THE SENATE SHOULD DEBATE WHETHER TO ABROGATE THE ABM TREATY, INSTEAD OF DEBATING INTERPRETATIONS OF U.S. UNILATERAL ABM COMPLIANCE POLICY

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CIA-RDP94B00280R000700020007-3
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December 22, 2016
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March 10, 2011
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7
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April 8, 1987
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/10: CIA-RDP94B0028OR000700020007-3 S;t~36 CONGRESSIONAL itBCC D ?- SENATE April $, 1987 Mr. President, the -needs of the homeless are inmredbte. The legiats- tion being considered today provides or acoordinated. Federal effort to ad- dress this emergency. States, local governments, and pri- vatte vdluntary and charitable orgatrai- rations have been unable to meet ail of the basic hum needs of our Na- tion's 'homeless. The Federal 'Govern- ment must take a greater role In pro- viding assistance to protect and Jm- prose the lives and safety of m411Iests of suffering homeless. A serious legis- lative response to hornlessness in our country Is both desperately needed and long overdue. I urge my colleagues bo?support this legisn. Mr. HEINZ. Time iegislation before us authorizes regisnsl;Aaiff for the Us- tdonal Council in each of the atasidard I deral regions. Tb ey are to support regional efforts on behalf of the homeless, share information. and co- ordinate homeless assistance. I ap- plaud the chairman for this provision. My concern, and that .of n nny service- providers, is that FEMA boards and nonprofits will have to answer to the regional staff, that we are placing an additional layer of approval on exist- ing programs. My understanding is that the regional staff do not have an approval role, but are to.provide assist- ance and guidance. Is my understand- ing correct? Mr. GLENN. The Senator is correct. While we envision an active role for the Council staff, coordinating the many local and regional efforts on behalf of the homeless, they are not to play an administrative role. I do not envision an additional layer of bu- reaucracy for homeless programs. Mr. HEINZ. I thank the Senator for his statement, and congratulate him on the splendid work this legislation represents. Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, there will be no more rollcall votes today. MORNING BUSINESS Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that there now be a period not to extend beyond 6:15 p.m. today during which Senators may transact morning business and during which Senators be permitted to speak for not to exceed 5 minutes each. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? Without objection, It is so ordered. Mr. HELMS addressed the Chair. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Carolina. THS SENATE SHOULD DEBATE WHETHER TO ABROGATE THE ABM TREATY, INSTEAD OF DE- BATING INTERPRETATIONS OF US. UNILATERAL ABM COMPLI- ANaCE POLICY SUMMARY Mr. HELMS. Mr.. President, the Senate has been debating the line legal and technical paints of an 18- year-old,treaty negotiating record =W a 15-year-old :ratification :hearing record on the SALT I alma-Ballistic Missile Treaty. This is a very esoteric and highly complex debate, ,and unfor- tunately, it is also distracting the Senate from the real issue. The Senate needs to wake up and smell the coffee-America is is gravest mortal danger and we should abrogate the ABM Treaty. The pout is, Mr. Presi- dent, that the ARM Treaty is imped- ing curability to defend our supreme national, Interests. Instead of debating fine legal. and technical points of our ABM 1re4y compliance .policy, we ld be corned with a -h h print nadioarwdde ABII defense, and they will have an operational na- tionwide'AIM defense whin a year or even less. While the Western de- mocracies complacently debate ABM compliance policy interpretations and are foolishly preoccupied with negoti- ating for a new INF Treaty, the 'Sovi- ets are always carefully calculating the correlation of forces. "Me chilling impact of this new information is that the Soviets will soon be able to use their overwhelming strategic offensive first strike capability, combined with their emerging monopoly on nation- wide ARM defense, for nuclear black- s ou mail. more momentous debate over the very Let us not forget, Mr. President, core of our national necnrtty. The that Adolf Hitler similarly boasted in Senate should be debating instead why private in the mid-1930's of his arms we are u ally re anion develop- men control treaty violations. at the cacao our vi testing, ital s strategic g, tan.and dearlyefense time .that he pushed his aggressive am- oul the face of now obvious Soviet .ABM bitions to the point of global war. Treaty break out. Soviet Leader Gorbachev already :has debate. we are allowing the Soviets to lock in the final one-sided prohibition on the United States SDL This one- sided prohibition is all the Soviets need to obtain overall offensive and defensive strategic supremacy for all time, to obtain the capacity for nucle- ar blackmail and world domination that comes with such military suprem- acy. In fact, even the broad interpreta- tion will not .allow the United States actually to deploy SDL But deploy- ment is the name of the game. Near- term deployment of SDI is absolutely essential to American national securi- ty. Thus there is a head-on collision between the ARM Treaty and Ameri- can supreme national security inter- ests. In due course,. 1 will review of the basis for what is really the secondary issue, namely that of the legally cor- rect, broad interpretation. But first I must repeat that debating U.S. unilat- eral ARM Treaty compliance is TL relevant debate, distracting us the real debate. The real debate should be over whether to abrogate the ABM Treaty as a proportionate re- sponse to Soviet ABM Treaty break out. Indeed, Secretary of Defense Weinberger has declared that nothing could be more dangerous to Western security than the Soviet deployment of a nationwide ABM defense, a de- ployment that would amount to break out. Mr. President, the American people should be provided with some very frightening, newly declassified infor- mation. The public should now be aware that the CIA has evidence that the Soviets have actually privately ad- mitted and boasted to themselves that their Krasnoyarsk radar violates the ABM Treaty. Even more significant is the fact that the Reagan administra- tion now believes that the Soviets are working on an integrated plan for a nationwide AIIM -defense. Indeed, the Soviets already have es- tablished the prohibited base ,for is domination that would have made Hitler very envious indeed. The bite Soviet Leader Brezhnev prophetically stated in 1973 that by 1985 the corre- lation of forces would have shifted so decisively in Soviet favor that the Soviet Union -would be able to exert its will in any region of the world it wanted. Mr. President, that is exactly where the Soviets are today. Mr. President, our distinguished col- league, Senator NUNN, has focused our attention on the issue of American unilateral disarmament. This issue has distracted us from the fundamental threat. But he has done one construc- tive service to the Senate, and I con- gratulate him for this service. Senator NUNN has focused our attention upon the nearly 20-year history of the SALT process. There is much in this history that the Senate needs to be re- minded of, because in my opinion, the SALT process has definitely under- mined American national security in- terests because it has failed to achieve the two fundamental American obJec- tives for SALT-prohibition of offen- sive first strike and nationwide ABM defenses for both nations. These two United States fundamental objectives were completely thwarted by the Sovi- ets. Indeed, the Soviets have now achieved a monopoly in both the key capabilities that the United States in- tended to prohibit. As Senator NUNN suggested, let us carefully scrutinize the history of the SALT process. Many colleagues will be astonished by what we will find. Mr. President. there is strong, con- verging evidence from many sources that the Soviets deceived the United States on the key issues in the negoti- ations leading up to the 1972 SALT I ARM Treaty and Interim Agreement. The Soviets likewise deceived the United States on the key issues in the negotiations leading up to the 1979 SALT II Treaty. 'There is additionally sttunig evidence that the Soviets in- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/10: CIA-RDP94B0028OR000700020007-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/10: CIA-RDP94B0028OR000700020007-3 April 8, 1987 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE S 4837 tended to violate these treaties from the very moment of their signature. In late May 1972, the evidence of Soviet SALT I negotiating deception and their intention to violate was sup- pressed within the United States Intel- ligence community, was withheld from the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and from Congress. There is authoritative testi- mony to the Senate on this suppres- sion, and on the meaning of the intelli- )pence suppressed. The Senate may thus have been misled by the execu- tive branch on all the key issues of the SALT I agreements. Therefore, the Senate may have approved the SALT I agreements without full knowledge of the situation. Mr. President, this evidence was sup- pressed. Indeed, it follows from this suppressed evidence of Soviet decep- tive negotiating and violation inten- tions at the beginning of the 20-year SALT process, that the entire SALT process itself has been conducted on false assumptions about Soviet reci- procity from the very start in 1967. Early this year, the Senate voted 93 to 2 that Soviet violations of existing arms control treaties are an important obstacle to the advice and consent of two-thirds of the Senate for ratifica- tion of any new treaties. President Reagan recently reported to Congress that: A number of activities involving SALT II constituted violations of the core or central provisions of the Treaty frequently cited by the proponents of SALT II as the primary reason for supporting the agreement. If Soviet violations of central provi- sions of existing treaties are so impor- tant that they might prejudice the Senate against voting for ratification of new treaties, then it may also be true that the Soviet violations of exist- ing treaties themselves constitute an important obstacle to continued United States unilateral compliance with those violated treaties. As Presi- dent Reagan told Congress for the first time on March 10, 1987: It was, however, the continuing pattern of noncompliant Soviet behavior that I out- lined above that was the primary reason why I decided, on May 27, 1986. to end U.S. observance of the provisions of the SALT I Interim Agreement and SALT II. If Soviet violations of the central provisions of both the SALT I Interim Agreement and the SALT II Treaty were serious enough to fintilly cause the President to abrogate these agree- ments, albeit only long after both had expired, perhaps the President and the Senate will also decide to abrogate the SALT I ABM Treaty for the same primary reason. After all, Soviet ABM Treaty break out violations are even more fllgrant, and are much more dangerous to American national secu- rity. THE SOVIET BROAD INTERPRETATION IS CORRECT FOR BOTH SIDES The Reagan administration's legally correct, broad interpretation of the ABM Treaty has easily survived the attacks of the "Blame America First" bloc in Congress. The broad interpre- tation is the Soviet interpretation, be- cause the Soviets clearly and repeated- ly refused to agree to the narrow in- terpretation, and Soviet spokesman have clearly stated since 1972 that the broad interpretation was their view. I find it difficult to disagree with the Soviets, because the broad interpreta- tion is the correct one. Of course, the broad interpretation suits Soviet inter- ests, because the Soviets are probably ahead of the United States in develop- ing and testing SDI-type, space-based ABM defenses, while claiming to be complying with the ABM Treaty. Moreover, the Soviets proposed a draft space treaty containing the narrow interpretation to the United States in March, 1985. This Soviet pro- posal tried to ban the development and testing of space-based ABM de- fenses. This Soviet proposal therefore assumed that development and testing of space-based ABM's were not already banned' by the ABM Treaty. This is precisely the broad interpretation of the ABM Treaty, and this Soviet pro- posal itself confirms that the Soviets had always embraced the broad inter- pretation. The Soviets clearly thought that development and testing of exotic spaced-based ABM's was not banned by the ABM Treaty. Their proposal was obviously intended to stop U.S. strategic defense initiative research and development and testing dead in its tracks. Their proposal conclusively indicated that they believed that the broad interpretation was the correct interpretation, and so they wanted to Induce the United States into agreeing to being constrained by the narrow in- terpretation. Judge Sofaer had reportedly stated that after his extensive research into the SALT I negotiating history, he was forced to conclude that the Sovi- ets had deceived the United States ne- gotiators into believing that they had somehow achieved a mutual ban on development and testing of ABM's based on new physical principles, when in fact the United States nego- tiators had achieved no such result. Judge Sofaer has thus stumbled upon another significant but long unknown case of Soviet SALT I negotiating de- ception. CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE OF SOVIET NtE,GOTIATING DECEPTION IN SALT I Mr. President, on March 2687, in the joint Senate Foreign Relations Committee and Judiciary Committee Hearings on the ABM Treaty interpre- tation, I asked Assistant Defense Sec- retary Richard Perle an important question. I asked: "Does the SALT I Interim Agreement negotiating record indicate that the Soviet SALT negotia- tors deceived the United States on the issue of whether heavy ICBM's were prohibited from replacing light ICBM's?" Richard Perle answered: Yes, Senator. I believe this is not only the most dramatic instance of Soviet deception, but the one that carried the gravest conse- quences. It was one of the most important provisions of the Interim Agreement, that launchers for light missiles could not be converted into launchers for heavy missiles. We were unable in the negotiations to get the Soviets to agree to a definition of the terms heavy and light. There were limita- tions in the treaty (sic) on the extent to which the silos in which missiles were based could be enlarged. At the time, the Soviets had a new missile, vastly more effective and substantially larger than the light missiles, the launchers for which could not be con- verted to launchers for heavy missiles. I believe they concealed the testing of that missile until after the Interim Agree- ment was signed, and we subsequently, to our dismay. discovered that the light SS-l is were replaced by SS-19 missiles that, by the understanding conveyed to the Senate of the United States would surely have consti- tuted heavy ICBMs. I know that this was a particular concern because that conversion meant a sixfold increase in the number of Soviet warheads and a very substantial in- crease in the throw-weight of that ballistic missile force. In addition to the evidence in t4 SALT I diplomatic negotiating record indicating Soviet deception, there is important, dramatic, intelligence evi- dence indicating Soviet deception on the SS-19 heavy ICBM. This evidence is the best and most authoritative evidence of the inten- tions of the Soviet leadership regard- ing negotiations and compliance in the entire 20 year SALT process. This evidence was acquired in 1972. The story has already been published in many places, including at least three times in the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. One example is William Beecher's article in the Boston Globe of October 10, 1976, entitled "United States May Reply to Soviet Rays." There are several other unclassified descriptions of this evidence. William Safire wrote about it in the New York Times article of August 6, 1981, enti- tled "Deception Managers." It was de- scribed in detail in the Heritage Foun- dation 1980 book, "Mandate for Lead- ership." And it was referred to in Ad- miral Zumwalt's testimony to the Senate Defense Appropriations Sub- committee on March 28, 1984, and in Air Force magazine of December 1978, January 1979, and March 1979. CIA has cleared several articles and books containing this information for publication. Most recently, Assistant Defense Secretary Richard Perle mentioned this evidence in testimony to the joint hearing of the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee and Judiciary Com- mittee on March 26, 1987. Here is the way these pieces of unclassified infor- mation on this "most dramatic" evi- dence of Soviet deception in SALT seems to fit together: William Safire wrote: The first Inkling of [Soviet SALT I negoti- ating deception] came to us in May, 1972. via "Gamma Gupy," our tuning in to limou- sine telephone conversations between [the late Soviet General Secretary] Leonid Brezhnev, [the former Foreign MIEtbter] Andrei Gromyko. and Soviet missile .rla I- ers at the Moscow [SALT I] SullMiit Obll' Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/10: CIA-RDP94B0028OR000700020007-3 i