The Chairman's View
"I don't think that Saddam Hussein is any better off than
he was when he started [attacking the Kurds in northern Iraq].
I submit to you, Saddam Hussein is worse off today than when
he started all of this."
Army Gen. John M. Shalikashvili, Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, in a September 8, 1996, appearance on
NBC's "Meet the Press."
For Fifty B-2s
"I absolutely believe the minimum number of B-2s we should
have is fifty. We need to make a commitment and let industry
know our intentions."
Rep. Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.), Speaker of the House,
in an August 23, 1996, statement to B-2 workers at Northrop Grumman's
stealth bomber facility in Palmdale, Calif.
Facts of Life
"We have never, from the beginning, sought their permission
for establishing the no-fly zone. . . . This is not an issue
in which they have a vote."
Defense Secretary William J. Perry, in a September
3, 1996, response to Iraq's complaints about US imposition of
an enlarged no-fly zone following Iraqi attacks on Kurds in northern
Iraq.
Facts of Life (Cont.)
"We have separately warned Iran not to meddle [in the battle
in Kurdistan]."
Secretary Perry, same statement.
"Intelligence Failures"
"Intelligence failures left military personnel in Khobar
Towers, as well as the 4404th [Composite] Wing's leaders, largely
unaware of the magnitude of the threat they faced. Intelligence
support fell short in at least three ways. First, available intelligence
was virtually devoid of specific knowledge of terrorist and dissident
activity inside Saudi Arabia. . . . Second, there were failures
of analysis. . . . Finally, and perhaps most significantly, these
intelligence assessments did not acknowledge their own limitations.
They did not communicate a level of uncertainty that should have
been appropriate, considering the lack of specific knowledge
available and the difficulty of understanding the complex currents
of Saudi society. Based on such intelligence assessments, commanders
in the theater likely had a false sense of confidence [about]
the level of threat they faced and the requisite level of security
required to protect US forces."
Rep. Floyd D. Spence (RS. C.), chairman of the
House National Security Committee, in an August 14, 1996, statement
accompanying an HNSC report on the June 25 bombing of Khobar
Towers in Saudi Arabia.
Dole and Defense
"If I make a mistake on defense spending, I'm going to err
on the side of spending a little too much [rather] than a little
too little."
Presidential candidate and former Sen. Robert Dole
(R-Kan.), in an August 14, 1996, speech at the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial in San Diego, Calif.
Historically Novel
"The Air Force changed the course of history . . . last
September [1995], when we led a precise, vigorous air campaign
that finally altered the series of events in Bosnia[-Hercegovina].
Besides breaking the cycle of violence that had fed that [country's]
three-year war, Operation Deliberate Force also gave us a hint
of what combat will look like in the twenty-first century. For
instance, while only nine percent of all munitions used in [Operation]
Desert Storm were precision guided, in Bosnia, ninety-eight percent
of munitions dropped by US forces were precision guided. . .
. The photos from Bosnia typically show one crater where the
target used to be, with virtually no collateral damage."
Sheila E. Widnall, Secretary of the Air Force, in
a June 14, 1996, speech to the National Press Club, Washington,
D.C.
Harassment Declining
"Sexual harassment is declining in the active military.
. . . In 1988, sixty-four percent of female respondents reported
experiencing one or another form of gender-related [misbehavior].
In 1995, fifty-five percent of female respondents reported such
experiences. . . . That decline is pretty consistent across the
services. . . . People know the rules, they understand how to
report these unwanted incidents, and most aren't reluctant to
report. There's confidence that their leaders will deal with
it. But--and this is a message that leaders throughout the chain
of command will be especially attentive to--sexual harassment
is occurring. It may be occurring in your organization, on your
watch, and some believe that it isn't being taken seriously enough."
Edwin Dorn, under secretary of defense for Personnel
and Readiness, in a July 2, 1996, Pentagon statement on the release
of a massive new DoD study of sexual harassment.
The Big Three Targets
"Let me tell you the kinds of targets that are threatened
by information warfare: first, the domestic infrastructure, both
the government sector and the private sector--for example, air
traffic control, powerplants, and banks. The second category
of targets threatened by information warfare involves international
commerce--international funds transfer, international transportation,
and, of course, international communications. Finally, information
warfare threatens our military forces, whether they're deployed
in peacetime or . . . wartime. In some sense, the electron is
the ultimate precision guided weapon. . . . It can be directed
directly to the command and brain structure of our military systems
and our military forces. The electron, in my judgment, is the
ultimate precision guided munition."
John M. Deutch, director of Central Intelligence,
in June 25, 1996, testimony to the Senate Governmental Affairs
Committee.
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