Room Service
at Hanoi Hilton
"Though having committed untold crimes on our people, American
pilots suffered no revenge once they were captured and detained. Instead,
they were well-treated with adequate food, clothing, and shelter."
-Statement currently exhibited in the Hoa Lo prison in Hanoi, as
recounted in an April 26 Associated Press dispatch. (See also box,
below.)
No Margin for Delay
"It is clear to me that the maintenance of an aggressive but well-hedged
JSF [Joint Strike Fighter] program is critical to the nation's future
defenses. The JSF will be the cornerstone of US tactical aviation for
decades to come. Under current plans, at least 50 percent of the fighter/attack
force structure will consist of JSF variants when the program is completed
in the 2020s. ... Roughly 1,500 tactical fighter/attack aircraft-or an
average of about 150 per year-are expected to reach retirement age during
the decade beginning in FY 2010. By contrast, the United States has procured
only about 50 tactical fighter/attack aircraft on average annually over
the last seven years. Thus the opportunity afforded by the post-Cold
War drawdown to acquire tactical fighter/attack aircraft at levels well
below steady-state replenishment rates is over. There is no margin for
delay."
-Deputy Secretary of Defense Rudy de Leon, in a May 2 memo to Air
Force and Navy secretaries and service chiefs in response to a move
in the Senate to delay the program. Reported in Inside the Air Force.
The Legacy Stops Here
"The news media [are] buzzing with speculation that President Clinton
will attempt, in his final months in office, to strike a major arms control
deal with Russia. ... White House officials have openly stated their
concern that Mr. Clinton faces the prospect of leaving office without
a major arms control agreement to his credit. ... That, perhaps, would
be, to him, a personal tragedy. Mr. Clinton wants an agreement, a signing
ceremony, a final photo-op. He wants a picture [of him] shaking hands
with the Russian President, broad smiles on their faces, large ornately
bound treaties under their arms, as the cameras click for perhaps the
last time, a final curtain call.
"I must observe that, if the price of that final curtain call is
a resurrection of the USSoviet ABM Treaty that would prevent the
United States from protecting the American people against missile attack,
then that price is just too high. With all due respect, I do not intend
to allow this President to establish his legacy by binding the next generation
of Americans to a future without a viable national missile defense."
-Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, in an April 26 Senate floor speech.
Translation: No No-First-Use
"The Russian Federation reserves the right to use nuclear weapons
in response to the use of nuclear and other types of weapons of mass
destruction against it and (or) its allies, as well as in response to
large-scale aggression using conventional weapons in situations critical
to the national security of the Russian Federation."
-From "Military Doctrine of the Russian Federation," approved
by Russian presidential decree, dated April 21.
Joint Control of CAS/BAI?
"[My] hypothesis is that there are half-dozen or so key military
areas in which the joint equities supersede the service equities. I have
a list of those things. I've given that list to my staff as a watch list
and any doctrinal issues, organizational issues, training issues, procurement
issues which hit that list, I said this is what we should focus on. ...
[Items are integrated air and missile defense; command and control; combat
identification; intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance; battlefield
strike; joint fires; and strategic mobility and deployment.]
"That list is not approved by the Secretary of Defense and the
Chairman [of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]. I briefed them on it. They said
[it was] interesting. ... I briefed the service chiefs on it, and, once
again, I got neither a yes nor a no. It is simply a work list. ... Some
day the Chairman and the Secretary of Defense are going to have to take
my private list and turn it into an official list and say that, in these
areas, ... the joint guys have equality or even precedence. ... [The
idea received] great support from [regional Commanders in Chief]. When
I briefed the CINCs on it, they actually added another item-Close Air
Support and Battlefield Interdiction. They added that. That wasn't on
my list."
-Adm. Harold W. Gehman Jr., CINC, US Joint Forces Command, in April
27 remarks to the Defense Writers Group.
Lest We Forget Dept. (Vietnam
Div.)
"Vietnam should teach
us an important lesson. Hanoi [is creating]
a collectivist society ... likely to produce
greater welfare and security for its people
than any local alternative ever offered,
at a cost in freedom that affects a small
elite."
-Stanley Hoffman, Harvard
professor and Vietnam War opponent, in
May 3, 1975, The New Republic.
"The greatest gift our
country can give the Cambodian people is
not guns but peace. And the best way to accomplish
that goal is by ending military aid now."
-Rep. (now Sen.) Chris Dodd
(D-Conn.), House floor speech, March 12,
1975.
"It is ironic that we
are here at a time just before Vietnam is
about to be liberated."
-Producer Bert Schneider,
Academy Awards presentation, April 8, 1975.
Vintage anti-war sentiments
recollected by James Webb, former Navy Secretary
and decorated USMC combat veteran, in an
April 28, 2000, article in The Wall Street
Journal.
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