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Key republicans support missile defense improvements
Fly 11 – Jamie Fly, Bush administration at the National Security Council (2008-2009) and in the Office of the Secretary of Defense, January 3, 2011, “ After New START, Obama must move forward on missile defense,” http://shadow.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/01/03/after_new_start_obama_must_move_forward_on_missile_defense
In two of these areas, Sen. Kyl and his colleagues did yeoman's work by prodding the administration to improve nuclear and missile defense policy. Through months of negotiations, he extracted a commitment from the Obama administration to provide $84.1 billion of funding over the next ten years to ensure that the aging U.S. nuclear stockpile is modernized. And during the final days of the Senate debate, Sen. Kyl, joined by Sen. McCain and others, obtained assurances from Obama regarding his long-term commitment to develop effective missile defenses.
Politics link turn- bipartisan support
Lambakis 7 – Steven Lambakis, pHd, national security anmd international affairs analyst specializing in space power and policy studies for National Institute for Public policy, February 19, 2007, “Missile Defense From Space,” RealClearPolitics, http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2007/02/missile_defense_from_space.html
After more than 60 years of advances in ballistic missile technologies, we have only just begun to address our vulnerability to them. Missile defense is a policy and budgetary reality today, and it enjoys strong bipartisan support. Current U.S. efforts to dissuade other countries from investing in ballistic missiles, to assure U.S. allies, and to deter aggression put missile defense in a place of prominence. Bush Administration policy is to evolve the fielded system incrementally to defend against these threats. The system is intended to adapt to new threats as they emerge and integrate advanced missile defense technologies as they are introduced.
A2: Flip-Flop Link- the plan was Obama’s original statement
Fly 11 – Jamie Fly, Bush administration at the National Security Council (2008-2009) and in the Office of the Secretary of Defense, January 3, 2011, “ After New START, Obama must move forward on missile defense,” http://shadow.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/01/03/after_new_start_obama_must_move_forward_on_missile_defense
The suspect timing of the announcement, just as the administration was attempting to conclude negotiations with Moscow on New START and the bungled handling of the rollout raised further concerns that the administration was willing to barter away missile defense in an effort to overcome Russia's longtime opposition to U.S. missile defense. The treaty text signed by Obama contributed to conservative angst by linking offensive and defensive weapons in the preamble, a linkage that Russia had long sought but that the Obama administration insisted would not affect its future missile defense plans.
President Obama reaffirmed this position in a letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid during the Senate debate on New START, his strongest statement to date on missile defense. The president wrote that "as long as I am president, as long as the Congress provides the necessary funding, the United States will continue to develop and deploy effective missile defenses to protect the United States, our deployed forces, and our allies and partners." The president also reaffirmed his commitment to fully implement all four phases of his new missile defense plan in Europe, including the fourth phase, which will involve interceptors capable of defending against long-range Iranian systems -- the phase that Russian officials may have had in mind when they threatened to withdraw from the treaty if the United States develops its missile defense system quantitatively or qualitatively. Despite these commitments regarding funding for nuclear modernization and continued expansion of missile defenses, the administration will now have to follow through on its promises.
Public link turn- they will like the plan
Lambakis 7 – Steven Lambakis, pHd, national security and international affairs analyst specializing in space power and policy studies for National Institute for Public policy, February 19, 2007, “Missile Defense From Space,” RealClearPolitics, http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2007/02/missile_defense_from_space.html
Critics contend that weapons in space would destabilize existing security relationships, precipitate an arms race, undermine U.S. foreign policy, and seed anti-American coalitions. Not only are such criticisms based on questionable assumptions,2 but they also have not persuaded the country to forgo the advantages of space weapons. The most one could say at this stage is that the American people are indifferent, noncommittal, and confused.
Yet given the efficiencies space offers, and given the unpredictable, catastrophic, and global nature of threats we expect to face, it makes sense to explore the possible benefits of taking other combat missions to space. Once the benefits of active space defense programs and operations are made plain, the support of the American people will be forthcoming.
Republicans like the plan- view it as critical to security
Brinton 10 – Turner Brunton, Washington Staff Writer, Reporter: Military Space, Missile Defense, September 27, 2011, “GOP Pledges To Fully Fund Missile Defense,” http://spacenews.com/policy/100927-gop-pledges-fund-missile-defense.html
Republican members of the U.S. House of Representatives on Sept. 23 unveiled a new “Pledge to America” policy agenda that includes freezing nonmilitary spending and restoring missile defense funding that it says is needed to protect the United States from a ballistic missile attack from Iran.
“There is real concern that while the threat from Iranian intercontinental ballistic missiles could materialize as early as 2015, the government’s missile defense policy is not projected to cover the U.S. homeland until 2020,” the document states. “We will work to ensure critical funding is restored to protect the U.S. homeland and our allies from missile threats from rogue states such as Iran and North Korea.”
Statement from Senator Kyl: We’re moving in the wrong direction in terms of missile defense
Huessy 11 – Peter R. Huessy, Senior Defense Associate, National Defense University Foundation, April 16 2011, Transcript from Senator Kyl, “Kyl Transcript: Senate Perspectives on Iran, Missile Defense and Nuclear Deterrence,” http://bigpeace.com/phuessy/2011/04/16/kyl-transcript-senate-perspectives-on-iran-missile-defense-and-nuclear-deterrence/
Finally, let’s talk about missile defense. This is really headed in the wrong direction. The United States seems to, and this is the administration, seems to have decided that its primary goal in missile defense is to make sure the Russians are not offended. Their policy has been to curtail defense of the homeland, our U.S. strategic or homeland missile defense requirements in favor of regional missile defenses insofar as those do not offend the Russians.
Now of course regional defenses are necessary, but they are not sufficient, especially at the expense of defending our homeland. But because any force that we would deploy, that could theoretically be effective against a Russian missile, will offend the Russians, then this administration is bound and determined not to go forward with it. That’s very dangerous.
Obviously the administration believes this is important to its reset. I have not seen a lot of evidence that this reset has really benefitted the United States. but I guess we can argue that another time.
Kyl has pushed for the plan in the past
Nukes of Hazard 7 – Project of the Center for Arms Control and Nonproliferation, October 8, 2007, “Senator Kyl Attempts to Sell Space-Based Missile Defense as Satellite Protection,” http://nukesofhazard.blogspot.com/2007/10/senator-kyl-attempts-to-sell-space.html
Last week, Senator Jon Kyl (R-AZ) attempted to amend the Senate Defense Appropriations bill to re-insert funding for the "space-based test bed" -- preliminary research into the development of three or more prototype weaponized satellites designed to intercept ballistic missiles launched from the ground. Kyl's case for funding the project was that it was a step towards the development of active defenses for American satellites against anti-satellite weapons, and that it was not necessarily a missile defense project. However, an examination of the budget request for the test bed casts serious doubt on Kyl's argument, indicating that the test bed is quite simply a missile defense program.
Kyl is the Michael Jordan of Congress
Barnes 2011 Fred, Jon Kyl’s Retirement: Major Loss for Senate Republicans, Fred Barnes is executive editor of The Weekly Standard, which he cofounded in 1995. From 1985 to 1995, he was senior editor and White House correspondent for the New Republic. graduated from the University of Virginia and was a Neiman Fellow at Harvard University. 2-10-11
For Republicans, losing Senator Jon Kyl of Arizona is a bit like the Chicago Bulls when Michael Jordan retired. Not only is Kyl the MVP among Republican senators, but he also makes the other senators look good and perform better. I can’t think of a member of Congress who will be missed more than Kyl when he retires in 2012.
Kyl has three great strengths. One is his knowledge of issues. He knows more about more subjects – from missile defense to the minutiae of health care – than almost anyone else in Congress. And knowledge is power.
Another is his strategic sense. Kyl has a good grasp of how various issues fit into the mosaic of his party’s political ideology. I’ve talked to him many times and always been impressed by this. He’s a serious conservative thinker on policy.
Plan is massively unpopular in congress
Kyl 8 – Jon Kyl, Senate minority whip, Speech before the American foreign Policy Council’s conference on “Missile Defenses and American Security,” “Missile Defense Priorities: The View From Congress,” March 10, 2008
There is something else that we should have learned from the Chinese anti‐satellite test in January of 2007. Some in Congress, many in Congress on the other side, believe that there is an artificial barrier between missile defense and space. This is the so‐called “weaponizing space” argument. But the two concepts are inseparable. They are not viewed as separate by an intercontinental ballistic missile traveling through space to reach a target. That is, clearly, a weapon in space. And, yet, when I tried to restore just $10 million for a study of the so‐called space test bed last year, colleagues raised this issue as if we were trying to start World War IV.
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