The Missing Link
"Many . . . postwar claims about weapon system performance
. . . were overstated, misleading, inconsistent with the best
available data, or unverifiable. . . . There was no apparent
link between the cost of aircraft and munitions, whether high
or low, and their performance in Desert Storm."
From "Operation Desert Storm: Evaluation of
the Air Campaign," a June 1997 report prepared by the General
Accounting Office.
Otherwise, It's Fine
"The report strikes me as the analytical equivalent of a
dumb bomb--it's off target and loud. It really makes a series
of very strange comparisons and takes the sort of lead-eyed view
that there doesn't seem to be much difference between precision
guided munitions and less-precise munitions or unguided munitions.
. . .
"They made no allowance for the inherent differences
in targets . . . and therefore assume that they could be hit
equally with precision or nonprecision bombs. . . . It's like
comparing a .350 hitter in the National League with a .350 hitter
in high school and saying they're both the same because they
both hit .350, without taking account of the different pitching
conditions they encounter. . . .
"We have moved to a new generation of weaponry, and nobody
denies that. We are not going to turn the clock back to an increased
reliance on dumb bombs. We are going to continue to build an
Air Force and a military based on precision guided munitions."
DoD spokesman Kenneth Bacon, in July 1, 1997, press
briefing during which he commented on the conclusions of the
GAO report.
From the Foxhole
First US Grunt: "I don't understand why
we're talking about expanding NATO! Why can't we just go home?
Second US Grunt: "If we went home, who would
help our friends in eastern Europe defend themselves against
our friends in Russia?"
From political cartoon panel drawn by syndicated
cartoonist Chuck Asay, carried in the June 15, 1997, Washington
Times.
Absolutely Key
"It's important to reflect that over half of our sensors
that provide us information about the battlefield are sensors
that ride on air-breathers, not satellites. And so air dominance
for us is absolutely key if we're going to maintain dominance
on the battlefield. UAVs, other [systems]--from AWACS to Joint
STARS to whatnot--over half of our sensors depend on having the
ability to operate in the air. And so something like the F-22--that
will be the premier aircraft to provide us air dominance--is
absolutely key."
Army Gen. John Shalikashvili, Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, in a May 20, 1997, Senate Armed Services Committee
hearing on the F-22 fighter and the Quadrennial Defense Review.
Wirthwhile
"This is a legitimate military issue. This is not [the idea
of] a bunch of trendy 'greenies.' "
Timothy Wirth, undersecretary of state for global
affairs, as quoted in June 5, 1997, Associated Press coverage
of the Western Hemisphere Defense Environmental Conference. He
referred to training Latin American troops to guard rain forests
and endangered species.
It's Come to This
"It became increasingly evident during our travels that
military personnel need to be informed what is not harassment
as well as what is. . . . The [current antiharassment] training
scared the men from interacting on any level with the women.
Men reported that they were told, 'Don't talk to them, don't
sit near them in the mess, don't breathe near them.' Not surprisingly,
the women reported that the men seemed 'scared to death of us.'
"
From a draft of a Rand Corp. study for DoD, "Recent
Gender Integration in the Military: Effects on Readiness, Cohesion,
and Morale," as excerpted in the July 7, 1997, Washington
Times.
Separation of Powers
"The United States is moving with unparalleled velocity
toward the kind of high-tech military equipment that has no match
in Europe. I am beginning to worry that, one day, we will wake
up and find that our armies [those of the US and of European
nations] can no longer work well together."
German Army Gen. Klaus Naumann, chairman of NATO's
Military Committee, as quoted in the July 6, 1997, Washington
Post.
Our Two New Friends
"During the last half of 1996, China was the most significant
supplier of WMD [weapons of mass destruction]related goods
and technology to foreign countries. The Chinese provided a tremendous
variety of assistance to both Iran's and Pakistan's ballistic
missile programs. China also was the primary source of nuclear-related
equipment and technology to Pakistan and a key supplier to Iran.
. . . Iran also obtained considerable CW [chemical weapon]related
assistance from China in the form of production equipment and
technology.
"Russia supplied a variety of ballistic missile-related
goods to foreign countries, . . . especially to Iran. Russia
was an important source for nuclear programs in Iran and, to
a lesser extent, India and Pakistan."
From CIA report, "The Acquisition of Technology
Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and Advanced Conventional
Munitions," released in June 1997.