Clinton Legacy Watch # 6: Crises Involving U.S.-Russian Space ‘Cooperation’ Show Clinton-Gore Errors, Need for Changes
(Washington, D.C.): Few initiatives
have enjoyed higher priority for the
Clinton-Gore Administration than the Vice
Presidentially-sponsored effort to
integrate the Russian and U.S. space
programs. And, arguably, none
better illuminates the faulty premises
and ominous repercussions of the
Administration’s stewardship of relations
between the two countries. To
understand the implications of President
Clinton’s legacy in this area, it is
necessary to consider both the
“cooperative” space program per
se and the policy predilections it
epitomizes.
At the personal direction of Vice
President Gore, the Russian Space Agency
(RSA) has been transformed from a
prospective supplier to a full partner in
the International Space Station (ISS).
Phase I of this partnership — U.S. use
of the Mir space station — became a
pretext for diverting hundreds of
millions of dollars in NASA funds to
Russia. Nominally, this practice was
justified on the grounds that it would
pay for American personnel to make
extended visits to the decrepit Mir
facility. As a practical matter, however,
its real purpose has
been to provide financial life-support to
Russia’s space program (a key element of
the old Soviet military-industrial
complex) in general and to Mir in
particular.
The Vice President’s initiative also
permitted the Russian technological
contribution to the ISS to be made part
of the “critical path” for the
space station — a patently unwise step
driven by high policy, rather than
prudent, programmatic considerations.
The Jury is In
The folly of the U.S. over-investment
in Mir has come into sharp focus recently
as a result of the almost daily reports
of minor, and increasingly frequently, major
technical problems on the Russian space
station.(1) Now, Congress has in hand a damning
assessment of the Phase I program from a
senior Clinton Administration official,
NASA Inspector General (IG), Roberta L.
Gross.
In a letter report prepared at the
request of House Science Committee
Chairman James Sensenbrenner
(R-WI), the NASA IG lays out nine
major areas of concern with the Mir.
These include: problems with the Soyuz
escape vehicle (into which Mir
inhabitants have been obliged to scurry
for safety reasons repeatedly in recent
months); fire hazards; dangerous fatigue;
the lack of adequate training; exposure
to potentially dangerous levels of carbon
dioxide(2);
and the cumulative effects of Russia’s
notoriously erratic funding for Mir.(3)
The language in the letter’s conclusion
is noteworthy:
“When the Shuttle/Mir program
began, the basic safety of the Mir was
accepted based upon a known history of
apparent safe operations. It
appears in recent months that the risk
level associated with Mir operations has
increased. NASA must conduct
credible risk assessments to fully
account for the safety standards it now
applies to Phase I programs. Those
assessments must be based upon
understanding the risks involved, weighed
against the expected benefits of
continued operations.” (Emphasis
added.)
The Other Shoe Drops
The NASA IG report notes that “fulfillment
of foreign policy objectives” is one
of three primary goals of the
U.S.-Russian collaborative space program
(after development of the International
Space Station and research into the Life
Sciences.(4))
Indeed, at the direction of officials
like Vice President Gore and Deputy
Secretary of State Strobe Talbott, the
joint space program has been a showcase
for many of the Clinton Administration’s
highest priority — and most dubious —
bilateral initiatives. As such, it serves
to illuminate in microcosm the problems
likely to be forever associated with the
Clinton legacy vis á vis the
former Soviet Union:
- Welfare for Russian
Scientists: The Clinton
Administration has vigorously
supported efforts known
generically as the Cooperative
Threat Reduction program — an
initiative popularly associated
with its chief congressional
sponsors, former Senator
Sam Nunn (D-GA)and Senator
Richard Lugar (R-IN).
The theory has been that by
providing work/funding for
Russia’s space program and other
parts of the old Soviet
military-industrial complex, its
scientists and technicians would
not make their expertise
available to dangerous third
parties. - Reckless
Intelligence-Sharing:
The Clinton Administration
response to these reports has
been typical: Assume it is a
“rogue” or
“freelance” operation
and provide Moscow information
that will enable the Kremlin to
close it down. This assumption is
probably wrong on the first count
— the businesses involved(5)
are closely linked to the Russian
government. Israel, whose
intelligence services are
credited with having first
discovered what Koptev was doing
when he was not worrying about
the Mir program, regards the
information as sufficiently
credible, and alarming, to have
suspended a major natural gas
deal with Russia. - Undue Reliance on
‘Assurances’: The
Clinton Administration has
announced that it is sending a
retired career diplomat, Amb.
Frank Wisner, to Moscow to
express concerns about Koptev’s
Iranian connection. According to
a spokesman for the Vice
President, among those with whom
Wisner will address these
concerns is Koptev, himself!
As the Washington Times
has reported in recent days, the
bankruptcy of this idea is now
evident. Indeed, Yuri Koptev, the
head of the Russian Space Agency,
and the aerospace director of the
Russian state arms exporting
agency are among those implicated
in a major effort to assist Iran
acquire the ability to
manufacture long-range ballistic
missiles. According to the Times,
these missiles — two derivatives
of the North Korean No Dong,
dubbed the Shahab-3 and Shahab-4
— will have ranges between 800
and 1,200 miles and could be
capable of delivering chemical,
biological or nuclear weapons to
targets as far away as the
European continent within
two-to-three years.
The effect of the
intelligence-sharing that is
justified by this benign
assumption will almost certainly not
be to end that cooperation.
Rather, it will simply disclose
to the Russians sources and
methods by which this information
has been gleaned and, in effect,
encourage them to conceal such
telltale signs in the future.
This will, in short, not make the
proliferation threat more
manageable, just less well
understood.
It is absolutely predictable that
Wisner will be given
“assurances” that
Russia is not involved in any way
in the Iranian missile project.
Indeed, Prime Minister Victor
Chernomyrdin — who will be
meeting with Vice President Gore
next week in Moscow in the ninth
meeting of their so-called
Gore-Chernomyrdin Commission
(GCC-9) — has already denied
that Russia is aiding Iran’s
program, calling such reports
“stupid” and “not
worthy of comment.”
Equally predictable is the
Administration’s response. Among
others, Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State Robert Einhorn,
the Clinton point-man when it
comes to crediting
unsubstantiated
“assurances” of foreign
governments’ commitment to
non-proliferation in the face of
powerful evidence to the
contrary,(6)
will doubtless give great weight
to the Russian rhetoric. U.S.
intelligence agencies will be
implicitly, if not explicitly,
discouraged from debunking
Moscow’s promises. And there will
be no interruption in the U.S.
taxpayer-subsidized
“cooperation” that
rounds out the pay Koptev and
Company receive from Iran (and
perhaps other clients).
The Bottom Line
House Science Committee Chairman Sensenbrenner
and his colleagues — notably Space
Subcommittee Vice Chairman Dave
Weldon (R-FL), who wrote Vice
President Gore on 10 September urging the
“Administration to denounce
[Koptev’s] actions in the strongest
possible terms and immediately insist
upon his dismissal” — are to be
commended for the hearing they will be
holding this morning concerning
U.S.-Russian space cooperation.
The Center calls on these
distinguished Members of Congress to take
the lead in the following further steps:
- Ensure that another
American is not placed aboard the
Mir space station when Michael
Foale’s harrowing stay there
comes to an end. Doing
otherwise would not only put the
next astronaut’s life at
unjustifiable risk. It would also
oblige the United States to
continue funding for Mir that is
both unwarranted and that should
be applied instead to bringing
the next generation space
station, the ISS, on-line as
rapidly as possible. - Signal before next week’s
Gore-Chernomyrdin meeting that
Congress lacks confidence in the
Cooperative Threat Reduction
program and similar Clinton
initiatives that have not kept
Russia from engaging in
activities inimical to vital U.S.
interests — and that may, in
some cases at least, have
actually served to facilitate
such activities. Of
particular concern is a further
push the Vice President is
expected to make at GCC-9 to
forge an “umbrella
agreement” authorizing the
sharing of advanced military and
dual-use technology like
supercomputers with Russia.(7) - Make clear Congress’
opposition to allowing Russia to
remain in the “critical
path” to completion of the
International Space Station.
The enormous investment being
made in this project must not be
allowed to be held hostage to
Russian programmatic shortcomings
arising from the Kremlin’s
technological, financial and/or
political problems. - Insist on an
investigation into whether there
has been a cover-up on the part
of the Clinton Administration
with respect to information about
Russian involvement in Iran’s
ballistic missile program.
The Washington Times indicates
that such information has been
available to the Administration
since last January, a fact that
— if true — would, as Rep.
Weldon put it, be “really
bad.” - This is particularly the case
since, as one of the Congress’
most thoughtful, national
security-minded legislators, Sen.
Jon Kyl (R-AZ), has
observed: “The
evidence is mounting that
significant amounts of [Russian]
technology are being transferred
while people are dithering and
talking. There is a point at
which it could be too late; Iran
will have what it needs. There
has to be action, not talk.”
– 30 –
1.
For more information on the recent
problems with Mir, see the Center’s Decision
Briefs entitled: Pull
The Plug On Mir (
href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=97-D_100″>No. 97-D 100, 18
July 1997); and The Buck
Stops With Al Gore: Veep-Approved Rip-Off
By Russia Of U.S. Taxpayer, Technology
Now Threatens An American’s Life
(No. 97-D 89,
27 June 1997).
2. A particularly
gripping passage in the IG letter
involved the problem of carbon dioxide
(CO2) removal. Astronaut
Shannon Lucid claimed during a
post-flight debriefing that while on Mir,
she “could tell when the CO2
concentration was going up. When the CO2
concentration was getting too high, it
was a little harder to think. It was
easier to make mistakes.” She went
on to say that “there were many
reasons that could cause the CO2
concentration to go up. The CO2
level would go up when the life support
system wasn’t working as well as it
should and when there were a lot of crew
members exercising at the same time. I
could tell when the CO2 was
getting higher, and the rising CO2
levels definitely increased the crew’s
chance for making mistakes.”
(Emphasis added.)
3. To these safety
concerns must, of course, be added the
obvious “red-flags” associated
with the June collision of a resupply
vessel and a February fire that
threatened the lives of all the crew.
4. Ms. Gross
reports, however that “[There is] nothing
at this point in the Phase 1 program that
is in the critical path for the continued
development and beginning of flight
operations for the International Space
Station” and that the Life
Sciences research had to be abandoned due
to physical crises on Mir.
5. According to
Israeli and U.S. intelligence sources
cited by the Washington Times,
these include: “Rosvoorouzhenie, the
Russian arms-export agency; the Bauman
Institute, the Russian equivalent of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology;
NPO Trud, a rocket-motor manufacturer;
and Polyus, or ‘North Star,’ Russia’s
leading laser developer. The Russian
Central Aerodynamic Institute is also
said to be involved in the Iranian
missile project. The help being provided
by these entities to Iran is reported to
include: “wind-tunnel testing of
missile nose cones, the design of
guidance and propulsion systems, and
development of a solid-fuel
project.”
6. For example,
Einhorn has in recent months been the
designated hitter in arguing that China
— which is also reported by the Washington
Times to be involved in the Iranian
ballistic missile program through the
transfer of “telemetry equipment
that sends and collects missile-guidance
data during flight tests” — is
meeting its non-proliferation
obligations. It appears likely to fall to
him to justify the preposterous
presidential certification to that effect
required in connection with the sale of
nuclear power technology to China that is
expected to be announced on the eve of
Chinese premier Jiang Zemin’s visit next
month to the United States.
7. Among the
strategically sensitive areas identified
in draft guidance prepared for GCC-9 as
appropriate areas for such collaboration
are: ballistic missile defense, the Joint
Strike Fighter program, “high-speed
penetrators for use against deeply buried
targets,” “a low-cost,
ground-launched hypersonic
interceptor” and “surveillance,
detection and non-lethal technologies in
support of counter-terrorism, landmine
detection and peacekeeping
operations.”
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