U.S. Considers Anti-Satellite Laser 511
SpaceAdmiral writes "The U.S. government wants to develop a ground-based weapon to shoot down enemy satellites in orbit. The laser will be much more powerful and sophisticated than a similar endeavor a decade ago. From the article: '... some Congressional Democrats and other experts fault the research as potential fuel for an antisatellite arms race that could ultimately hurt this nation more than others because the United States relies so heavily on military satellites, which aid navigation, reconnaissance and attack warning.'"
Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:3, Insightful)
Far more likely it's to protect America's "intellectual property economy" when it's cheap enough for private individuals to launch their own satellites to disseminate information under any laws they see fit.
Oh - and registration free link courtesy of Coral Cache [nyud.net]
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:5, Insightful)
Far more likely it's to protect America's "intellectual property economy" when it's cheap enough for private individuals to launch their own satellites to disseminate information under any laws they see fit.
Wow. There's my first good laugh of the day.
No, this is more of a paranoid-delusional fantasy of the Pentagon and some bureaucrats who don't want competition from China and maybe Russia. The key to U.S. military dominance is our excellent satellite intelligence. While HUMINT helps with the social engineering aspects of war, nothing but a satellite combined with proper munitions can blow up a tank underneath a bridge without hitting the bridge. From 40,000 feet. Our satellites give our military and NIMA a detailed view of pretty much every square meter of the planet, and we use this to blow shit up. No other nation on the globe has this capability to the extent we do. The United States government wants to keep it this way.
So, we're in a hypothetical future conflict with China. They have satellite capabilities similar to ours. Maybe not as good, but similar in ability. We use these lasers to blow up their satellites, removing their capability to deliver precision guided munitions. We retain that capability. We win the fight. Maybe not the war, as Iraq is teaching it takes more than bombs to do that, but at least the U.S. isn't the country blown to bits with an occupying force.
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:2)
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:2)
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:5, Insightful)
I do agree with your post to a certain extent, but the US hasn't entered a hot war with an equivilant (or even close) power for over fifty years (and arguably never)
The hot wars of the future will be with countries like iraq, where the US can absolutely dominate in air & space.
This project seems more likely for cold/economic wars of the future. Think about the damage to the US economy if Chinese satellites rebroadcast everything that could be rebroadcast (from entertainment through economic/political/military secrets to proprietary source code/ blueprints/ etc).
The US has always used its military to protect its economy - there is no reason this project should be any different.
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm sorry if this first post (my first one on slashdot) offended someone around here,
Don't worry about offending people - it's just words (and our ancestors have died to protect our rights to free speech).
If anyone gets offended, they have the right to reply & debate. That way everyone learns something!
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:4, Insightful)
The tragedy is, they ought to be thinking about something *besides* oil in forty years.
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:3, Interesting)
Now add in the fact that the U.S. is actually building 14 large bases at the same time they tell us they plan no perma
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sure the French thought something similar when they built the Maginot line [wikipedia.org] - "Now we're safe from the Germans, all wars will be small colonial ones".
The world can change pretty quickly, as Pearl Harbour or 9/11 show. If you want to survive, you need to prepare for all possible sorts of wars, not just the ones that seem likely at the moment. And a war with China is all two possible. I'm not suggesting that either side want it, but if you look at the regular standoffs over Taiwan, it's always possible that an accident could esacalate into a very dangerous situation. To a lesser extent, it's possible that North Korea could drag the Chinese and the US into a conflict.
And a war between China and the US would be much more evenly balanced in a sortf of Zerg vs Protoss way. It would also be marked by extreme ruthlessness, and it's hard to imagine that shooting down satellites would be regarded as particularly unacceptable.
And there are other possible conflicts where the US would be evenly matched, e.g. against Russia or even Iran. Whilst it's unlikely that Iran would be able to launch satellites, they would be able to buy coverage & GPS like services from European or Russian ones.
Even if none of this happens, shooting down satellites with a ground based laser is a cool trick. AFAIK, the US does have anti satellite weapons already - there was a cold war program to fire missiles from an F15 [wikipedia.org]. Looking at that link, the Russians experimented with a load of anti satellite techniques from kamikaze 'figher satellites' to a ground based laser that fry satellite's image sensors.
the world did not change after 9/11 (Score:3, Insightful)
The world DID NOT CHANGE after 9/11 because of 9/11. It changed because of people claiming it changed, and said people "protecting" us from boogeymen. First it was communists- now it is terrorists.
3,000 people died in the WTC attacks; twice as many Americans die from heart attacks in a month, and preventing their deaths doesn't require stripping people's civil liberties.
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:2, Informative)
You're vastly overstating the power of the Chinese military. Not only are they not on par with the U.S., they aren't even close to being so. Many of their soldiers just go trucks to move around in, previously they were walking. The Clinton Administration made it possible for them to launch an ICBM and actually hit something. Before that, their guidance systems
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:2)
I remember at the height of the cold ware, China, the worlds 3rd SuperPower, only had 11 nuclear weapons. (England and France have more) Still, 11 was enough to get them into the club, and so far, they used them wisely. (i.e. not at all)
Now, your saying that they have 22 ICBMs. Yes, they may not be at our level yet, but their climb is much easier because they can learn from us. Even non and declassified stuff gives you lots of information about
We win the fight ? (Score:2, Insightful)
And therein lies your problem. If your enemy can't pin-point the military target, then their next best option is to target a large city. Way to go, that was smart. Instead of losing a missile silo, you lose 250,000 citizens.
Re:We win the fight ? (Score:5, Interesting)
Not sure why this is modded at zero ... I think the AC is onto something here! Take this to its logical conclusion, ie otherwise totally powerless citizens against a superpower, and you end up with terrorists, as that is the only apparent way to strike back!
Of course, the US has historically had the benefit of being physically remote from the people they wage war on - no V1 or V2 flying bombs flying over the channel in US history (discounting the Japanese balloons of WWII I guess). The threat of ICBMs brings this a little closer to home, but we know who has these, and "we" tend not to wage war on them so much! But now we have the age of the bomb in a backpack and all bets are off!
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:2)
How much of an EM pulse can American satellites survive?
Re:One obvious target... (Score:4, Informative)
The U.S. isn't really concerned about enemy spy satellites -- god knows our borders are so porous, you could just send a TV crew in and photograph almost anything you want, as long as they don't look Middle Eastern -- but navigation satellites are another matter.
The saving grace of the GPS system, from a U.S. military perspective, is that an enemy really can't depend on it; we can throw errors into it pretty much anywhere, anytime we want without having our equipment be affected (except all the guys using civilian GPS receivers because they haven't been issued real ones). I think there's a real concern that if there was a competing GPS-like system, that an enemy could use it to pilot a cruise missile at a U.S. target in such a way that we wouldn't get much warning.
Now, I think this is kind of a false threat: I think, given what I said earlier about our borders, that it's a whole lot easier to just drive a truck up to said U.S. target and blow it up than it would be to cobble together a homemade V-1 or V-2 with Galileo navigation, but apparently others disagree.
At any rate, any navigation system that provided GPS-like accuracy that wasn't within direct U.S. control would almost certainly necessitate the creation of a way to destroy it, or at least temporarily disable it in certain areas (if you de-orbited a satellite or two you might be able to make a hole in the system's coverage that would take a while for the operators to replace from spares).
Not that it would do any good against ICBMs, Chinese or otherwise, since they use astro- and inertial navigation systems anyway.
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:3, Funny)
The national debt? BOMB IT!
The homeless? BOMB THEM!
Healthcare cost spiraling out of control? BOMB THE INVALIDS!
Terrorists? MOAB!
Gas prices? BOMB OIL-PRODUCING COUNTRIES! BOMB RIGHT DOWN TO THE OIL!
Complaints about Camp X-ray? BOMB CUBA!
Lasting peace in the middle east? BOMB THEM!
Air safety? BURN THE SKY! ARCLIGHT FROM HERE TO CHINA!
Chinese satellites? LASER BOMB!
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:3, Informative)
1) The US is a member of NATO.
2) Although the commander of the NATO operation was British, the plane that made the attack was a US Air Force F15E manned by an American Air Force pilot and weapons officer.
3) Amnesty International's investigation determined t
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:2)
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's because the primary purpose of this program, like so many others, is to transfer vast amounts of money from the federal treasury to certain politically cooperative industries. Like Star Wars before it, I doubt that there is anyone in the Bush administration that cares one iota whether it has any real military value or even whether it ever "works" or not. The real (political) value is in the spending itself.
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:2)
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:4, Insightful)
Our current Secretary of Defense, who so many around here love to hate (myself included), would disagree with your assessment. He's cut programs that he deems unnecessary in the past [brookings.edu]. He didn't make a lot of friends inside or outside the Pentagon by doing it. I'm no Rumsfeld defender after the colossal fuck up that is Iraq, but I will give him some credit where credit is due.
The real culprit, IMHO, is Congress. Where the heck is the oversight? You expect the Pentagon to push forward every weapons program they can dream up. That's what we pay them to do. Congress controls the purse string and has oversight which means ultimately they've got the power to put a stop to these programs if they choose to use it.
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:3, Insightful)
They Russians were testing anti-Satellite weapons in the 80's as I recall, crude but effective in theory. All you need to do is launch a Satellites into an orbit that matches the one you are taking down, and blow yours up. Car bomb in space, in effect. I guess this is why we are suddenly afraid of this, though I suspect the White House is over-estimating the ease of putting a car bomb in space, then matching the orbit of an object flying at thousands of mph. For what? to t
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:2)
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:3, Insightful)
Ok, call me an X files conspiracy theory type, but we've already got space defense systems and this is merely meant as an upgrade or additional weapons systems.
Lets examine the facts.
-we currently have more than 20 GPS sattelites in orbit. Besides helping you find the closest Starbucks, these are also used to help our soldiers find their way throug remote mountain passes and help missiles find their targets.
-Military doctrine is to control the media as
Been done. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Purpose for defense or offense? (Score:5, Funny)
Of course no feelings were bruised!
You can't be a whiney mac fanboy without having a thick skin!
Sooner than we think... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Sooner than we think... (Score:2)
Re:Sooner than we think... (Score:2)
Man, that movie is one of my absolute favorites
-WS
More likely (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, if that happened, I would imagine that there would be an "arms race" to produce stealth satellites, and weaponized satellites that can take down antisatellite weapons.
what amazes me (Score:2)
Re:what amazes me (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:what amazes me (Score:2)
Or as I joked in my earlier post, sit behind one-way glass... or a material that only lets light through at 90degrees (whatever it's looking at at the time), other light would be reflected. Of caues I'd feel sorry for whatever random innocent was sitting wherever the reflectected beam ends up!
You would also have to be able to compensate for the force pushing the sattalite out of or
Danger is the middle name (Score:2, Funny)
[Scott snickers]
Dr. Evil: What?
Scott: Oh, nothing, Darth.
Dr. Evil: What did you call me?
Scott: Nothing.
Scott: [pretends to sneeze] Ripoff.
Dr. Evil: Bless you.
Dr. Evil: I will hold the world ransom unless you give me... ONE MILLION DOLLARS!
[UN members all start to laugh.]
Dr. Evil: Er, that is, unless you give me... ONE HUNDRED BILLION DOLLARS!
[UN members gasp!]
Re:Danger is the middle name (Score:2)
And next up... (Score:2)
I think... (Score:2)
Re:I think... (Score:2)
PS: What fun would it be to get to his fillings?
Wow. (Score:5, Insightful)
The other theory, give countries warnings about removing satellites? Countries love ultimatums too. Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that I'm against this (or for it, really) but I'm suggesting that perhaps the political and diplomatic repercussions might need to be investigated more thoroughly.
From a sci-fi point of view, its Spies Like Us [imdb.com] all over again! Sounds interesting and technological to say the least.
Re:Wow. (Score:2)
As Sun Tzu puts it:
"Hence to fight and conquer in all your battles is not supreme excellence; supreme excellence consists in breaking the enemy's resistance without fighting."
and "Thus the highest form of generalship is to balk the enemy's plans"
Your enemy will be broken before the fighting starts.
if we're just hearing about this now (Score:2, Insightful)
Nothing says "ignorance" (Score:2)
Get flipping real.
It is a race. The difference is, are we going to join in or talk ourselves into a corner. The reason people pin the blame on the US for "escalating" everything is that items like this do come up for discussion in this country instead of being suddenly announced during a "military day". Also it doesn't hurt the US can actually do some of things mentioned while other countries would be years
Re:Nothing says "ignorance" (Score:2)
Get flipping real.
I don't dispute this, but people like you are the reason why most of the rest of the world hates Americans. There's a line between security and pissing everyone in the world off. Sometimes the latter is necessary for the former, but not as often as the U.S. does it.
Call me ignorant, call me whatever you like, I don't care one bit. Opinions are like assholes, everyone has one.
Re:Wow. (Score:2)
How much will this project cost in tax dollars? How easily can it be transformed into a permanent source of revenue? How much will government make on administration of the program? How much more power over the people will government acquire as a result? Finally, how many problems will this program spawn for the future (to be "f
Great... (Score:2)
Re:Great... (Score:2)
Mmmm... popcorn!
(See? Some of us actually got your Obscure Pop Culture reference!)
it's dual-use technology and an acounting shift (Score:3, Interesting)
Makes more sense than the opposite I guess (Score:2, Interesting)
sure, what the hell. At worst it will start a high tech arms race and that's good for business.
And the ultimate defense for a satellite? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And the ultimate defense for a satellite? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:And the ultimate defense for a satellite? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:And the ultimate defense for a satellite? (Score:2)
Here I thought mirrors was a part of the lasers themselves. Though, that may not apply to all lasers. In any case, you could probably absorb a lot of the laser's effect by surrounding the satellite with an orb of a transparant material, filled with a high
That way thinking is the problem with the USA (Score:4, Insightful)
As the USA concetrates on the development of these so called lasers, al-Qaida and its affiliates will enter the USA through the porous southern and norther borders and do greater harm.
Folks, do not be suprised to hear in future that this project has corruption and greed behind it. Remember that the USA spent US$5.99 billion on the shuttle which was never value for money!
Re:That way thinking is the problem with the USA (Score:2)
Al-Qaeda is already here, living among us. Haven't you been paying attention? The 9/11 hijackers were all living in the United States at the time of the attack. Some of them were here for 10 years prior to the attack. Do you think that these were the only ones? Do you think that just because the government arrested a handful
Re:That way thinking is the problem with the USA (Score:3, Insightful)
Right, because there is only one person working in the Pentagon and he can only concentrate on one thing at a time.
Seems like we have more to loose (Score:3, Insightful)
The USA needs to be careful here... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The USA needs to be careful here... (Score:5, Informative)
Oh, wake the hell up.
News flash: Reconnaissance satellites are *weapons*. They are also *not new*. They've been around for decades, so space has already been 'militarized.' The Russians had a working anti-satellite program back in the *late 1960s*. We were succesfully killing satellites with missiles back in the mid-80s. The notion that this 'militarization of space' is anything that has its roots in the current administration bespeaks a woeful ignorance of recent history.
A few missles that blast millions of ball-bearings into to orbit, and the entire planet will be locked out of space for hundreds, or even thousands of years
No, it wouldn't. There are any number of ways to deal with that scenario, ranging from heavier armored satellites to different target orbits to cheap pop-up satellites that you can launch from submarines and don't have to survive for more than a fraction of an orbit. None of these are as good an option as what we do now, but the suggestion that all someone would have to do to prevent all access to space for millennia is set off a few rockets full of ball-bearings is absolutely ridiculous.
Blissful ignorance (Score:2)
some Congressional Democrats and other experts fault the research as potential fuel for an antisatellite arms race that could ultimately hurt this nation more than others because the United States relies so heavily on military satellites, which aid navigation, reconnaissance and attack warning
This is to say military planners should blissfully ignore enemy military surveillance and navigation satellites flying overhead while they are used to target our forces. Why? Do we want to be nice to our adversary
Re:Blissful ignorance (Score:2)
Re:Blissful ignorance (Score:2)
You can have all the military data in the world but if all you have is a single AK-47 and a stick of dynamite, what'cha gonna do?? Unless you're the A-Team, I'm guessing not a whole lot.
Same with these anti-satellite weapons... Who is the military protecting us from? The groups with the intercontinental weapons can be rationalized with
Re:Blissful ignorance (Score:2)
What enemies does the US have that target, or will in the near future target, US ground forces using satellites? Making hugely expensive preparations for a potential Russian invasion of mainland USA seems, uhm, less cost-effective than alternative ways of spending the same amount of cash.
Make no mistake this is an offensive weapon (Score:2, Insightful)
The other "Star wars" (Score:2)
Water-Based? (Score:2)
You can't shoot down a satellite (Score:5, Insightful)
You can destroy it but all that will happen is that the pieces will
spread out from the point of explosion/impact and eventually become
space junk that could cause problems from friendly satellites.
Hopefully the laser would only disable a satellite and not cause its
fuel tanks to detonate , since if they do then the US will simply
be causing problems for itself , its allies and all space farers in
the future.
Re:You can't shoot down a satellite (Score:2)
More U.S. Taxpayer money down the drain (Score:2)
They are cutting down social security but they always find the money to feed the military industry complex.
From where ? From U.S. Taxpayer pockets.
Ah, in addition the same taxpayers will have to replenish the military ranks using the machines they paid to manufacture when a war starts - tanks, guns
In short, theyre surrounded in all sides - first pay for the machine, then pay to use the machine with your life.
Doesn't make sense (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Doesn't make sense (Score:2)
Easy! All you have to do is hope no one else makes a baseball bat. You'll be safe forever.
Warfare is not about being equal or fair. You want to win (however a 'win' is defined in any given conflict) as quickly as possible, and with as few casualties as possible. On both sides.
We still don't do radiation scans at all ports (Score:3, Insightful)
This is a waste of money. Spend the cash you'd put into a ground based anti-satellite laser and instead do things that would measurably improve the security of the US against attack from vectors which matter in realistic terms. If we determine we really need to destroy a satellite, we already have specially designed anti-satellite missles.
Military Bozos (Score:2, Interesting)
Don't get me wrong, I'm glad they are thinking of the most likely attack that will befall satellites, but the logical step after this is to design something that can divert this type of attack. If the US were to suddenly lose all satellite communications, we'd be in some serious
Re:Military Bozos (Score:2)
Of COURSE! Research into development of a system like this totally precludes any other type of research. Until this laser is up and running, no one in the entire country can be thinking of ways to protect a satellite against a laser or other type of attack. Every single one of them
Starfire sound familiar? (Score:2)
I'm a little surprised that people are upset about this technology now. It was developed in the late 80's. I know
Shoot down Space Junk (Score:2)
They can start their testing by shooting down the hundreds of useless satellites and debris orbiting the earth at this very moment.
http://www.space.com/spacewatch/space_junk.html [space.com] Space Junk
http://www.space.com/spacewatch/space_junk_list.ht ml [space.com] Space Junk: The full list
http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/space/solarsystem/ear th/spacejunk.shtml [bbc.co.uk]
The race has begun (Score:5, Informative)
My response to reading the article: duh!
Here are some recent articles on the developments in China. The US is not starting this race, but it'd be nice to keep up regardless.
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/space/2005-07 -27-china-satellites_x.htm [usatoday.com] m l [afio.com]
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/HD20Ad03.html [atimes.com]
http://www.house.gov/coxreport/chapfs/ch4.html [house.gov]
http://www.spacedaily.com/news/china-01c.html [spacedaily.com]
http://www.taiwandc.org/twcom/84-no3.htm [taiwandc.org]
http://www.afio.com/sections/wins/1998/notes48.ht
The world is, a dangerous place. As with Sudan and Iran, the UN is no deterrent to aggression. Enlightened self-interest directs us to investigate these types of systems for the same reasons we investigate lethal pathogens. Surviving them requires understanding them even if we never intend to use them.
What about the mines?? (Score:5, Insightful)
The US is not starting this race, but it'd be nice to keep up regardless.
From your SpaceDaily.com link above: "China will become the third nation after U.S. and Russia to possess an ASAT system." China can make arguments identical to yours about enlightened self-interest. They could make the same argument about WMDs -- and Saddam Hussein, Kim Jong Il, and the regime in Iran have all done just that. Deterrence, etc.
Re:The race has begun (Score:5, Funny)
Is that comma meant to indicate a Shatner-esque pause?
Ozone layer (Score:2)
Earth is in a war with another planet. (Score:2)
The day the rest of the world realizes this fact is when the armada arrives.
Seriously though, this technology is bound to happen. And our weapons capabilities will continue to get stronger and we'll be able to destroy OTHER planets with one button. We can't underestimate the ingenuity of human stupidity, so one day shit will happen and we'll come close killing ourselves.
Blind enemies lash out (Score:4, Insightful)
This was basicly the logic behind the ABM treaty. It still holds good.
With our current terrorist enemy, I cannot see blinding any satellites would help. With potential enemies, most of them have nukers and likely would get very edgy blinded.
So ..... (Score:2)
How come they can't provide universal free healthcare, and universal free veterinary care for cats and dogs? It's recognised that pet owners are generally healthier and longer lived than non-pet owners. This should be expected, since pet ownership provides physical exercise, companionship and mental stimulation. A small investment in a dog or cat pays dividends in terms of few
impossible to generate a powerfull enough beam (Score:3, Insightful)
It is a electric field and a magnetic field moving together.
The breakdown voltage of air is about 2000V per millimeter.
With a powerfull laser in a lab, which is about fifty orders of magnitude too weak to do anything to a satellite, you can get sparks in mid air due to the air breaking down because of the high voltage of the electric part of the electromagnetic wave.
You cannot generate a laser beam powerfull enough to destroy a satellite from the ground. IF you tried you would just make a lot of plasma in the air above your laser. Focusing lots of little lasers on a satellite would require far more lasers than could be practically built.
I suspect these storys are planted in the media to worry unfriendly countrys, just like the star wars program that never had a chance of working or the rediculous story I saw in a newspaper a couple of years ago about missiles that can burrow into the ground and destroy a shelter 150feet down.
I also think it's a sad reflection on the state of slashdot that this story is up to 150 comments and I'm the first to point this out. I'm going to go and bash my head on a wall unitl I come to my senses and stop even reading alterslash. [alterslash.org]
Movie plots (Score:3, Funny)
Wake me up when we get to shark poewred lasers.
Re:Ronald Reagan - Your Laser Is Ready (Score:4, Funny)
I've never tried, but I'd assume its relatively difficult to make satellites out of sticks and dirt.
Re:Ronald Reagan - Your Laser Is Ready (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Ronald Reagan - Your Laser Is Ready (Score:2)
Nah, that part's easy.
The launching, on the other hand...
Re:Ronald Reagan - Your Laser Is Ready (Score:2)
I'm not defending the program, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Like, for instance... (Score:2)
Hello? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Seriously (Score:2)
You mean that launch platform that keeps blowing up and costs about $500m per launch. As opposed to zapping them from the safety of the ground and for a pittance.
Re:Because we all know other nations (Score:2)
Re:Because we all know other nations (Score:5, Insightful)
Imperial Japan [fas.org] had nuclear bomb programs too.
Personally, I'm glad America got there first.
The Soviets took the easy route. They had some Useful Idiots steal the technology [wikipedia.org].
The Soviets had ASAT programs too. ASAT weaponry is old news, it's just that now they're using lasers rather than missiles. Heck, even that's not all that new, though making it work would be.
Don't you think the way for the US to really ensure its population's security would be to try to track down the arsenal of the former USSR?
Don't you think Putin ought to take nuclear security more seriously? The Russians built the damn things and they're not so poor that they can't deal with them if they want to, especially with high oil prices pouring hard currency into Russian state coffers.
Re:Because we all know other nations (Score:2)
Interesting that you don't just say "Nazi" - just have to throw the fear word "socialist" out there as often as possible hey?
Don't you think Putin ought to take nuclear security more seriously?
Of course - that does not invalidate my point however.