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Technology has always found its greatest consumer in a
nation's war and defense efforts. Since the last attempts at a
"Star Wars" defense system, has technology changed
considerably enough to make the latest Missile Defense
initiatives more successful? Can such an application of
science be successful? Is a militarized space inevitable,
necessary or impossible?
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(5114 previous messages)
rshow55
- 04:18pm Oct 22, 2002 EST (#
5115 of 5174)
Can we do a better job of finding truth? YES. Click
"rshow55" for some things Lchic and I have done and worked for
on this thread.
lchic
10/22/02 11:39am There's reason to check a lot of
things -- and the fact that the question of who gassed the
Kurds is still in doubt gives one more reason - among many
compelling ones - why we need to get a lot of things checked.
Truth matters. lchic
10/22/02 11:45am
There are a lot of things to check about missile defense -
and easy ways of checking them - except that, too often, it
seems to be against the rules to check anything to
closure if anybody in power objects. "Technical discussion has
been pretty dense so far;" rshow55
3/2/02 11:52am
rshow55
- 04:21pm Oct 22, 2002 EST (#
5116 of 5174)
Can we do a better job of finding truth? YES. Click
"rshow55" for some things Lchic and I have done and worked for
on this thread.
Russia Rejects New Iraq Resolution Filed at 12:52
p.m. ET http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/international/AP-Iraq-World-Reax.html
"MOSCOW (AP) -- Russia rejected the new U.S.
draft resolution on Iraq Tuesday, dealing a sharp blow to
American efforts to gain U.N. backing for the automatic use
of force if weapons inspectors are thwarted by Baghdad.
"Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov's statement
said the U.S. document failed to meet Russian criteria.
. . . . .
``The American draft resolution...does not
answer the criteria which the Russian side laid out earlier
and which it confirms today,'' Ivanov was quoted as saying
by the Interfax news agency.
"Ivanov made the statement several hours
after meeting with Hans Blix, the chief U.N. weapons
inspector.
"Ivanov made his comments after separate
meetings with State Department Undersecretary John Bolton as
well as with Blix.
. . .
"China ``will take seriously'' any measure
supporting U.N. weapons inspections and leading to a
peaceful settlement of the standoff between Iraq and the
United States, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu
Jianchao said at a regularly scheduled briefing.
"However, he added: ``We have always held
that the U.N. weapons inspectors should return to Iraq as
soon as possible and the Security Council should consider
its next move according to the result of the inspection.''
"French President Jacques Chirac did not
react directly to the draft but suggested the French were
not close to supporting it.
``We have our own appreciation of things,
and we tell (the United States) that,'' Chirac said, even if
``we don't say it in an aggressive way.'' He spoke to
reporters after a meeting with Danish Prime Minister Anders
Fogh Rasmussen whose country holds the rotating European
Union presidency.
"Some countries, including the United States
and Great Britain, have said that Iraq has made strides in
developing weapons of mass destruction that pose a grave
threat to mankind.
How is that threat to mankind greater - or different in
kind, from a number of other threats set out in detail
in the following paper?
CNS Occasional Papers: #3 Nonproliferation Regimes At
Risk CHALLENGES IN THE MIDDLE EAST TO
NONPROLIFERATION REGIMES by Michael Barletta and Amin
Tarzi
"The proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction and other challenges to international
nonproliferation regimes emerging from the Middle East have
global as well as regional consequences. .....
http://cns.miis.edu/pubs/opapers/op3/bartar.htm
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