THESE DAYS MCNAMARA LEFT-HANDEDLY ADMITS ERROR

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP70B00338R000300080044-9
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 19, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 9, 2006
Sequence Number: 
44
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
November 28, 1966
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP70B00338R000300080044-9.pdf76.08 KB
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Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000300080044-9 THE WASHINGTON POST Monday, Nov. 28, 1966 All These Days . . McNamara Leit-Handedly RIGHT AFTER the Re- publicans racked up some good gains in Congress at the polls, Defense Secretary Robert S. McN a m ara put In a big p o 1 1 t I- cal stop-loss order. He j o u r neyed all the way to the LBJ ranch to an- nounce that there was "consid- erable evidence" that Soviet Russia was building and de- ploying an anti-ballistic mis- sile system, and that he had a way to negate it. His suggested antidote was not to counter with an anti-missile missile system of our own, but to arm our Polaris submarines, at a cost of $2.6 billion, with a bigger atomic missile, the Posei- don, which would be able to penetrate the new Soviet defenses. Presumably the present Polaris missile isn't good enough. To anyone with a long memory, the McNamara performance amounts to an admission that a great mis- take has been made by Ad- ministration policy planners. For ever since .1961 the Pentagon has been proceed- ing on the assumption that if the United States re- frained from developing an anti-missile missile system, the Russians would refrain too. Apparently we have made a terribly bad guess, and McNamara is left to pick up the pieces as best he can lest the whole business re- coil upon the Democratic Party when certain nosy Republican Congressmen be- gin to ask questions. THE IDEA that the way to the Russians from keep building an anti-missile mis- sile was to let our own anti- missile program languish has been attributed to Pro- fessor Jerome Wiesner of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Whether this was the Professor's own brainchild, or whether it was fathered by a score of people in the unilateral dis- q?niament lobby, is a good estu,r Admits Error But Professor Wiesner served as President John F. Kennedy's special adviser on technology at the time that the decision was made not to go ahead with an anti-missile missile network. During this period Wiesner was arguing that "one of the potential destabilization elements in the present nuclear stand- off is the possibility that one of the rival powers might develop a successful anti- missile defense. "Weisner was all for keep- ing the so-called "NikeZeus anti-ballistic missile in a state of "research and de- velopment," not in deploy- ment. It was anything to keep the Soviets from being ? By John Chamberlain seared into putting on full steam ahead to develop and deploy an anti-missile grid that might negate the threat of the U.S. Polaris sub- marine. The policy of not provok- ing the Russian bear in the anti-missile missile business has flopped by Secretary Mc- Namara's own admission. To save face, the Secretary is falling back on the old football axiom, that the best defense is a good offense. When Congress recon- venes, Secretary McNamara may well be on the hot seat when called upon to explain his post-election political stop-loss order. ? 1966, King Features syndicate. Inc. Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000300080044-9