HolyCoast: North Korean Missiles and Star Wars Critics
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Thursday, July 06, 2006

North Korean Missiles and Star Wars Critics

With North Korea poised to launch more missiles, the Washington Examiner takes to task those members of Congress who so vociferously derided President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative, or "Star Wars" as the missile defense system came to be known:
North Korea’s threatening spate of missile launches — including an unsuccessful try with an advanced version of its Taepodong 2 Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile that is capable of hitting the United States — has sparked a cacophony of talk from leaders and foreign policy experts around the world.

As they debate and discuss various options at the United Nations and in capitals around the globe, the rudimentary U.S. missile defense system is poised to shoot down anything launched from North Korea that threatens the American homeland or the critical interests of our regional allies like Japan and Australia.

Noticeably absent are the voices of those who, since President Reagan first proposed such a system in 1984, have fought development and deployment of the missile defense system the U.S. must now depend upon in dealing with North Korea. These folks have claimed over and over that the system they derisively call “Star Wars” can’t possibly work, would be too expensive, would incite a new world arms race, etc., etc. Names that come to mind in this regard include senators like Joe Biden, D-Del., Jack Reed, D-R.I., Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., and Carl Levin, D-Mich., and the Clinton-Gore administration that delayed and dilly-dallied with work on missile defense for most of the ’90s.

[...]

It is a sobering thought to wonder how much more secure the United States and its allies would be today in the face of madness like North Korea’s launches if instead of a limited defense still in development we could depend upon the robust protection first proposed many years ago.

The left has a habit of leaving us defenseless. Their obstruction of the missile defense program has left open the possibility that a tinhorn dictator in North Korea can lob missiles at us at will, just as their obstruction of oil exploration in the Alaskan National Wildlife Reserve has made sure we're always short of oil and have to rely on unreliable foreign sources. The left cannot be trusted with our security.

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