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The Other Minutemen: Missile Defense Arrives, Just in Time By Rod D. Martin, 4 July 2006
Every day brings news of the Minutemen on Mexico’s border; and on this 230th birthday of the American idea, we recall the original Minutemen, who stood ready to meet the British threat at a moment's notice.
But little noticed even by those conservatives who hungered for its creation since long before Ronald Reagan’s 1983 “Star Wars” speech, another Minuteman stands ready this Fourth of July. And in its job, minutes are the difference between life and millions of deaths.
Today the threat is very
different indeed. An evil assortment of equally resolute foes -- foes of both
our liberty and that of the rest of the world -- directly seeks our
annihilation. Just this Monday, North Korea, that sick cross between
1984 and
Atlas Shrugged, threatened America with nuclear war. Iran looms, the
Indian Subcontinent seems forever on the brink, and weapons technology continues
its spread.
Late last month, George W. Bush “turned on” America’s missile defense. For the very first time, Reagan’s vision is a reality: America’s small but growing missile shield is fully operational. And the best is yet to come.
But what if there are more than two players, with radically different goals and endgames in mind? And what if the enemy is demonstrably unstable or irrational, like the leaders of North Korea and Iran? Who really knows what Kim Jong Il, purposely presiding over an unending North Korean famine, or Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, seeking to bring about the firey return of the Hidden Imam, might do?
This much is certain,
though: nuclear blackmail is a lot harder against a country which can shoot your
missiles down.
Some question the system’s accuracy; and while Lt. General Henry "Trey" Obering, the builder of our system, says he's "very confident" that our current shield can shoot down any missile launched from North Korea, questions certainly remain.
But some missile defense is
self-evidently better than no missile defense. It adds uncertainty to the
calculation of any potential attacker: who really wants to bet against America’s
technical proficiency? And as the technology keeps improving, and more layers
of redundancy are added to the system, accuracy will grow better and better as
well.
Copyright: Rod D. Martin, 4 July 2006.
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-- Rod D. Martin is Founder and Chairman of TheVanguard.Org, America’s premier conservative movement online. A noted author and speaker, former policy director to Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and Special Counsel to PayPal.com Founder Peter Thiel, he is a member of the Arlington Group and of the Council for National Policy’s Board of Governors. He also serves as Executive Vice President of the National Federation of Republican Assemblies (NFRA), “the Republican Wing of the Republican Party”.
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