cut-outs like Zeljko
Raznatovic (whose nom de guerre is “Arkan”) or
General Ratko Mladic or Karadzic to maintain “plausible
deniability.” But, as the Journal noted, the bottom
line is inescapable:

“…Karadzic and Mladic have boasted about how
their forces were supported politically, financially and
militarily by Mr. Milosevic. Indeed, by no other
means could they have become more powerful and effective.

[Milosevic] also controls the Yugoslav Army, itself
directly implicated in the Bosnian war. And he continues
to protect the likes of Arkan, who is apparently immune
because his indictment would immediately implicate
Belgrade and Milosevic.

“Having granted Mr. Milosevic rights to most of
what he won so brutally, the Clinton Administration is
now proposing to give him the appearance of democratic
legitimacy by pressing through the ersatz election in
Bosnia envisioned in the Dayton agreement. Then U.S.
troops will be withdrawn. There is one man who can
guarantee the whole house of cards won’t collapse before
November, and he sits in Belgrade. That’s why
Slobodan Milosevic and his Himmler are safely out of the
reach of prosecutors
.” (Emphasis added.)

The Bottom Line

Abraham Lincoln once wryly observed that while “You can
fool some of the people some of the time, and even all of the
people some of the time, but you can’t fool all the people all of
the time.” President Clinton — and his subordinates — may
hope that they can fool all of the American people for the next
four months by pretending that the Administration’s Russia
policy, its Balkan peace policy and most of its other
international initiatives are sound and progressing
satisfactorily.

Let’s be clear: Pretending that all is well with Boris Yeltsin
or that neutralizing Radovan Karadzic will save the Dayton
accords may or may not get Bill Clinton through the November
election. But no one should be under any illusion. This
foolishness risks causing grave and lasting harm to U.S.
interests. And this country’s voters are not likely long to
suffer those who tried to fool — and make fools of — the
American people.

– 30 –

Prepared Testimony of Sven F. KraemerFormer Director of Arms Control, National Security Council Staff 1981-1987, Before the House Committee on International Relations

Global Proliferation Threats, China and MFN

Mr. Chairman, distinguished members of the International Relations Committee of the House of
Representatives, the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction is a mounting strategic threat to
the United States. The chief sources of that threat are not only the handful of infamous rogue
regimes. The threat also comes from officials in Russia and China who are their chief suppliers
and who are selling dangerous weapons and technologies to others hostile to America.

Most tragically and unnecessarily, the global proliferation threat is compounded by the illusions,
cover-ups and weaknesses of Clinton administration defense and foreign policies which are
heading America and her key allies for the bull’s eye of disaster.

I hope that today’s hearing can help make a difference in preventing future proliferation Pearl
Harbors. I hope your Congressional colleagues will support policies commensurate with the
threats. It is necessary to describe threats realistically, to use the instruments of American
leverage, to stem the flows of advanced dual-purpose technologies that are the wild card of
proliferation, to give teeth to sanctions against violators, and to have military means and deployed
defenses available in case sanctions and arms agreements fail. Otherwise you have no chance to
“provide for the common defense” or assure “the blessings of liberty.”

I understand that today’s heating is focused principally on a senior representative of the Clinton
administration. As only a few minutes of testimony will be available for critics of the
administration’s policies, I have prepared a more extended statement for our review. I hope your
Committee to hold detailed hearings on these issues. I urge that Congress to establish a “Team B”
group of experts to conduct an independent analysis and to report its findings and
recommendations.

I would welcome an opportunity to testify in the future and to participate in new assessment
efforts. I worked on such issues in the U.S. government for twenty-five years beginning with the
Kennedy administration and including with four presidents and ten National Security Advisors’ in
the White House. I recently completed comprehensive analyses of the threats and alternative
responses. My prepared statement covers two interrelated subjects: Part I Proliferation Threats
(pp. 1-12) and Part II- China, MFN and Security (pp. 12-24).

The Globe at Risk

The Clinton administration is grossly failing to deal with threatening global realities in its defense
and arms control policies. The administration is in denial, colors its official threat estimates and
rejects both vigorous enforcement and advanced active defense programs in countering
proliferation threats. The administration is wedded to cornerstone myths about a benign new
world order, about its ability to deal with dictators as if they were democrats, about inevitably
benign strategic partnerships with Russia and China, and about the efficacy of multilateral
agreements and international “norms,” although these paper regimes lack effective verification and
effective sanctions and tend to disarm America rather than rogues. Instead of working at home
and abroad to block high-tech flows to rogue states and those who supply them, the flow of
enabling technologies for advanced weapons continues virtually unchecked as the Clinton
administration too often puts the seeks short-term commercial gains over security and
appeasement over enforcement. At the same time U.S. military forces and production as well as
research and development levels have been drastically cut even as much of the world is arming.

The strategic reality is that notwithstanding unprecedented hopes and opportunities for a peaceful
post-Cold War era, the world remains very dangerous. An unstable and undemocratic Russia and
China and a number of rogue states proliferate weapons and violate agreements and are generally
rewarded rather than sanctioned by the United States. Missile deterrence has broken down in at
least seven recent conflicts in the Middle East, South Asia and East Asia and missiles can now
readily reach U.S. forces and allies in numerous hotspots overseas. Sea-borne threats can
devastate America’s coastal cities with any of the thousands of shorter-range missiles which are
available throughout the world today. Militant ideologies and international criminality are
increasing. The proliferation of new information technologies and new information warfare threats
can rapidly increase others long-range power, potentially devastating key nodes of America’s
commercial and defense infrastructures. America faces new forms of attack by rogues undeterred
either by arms control agreements or by classic notions of deterrence.

In a MAD Maginot Line stance that will inevitably prove costly in American lives and treasure,
the administration remains wedded to the doctrine of Mutual Assured Doctrine (MAD) and the
Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty incorporating that doctrine while it condones much arms
control cheating and major arms buildups in Russia and China. It supports the broken ABM treaty
even as it vigorously opposes the accelerated deployment of robust national anti-missile defenses
required to “provide for the common defense” of the American people, their key allies and their
vital interests. One result, as stated starkly by Secretary of Defense William Perry in testimony to
the House National Security Committee in March 1996: “We have no capability to shoot down
any ballistic missiles fired at the United States.” Absent such an insurance safeguard, America
doesn’t have any counter-proliferation policy either.

I. PROLIFERATION THREAT
ASSESSMENTS — TRUE AND FALSE

There has been a major flap recently about the Clinton administration’s cockeyed intelligence
estimates on proliferation threats and the President’s use of those estimates in vetoing national
missile defense deployment programs. The President and his team have downplayed proliferation
dangers from China, Russia and various rogue states and have invariably trumpeted “successes.”
But on two rare occasions President Clinton did appear aware of the real world dangers his
administration’s illusory proliferation and defense policies all too often deny. On November 9,
1995, following the wording of a similar directive issued a year earlier (November 14, 1994) he
issued an Executive Order in which he declared:

“I, William J. Clinton, President of the United States of America, find that the proliferation of
nuclear, biological and chemical weapons (“weapons of mass destruction”) and of the means of
delivering such weapons, continues to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national
security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States, and hereby, declare a national
emergency to deal with that threat.” (Emphasis added.)

If taken literally, and seriously, the 1995 and 1994 Executive Orders acknowledge grave current
strategic threats to the United States from the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and
the means of delivering them.

These threats should be matched by requisite policies and programs, to fulfill the Constitutional
imperative “to provide for the common defense.” On the contrary, however, the administration’s
proliferation and arms control policies have increasingly been policies of illusion, denial, cover-up,
and high-risk gambles.

Considerable insight into the realism or falsity of current Clinton administration proliferation
estimates — and current lack of credibility — can be gained from comparing them to other official
estimates.

Bush Administration

Before Bill Clinton took office, Bush administration officials hopeful about a benign new world
order that was to emerge from the collapse of the Iron Curtain and the Soviet Union, nevertheless
became increasingly concerned about the global proliferation threat. They understood the threat
not only with regard to Iraq, against which they prosecuted the Gulf War and in which they found
missile and weapons capabilities far more advanced than previously declared by international arms
inspectors or anticipated by U.S. intelligence. They also saw the threat as deriving from other
rogue states and from other rogues, including potentially some in the dismembered Soviet Union,
with its instabilities and its uncertain weapons controls.

The Bush administration’s official proliferation estimate presented one year before Bill Clinton
took office foresaw a major threat within the decade of the nineties. As presented by Secretary of
Defense Dick Cheney in his 1992 annual report to the President and the Congress:

“By the end of this decade as many as nine developing countries could have nuclear weapons, up
to thirty could have chemical weapons, ten could posses a biological weapons capability and up to
twenty or more could acquire missiles through overt or covert means.” (Emphasis added.)

In response to this threat and to the “loose nukes” problems of unauthorized or accidental
launches in the states of the former Soviet Union, the Bush administration had proposed initiatives
which included development of new post-Cold War technology controls, new counterproliferation
efforts (both organizational and programmatic) and deployment, by 1996, of an antimissile Global
Protection System Against Limited Attack (GPALS).

Russia — 1991-1992

During this same
period the clear and present proliferation threat also came to be recognized in Russia and
provided a basis for moving ahead on the anti-missile defenses now opposed by Clinton officials
and Yeltsin’s hardliners. An example of expressed Russian concern occurred during the last days
of the Soviet Union, at an October 1991 conference of U.S. and Soviet experts. There, Lt.
General Viktor Samaylov a senior representative of the office of Russian State Counselor on
Defense, declared:

“We realistically appraise that by the year 2000, about 15-20 or more governments and states will
have their own ballistic rockets and launchers. Half of these governments will have missiles with
more than a 5,000, or up to a 5000mile range. I think this is a very serious source of threats…in
the future. Therefore, an integration of joint efforts towards an ABM agreement is both full of
promise and full of interests for us.” (Emphasis added.)

In another example during the initial days
of the new Russia, Marshall Yevgeniy Shaposhnikov, Commander of the Joint Armed Forces of
the Commonwealth of Independent States declared in February 1992:

“The thing is that we have nonetheless reached the point where roughly a dozen more countries
could shortly join the nuclear club. We will have less and less reliable insurance against breaches
in the rules of storage and protection and unsanctioned use of nuclear weapons in various regions.
All this convinces us that it is time to think about a global defense system.” (Emphasis added.)

Similar themes were expressed by President Boris Yeltsin in his January 1992 address to the
United Nations and at his summit meeting with President Bill Clinton in June 1992.

Early Clinton
Administration Warnings — 1993

In the opening days of the Clinton administration, before the
new Clinton orthodoxy was to impose severe policy constraints on objective intelligence
assessments, two senior U.S. Central Intelligence officials provided testimony in close agreement
with the proliferation assessments of the Bush administration.

In February 1993, Clinton’s new Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, R. James Woolsey,
summarized the threat as follows in testimony to the U.S. Senate:

“More than 25 countries, many
of them hostile to the United States and our allies, may have or may be developing nuclear,
biological and chemical weapons — so called weapons of mass destruction — and the means to
deliver them. Aside from the five declared nuclear powers, numerous countries have, or are
pursuing nuclear weapons capabilities. Iraq and Iran, for example, have the basic technology to
eventually develop such weapons.

“More than two dozen countries have programs to research or
develop chemical weapons, and a number have stockpiled such weapons, include Libya, Iran, and
Iraq. The military competition in the always volatile Middle East has spurred others in the region
to pursue chemical weapons. We have also noted a disturbing pattern of biological weapons
development following closely on the heels of the development of chemical weapons.

“More than a dozen countries have operational ballistic missiles, and more have programs in place
to develop them. North Korea has sold Syria and Iran extended range Scud C’s, and has
apparently agreed to sell missiles to Libya. Russia and Ukraine are showing a growing willingness
to sell missile technology prohibited by the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR). Egypt
and Israel are developing and producing missiles, and several Persian Gulf states have purchased
whole systems as well as production technology from China and North Korea. Some have
equipped these missiles with weapons of mass destruction, and others are striving to do so.”

In his testimony Woolsey also touched on massive control problems in Russia, where, he said:
“many agencies involved in controlling exports are also responsible for promoting military
exports, creating obvious concerns…(and where) the lure of large, illegal profits means that the
risk of such transfers will grow.”

No doubt understanding that his realistic assessments would prove unwelcome in the Clinton
administration bent on denying global threats and on cutting deep into the marrow of U.S. defense
capabilities, Woolsey testified: “I have painted a rather bleak picture, but accuracy and candor
require bleakness. And unless we reverse the current trends, the future could come to be even
more dangerous than these descriptions of current reality.” Within days of Woolsey’s testimony,
Lawrence Gershwin, the Central Intelligence Agency’s senior analyst for strategic forces, provided
additional perspective which further confirmed the extreme seriousness of the proliferation threats
facing the United States and the Clinton administration. In a prepared statement first presented at
a Washington D.C. forum in March 1993, and presented in Congressional testimony and to allies
in essentially the same form during the next several months, Gershwin provided sober threat
estimates on the strategic/ICBMs from proliferation. First he noted the current intercontinental
threats from space-launch vehicles which could serve as intercontinental ballistic missiles
(ICBMs); second, he predicted indigenous development of ICBMs in as few as eight years; and,
third he foresaw substantial ICBM infrastructure capabilities within the next decade.

According to Gershwin’s early 1993 testimony:

  • For space-launch vehicles: “Presently, India, Israel, and Japan have developed space-launch
    vehicles that, if convened to surface-to-surface missiles, are capable of reaching targets in the
    United States. Brazil has a space launch vehicle under development that is expected to be test
    launched within the next five years.”
  • For indigenously developed Intercontinental Ballistic
    Missiles (ICBMs): “After the United States House of Representatives turn of the century…some
    nations that are hostile to the United States may be able to indigenously develop ballistic missiles
    that could threaten the United States. We really cannot give you a precise date — it could be eight,
    ten, or fifteen years from now — when these ICBMs could be deployed.”
  • For the next decade: “Over the next ten years, we are likely to see several Third World nations
    establish the infrastructure and develop the technical knowledge required to undertake ICBM and
    space launch vehicle development.” (Emphases added throughout.)

Like Woolsey, Gershwin pointed to Russia and China as proliferators and especially to Iraq, Iran,
Syria, Libya and North Korea as hostile nations gaining very dangerous capabilities. Russia, for
example, had recently “advertised a derivative of the old SS-23 ballistic missile for sale as a
civilian rocket” and with North Korea, there was “the real possibility that it has already
manufactured enough missile material for at least one nuclear weapon.” Like Woolsey in this and
other testimony, Gershwin noted that indigenous developments could be speeded up through
shortcuts such as acquisition from other countries.

But above all, Gershwin pointed to the historically new dimension of global proliferation problems
by comparing the regional proliferation threat, existing even as he spoke, i.e., as Bill Clinton was
entering office, to the strategic threat facing the United States in 1960 — the period of the Cold
War, around the time of the Cuban Missile crisis. Gershwin noted that: “The potential capabilities
of some of these countries are comparable to, and in some cases, more lethal than the Soviet
threat in 1960. With leaders like Quaddhafi and Saddam Husayn, and in many cases weak,
unstable, or illegitimate governments, our classic notions of deterrence hold much less promise of
assuring US and Western security.” (Emphasis added.)

Clinton Administration from 1994 to Mid-1995

During 1994 and early 1995, with Woolsey still at the CIA, statements by key Clinton
administration officials continued to confirm that the proliferation situation was very serious and
involved missiles numbering in the thousands. In 1994, when John Deutch was still the Deputy
Secretary of Defense, he reported that: a ballistic missile threat to U.S. territory could emerge by
the end of the decade. In March 1995, the theater threat was described in near strategic global
terms by Lt. General Malcolm O’Neill, the then Director of the Pentagon’s Ballistic Missile
Defense Office, as follows:

“The (Theater Missile Defense) TMD threat I think is here. I think we can all agree that beyond
the thousand or so that are pointed at Israel, there are probably another three or four thousand
that are pointed at other people in the world, being held for use by potential adversaries, some of
whom are not so deterrable as was shown when Saddam Hussein used the SCUDS against Saudi
Arabia and Israel.”

In March 1995, at the Central Intelligence Agency, a new Proliferation Center established by
Director Woolsey released a detailed unclassified study of the proliferation threat. This report
found a growing threat in its survey of ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and chemical, biological,
nuclear and advanced conventional weapons. In addition to reporting 31 incidents involving
nuclear materials (for the period June to December 1994), the CIA report found that:

“At least 20 countries–nearly half of them in the Middle East and South Asia-already have or may
be developing weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and ballistic missile delivery systems. Five
countries–North Korea, Iran, Iraq, Libya and Syria–…pose the greatest threat because of the
aggressive nature of their WMD programs. All five already have or are developing ballistic
missiles that could threaten US interests…. Worsening economic conditions and the lure of
lucrative foreign sales will encourage other states or firms to engage in WMD-related technology
transfers…(and) an even more troubling issue–the potential for smuggling nuclear weapons or
nuclear-related material from the former Soviet Union–has contributed to the growing
proliferation problem.”


Regrettably, the earlier realism, professionalism and candor disappeared
with the resignation of Woolsey from the CIA. All three of the realistic strategic factors cited by
Gershwin, as well as his historical understanding that current threats could be considered
dangerous strategically, as during the Cold War were subsequently considered taboo. No doubt
that would have called for tougher anti-proliferation policies, for arms control agreements with
mandatory inspections and mandatory sanctions and for accelerated deployment of theater and
strategic anti-missile defenses. As political correctness came to dominate, all such warnings came
to be denied while the arms control and anti-missile policies became even weaker.

The Tainted National Intelligence Estimate of December 1995

The Clinton administration stalled
on new proliferation assessments throughout 1995 as it vigorously opposed Congressional efforts
to provide the national defense insurance policy of effective national anti-missile defenses,
particularly in the Contract with America and by increasing evidence of public concern about the
absence of such defenses in a volatile world. At the same time, Representative Curt Weldon and
others in the Congress pressured the administration for an updated National Intelligence Estimate on the
proliferation threat, only to encounter a stall and to be told during the year that it would be
available in May, in June in July in September, etc. Members of Congress were astonished to hear
about a new NIE and a new bottom line when the NIE was cited in a December 1, 1995 letter to
Senators opposed to efforts to assure deployment of effective anti-missile defenses as rapidly as
possible. As reported by Representative Floyd Spence, the Chairman of the House National
Security Committee at a February 1996 hearing of the Committee: “…a recently completed
National Intelligence Estimate (NIE), prepared by the intelligence community, concludes that the
threat to the United States posed by long-range ballistic missiles is lower than previously believed.”

A letter by the CIA’s Director of Congressional Affairs to Senators Bumpers and Levin, written
on behalf of the Director of Central Intelligence (DCI), John Deutch, asserts that the previous
intelligence community estimate of the missile threat to the United States as reflected in the
language of H.R. 1530 (the FY 1996 Defense Act passed by the House and the Senate),
‘overstates what we currently believe to be the future threat.’ The letter states that it is ‘extremely
unlikely’ any nation with intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) would be willing to sell them;
declares that the U.S. early warning capability is ‘sufficient to provide notice many years in
advance of indigenous development”; and judges the prospect of an operational North Korean
ICBM within the next five years to be ‘very low.'”

It was soon made clear to members of Congress, and reported in official unclassified testimony by
Richard Cooper, the Chairman of the National Intelligence Council, that the new NIE was at
odds with prior official estimates:

“First, the Intelligence Community judges that in the next 15 years no country other than the
major declared nuclear powers will (indigenously) develop a ballistic missile that could threaten
the contiguous 48 states or Canada. Second …. North Korea is unlikely, in the next 15 years, to
obtain the technological capability to develop and deploy a longer-range ICBM capable of
reaching the contiguous 48 states.”

President Clinton cited this unreal, doctored estimate as he vetoed the Defense Bill passed by the
Congress.

The NIE’s Dangerous Assumptions

The dangerous, and ridiculous, lengths to which the Clinton administration has gone in its efforts
to disguise the proliferation threat — apparently so as to paint its counterproliferation and arms
control efforts as successes and to block U.S. strategic defense programs — are clear from the
NIE’s unclassified version as subsequently briefed to the Congress by senior CIA officials.
Testimony indicates that those who tasked the NIE simply excluded the most likely major threats
from the analysis and that the analysis was further compromised by far-fetched assumptions about
a benign global environment belied by the well-known realities previously set forth by the U.S.
government. The Clinton administration’s NIE, and the foundation of its counter-proliferation
and related arms control and missile defense policies are fatally flawed by:

  1. The exclusion of all
    “non-indigenous” threats, i.e. threats accelerated by the purchase or theft of weapons and delivery
    systems.
  2. The exclusion of threats to the “non-contiguous” states of the United States of America, i.e.
    Hawaii and Alaska, except from North Korea.
  3. The exclusion of threats from “major declared
    nuclear powers,” Russia and China, which have face “loose nukes” and proliferation problems.
  4. The false assumption that “No other potentially hostile country (other than North Korea) has
    the technical capability to develop an ICBM in the next 15 years.”
  5. The false assumption that while “any country with an indigenously developed space-launched
    vehicle (Iraq is one)…could develop an ICBM within five years…. a flight test is a sure detectable
    sign of a ballistic missile program….(and) we would almost certainly obtain earlier indicators of
    an ICBM program.”
  6. The admission that “foreign assistance can affect the pace of a missile
    program…(while claiming that) the Missile Technology Regime (MTCR) has significantly limited
    international transfers, (although) leakage…will likely continue.”
  7. The false assumption, belied, inter alia, by Russian and Ukrainian sales proposals and by the
    administration’s September 1995 “space-launcher” sales agreement and Russian, Ukrainian and
    Chinese machinations involving SS-18 ICBM stages that “we expect no country that currently has
    ICBMs will sell them.”
  8. The assumption that “we believe that an attack by cruise missiles
    launched from ships off the (US) coast would be technically feasible, but unlikely.”

Since the NIE
was issued, former CIA Director Woolsey and Lt. General Malcolm O’Neill, the former Director
of the Pentagon’s Ballistic Missile Defense Organization, have been among those sharply
criticizing the NIE and calling for a new estimate.

Arms Control, Deterrence and War

Arms control treaties and deterrence assumptions based on the effectiveness of treaties lacking
mandatory inspections and sanctions and backed by the threat of military power and the
deployment of active defenses have proved illusory and MAD Cold War theories of deterrence
based on Mutual Assured Destruction have proved dangerously obsolete.

Currently touted “bans” on chemical and biological weapons, nuclear testing and Strategic Arms
Reductions (with virtually no eliminations) cannot be effectively verified or enforced but are likely
to lead to precipitous U.S. disarmament which is likely to be largely unilateral and highly
destabilizing. While the Clinton administration is falling over backward to let Russia’s generals
make the obsolete ABM Treaty even more restrictive for U.S. defenses against proliferation, the
administration is modifying the Conventional Forces in Europe Agreement against the interest of
our allies in Turkey and Norway and against our friends in the Baltic nations.

Today, Iraq, Iran, North Korea, China, Russia and other nations take little risk in their violations
of major arms control agreements. Programs to produce weapons of mass destruction have been
discovered in rogue countries like Iraq, North Korea and Iran notwithstanding the fact that their
leaders have signed treaties prohibiting such activity. Seven missile wars have been fought in the
Middle East and South Asia, e.g. between Iraq against preponderant U.S. forces, in the war
between Iraq and Iran, in Russia’s war against Afghanistan and in the Gulf War.

While receiving advanced technologies, trade rewards and billions of U.S. dollars, Russia and
China, in particular, continue to abet proliferation toward such states. The rest of the Western
world, including the United States has lax technology transfer and trade policies which further
exacerbate the problem as technologies and expertise spread rapidly to forces professing deadly
hostility to the United States.

Gulf War Lessons

If, as is surely the case, the Clinton administration is wrong in its optimistic arms control and
defense assumptions, the price in American lives and treasure will be incalculable.More Americans
were killed (28) and wounded (78) by a single Iraqi missile in the Gulf War than by any other
action. One missile nearly hit a troopship in port. Israeli cities were terrorized at considerable cost
in lives and at a reported cost of a 25% slowdown in Israel’s economy. The United States was
lucky to face primitive SCUDs with its limited capability Patriot defenses; but as it was the United
States Air Force could not find a single SCUD mobile launcher in 5,000 sorties and the only
defense we had were the Patriots.

Iraq’s SCUDs were not deployed with the chemical and biological warheads which Iraq had
developed or the nuclear warheads which it might have had available six months later. With help
from Soviet military advisors, Iraq became masterful in the techniques of “maskirovka”, deception
and denial and continues such efforts. Had Iraq launched missiles with weapons of mass
destruction, the Gulf War and thus the fate of Saudi Arabia and Israel and our strategic interest in
both, would likely have ended in disaster.

As it was, the war cost $65 billion, most paid by Saudi Arabia. If U.S. and coalition forces had
been challenged by weapons of mass destruction, if Kuwait and Saudi Arabian oil had fallen into
Iraqi hands, if the regional momentum against Israel had been fueled by Iraqi victory, or if
proliferation of cyber and information warfare technologies continues apace, the costs in lives and
treasure. would have been far higher and lasting.

Immediate Sea-borne Threats to the United States

A final note should be made on the coverup involved in the Clinton administration’s attempts to
distinguish threats to the “indigenous” United States involves the current threat from sea-borne
missiles. In addition to the intercontinental missiles and their many thousands of warheads which
can reach every part of the United States from Russia and from China, most or all of the United
States, including Washington D.C. and numerous population centers along our coasts, can be
today be hit by ship borne missiles such as SCUDs fired, ample, from Iraqi, North Korean or
Iranian ships off our shores. Lack of land silos or substantial prior testing is no impediment. As
noted by Dr. William Graham, a former presidential science advisor and former director of the
president’s General Advisory Committee on Arms Control and Disarmament:

“Ballistic missiles do
not need to have a long range to threaten the United States. In the 1950’s, the U.S. launched
several ballistic missiles from the deck of a ship, and sent them to high altitudes where their
nuclear payloads were detonated. Most of the population of the U.S. lives near the East and West
coasts, and thus is highly vulnerable to a ship-launched missile that could be covertly deployed in
the merchant traffic several hundred miles at sea. The modifications to such a ship would not need
to be obvious, and a few test missile launches could be performed in remote locations in attempts
to avoid detection.”

The Future?

Wake up America! A mix of aggressive global trends and weak U.S. strategic policies may well
bring missile Pearl Harbor catastrophes into America’s future. Above all, the fatally flawed
multilateral anti-proliferation and arms control regimes in which the Clinton administration
entrusts America’s security and sovereignty cannot come close to guaranteeing American security
and global stability. They are lowest common defense denominator efforts which cannot substitute
for effective American diplomacy backed by effective American defense capabilities.

Without exception, as currently designed and operated by the international community, these
paper arms control regimes can be exploited by rogues for cheating and appeasement. They lack
the effective verification, effective sanctions, and capable military safeguards which could deter
proliferation and provide for America’s common defense we need against rogues wherever they
may be, including Middle East, Russia and China.

II. FOCUS ON CHINA, MFN, AND SECURITY

A special emphasis is warranted on China. As
you and other members of the House of Representatives review proliferation problems and vote
on China MFN I would like to emphasize that there is a strong strategic connection between these
two issues. If you are serious about proliferation you should not reward China with MFN, given
its poor record in proliferation, in trade, and in its aggressive behavior toward its neighbors. I
testified on these issues to the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations two weeks ago, and
would like to draw on some of that testimony today. The behavior of China’s hardliners is getting
more dangerous and tough standards, not MFN, are required at this time.

Congressional leadership, American leadership, will be essential for reformers and reform in China
in setting high standards in human rights, trade, and in security issues such as countering
proliferation and having effective arms control. More than ever, a new generation of
reform-minded Chinese needs our witness and our help against an authoritarian and aggressive
tide. The high human rights and security standards set by the Helsinki accords and by Reagan
administration defense and foreign policies gave just such critical legitimacy and support to the
voices of freedom and responsibility behind the Soviet empire’s Iron Curtain.

America made a decisive difference in winning the Cold War with the Soviet Union. We can make
a key, perhaps decisive, difference as China rapidly heads for great power status. Within the next
decade or two China will be one of the world’s two or three most powerful nations. It already has
the world’s third-ranking economy and is increasing its national assertiveness as it builds regional
and strategic military might. What America does, or fails to do — what we stand for as a nation —
will have considerable influence on whether or not China’s national assertiveness will be
aggressive and whether China can turn from its reactionary Communist ideology to the path of
democracy and peace.

A — TRADE ARGUMENTS AGAINST MFN

Your deliberations on proliferation issues and your vote on Most Favored Nation status for China
are strategically interrelated. But even from a strictly trade point of view, I believe the United
States should not conduct “business as usual” by extending MFN to China this year, but should
elevate standards and step up the pressure across the board in support of reform and
responsibility. Even with this week’s movement on closing (really closing?) a number of CD
factories (as if Chinese authorities couldn’t have long done this if the CD’s involved political
dissent), China remains in breach of numerous agreements and its trading behavior has not met
proper international trade standards, much less standards deserving of a “most favored”
characterization or the “free trade” or “normal trade rules” title with which some would rename
MFN rather than face the realities.

What free trade? China has too often acted erratically and illegally, pirating our patents,
restricting markets, and engaging in corrupt practices, even as it has built up a $35 billion trade
surplus against the United States, as it ships some 40% of its exports to our shores, as it has cost
over $2 billion in copyright losses and as it has already cost a net loss of some 200,000 U.S. jobs
as estimated by AFL-CIO representatives. And why did Clinton administration U.S. Patent Office
officials indicate in April of this year that the entire U.S. patent base would be given to China,
without restrictions and for free? These facts indicate that China needs America’s technology,
investments and markets far more than we need China’s and that we are giving away the leverage
for assuring real changes in China and in the Chinese-U.S. relationship. MFN suspension may
bring some short term losses in American dollars and jobs. But he costs will be far less than if —
through kowtowing steps such as the unconditional extension of MFN — America acquiesces in
China’s trade abuses, cuts the ground out from under the reformers, and sets the United States up
for far greater longterm losses as China’s ill-gotten gains begin dramatically to undercut our
competitive advantage in key economic sectors and begin to cost us far larger numbers of dollars
and jobs. And the U .S. flow of technology is already hurting us in China’s proliferation, military
and economic activities. How can any American, businessman or not, go along with the
immorality of failing to say “no” to China’s human rights, business and military abuses? And do
Americans really not care that Chinese “People’s Liberation Army” companies are established in
the United States — including nine in California — by the very same people whose soldiers run
China’s slave-labor prison camps.

B — THE SECURITY DIMENSION — TEN REALITY
CHECKS

An equal playing field for free trade can only be assured by political freedoms backed by sound
security policies. MFN and trade must always be considered in the context of profound moral and
strategic questions involving human rights and security. There can be no secure trade, or peace or
progress if there is no democracy at home, if neighbors can be threatened abroad, if proliferation
to rogue nations can be conducted as state policy, and if agreements cannot be trusted or
enforced.

President Clinton said in April that China’s greatest security threat to America was its pollution
potential from cars — not its proliferation activities, not its military programs, not its imperial
reach. His administration acts under a dangerous post-Cold War illusion that strategic threats
have disappeared, that democracies and dictators are not really all that different, that America is
unassailable and invincible, and that we and our allies need to do little or nothing to provide for
the common defense other than to have reasonably acceptable trade relations and sign ever new
paper agreements promising good behavior in arms even if there are no effective verification
procedures, sanctions, or U.S. defense programs to back these up. In this setting the
administration has virtually ended restrictions on the flow of militarily useful advanced
technologies to China, and through China’s proliferation, to rogue nations. It is time for reality
checks, bottom-up reviews and in-depth hearings. It’s time to take the blinders off about
dangerous strategic realities about China compounded by high-risk Clinton administration policy
gambles.

1. Communist China is Not Democratic and China’s Military Leaden Are Not Under
Democratic Control.

The overall strategic reality about China is that neither China’s political and military leaders nor
their programs are under democratic control and that China’s proliferation activities and its
imperial drive to be a regional and worm power in economic and military terms continues,
unchecked by democratic limits and too often appeased by foreign powers including the United
States. The basic economic and political reality is that notwithstanding economic progress
especially in Beijing and the coastal cities of Shanghai and Guangzhou, a struggle continues
between China’s reformers and the old party cadre and clans who resist reform and who seek to
maintain a Communist society and tight national cohesion during the transition from Deng’s
“preeminent leadership.” The People’s Republic of China is not a “republic” any more than the
People’s Democratic Republics of Eastern Europe under Soviet rule. Taiwan and Hong Kong are
far more democratic and far more like real republics. The “people” the PRC leadership still most
stands for are those of the families or “clans” of the senior Communist Party officials and the
senior officer cadre of the People’s Liberation Army. They dominate political, economic, cultural
and military life. For reasons of ideology, power and privilege they are determined to avoid
Mikhail Gorbachev’s “perestroika” and “glasnost” reforms, which overthrew Gorbachev and the
Communist dictatorship and ended the Soviet Union.In this context, official Chinese claims that
China is spending only $5 billion a year on defense are patently untrue. A U.S. Department of
Defense (DOD) study published in 1994 provides DoD estimates of over $30 billion and U.S.
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency estimates of about $50 billion annually. Expenditures
have risen since then and are supplemented by high-technology acquisitions through high priority
trade and intelligence operations. In this context too, official Chinese claims that it is not
proliferating technologies and/or weapons of mass destruction abroad are also untrue. There is no
ready way of knowing the correct Chinese defense figures or internal program details since there
is no free Chinese Congress in Beijing with the power of the purse and of appointment, nor any
free press or free political questioning. The Clinton administration all too often simply accepts
China’s explanations, excuses and behavior and even augments China’s emerging strategic threat
through advanced technology transfers.

2. China, Proliferation and Broken Treaties

A principal immediate problem is that China, along
with Russia, has the world’s worst record on the proliferation of components and technologies of
weapons of mass destruction to rogue states and that the Clinton administration is failing to act to
block such activities. I believe it is time to consider those who supply and support rogues to be
considered as rogues themselves. General Brent Scowcroft, U.S. National Security Advisor in the
Ford and Bush administrations, has warned: “The Chinese military seems to be willing to sell
weapons to anyone who can pay the price….” including militant states hostile to the United States.
China has accumulated an abysmal record of broken anti-proliferation treaties and broken U.S.
laws, a record which the Clinton administration has abetted through acquiescence. The treaties
broken by China include the Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), the Missile
Technology Control Regime (MTCR) and the Chemical Weapons Convention. U.S. laws broken
by Chinese proliferation activities, and generally not enforced by the Clinton administration,
include the U.S. Nuclear Prevention Act, the U.S. Arms Export Control Act and the National
Defense Authorization Act. China’s role in North Korea’s nuclear and missile proliferation
activities is a case in point. It is highly suspect since North Korea’s nuclear reactors and missiles
closely resemble China’s. But China has denied knowledge or leverage in North Korea, has
opposed tough sanctions against North Korea and has recently refused to participate in
multilateral talks on future peaceful developments on the Korean Peninsula. Meanwhile the
Clinton administration rewarded North Korean violations of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
with new reactors, $4 billion, and postponed inspections of suspect sites.

China has supplied nuclear reactors to Algeria and Iran, chemical weapons materials to Syria and
Iran, and missiles to numerous countries including Iran, North Korea, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.
China’s most recent illegal proliferation activities reported early in 1996, include sales to Pakistan
involving M-II missiles and 5,000 ring magnets used in gas centrifuges that enrich uranium for
weapons and which may have achieved operational status. But in addition to special problems
relating to Pakistan, it appears that China may have a larger strategic purpose in mind particularly
with Iran, which its hard-line strategists may well view as a long- term surrogate against U.S.
allies and interests in the Middle East. Early in 1996 it was reported that China had delivered
ballistic missile components, C-802 missiles, chemical weapons precursors, and nuclear weapons
related materials to Iran. In March 1996 The Washington Post reported:

“U.S. intelligence officials have concluded that companies in China are providing Iran with several
virtually complete factories suited for making deadly poison gases, an act that may violate a U.S.
law as well as China’s pledge to abide by a global treaty banning such assistance, according to
U.S. officials…. For more than a year, Washington has been monitoring a steady flow of Chinese
chemical related equipment to Iran, where it is being installed in new factories ostensibly meant to
produce industrial chemicals for commercial use. But U.S. officials say the factories have a covert
military use and have already complained to Beijing about the assistance without avail. The influx
of Chinese technology is helping to fuel what one U.S. official described as ‘the most active
chemical weapons program in the Third World.'”

With only rare and brief exceptions, the Clinton
administration has opposed application of the commercial and other sanctions established against
proliferants under U.S. laws and international treaties. The Clinton administration role has been
one of appeasement. Far from utilizing the legal and sanctions instruments at hand, the
administration has during the past year reportedly failed to act on five such cases on which the
Congress had urged the President to act. On top of everything else, he is failing to obey U.S. law.

As one example, the Clinton administration has opposed the demand of Senator Larry Pressler
and others to implement the U.S. sanctions required by the 1993 U.S. Defense Authorization Act
(co-sponsored by then Senator Albert Gore) against nations that transfer advanced weapons to
Iran or Iraq. Senator Pressler had noted that China’s cruise missile deal with Iran violates U.S. law
and “is a vital national security matter and demands immediate attention.”

3. China’s Military
Modernization — Conventional and Strategic Strike Forces

In addition to extending its strategic
reach through proliferation activities, China is building up modern strike forces designed for
regional and internal military roles and its strategic missiles, already able to reach the United
States, are being substantially augmented in their mobility and their offensive capability. The reality
of a potential Chinese strategic threat is officially denied in the Clinton administration’s public
intelligence estimates about future missile threats and is generally ignored by officials and media
focused militarily primarily on China’s gunboat diplomacy in the South China Sea and on its
military exercises and missile threats in and around Taiwan.

The serious reality is that China’s
announced military doctrine and programs call for highly mobile strike forces, with new
generations of ships (including submarines, destroyers and possibly a carrier) and advanced naval
and land-based fighter aircraft. These systems, some being acquired from abroad, are to be
equipped with modern weapons systems and high-tech command and communications linkages.

The strike forces appear to have both regional and internal security functions in asserting Beijing’s
far-reaching sovereignty claims. China’s vigorous nuclear force modernization program includes a
wide range of new strategic and intermediate-range missiles based on land and sea, and appears to
be benefiting from new flows of arms and technology from Russia. These systems include new
truck-mobile nuclear missiles whose solid-fuel propulsion and enhanced accuracy adds to their
high capability and low vulnerability. Numerous intermediate-range missiles, with strategic
potential when launched with lower-weight warheads, are hidden in caves and tunnels and
include the DF-4s. Two new ICBM systems are underway to augment the Dong Feng 5/5A
(CSS-4) — the DF-31 and the DF-41. The Julang I (CSS-N-3) missile fired from China’s
XIA-class nuclear submarines will be augmented by the intercontinental-range DF-31/JL-2.

The launches of advanced Chinese missiles in the vicinity of Taiwan in the summer of 1995 and in
March 1996 and the sales of Chinese cruise missiles to Iran which began in the 1980’s (and are of
the type with which Iraq killed Americans on the USS Stark) and were reported upgraded in April
1996, reflect modern cruise missile capabilities with which China is showing its muscle. These
capabilities are reportedly greatly enhanced by the acquisition of Western technology including
advanced computers and engine. Some of America’s biggest companies others are transferring
very sophisticated technologies to China, apparently virtually unchecked by administration
constraints. McDonnell-Douglas even permitted Chinese visits to plants where the B-1 bomber
and C-17 strategic transport plane were manufactured and sold advanced “axis” tools used to
manufacture aircraft, cruise-missiles and nuclear warheads.

4. China-Russia Strategic
Collaboration, SS-18 ICBM Proliferation, and Other New Threats

Collaboration and transfer of advanced weapons and technologies, possibly including SS-18
strategic Inter-continental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) to China, are increasing between Chinese
and Russian military leaders including hardliners who may wish to work against what some
perceive as common, democratic enemy, the United States.

Chinese and Russian military leaders have recently described relations as the best in decades, i.e.,
since the Stalin-Mao alliance. In September 1993 the two countries agreed not to target or use
force against each other, the former an agreement China rejected for the United States when
proposed by the Clinton administration. Following several high-level exchange visits, Yeltsin’s
April 1996 visit to Beijing cemented a close strategic partnership, with Yeltsin asserting that Russia
had not found a single point of disagreement with China. No disagreement on proliferation, nuclear
testing, technology theft, human rights abuses, border disputes?

Russia shows no apparent hesitation in providing advanced weapons and technologies, including
nuclear technologies, to China’s military. Hundreds, if not thousands, of Russian military
specialists are in China and a February 1996 Congressional staff study reported recent Chinese
purchases from Russia as including: 26 Su-27 fighters (with an additional 26 under negotiation,
and by now reportedly under contract, along with a factory to build more), 24 Mi-17 helicopters,
10 IL-76 heavy transport planes, 100 S-3O0 surface-to-air missiles and 4 mobile launchers,
advanced rocket engines and missile guidance technology, 100 Klimov/Sarkisov RD33 engines,
uranium enrichment technology and nuclear reactors.

An extremely troublesome recent development has been the possible collaboration of senior
Russian and Chinese authorities in seeking to transfer to China Russian SS-18 intercontinental
ballistic missiles, the most deadly strategic weapon of the Cold War, from a deployment site in
Ukraine. All SS-18 missiles are to be destroyed under the START II treaty, but in one of several
damaging amendments to this treaty (and to START I), the Clinton administration in September
1995 permitted Russia and Ukraine to sell the stages of such missiles anywhere in the globe as
“space launchers,” e.g. to Cuba, Iran, etc.? Of course anything that can launch a “peaceful” object
into space can also launch a warhead.

In January 1996 Ukraine expelled three Chinese nationals for trying to obtain SS-18s at a
missile-production facility in Dnepropetrovsk, Ukraine, presumably with the cooperation of the
Russian military personnel at the site who oversee nuclear weapons security and the planned
movement of the weapons to Russia. In May 1996, these efforts were boldly renewed and the
Clinton administration, caught with its earlier space-launcher concessions seemed paralysed in
response.

5. China’s Nuclear Weapons Tests

China has recently conducted a series of nuclear weapons tests while the United States has not,
and the Clinton administration is augmenting China’s nuclear strike capabilities.

The United States and Russia have conducted no nuclear tests since 1992, a fact soon likely
critically to impair the effectiveness of the U.S. nuclear deterrent in a world of evident nuclear
ambitions among a number of rogue states. During this four year period, China has continued a
robust nuclear weapons test program even while asserting support for a future Comprehensive
Test Ban (CTB), a top Clinton administration priority for 1996 even though the proposed CTB
treaty cannot be effectively verified or enforced. China exploded a one megaton weapon in 1992
and conducted other large-scale nuclear tests in October 1993, in June 1994 (an H-bomb), in
October 1994, and in 1995, with indications for further tests in 1996.China points to France as an
excuse, but while France conducted six small-scale underground nuclear tests as precursors to
preparing to join the Comprehensive Test Ban agreement, France sharply contrasts with China in
key ways. All French military forces are under assured democratic civilian control, France has a
record of compliance with treaties, French military forces, including its nuclear forces, are being
sharply reduced and no French forces are targeted against the United States.

As in other aspects of China’s strategic modernization, Clinton administration policy on China’s
nuclear testing has been one of continuing acquiescence, and even assistance. Early in the
administration, for example, according to an October 1994 report in The New York Times: “After
China’s test last October (1993), President Clinton instructed Energy Secretary Hazel O’Leary to
begin reviewing options to resume American testing at the Nevada test range (but) when this
threat drew no response from the Chinese, the White House conceded that nothing it could do in
the form of pressure could dissuade Beijing, and the effort was abandoned.”

In October 1994, incredibly, Secretary of Defense William Perry publicly offered advanced U.S.
computer technologies to China for the specific purpose of simulating nuclear weapons tests and
thus directly increasing potential threats against America’s cities if hardliners prevail in China. The
computers are reportedly of higher quality than the advanced computers deployed on the U.S.
AEGIS cruisers. How can the Clinton administration claim an antiproliferation policy when it
undertakes such dangerous gambles?

6. China’s Biological and Chemical Weapons Programs

China has a very poor record on chemical and biological weapons agreements and related
proliferation activities.

U.S. government reports have repeatedly noted China’s violations in the area of chemical and
biological weapons programs. The annual compliance report to the Congress issued by the
President and the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency in 1994, noted that: “China’s CBM
mandated declarations (Confidence Building-Measures of the Chemical and Biological Weapons
Conventions) have not resolved U.S. concerns about this program and there are strong indications
that China probably maintains its offensive programs.” The classified version of this ACDA report
reportedly was even more explicit in condemning these treaty violations.

An April 1996 proliferation report issued by the office of Secretary of Defense William Perry,
described China’s programs as follows: “China has a mature chemical warfare capability and may
well have maintained the biological warfare program it had prior to acceding to the Biological
Weapons Convention in 1984. It has funded a chemical warfare program since the 1950’s and has
produced and weaponized a wide variety of agents. Its biological warfare program included
manufacturing infectious micro-organisms and toxins. China has a wide range of delivery means
available, including ballistic and cruise missiles and aircraft, and is continuing to develop systems
with upgraded capabilities.”

7. China’s Espionage and the Abuse of China’s Defense “Conversion”
and U.S. Aid

China’s technological and military espionage activities have been stepped up
significantly and are reportedly abetted by the U.S.-China Joint Defense Conversion Commission
established in 1994 by U.S. Defense Secretary William Perry and China’s General Ding Henggao,
Director of the Commission for Science Technology and Industry for National Defense
(COSTIND). The Clinton administration is ignoring serious warnings that China is stealing or
buying advanced dual-use technologies which will undermine U.S. military security and our
commercial competitiveness in the future. Already two years ago, Senator Larry Pressler warned
that: “The Chinese are engaged in an unprecedented espionage campaign and nuclear weapons
buildup…but I can’t get senior Clinton administration officials to acknowledge the threat.”
Representative Nancy Pelosi, a member of the House Intelligence Committee, similarly warned
that “China is engaged in a full-court press to obtain American high technology to modernize its
military….” Yet, said Pelosi, Washington has “turned a blind eye to this practice.”

In addition to serious economic consequences, including grave long-run damage to the
competitiveness of U.S. companies, dangerous security implications derive from China’s
acquisition of sensitive technologies whose transfer the Clinton administration has encouraged
notwithstanding their high military and proliferation potential, e.g. advanced computers, cruise
missile engines and satellites. According to Time magazine, U.S. intelligence officials reportedly
warned the administration about one such transfey in April 1994, involving the sale of rocket
engines, that “China will gain high-quality military technology, which could be used for a new
generation of cruise missiles…(which) would put most of the rest of Asia within range of Chinese
nuclear attack.” Secretary of Defense Perry has continued to place great confidence in the
reliability of General Ding, COSTIND and China’s “conversion,” and has sought substantial U.S.
taxpayer funds to support the COSTIND effort even though this project and its participants are
highly suspect. U.S. defense intelligence analysts have identified COSTIND as an espionage
organization “attempting to steal foreign technology with military applications, primarily from the
United States.” General Ding is described in his own official biography as having “organized and
coordinated research and production of strategic missiles and the launching of satellites.”

China’s paramount leader, Deng Xiaoping, has officially defined China’s “defense conversion”
programs as follows: “Combine military and civilian, combine war and peace, give first priority to
military products and make civilian products finance the military.” Lt. General James Clapper, the
former Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, has testified to the Congress that the China’s
the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) plays a role in all important Chinese industrial and business
organizations, especially those involving joint ventures with foreigners. Through PLA business
ventures, and the participation of the Chinese intelligence services in the PLA’s dealings, U.S.
technology is thus immediately vulnerable to being skimmed off for the purpose of accelerating
China’s ambitious military modernization programs, programs which may threaten U.S. allies and
U.S. forces in the future. According to recent testimony by AFL-CIO officials at least eight
businesses have been established in California by the PLA, the same institution which runs China’s
slave labor camps. It should be noted that while China enthusiastically uses its military and
business relationships as well as its overseas students and business contacts for technological
espionage, it severely restricts the flow of even appropriate legitimate information to western
businesses. New Chinese restrictions announced in February 1996 led Clinton administration
Trade Representative Mickey Kantor to note plaintively that: “This is, of course, an issue of free
speech and censorship, but it is also at the heart of our trade relationship ….clearly it is a step in
the wrong direction, to state the obvious.” Indeed!

8. Chinese Colonialism

In its regional imperial drive, China has used military force not only against Taiwan, but also in
pressing its extensive territorial claims in territories of the South China Sea, including the oil-rich
Spratly and Pescadores islands, in gun boat battles with Philippine and Vietnamese ships. China is
also building bases in Burma and in the Indian Ocean.

In support of its extensive sovereignty claims beyond the mainland, China has engaged in gunboat
diplomacy, has sought aerial refueling capabilities, has bought advanced strike aircraft such as
Su-27s, and is seeking an aircraft carrier and other force projection capabilities while also building
up mobile rapid-reaction forces around China’s periphery.

Fighting what senior Communist leaders consider the virus of democracy and self-rule wherever it
arises — whether in Tiananmen, Tibet, or Xinjiang, whether in Taiwan or in Hong Kong — China
rejects international human rights standards anywhere in China’s orbit. China has made clear that
when it takes over Hong Kong in July 1997 and Macao in 1999 it will remove existing democratic
laws, officials and institutions.

China appears to view the 21 million people of Taiwan much like Saddam Hussein viewed the
people of Kuwait, which he called Iraq’s 19th province and then proceeded to invade. Mainland
China has not controlled Taiwan for over a hundred years, since 1895, and has maintained a
Communist Party dictatorship while Taiwan has made great strides toward democracy. Taiwan
surely has no desire or capability to attack the mainland and represents no conceivable military
threat whatsoever, yet Chinese acts of war launched missiles at Taiwan and the international
waters around it.

Isn’t it time that the people of Taiwan should feel secure in their democracy and their
self-determination without fear of attack from China and that the United States fully supports
them in this process, as required by morality and by U.S. law? If China can accept “two systems
one country,” why not “two systems, two countries?” As The New York Times editorialized in
February 1996, “There increasingly is a case to be made for Taiwanese independence. Taiwan has
not been ruled by China for most of the last century. It has a different political and economic
system and its people enjoy a freedom and affluence many rightly fear could not survive under
Communist rule.”

9. A Range of Potential Threats to America’s Security

In addition to proliferation dangers which can rapidly threaten U.S. forces and allies overseas,
U.S. intelligence and Defense Department officials have recently noted that China’s military
build-up, both strategic and conventional, has increasingly serious implications for United States
security. In May 1994, the then head of the Pentagon’s Ballistic Missile Defense Organization, Lt.
General Malcolm O’Neill, told the Congress that U.S. intelligence analysts expected growing
numbers of Chinese missiles to be aimed at the United States and its interests. While China signed
a non-targeting agreement with Russia, it turned down Clinton administration requests for such a
symbolic arrangement (unverifiable though it would have been) and some analysts report that
China’s nuclear doctrine calls for use of nuclear weapons not simply for deterrence against hard
military targets such as U.S. missile silos, but against “soft” targets, i.e. American cities. The
Clinton administration has no arms control sanctions or missile defense programs available or
planned which could possibly handle such threats effectively.

In a 1995, the Office of Net Assessment in the Office of the Secretary of Defense concluded that
the pace of China’s military modernization program, which includes substantial conventional force
improvements, would enable China to defeat U.S. forces in a regional military conflict in Asia by
the year 2020. During the March 1996 Chinese missile launches over and around Taiwan, a
Chinese official went so far as to threaten Los Angeles with nuclear attack if the U.S. were to
defend Taiwan against invasion from mainland China. In recent months, Chinese criminal mafias
have been caught repeatedly in immigrant smuggling and narcotics operations in the United
States. A new level of danger with potential fire-spark implications for America’s inner cities
occurred in May 1996. Chinese agents, linked to a Chinese company directed by officials tied to
China’s top leaders, were caught in an FBI sting operation in San Francisco selling 2,000 AK-47
automatic assault rifles and numerous hand grenades and offering Stinger anti-aircraft missiles to
Americans whom the Chinese apparently assumed were criminals or radical militants likely to use
them against American people and institutions in our inner cities. That’s proliferation truly coming
home to U.S. cities! Why don’t those who favor gun control move to exert gun control over
China’s guns and China’s riot promotion in the United States?

10. In Sum: The Fatal Consequences of Clinton Administration Policy Incoherence toward China
and the World

I believe there has never been anything, even during the Carter administration, like the Clinton
administration’s high-risk gambles and continuing confusion and weakness in U.S. defense and
foreign policy. Unless reversed, this administration’s policies will bring America major disasters,
of which a failed China policy will be just one.

At the height of the 1996 Taiwan crisis, and as China has been caught in a series of dangerous
proliferation schemes, a Washington Post editorial captured some of the flavor of the Clinton
administration’s fatally confused China strategy as follows: “Let’s go through this carefully.
American intelligence believes China has been selling sensitive nuclear weapons related equipment….
American law and policy prescribe a range of economic and other penalties for these
dangerous contributions to nuclear spread. Yet the Clinton administration is described as leaning
toward waiving the sanctions. The reason given is to ease tensions with Beijing and to improve
the climate in which efforts would be made to persuade China to curb those exports in the future.
That’s right: The Chinese are the accused violators, and the Americans–as the complaining and
injured party–are backing off….” (Emphasis added.)

The Post editorial continued: “It is already established that the Clinton administration is putting
trade over human rights in its China policy, even though the mellowing that trade was expected to
bring about is so far not in sight. Now it is being established that the administration is putting
trade–‘There are tremendous commercial opportunities there, export chief Ron Brown said this
week–river nonproliferation as well. The administration’s China policy is on the edge of
incoherence. The Chinese could be forgiven for thinking that in any given case they “…can press at
the margins, play on the differences among the elements of American government and society and
have their way by standing firm.” (Emphasis added.)

In fostering extraordinarily weak norms for multilateral arms control, including antiproliferation
agreements and in all too often appeasing Russia’s hardliners on START, national missile
defenses, Chechnya (Boris Lincoln?), economic reform, etc. the Clinton administration continues
to set very poor policy precedents. They undercut reformers and appease Communist nationalists,
not only in Russia but also in a China unaccustomed to keeping agreements or meeting
international human fights standards.

Unwilling to punish China’s proliferation activities and violations of numerous existing arms
control agreements, the Clinton administration has actually stepped up the flow of advanced
dual-purpose technology to China and pushed for new arms control agreements which China is as
unlikely to heed in areas of nuclear testing, chemical weapons, retargeting, etc.. Trade, and unfair
trade at that, has been elevated far above the efforts to improve the human fights, proliferation
and military abuses that should have been at the core of a developing U.S.-Chinese relationship.As
Deng fades from the scene, it is especially necessary for America to stop treating China’s leaders
like children and instead seriously to step up to China’s hardliners and to buttress the cause of the
reformers and fundamental reform. It is essential to hold China to fulfillment of its international
obligations in human fights, trade and arms control. We need new policies, new programs and a
Pacific Democracy Defense Program and more.

On proliferation issues, as on China policy generally, U.S. appeasement will only increase the
militancy and leverage of hardliners in China and elsewhere around the world. Unless reversed,
current policy is sure to set back the cause of reform, responsibility and peace, and to increase
potential threats from China and the rogues to whom it is proliferating dangerous military
technologies. These threats endanger not only key U.S. allies in Asia, but to vital U.S. interests in
that region and to the United States homeland itself.