The Secretary Of Missile Defense

When it comes to the new space shield, Donald Rumsfeld is both architect and evangelist. Will his idea fly?

  • Share
  • Read Later

(3 of 5)

Rumsfeld's return to power is all the more remarkable because he and the first President Bush were participants in a 25-year rivalry. When Ford was hunting for a Vice President, it was Rumsfeld who pushed Bush the elder all the way to Beijing--and out of the running. Rumsfeld wanted the Veep job, but Nelson Rockefeller got it. When Rockefeller was cut from the G.O.P. ticket in 1976, Rumsfeld, again seeking the spot, maneuvered Bush over to the CIA. Bob Dole got to be running mate. Rumsfeld made a brief and furtive run for the No. 2 spot in 1980 under Reagan and considered the nomination eight years later--losing both times to Bush. Rumsfeld put aside his ambitions for political power and chose to make millions running pharmaceutical giant G.D. Searle & Co.; General Instrument Corp., a television-and-cable-technology company; and Gilead Sciences Inc., a drug firm. His return to Washington was engineered by Dick Cheney, a protege Rumsfeld had helped make chief of staff in Ford's White House.

While Rumsfeld's shop faces the challenge of building the shield, it is the nation's diplomats spreading out over the world who face the equally arduous task of selling it overseas. This week deputies at the State and Defense departments and the National Security Council will jet to foreign capitals to peddle Rumsfeld's shield. It won't be easy. Washington's allies and its foes have grown accustomed to dealing with a world larded with nuclear weapons. During the cold war, the Anti-ballistic Missile Treaty of 1972 ensured that the U.S. and the Soviet Union would remain naked to the other's atomic wrath. While the logic of such mutual assured destruction was ghoulish, it did have one thing going for it: it worked.

Still, there are some signs that Bush may carry the day. British officials in Tony Blair's government have made receptive noises about missile defense. Indeed, the bipolar world is gone, the threat of rational superpowers replaced by rogue states or terrorists. The Bush team plainly views the ABM Treaty as a relic. Secretary of State Colin Powell has told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that "it may be necessary, ultimately, to walk out of the ABM Treaty and abrogate our responsibilities." Bush says he is willing to reduce the U.S.'s 7,200 nuclear weapons quickly and unilaterally to entice both allies and such potential foes as China and Russia into embracing a more defensive strategic balance.

Rumsfeld's rhetoric, designed to be calming, has some nations concerned. "This isn't the old Star Wars idea of a shield that will keep everything off of everyone in the world," Rumsfeld told the Senate Armed Services Committee during confirmation hearings in January. "It is something that in the beginning stages is designed to deal with handfuls of these things and persuade people that they're not going to be able to blackmail and intimidate the U.S. and its allies." That phrase--"in the beginning stages"--vexes China and Russia. Both fear that a U.S. missile shield, once built, will continue to expand until it is robust enough to thwart attacks from anyone.

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5