13 June 2000
Transcript: Pentagon Spokesman's Regular Briefing
Pentagon Deputy Spokesman Admiral Craig Quigley briefed.
Following is the Pentagon transcript:
DoD News Briefing
Tuesday, June 13, 2000 - 1:00 p.m. EDT
Presenter: Rear Admiral Craig R. Quigley, USN, DASD PA
Rear Adm. Quigley:
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. I have a few
announcements this afternoon.
Starting tomorrow, more than 18,700 service members from all branches
of the U.S. armed forces, as well as forces from Germany, the United
Kingdom, the Netherlands and Canada, will begin Exercise Roving Sands
'00. This joint and combined forces exercise, the world's largest
joint theater, air and missile defense exercise, will take place at
training ranges and sites throughout Virginia, North Carolina,
Louisiana, New Mexico, Texas and Nevada. And we have a bluetop in the
back of the room with more details on that.
Also starting tomorrow, soldiers and airmen from the U.S. Army Europe,
Special Operations Command Europe and U.S. Air Forces Europe and the
Republic of Georgia armed forces will begin Exercise MEDCEUR 00-1, a
joint and combined medical exercise in the Caucasus in Tblisi,
Georgia. This is a mass casualty exercise and is the first medical
exercise ever conducted in Georgia, in the spirit of the Partnership
for Peace program. This will provide an opportunity to exchange
medical information and techniques with host-nation medical personnel
and conduct training in emergency medication operations. And again, we
have a bluetop with more details on that.
The next couple of announcements concern General Shelton. He will be
the graduation speaker tomorrow at the combined National Defense
University graduation ceremony. This is at 10:00 tomorrow in front of
Roosevelt Hall at Fort McNair. There's a press advisory in the back of
the room on that with point-of-contact information.
And next, General Shelton and the commissioner of Major League
baseball, Bud Selig, will honor and remember Korean War veterans
during a formal wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknowns at
Arlington National Cemetery tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. Joining General
Shelton and Mr. Selig will be Korean War Marine Captain and former
baseball player Jerry Coleman. Other retired players from the Korean
War era and numerous Korean War veterans have also been invited to
attend. The wreath-laying ceremony, with full military honors, will be
followed by a press conference with Shelton, Selig and other ceremony
participants. We have a release on that as well.
Finally, on General Shelton, he will serve on the panel of the
Secretary of State's Open Forum this Thursday, the 15th, beginning at
11:00 in the morning, in the Dean Acheson Auditorium at the State
Department.
Joining General Shelton will be former Deputy Secretary of Defense
John Hamre, now president and CEO of the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, and Ambassador David C. Litt, political adviser
to the commander, U.S. Special Operations Command.
Finally, Secretary of Defense Cohen --
Q:
(Off mike.)
Quigley:
Sorry?
Q:
(Off mike.)
Quigley:
I believe this is an annual one, John, and it covers a
variety of topics. But he has been one of the -- is one of the panel
members. And I don't know who the other members of the panel are.
Q:
At what time, please?
Quigley:
Eleven tomorrow morning.
Q:
Tomorrow morning?
Staff: No, on Thursday --
Quigley:
I'm sorry. Thursday morning. Thursday morning.
And finally, Secretary Cohen announced today that the president has
nominated Army Lieutenant General Donald L. Kerrick for appointment to
the grade of lieutenant general, with assignment as deputy assistant
to the president for National Security Affairs and deputy national
security adviser. Kerrick is currently serving as the assistant to the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff here in Washington, D.C.
And one more announcement for tomorrow: We'll have details for you
later on this afternoon, but we will be putting together a briefing,
probably in this room, probably early tomorrow afternoon -- and I
promise we will fine-tune that as the afternoon goes on -- on national
missile defense.
Q:
What is the topic for the State -- (off mike)?
Q:
Who's going to brief on national missile defense?
Quigley:
We'll get back to that.
The theme of the discussion, John, for the activities over at State on
Thursday morning will be "Preparing for the Crisis after Next: Future
Visioning in the State Department, the Interagency Process, and the
Military."
Q:
Whoa!
Q:
Hm. "Visioning"?
Q:
Vision?
Q:
Hm.
Q:
It's a State Department word. (Laughter.)
Quigley:
I'm not sure that's a word, but it's their forum, and they
can use -- they can call it what they will.
We're -- our hope is to have retired General Larry Welch brief
tomorrow.
Q:
What's the purpose?
Quigley:
As you know, General Welch heads the independent review team,
which has so far issued two reports on our national missile defense
program. The third has recently been published. He is trying very hard
-- and it's classified, of course. He is trying very hard to complete
an unclass version and will be -- hopefully have that done, so that we
can sit down and discus that with you tomorrow. That's the goal.
Q:
Do you have a time?
Q:
No time set yet.
Quigley:
Not yet.
Q:
Cameras?
Quigley:
We'll announce that later on this afternoon. I am thinking
here, and I am thinking early afternoon tomorrow; but we need to
coordinate some schedules yet, and that is still a work in progress.
Q:
This will be on --
Q:
Barbara, I am not sure on cameras yet.
Q:
Well, can we make --
Quigley:
We'll let that know as --
Q:
-- a request that we would certainly prefer?
Quigley:
Indeed.
Q:
But it won't be background?
Quigley:
No, it won't be background.
Q:
And the report will be available to us before the news conference?
Quigley:
Well, the report is classified. And there is no intention of
doing an unclassified report, but there will be certainly a synopsis
of its findings. And you have the leaders of the independent review
team that will be available -- and again, that's the goal for tomorrow
-- to try to answer any follow-on questions, talk about process and
some of the issues that went in the -- he may also be able to get one
or two additional members of his team.
Q:
The last report was published in an unclassified form -- I don't
know if you want to call it a synopsis or whatever. But is there --
you know -- I don't know -- 50 pages or something -- are you going to
do the similar --
Quigley:
I don't know. It certainly won't be available in that format
by tomorrow. I don't know; I just simply have not discussed that with
him.
Barbara?
Q:
Can we just come back on one thing? I think I heard you answer to
him it's not a background session?
Quigley:
Correct.
Q:
So, therefore, we will be able to have cameras.
Q:
Yeah.
Quigley:
Well, that's my working assumption. Okay? You're trying to
nail me down with specifics that I don't have yet, and I do promise
you that we'll have them before close of business today. But that's
what we're shooting for, for tomorrow.
And that completes my announcements. I'll be glad to take your
questions.
John?
Q:
Just to get a step ahead of these, Larry Welch and the people who
may be briefing tomorrow. As you know, yesterday, a group of 35
scientists went up on Capitol Hill and said to various lawmakers that
national missile defense is not going to work, it's a stupid idea, and
that even if you spend the money, it's not going to work. Do you have
any response to --
Quigley:
Well, certainly. I mean, that's certainly not our position,
John. I mean -- we have --
Q:
It's not stupid?
Quigley:
-- we have always said that this program is technologically
very challenging but we feel we are making good progress. And the
testing process is laid out for quite a ways to come. We are
anticipating the next shot to be in early July.
That's a significant shot, but it's certainly not, by any stretch, the
final test. The testing of a national missile defense program would
stretch on into the next several years, as you might expect for a
program of this complexity. We're still working with a prototype
exo-atmospheric kill vehicle. We're working with a prototype, or a
developmental, booster. All of the battle management radar, the
command and control system, all of these things are still being
developed concurrently. So there's a considerable level of
technological risk.
But we have confidence that we will successfully be able to integrate
these various technologies and come up with a system that is effective
and can discriminate against the projected threat that a rogue nation
might possess in the year 2005, which is our target to deploy this
system, initial operational capability.
Q:
Well, they say that you will not be able to distinguish between the
kind of decoys that even a rudimentary adversary would be able to
deploy. You're saying, "Yeah, we will"?
Quigley:
Completely disagree with their assessment in that regard. The
combination of discrimination abilities that the entire national
missile defense system would incorporate gives incredible
discrimination capability against the countermeasures that our
intelligence community best estimates will be present from the likely
nations that would deploy such a system in the 2005 time frame.
A lot of the arguments have focused on a single discriminator within
the family of discriminators, and there is no single element within
that, that -- on which we rely. Rather, we are relying on a
combination of factors -- the radars, the optical sensor in the kill
vehicle, the IR sensor in the kill vehicle, intelligence estimates --
a variety of capabilities and discriminators that we have confidence
will, in total, in sum, now, be able to do the job of effectively
discriminating warheads from decoys for the threat that we project to
exist at IOC in 2005.
Bill?
Q:
So, why? If this system was not viable, was not buildable and not
workable, would the Russians, the Chinese, many of the Europeans
allies make such a fuss about our not even yet having decided to
deploy this system?
Quigley:
Well, that's a tough one to answer, Bill. I'm not sure.
Secretary Cohen earlier today had a session of about 40 minutes, I
believe, with his counterpart, Defense Minister Sergeyev. That was
followed by about 45 minutes with both he and Minister Sergeyev with
President Putin, and then again Secretary Cohen and Minister Sergeyev
together about an hour more after that. And they discussed a variety
of topics. But certainly their views on national missile defense and
European missile defense and the threat and the viability of
technologies such as boost phase or mid-trajectory were all very much
on the table.
The talks were very constructive, although it's very clear that the
two nations are -- see things very differently on this subject. The
tone was amicable, and all have agreed to discuss this further and
take a look. And again, we got three major elements here from the
discussions today. One is the threat. Two is the viability of boost
phase intercept -- interceptor program. And third is the whole concept
of the European missile defense that the Russians have recently
proposed. Much discussion and clarification and detail needs to be
exchanged on these three subject areas, and that was agreed to today.
Q:
On that particular subject of the European system that the Russians
proposed, what can you tell us insofar as those details you mentioned?
What can you relate to us about what they want to do, what the
Russians want to do?
Quigley:
Well, I don't think I can go much further than at this point
in hearing the Russians out in greater detail as to what their
proposal entails and take it from there, Bill. There's not a -- that
is the next step, I believe, is hearing their views, getting
additional details on the system that they might propose, and take it
from there.
Q:
And that's ongoing today.
Quigley:
Well, just starting today. That agreement was reached today.
Q:
Okay.
Quigley:
Bob?
Q:
Does the -- does the new Welch report address the question of
whether the deployment readiness review should be delayed, or should
go ahead as scheduled this summer?
Quigley:
Yes, it does.
Q:
And what does it conclude?
Quigley:
Stay tuned.
Q:
Well, I mean, why can't you say now?
Quigley:
Because we plan on doing this tomorrow in a much more
comprehensive way -- (laughter) -- much more comprehensive way than I
can address today.
Q:
It doesn't require a comprehensive answer, just --
Quigley:
I'm not going to do it piecemeal, I'm sorry.
Q:
Another subject?
Quigley:
Yes.
Q:
Yes. Senator Gordon Smith stated the other day that he favors now
the independence of Kosovo. I was wondering how is it going to affect
your military presence in the area?
Quigley:
I don't know as if it will have a direct effect. This is a
decision that this nation takes in concert, in discussions with its
friends and allies around the world. So there's many discussions
ongoing on Capitol Hill on any given day on Kosovo and many other
topics. It's something that we note with interest. But this a part of
our process each and every year here in this country. But ultimately,
I'm sure the senator would agree that this would have to be a decision
that this nation would then make.
Q:
The awarding of Bronze Stars to service members who were not at the
theater under fire, when will the Pentagon -- what's the status of the
review into that and how --
Quigley:
Just really getting started, and I have no estimate for you.
I'm sorry. I asked that question this morning. Just really getting
started.
Q:
A question about these missing computer drives from Los Alamos.
Since they're said to contain technical and tactical data for the NEST
[Nuclear Emergency Search Team] teams, and since U.S. Special Forces
are part of the NEST teams, was the Pentagon, DOD, Special Forces
Command informed of this security lapse either before FBI, DOE, or
since?
Quigley:
Not to my knowledge, no. Since? Yesterday, certainly, yes,
when it was announced publicly, yes we were. But prior to that, not to
my knowledge, no.
Q:
Okay. Were you formally informed by DOE or Los Alamos? How did --
Quigley:
I think there was notification made from DOE in a variety of
different points within DOD yesterday.
Q:
And has anybody --
Quigley:
I think that was around the same time in the day, but it
probably varied by a little.
Q:
And is anybody at DOD or Special Forces Command now in contact with
DOE to determine exactly what was lost and what the potential --
Quigley:
No. No, we are not. We are not involved in the investigation
at all. This is DOE and FBI.
Q:
And what can you tell us about the kind of tactical data that was
contained in these disks and whether in fact it would in any way
possibly jeopardize Special Operations?
Quigley:
The answer to your question is not a thing, Mik, because we
don't know what was on the disks.
Q:
But you know, generally, that the Special Forces are in fact part
of NEST tactics in terms of their operations.
Quigley:
But I am not going to get involved in any details on NEST
team operations.
Q:
Well, I'd like to follow up on that. Is the --
Quigley:
Okay.
Q:
-- (laughs) -- is the secretary of Defense or this department -- if
I understood you correctly, you said you weren't informed until it
came out in the newspaper yesterday?
Quigley:
No, we were informed by DOE yesterday.
Q:
Yesterday, okay. Fine. Are you not perturbed about them not telling
you previously, since in fact much of that material involves both U.S.
nuclear weapons design and foreign nations' nuclear weapons design and
analysis? Are you not concerned that you haven't known about this for
weeks?
Quigley:
We are very comfortable that, between DOE and FBI, that they
had a handle on this and are doing the very best they can to try to
ascertain what material may have been lost and its impact on national
security.
Q:
Was the U.S. Strategic Command, which is in charge of all nuclear
stuff, or the Nuclear Weapons Council in this building, not even
informed? Nobody knew?
Quigley:
Not to my knowledge, not before yesterday.
Q:
Can you shed any more light on what -- just a general fashion --
what these NEST teams, what function they serve and to what extent the
military has a role in that?
Quigley:
I would steer you to DOE for that because they come under
their aegis, Jamie. And I'll tell you, they will probably not be
particularly forthcoming, but neither will I. (Laughter.)
Barbara?
Q:
Well, on that note -- (laughter) -- can you tell us whether or not
any of the Air Force assets or the tech escort unit assets, which
serve as backup to NEST teams, have moved men or equipment outside of
their normal areas or are on any heightened state of alert as
backfill?
Quigley:
Again, Barbara, that's a detail I am just not going to get
into.
David?
Q:
The 86 people who allegedly had access to the vault and of the 200
people who have allegedly been questioned so far, were any of them DOD
personnel?
Quigley:
No.
Q:
And in the exercise which took place at Lawrence Livermore in
April, which apparently was the last time they know where these disks
were, was that an exercise which involved the Department of Defense?
Quigley:
That one I don't know. Let me take that. I don't know if we
were players in that at all. Hadn't heard that.
Q:
Thank you.
Quigley:
Thank you.
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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