Another step in the collapse of Empire?
US
drops key European missile defense component
RT,
16 March, 2013
6
The
United Stated is abandoning a key part of its Eastern European
missile defense plan due to development problems and funding,
Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel has announced. The focus, he said,
will be shifted to perceived threats from North Korea.
Interceptors
in Poland and Romania, the deployment of which had been the source of
heavy criticism from Moscow, will be scrapped.
Hagel
told the press on Friday that the decision was made as part of an
overall restructuring of the country's missile defense plans, with an
eye to stopping perceived threats from Iran and North Korea.
The
restructuring of the program will see $1 billion shifted to add some
14 new interceptors to the 26 existing ones in Alaska designed to
counter potential North Korea missiles.
Washington
claims that its decision was prompted by a need to address North
Korea's faster-than-anticipated progress in nuclear weapons
development. The changes to the program will free up the money to do
so, Hagel said.
Explaining
the rationale behind the initial plans for American outposts in
Poland and Romania, Hagel said, "the purpose was to add to
the protection of the US homeland already provided by our current
[ground-based interceptors] against missile threats from the Middle
East."
But,
he added, "The timeline for deploying this program had been
delayed to at least 2022 due to cuts in Congressional funding.
Meanwhile the threat matures. By shifting resources from this lagging
program ... We will be able to add protection against missiles from
Iran sooner, also providing additional protection against the North
Korean threat.”
However,
the Poland- and Romania-based interceptors were only one component in
a multifaceted missile defense program. While Phase 4 – the
now-scrapped interceptors – are off the table, phases 1 through 3
are set to continue as planned.
"The
missile deployments the United States are making in phases 1 through
3 of the European Phased Adaptive approach including sites in Poland
and Romania will still be able to provide coverage of all European
NATO territory as planned by 2018," Hagel said.
Kremlin concerns
The
Kremlin has argued that deployment of the systems in its neighborhood
was aimed at countering Russian missiles and undermining its nuclear
deterrent, though Washington said the system was aimed at countering
threats from Iran.
During
initial negotiations with the George W. Bush administration, Moscow
offered Washington the use of an alternative site in Azerbaijan in
order to counter the Iranian threats evoked by the US.
The
missile shield also faced strong domestic opposition in Poland and
Romania, bringing the Obama administration in 2009 to announce that
it was canceling its plans for the project.
But
a reformulated scheme was announced a month later in October 2009,
showing plans to place smaller, mobile SM-3 ballistic missile
interceptors in the region by 2018.
Besides
the placement of the interceptors, Russian officials have also
opposed a radar installation set to be based in the Czech Republic.
The base would enable US forces and their NATO partners to monitor
activities in European Russian airspace.
Hagel
stressed that other components of American missile defense plans in
Europe would continue, and that Washington’s commitment in Europe
"remains ironclad," but made no reference to Kremlin
objections to the program.
An
anonymous senior State Department official told the AP that while
Poland and Romania were informed of the decision ahead of the
announcement, Russia was not.
AFP
Photo / Wojtek Rodwanki
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