SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Bill Clinton Scandal - SANITY CHECK -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dwight E. Karlsen who wrote (39430)3/19/1999 9:39:00 PM
From: Shawn Donahue  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 67261
 

Dwight,

I agree...but 1st we need a missile defense, and I wonder
if Clinton's sudden urge to bomb Kosovo is his latest "Wag
the Dog" to delay or prevent the vote scheduled for the next few
days in the Senate for a National missile defense system!

I am very busy lately and enjoy reading this columnist...and so
I asked to be put on this distribution list for updates...

Subj: China's Espionage Proves We Need a Missile Defense
Date: 99-03-18 16:31:26 EST
From: eagle@eagleforum.org (Eagle Forum)
To: Column@eagleforum.org

China's Espionage Proves We Need a Missile Defense

March 17, 1999 by: Phyllis Schlafly

We heard a lot of posturing this year about Senators fulfilling their
obligation to obey the Constitution. The Senate has no more
important obligation than to fulfill its constitutional duty to "provide for
the common defense" by voting for the National Missile Defense
Act (S.257), which is scheduled to come to the floor within the next
few days.


This bill declares it to be U.S. policy "to deploy as soon as is
technologically possible an effective National Missile Defense system
capable of defending the territory of the United States against limited
ballistic missile attack (whether accidental, unauthorized, or
deliberate)." Twice last year, a Democratic filibuster prevented this
same bill from coming to a vote, but a new front-page scoop in the
New York Times should shame the anti-defense Democrats into
changing their votes.

The Times exposé describes how Communist China, using an
espionage operation at our Los Alamos Laboratory in New Mexico,
stole the strategic know-how to miniaturize its nuclear bombs and
launch them at multiple targets from a single missile. The espionage
probably started in the mid-1980s, but U.S. intelligence didn't
discover it until 1995 when an analysis of Chinese tests revealed that
China has miniature warheads like our most advanced warhead, the
W-88.

Multiple nuclear warheads that can be launched from long-range
missiles, mobile missiles, and submarines are the main elements of
a modern nuclear force. They can be used on China's thirteen
intercontinental ballistic missiles that are already targeted on U.S.
cities.

As Yogi Berra would say, it sounds like deja vu all over again
because this is an espionage success story that ranks with the
Soviets' theft of our atomic secrets by Klaus Fuchs and the
Rosenbergs. It's more damaging than the betrayal of our secrets by
convicted spy Aldrich Ames.

Another parallel between the Chinese and the Soviet espionage of the
1940s is the coverup by the Administration. The Times' investigation
shows that the Clinton Administration's response to the 1995
discovery of this daring and dramatic theft of our most vital
technology was "delays, inaction and skepticism," plus shockingly
lax security at Los Alamos.

Of course, the Clinton Administration didn't want its China policy to
be upset by messy revelations that our trading "partner" was stealing
our technology and using it to target weapons of mass destruction on
U.S. cities. The centerpiece of Clinton's China policy was to allow a
billion-dollar-a-week trade deficit with China, which provides the U.S.
dollars China needs to build an up-to-date, aggressive war machine.

Clinton's China policy also included okaying increased exports of
satellites and other militarily useful items, looser controls over sales
of supercomputers, and trying to work out a deal to allow U.S.
companies to sell commercial nuclear reactors. After all, these sales
were of major commercial importance to the biggest contributors to
the Democratic Party's campaign coffers.

It was in 1995 when the whistle-blower in the Energy Department,
intelligence official Notra Trulock, first sounded the alarm about
Chinese Communist penetration at Los Alamos. But making a fuss
with the Chinese would have interfered with those millions of dollars
still to be raised from the Chinese for Clinton's 1996 reelection.

So, the Clinton White House and its National Security staff feigned
"skepticism," denied that China's extraordinary and inexplicable leap
forward in nuclear technology could have come from theft of American
secrets, and downplayed the significance. It was just so much more
important for Clinton to have a friendly meeting with China's President
Jiang Zemin and let photo-ops mislead the world with the illusion that
China was moving toward "democracy" and "capitalism."

The attitude of Clinton's National Security staff is ominously
reminiscent of the way the Roosevelt and Truman Administrations
stonewalled evidence about (in Harry Truman's words) "good old Joe"
Stalin's espionage, pretending to believe Secretary of War Henry
Stimson's famous words that "gentlemen don't read other
gentlemen's mail." But Joseph Stalin was no gentleman, and neither
are the perpetrators of the Tiananmen Square massacre.

Trulock encountered one roadblock after another in trying to present
his evidence of China's espionage to Clinton's National Security staff,
the FBI, the CIA, and his own boss, Energy Secretary Federico
Pena. The FBI opened a criminal investigation in 1996 and identified
five suspects, but no one has yet been arrested.

Trulock finally became a major witness before the Cox Committee
last year, even though senior Administration officials had ordered him
not to tell Congress about his findings, and demoted him after he
testified. Meanwhile, the principal suspect at Los Alamos has twice
failed a lie detector.

The Cox Committee reached unanimous, bipartisan agreement in a
700-page report that China's theft has severely hurt U.S. national
security. Any Senator who now votes against building an anti-missile
defense should be held personally responsible for leaving all
Americans like sitting ducks, vulnerable to a Chinese missile attack
or threat.
Phyllis Schlafly column 3-17-99

***************************************************************
Additional links may be found at our on-line copy of this column:
eagleforum.org
***************************************************************
Purchase Eagle Forum materials at our new on-line store!
eagleforum.org
***************************************************************

Eagle Forum eagleforum.org
PO Box 618 eagle@eagleforum.org
Alton, IL 62002 Phone: 618-462-5415
Fax: 618-462-8909
---------------------------------------------------------------
To subscribe to Eagle E-mail
please e-mail eagle@eagleforum.org
with SUBSCRIBE in the subject line