Russian President Dmitry Medvedev makes the address to the nation in Moscow's Kremlin on Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2008. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has proposed extending the presidential term to six years from the current four. OP-ED:
During the presidential campaign Vice President-elect Joe Biden predicted, "It will not be six months before the world tests Barack Obama like they did John Kennedy." This wasn't just another gratuitous allusion to the impending Camelot 2.0, but an apt comparison. A new, young president is a standing temptation to foreign powers seeking to find his limits.
The erection of the Berlin Wall and the Cuban Missile Crisis came about in part because Nikita Khrushchev sized up Mr. Kennedy as "too intelligent and too weak." Now Russia seeks to supply a new missile crisis, over agreements reached earlier this year between the United States, Poland and the Czech Republic to base elements of a missile defense system in their countries by 2012.
The morning after President-elect Obama's election, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev stated that Russia would deploy Iskander short-range missiles in the small Russian enclave of Kaliningrad on the Polish northeast border along the Baltic. Who knew the crisis Mr. Biden predicted within six months would begin germinating within six hours? The missile defense program is one of the most important legacies of the Bush administration. In the past seven years, the United States has made remarkable progress in the research, development, testing and deployment of advanced missile defense systems. The effort was jump-started when Mr. Bush announced in December 2001 that the United States would exercise its option to withdraw from the 1972 ABM Treaty.
Since then the strategic rationale for missile defense has grown more compelling. Proliferator states like North Korea and Iran have continued to advance their missile and nuclear programs. And unlike the Cold War period, when critics doubted the efficacy of defensive system being able to take out thousands of Soviet warheads, contemporary scenarios foresee more limited missile strikes by less deterrable actors. So capabilities have increased, as have threats, and our ability to cope with them.
But missile defense has had obdurate opponents. In 2001 Mr. Biden called Mr. Bush's missile defense plans a "theological mission" motivated by an "ideological commitment," resulting in "absolute lunacy." He retains that viewpoint today. But the missile defense argument is not ideological but grounded in strategic realism. If anything, it is the opponents of missile defense who have a "faith based" strategy - namely, hoping nothing happens. And if the vice president-elect wants to discuss theological missions, he really should pursue that topic with the regime in Tehran.
The Obama administration will be less committed to missile defense than its predecessor, but will it back up our allies?
Obama foreign policy advisor Dennis McDonough said the president-elect "made no commitment" on the shield during his conversation with the Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and that "his position is as it was throughout the campaign, that he supports deploying a missile defense system when the technology is proved to be workable."
"Proved to be workable" is a red flag. This has been the standby argument against missile defense since the 1960s. Critics of the system can avoid debating the compelling strategic rationale by citing alleged technological deficiencies. You can always find some scientist willing to testify that missile defense technology is imperfect - indeed what technology is perfect? But the argument is showing its age, especially given the proven workability of missile defense systems.
Furthermore, Mr. Obama's unwillingness to reassure Mr. Kaczynski is troubling. The Russians are watching this development closely, hoping to see the U.S. back down, particularly after Moscow's assertive and successful gamble in Georgia. Mindful of this, our eastern European allies are moving cautiously. Fearing an emerging grit deficit in the United States, both Poland and the Czech Republic have delayed final ratification of the missile defense agreements until the next administration is in place, and until they have concrete assurances that the United States will back them up. For countries on the Russian periphery who suffered over 40 years of Soviet occupation, national security is too important to be anchored on American vagueness.

By Kara Rowland - The Washington Times
Obama was excoriated for continuing the Bush administration's strictest national security policies, including indefinite detention, military commissions and a "targeted kill" program that authorizes the government to take out suspected terrorists anywhere. Published 8:56 p.m. July 29, 2010

By Sean Lengell - The Washington Times
The House ethics committee officially lodged charges against Rep. Charles B. Rangel, including that he used his office to raise $8 million for a college public policy center named after him and didn't file taxes while he was Congress' chief tax writer. Published 8:56 p.m. July 29, 2010
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