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Conference back40::soapbox

Title:Soapbox. Just Soapbox.
Notice:No more new notes
Moderator:WAHOO::LEVESQUEONS
Created:Thu Nov 17 1994
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:862
Total number of notes:339684

74.0. "Contract With America: Peace Through Strength" by TNPUBS::JONG (Steve) Sun Nov 20 1994 15:06

    One of the ten pieces of legislation the Republican Party has pledged
    to bring to a House vote in the first 100 days of the new Congress is
    to significantly increase defense spending.
T.RTitleUserPersonal
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74.1Reaganomics math reduxTNPUBS::JONGSteveSun Nov 20 1994 15:0914
    On this one, the Republicans have signaled that their plan to
    significantly increase defense spending is to freeze spending against
    further cuts planned by the Clinton Administration.
    
    I guess Republican math (not less equals more) is in keeping with
    Reaganomics math that cutting taxes means more tax revenues.  One can
    read the projections in the Reagan and Bush budgets to see what they
    claimed would flow in versus what actually flowed in.
    
    What bilge!
    
    (I will also say that I support further defense spending reductions, so
    I am happier with this compromise than I would have been with the
    Republicans' stated goal, though I'd prefer the Clinton cuts most.)
74.2CALDEC::RAHthe truth is out there.Mon Nov 21 1994 01:429
    
    the legislators that agree with you had their clocks cleaned
    for the most part, so your preferences probably won't be shared
    by a legislative majority.
    
    those who supported defense cuts in the '30s have the deaths
    of thousands on their hands. people in the guvmint with sufficiently
    long memories are determined not to be caught as we were in 1941 and 
    1950 again.
74.3The threat is...?TNPUBS::JONGSteveMon Nov 21 1994 13:0111
    (This picks up a thread from the last 'Box)
    
    By no stretch of the imagination are we weak.
    
    Mr. Holt, I remember the disarmament after World War I, leading to the
    isolationist movement in the face of Hitler's rise.  Where is that
    threat today?  When this topic came up before, no one offered a
    credible threat or reason why we need military power sufficient to
    fight the Soviet Union, or two Vietnam-style wars simultaneously.
    The *only* justification I have seen is that the Republicans are back
    on top, and they favor defense spending as a matter of dogma.
74.4MOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Mon Nov 21 1994 13:2823
> Where is that threat today?

I can't recall which thread in the old box it was in, so I won't waste any
time trying to find it now, but a recall one in which someone asked
"Your world is simple, isn't it?", and you replied "Your world is scary,
isn't it?". And I replied, "Yes, Steve, mine is. Very Scary. I have little
trust for anything in the Eastern Hemisphere east of Western Europe and
North of the Equator."

That's a significant piece of the world that's a threat, Steve. Regardless
of your opinions about the Russian navy rusting at the dock. There is so
much obvious political and social instability in that part of the world that
I don't trust for one minute that "we're safe from harm", and an attitude
that makes that assumption in the interests of scaling back drastically
on military spending is an attitude that can quite clearly get us fried.
Like I said, I may be paranoid,, but if I'm right, you'll be just as safe
as the rest of us as a result, provided we don't scrimp on the military.

Do you honestly believe that there is no threat? Do you, like George,
feel that we haven't any enemies since we aren't at war with anyone?

Who would you like to have pull your nads out of the fire if you're wrong?

74.5ANNECY::HUMANI came, I saw, I conked outMon Nov 21 1994 13:378
    Well here in Europe (a little closer to the heat than you I suggest) we
    are not running scared, even with people like Janivinsky (sp?) around.
    The attitude is more on of neighbourly concern for emerging countries
    going through very trying times.
    
    Perhaps you should come here and get a different view of things?
    
    martin 
74.6CALDEC::RAHthe truth is out there.Mon Nov 21 1994 13:4421
    
    Hitler was below the fold on the page just before the classifieds
    until he bacame Chancellor.
    
    He was a curiosity, like Zhirinovsky is today. A ridiculous figure.
    
    You ask where the threat is today? Be glad we don't know yet, for
    once threats unmask themselves you can be assured that this unmasking
    will take place at a time and place and in a manner of the threat's
    choosing, and not necessarily under circumstances where we have time
    for a leisurely and considered response.
    
    We were so unprepared for WWII that we drilled recruits with
    broomsticks. In 1950 we sent a batallion to stop an NK division, with
    weapons not fired on a range or zeroed, with puny ineffective bazookas,
    and with men grown soft from occupation duty in Japan. They were
    slaughtered. Never did we suspect that the N Koreans would dare attack
    nor did we suspect that such a plan was under consideration. 
    
    Complacency is our greatest enemy. 
    
74.7Is Western Europe downscaling its military?MOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Mon Nov 21 1994 13:467
>    Perhaps you should come here and get a different view of things?

Thanks anyway. I'll pass.

I have no doubt that European outlooks on the matter differ, as they've
always had better proximity to the threats.

74.8ASDG::HORTONPaving the info highway with siliconMon Nov 21 1994 13:4712
	Try Tom Clancy's latest novel, "Debt of Honor,"
        for a taste of post-Cold War surprises.  Good yarn
	and, though I don't much expect antagonism with
	Japan to go this far, it gives one pause about cutting
 	the military excessively.

	Of course, eliminating govt waste and fraud would go a long
 	way to restoring solvency, and the military should 'fess
	up to its share.  See the Grace Commission report for more.

	-Jerry
74.9AIMHI::JMARTINBarney IS NOT a nerd!!Mon Nov 21 1994 15:021
    "For they will cry peace peace...and then sudden destruction"
74.10Force appropriate to today's threatsTNPUBS::JONGSteveMon Nov 21 1994 17:0439
    Anent .4: Jack, it is not my "opinion" that the Russian Navy lies
    rusting at anchor, it is a fact.  The intelligence community doesn't
    even have to use its satellites to verify the rust blooms in the water; 
    any tourist can go see.
    
    Yes, this is still a dangerous world; I never suggested it wasn't.
    Do not try to equate reduced defense spending with disarmament or
    increased defense spending with security.  (The Republicans, I remind
    you, are currently talking about freezing cuts.  By your rhetoric, you
    ought to find that unacceptable.)  But the nature of the threat has
    changed, and I say that fully mindful of the Gulf War, the Bosnian War,
    and the Korean crisis.
    
    My question is, if a terrorist explodes a bomb in the World Trade
    Center, whom do we nuke?  If the Palestinians bomb an Israeli, how many
    divisions to we send in?  If a Caribbean island needs democracy
    restored, where do we carpet-bomb? How many thousands of tanks do we
    need in Europe to protect against the invasion of Romanian orphans?
    
    Remember that the Pentagon's job is to assess threats and recommend
    spending levels.  By nature paranoid, the planners assume things like
    multiple wars in opposite hemispheres and rampant equipment failures
    necessitating multiple redundancy (and this within the Army/Navy/Air
    Force triad structure, which is inherently redundant in the first
    place).  Remember how many nuclear warheads we targeted at Moscow? I do
    -- it was over 80.  As Senator Kennedy said just before President
    Reagan's historic treaties with President Gorbachev, "We have enough
    warheads to make the rubble bounce."  The beauty of the system, from
    the Pentagon's viewpoint, is that there was no limit to the need for
    more weapons.  They more candid of them admitted it themselves.  Given
    that we nearly blew out our economy playing the arms-race game, we had
    too much before.  
    
    Yet the last time the Republicans were doling out the dough (no pun
    intended), they gave the Pentagon considerably *more* than they asked
    for.  I think we do not need to re-arm, or even maintain the force
    levels we have now; given the budget problems we have, we are risking
    wrecking ourselves economically, which is what the communists wanted
    all along.  Why give it to them now?
74.11Why don't you cite _War of the Worlds_ too?TNPUBS::JONGSteveMon Nov 21 1994 17:074
    Anent .8: Jerry, you are trying to scare us with a Clancy novel?
    
    Did you read _Red Storm Rising_?  Do you feel it is now, or ever was, 
    a description of a credible threat?
74.12More Bang for the BuckUSAT02::WARRENFELTZRTue Nov 22 1994 10:3914
    Wordy:
    
    There still is a threat to world peace mainly through disassembling of
    the former Soviet Union and the proliferation of arms.
    
    I agree that we should get more "bang for our defense buck" and while
    we may not need 100 of [insert weapons system name], we may need 50 and
    with the savings use that to fine tune our 'terrorist detecting'
    capabilities.
    
    My own personal opinion of the New World Order centers around the
    possibility of a small, secret and well trained and equipped terrorist
    group holding the world 'hostage'.  Who knows, maybe that's where the
    Antichrist will emerge from...   
74.13Not a big vote getter...GAAS::BRAUCHERTue Nov 22 1994 12:4714
    
    My guess is that Defense Appropriations is about the least popular
    portion of the Contract with America, and not much will happen.
    In fact, with a Line Item Veto going before it, they probably don't
    have to do this.
    
    Where are the big Bad Guys ?  The public, including conservatives,
    look out on the horizon before supporting military programs.  And
    anyway, foreign policy has declined in importance in American
    politics, as Bush and Clinton have both found out.  Methinks the
    Republicans will let this one go more easily than any of the others.
    
    Just a guess.  bb
    
74.14Yes, but are we deployed to fight terrorism?TNPUBS::JONGThis is revolting! May I have more?Tue Nov 22 1994 14:333
    Anent .12: Ron, I agree with your assessment of the threats.
    But my question remains: how many nuclear-power aircraft carrier task
    forces will we need to protect ourselves from kidnappers?
74.15USAT02::WARRENFELTZRTue Nov 22 1994 14:4110
    .14
    
    Wordy:
    
    Against terrorism, there are advances dramatically being made, but we
    haven't reached "World Class" status yet...
    
    Again, I believe we agree on:  we don't need X of [weapons system], but
    actually Y, being some quantity less than X.  I am against defense as
    pork for pork purposes only, as was the Grace Commissions report.
74.16and we're sending them billions to help finance itCSOA1::LEECHannuit coeptis novus ordo seclorumTue Nov 22 1994 15:075
    If all is well, why is Russia making all manner of nuclear subs and
    missiles, and conventional weapons?  They are outproducing us 2:1
    currently (overall).
    
    -steve
74.17BOXORN::HAYSI think we are toast. Remember the jam?Tue Nov 22 1994 15:1513
RE: 74.16 by CSOA1::LEECH "annuit coeptis novus ordo seclorum"

> If all is well, why is Russia making all manner of nuclear subs and
> missiles, and conventional weapons?  They are outproducing us 2:1
> currently (overall).

The US is making one (1) sub currently.  This means Russia is making two
(2) subs.  I doubt very much if this is a problem,  seeing how Russia has 
sold as scrap two aircraft carriers,  a bunch of guided missile cruisers,  
dozens of subs,  a stack of smaller warships,  etc.


Phil
74.18Is that sub, like, big?TNPUBS::JONGOnce more dear friends into the breachTue Nov 22 1994 15:192
    Outbuilding us two subs to one?  Steve Leech, aren't you embarassed to
    be caught like that?
74.19SMURF::BINDERvitam gustareTue Nov 22 1994 15:211
    does that sub come with meatballs and provolone?
74.20NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Tue Nov 22 1994 15:232
They do tend to watch lots of videos on subs, so they might have Meatballs.
Was Stallone in Provolone?
74.21ODIXIE::CIAROCHIOne Less DogTue Nov 22 1994 17:264
    The russian sub comes with nukes and pickles.  They are producing three
    per year from what I heard.
    
    Better technology, too...
74.22CALDEC::RAHthe truth is out there.Tue Nov 22 1994 17:423
    
    hmm.. a russian sub with herring in sour cream and pickles
    would make more sense to me.
74.23NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Tue Nov 22 1994 17:431
Russian pickles have better technology than American pickles?!  It is to laugh!
74.24LaughVMSNET::M_MACIOLEKFour54 Camaro/Only way to flyTue Nov 22 1994 18:028
    You ridicule leech, yet you don't pick up on the title of his note.
    How much money are we sending russia to "stand down"?  I heard we're
    helping to pay ex-sov officers retirement.  And Glen is yacking about
    WELFARE in this COUNTRY.  He should be livid.
    
    Re: Hayes.  Who's buying all that russian "junk"?  NKorea?
    Aren't we giving them a couple billion so they don't develope nukes?
    Whatta joke.
74.25SOLVIT::KRAWIECKILess government, stupid!Tue Nov 22 1994 18:1910
    
    RE: .22
    
    No one in their right mind would eat herring in sour cream and pickles.
    
    The correct combinations are:
    
    Sour cream and onions   or  Wine sauce and onions...
    
    
74.26Another lie...GAAS::BRAUCHERTue Nov 22 1994 18:244
    
    Creamed herring - yum !  But it's not Russian.  They stole it.
    
      bb
74.27and they are scrapping JUNK, mostly...CSOA1::LEECHannuit coeptis novus ordo seclorumWed Nov 23 1994 17:4310
    re: .17 and .18
    
    If you were paying attention to what I wrote, the 2:1 ratio was the
    overall total...it may be as high as 3:1 overall, but since I don't
    have my statistics handy, I wanted to be conservative.
    
    I didn't break it down per category...but I will when I dig out the
    right source.
    
    -steve  
74.28We paid attention -- that's why we're laughingTNPUBS::JONGSteveWed Nov 23 1994 19:507
    Oh my God, they're building THREE subs!  We should surrender...!
    
    Seriously, *you* laughed at *me* when I suggested buying the Soviet
    warheads.  You're not laughing now, are you?  At, say $1,000,000 a
    megaton, I would sleep much better (and frankly, so would everyone else
    on Earth) knowing we had them under lock and key, not Saddam or Jong
    Il, even at that high price.
74.29CSOA1::LEECHannuit coeptis novus ordo seclorumWed Nov 23 1994 20:0714
    Actually, the number I remember from my source was one sub per
    month...but enough of the sub strawman.  The fact remains that this
    economically collasped country is building 2-3x the armaments we are,
    which include nuclear warheads/missiles, subs, tanks, and the like. 
    And we are sending them billions of $$ in aid.
    
    What's wrong with this picture?
    
    Never mind, go back to sleep.  All is well.  We certainly don't need
    the military any more.  Cold war is over and all that.  Let's just keep 
    cutting the defense budget.
    
    
    -steve
74.30CALDEC::RAHthe truth is out there.Wed Nov 23 1994 20:125
    
    but they are building them for Iran, right?
    
    I hear the Iranians want to use them to salvage
    the nuke warheads from sunken Soviet boomers.
74.31SOLVIT::KRAWIECKILess government, stupid!Wed Nov 23 1994 21:5610
    
    
    Nelson Mandella today declared that South Africa will continue to sell
    arms to aid in its "re-building process"...
    
    South Africa never had a nuclear program.... right? That's what they
    kept telling us.. right???
    
     Let's all go back to sleep now...
    
74.32This is a threat to us?TNPUBS::JONGSteveFri Nov 25 1994 20:571
    Andy, are you citing South Africa as an example of a threat to the US?
74.33More as a pipeline to others...SOLVIT::KRAWIECKILess government, stupid!Sun Nov 27 1994 21:184
    
    
    If they have nukes... why not?
    
74.34Any nuclear country is a threat to us?TNPUBS::JONGSteveMon Nov 28 1994 12:531
    Is England a threat to the US?  What about France?
74.35ANNECY::HUMANI came, I saw, I conked outMon Nov 28 1994 13:041
    well, you did nick all those French wine names......
74.36SOLVIT::KRAWIECKILess government, stupid!Mon Nov 28 1994 13:284
    
    RE: .34
    
    Boy!! You're quick... 
74.37Boy, you're unresponsiveTNPUBS::JONGSteveMon Nov 28 1994 15:001
    Andy, do you consider England and France threats to the US?
74.38SOLVIT::KRAWIECKILess government, stupid!Mon Nov 28 1994 16:022
    
     What definition of the word "pipeline" are you having trouble with?
74.39What part of "answer" troubles you?TNPUBS::JONGSteveMon Nov 28 1994 16:5917
    I see you won't answer the question again, Andy.  Very well, I'll
    answer it for you: you see South Africa, England, France, and every
    other country with nuclear weapons as a threat to the US, because the
    weapons can be pipelined to other, unfriendly hands.
    
    First, are you aware of the difference between stable countries, such
    as England and France, and unstable ones such as Ukraine and Russia?
    I have trouble with you equating them as pipelines.
    
    Second, are you aware of how the weapons are safed in those countries?
    (Hint: The US had a lot to do with devising the command/control
    procedures in the European countries.)  I have trouble with you
    equating those procedures with the procedures in Ukraine and Russia.
    
    Third, and this is the point under discussion, how much should we
    increase defense spending, and in what area, to make us safe from this
    threat?  I would very much like to hear your thoughts on this matter.
74.40CSC32::J_OPPELTOracle-boundMon Nov 28 1994 17:174
    	Different thread, but I like that some senators are making noise
    	to get us to consider dropping ties with the UN, or at least take
    	a renewed look at the value of our association with that impotent
    	organization.
74.41MPGS::MARKEYSenses Working OvertimeMon Nov 28 1994 17:185
    RE: .40
    
    Agreed! It's about time...
    
    -b
74.42NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Mon Nov 28 1994 17:244
I'm not defending the UN, but it's silly to call it impotent.  Since the end of
the Cold War, the UN has sent peacekeeping forces all over the place (with
mixed success of course).  When the USSR was still around, not much escaped
the veto of the the Security Council's permanent members.
74.43Overblown...GAAS::BRAUCHERMon Nov 28 1994 17:2811
    
    Um, gee, folks.  Most of the debate is about the much-delayed
    military pay increase.  No raises there for 5 years.  Enlistments
    are down.  A welfare mother does better - enlisted men and women
    would be below the poverty line in dollars, but aren't so listed
    because of food/uniforms/barracks, etc counted as benefits.
    
    The weapons stuff is mostly a debate about R&D, and the numbers are
    not large compared to the budget.
    
      bb
74.44Impotent.CSC32::J_OPPELTOracle-boundMon Nov 28 1994 17:297
>I'm not defending the UN, but it's silly to call it impotent.  ...
>When the USSR was still around, not much escaped
>the veto of the the Security Council's permanent members.
    
    	I rest my case.  TYVM.  
    
    	I'll throw in the UN's effectiveness in Bosnia for good measure.
74.45MPGS::MARKEYSenses Working OvertimeMon Nov 28 1994 17:2915
    >the UN has sent peacekeeping forces all over the place (with
    >mixed success of course).
    
    With pretty poor success really... do you consider Somalia a
    mixed success? Or Yugoslavia? I consider them disasters...
    
    The only "bright spot" was Kuwait... which was really Amercians
    with the UN along for the ride. GHWB involved the UN more to
    keep public opinion in tow than for any military purpose.
    
    The UN _is_ impotent without US military might... so what the
    hell do _we_ need it for? The UN has everything to gain from
    the US, what does the US gain from it? (Answer: squat)
    
    -b
74.46NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Mon Nov 28 1994 17:332
Joe, I don't follow you.  Are you saying that a UN that sends peacekeepers
hither and yon is as impotent as a UN that passes no substantive SC resolutions?
74.47CSC32::J_OPPELTOracle-boundMon Nov 28 1994 17:427
    	re .46
    
    	That very little could excape the SC is an excellent example
    	of the UN's impotence.
    
    	And I wouldn't rely on the peacekeeping missions to prove UN
    	effectiveness!
74.48Moved from Note 14TNPUBS::JONGSteveMon Nov 28 1994 17:4425
               <<< PEAR::DKB100:[NOTES$LIBRARY]SOAPBOX.NOTE;1 >>>
                          -< Soapbox.  Just Soapbox. >-
================================================================================
Note 14.117                        News Briefs                        117 of 117
CALDEC::RAH "the truth is out there."                19 lines  28-NOV-1994 14:30
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- A South Korean company has concluded a
    deal to buy two Russian aircraft carriers for scrap metal, the
    company said Friday.
    The Minsk and Novorossiisk, stripped of weapons and
    communications systems, are expected to arrive within several
    weeks, said Park Jong-nam of Young Distribution Co. Ltd. The price
    of the deal was not immediately available.
    The two 37,000-ton aircraft carriers, built in 1979 and 1984,
    were the mainstay of the Soviet Union's Far East Naval Fleet, but
    with the end of the Cold War, Russia decided to decommission them.
    Arms-related deals cause concern on the tense Korean Peninsula,
    where more than 2 million soldiers from North and South Korea face
    each other across the world's last Cold War frontier.
    Over the past few years, Russia has sold off its aging and
    deteriorating ships for scrap to countries including North Korea,
    causing concern in neighboring countries that the ships might be
    repaired and used.
    
    
74.49BIGQ::SILVAMemories.....Mon Nov 28 1994 17:448
| <<< Note 74.40 by CSC32::J_OPPELT "Oracle-bound" >>>



| or at least take a renewed look at the value of our association with that 
| impotent organization.

	Takes one to know one.....
74.50NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Mon Nov 28 1994 17:492
Joe, I don't see how you can say the UN *is* impotent because the permanent
members of the SC *used to* veto everything.
74.51CSC32::J_OPPELTOracle-boundMon Nov 28 1994 17:532
    	Always has been impotent.  What have they done recently that has
    	been a success?
74.52SOLVIT::KRAWIECKILess government, stupid!Mon Nov 28 1994 18:3512
    
    Sorry Steve, don't have the time to get into it right now.... back on
    my project...
    
      Regardless of the stability of these nations, it is feasible for such
    things to happen. There have been many documented instances where
    things got "lost"... including nuclear materials (I know... not the
    same as a bomb... but it is feasible).
    
      BTW.... I love how you equate the present South Africa with nations
    such as UK and France... S.A. maybe that for now, but give it time....
    it'll revert like it's northern neighbors...
74.53CLUSTA::BINNSMon Nov 28 1994 19:0912
.52
    
 >     BTW.... I love how you equate the present South Africa with nations
 >   such as UK and France... S.A. maybe that for now, but give it time....
 >   it'll revert like it's northern neighbors...
    
    
    In uttering that dire prediction, don't forget to skip over South
    Africa's immediate northern neighbor, the stable and democratic nation
    of Botswanna.
    
    Kit
74.54Or is it the one to the northwest..?SOLVIT::KRAWIECKILess government, stupid!Mon Nov 28 1994 21:444
    
    
    Is that the lovely, democratic nation where the government is
    confiscating all lands belonging to white owners?
74.55Well squirmedTNPUBS::JONGSteveTue Nov 29 1994 14:3049
    In Reply .31, Andy brought up South Africa (in a topic discussing the
    Contract With America's part about significantly increasing defense
    spending).  Since then, he's backpedaled furiously, as you can see...
    
    I guess, then, the question regarding .31 is: What's your point, then?
    
               <<< PEAR::DKB100:[NOTES$LIBRARY]SOAPBOX.NOTE;1 >>>
                          -< Soapbox.  Just Soapbox. >-
================================================================================
Note 107.13         HMS VANGUARD...the arms race continues...           13 of 13
SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI "Less government, stupid!"         37 lines  29-NOV-1994 10:55
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    RE: .12
    
>    Listen, Andy, you cited the nuclear threat of South Africa as a reason
>    for increasing DoD funding.  When I asked you about England and France,
>    you added them to the list.  Now, when I point this out here, you wuss
>    out and say you only meant the threat was "feasible," as if you didn't
>    take it as a serious threat.
 
       I stated that, yes, S.A. can be considered a possible threat because
    as far as I can see, they are NOT as stable as other "allies". Go back
    and read what I inputed. I never stated that this should be a reason
    for increasing DOD funding. I tried to show a possible threat... NEVER
    did I say that spending should be increased!! You took it and flew with
    it (as you usually do). I made an inference of plausibility. You
    ASSUMED!!! You call me a "wuss" because I wouldn't play your game? get
    real!!
         
  >  Maybe I wouldn't have to "rathole" so much if you wouldn't run down
  >  that rathole when your statements are held up to scrutiny.
   
     Your "scrutiny" is shallow at best....
    
     
   > If you don't have the courage to see your views exposed here, don't try
   > using them as a justification for spending more tax monies on defense.
   > Don't waste my money *or* my time!
    
      What has courage got to do with this? My views "exposed"???? You
    ASSUME again!! I don't really have the time to spend "defending" myself
    in the box... If you want, we can get together face to face and I'll
    rub your nose in your innuendo and rat-holing!!! Till then, why don't
    you be like Meowski and pick up the "towel" you'll think you've won and
    grow up a bit...
    
      "don't waste my time"???? You give yourself much more credit (in your
    own mind) than you're due...
    
74.56SOLVIT::KRAWIECKILess government, stupid!Tue Nov 29 1994 14:5511
    
    
     Ah yes... the limo-liberal think-speak....
    
    Clarifying is backpedaling... 
    
    
    >  -< Well squirmed >-
    
     Grow up....
    
74.57I'd call it leaving a vapor trailTNPUBS::JONGSteveTue Nov 29 1994 15:165
    Yes, well, in a topic discussing the need for increasing defense
    spending, when you bring up South Africa, then willingly add England
    and France, and then say you didn't mean that we ought to increase
    defense spending in response to these "threats," yeah, I'd call that
    backpedaling.
74.58SOLVIT::KRAWIECKILess government, stupid!Tue Nov 29 1994 15:239
    
    
    Wordy starts his very own towel collection!!!!
    
    Will it rival Meowski's??????
    
    
      Guaranteed!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    
74.59imhoGAAS::BRAUCHERTue Nov 29 1994 15:264
    
    Nah, Jong can't hold a candle to George.
    
      bb
74.60OOTOOL::CHELSEAMostly harmless.Tue Nov 29 1994 15:393
    Re: .58
    
    Take it to the ring.  Or take a blood pressure pill.  Or both.
74.61ODIXIE::CIAROCHIOne Less DogTue Nov 29 1994 15:501
    Just because it has it's own building doesn't make the UN impotent.
74.62SOLVIT::KRAWIECKILess government, stupid!Tue Nov 29 1994 15:5417
    
    RE: .60
    
    Extra exclamations points are there for emphasis....
    
    Don't like my emphasis? Hit NEXT/UNSEEN....
    
    Don't ASSUME I need pills or a ring...
    
    I take my frustrations out in my aerobics class...
    
    The day I let the likes of Wordy upset me is the day.... what is that
    place that freezes over??
    
    
    Ooooooops!! You can't NEXT/UNSEEN... can you? You're a moderator... how
    silly of me... 
74.63OOTOOL::CHELSEAMostly harmless.Tue Nov 29 1994 15:561
    Touchy touchy touchy.
74.64SOLVIT::KRAWIECKILess government, stupid!Tue Nov 29 1994 16:044
    
    
    I rest my case....
    
74.65BIGQ::SILVAMemories.....Tue Nov 29 1994 16:088


	You can rest your case, but it's evident that you have refused to
address Steve's claims. Could it be that they really are true? 


Glen
74.66HAAG::HAAGRode hard. Put up wet.Tue Nov 29 1994 16:121
    i'm a staying out of this one.
74.67BIGQ::SILVAMemories.....Tue Nov 29 1994 16:257
| <<< Note 74.66 by HAAG::HAAG "Rode hard. Put up wet." >>>

| i'm a staying out of this one.



	Thems words I never thought I would read from you... :-)
74.68HAAG::HAAGRode hard. Put up wet.Tue Nov 29 1994 16:345
>| <<< Note 74.66 by HAAG::HAAG "Rode hard. Put up wet." >>>
>| i'm a staying out of this one.
>Thems words I never thought I would read from you... :-)
    
    my momma left me with at least a lick of cents.
74.69lick of centsPENUTS::DDESMAISONStoo few argsTue Nov 29 1994 16:363
 so many puns, so little time.

74.70HAAG::HAAGRode hard. Put up wet.Tue Nov 29 1994 16:381
    try it baby. you'll luv it.
74.71PNTAGN::WARRENFELTZRWed Nov 30 1994 10:0117
    There are certain elements in even our allies ranks who would be
    considered dangerous if they had access to our superior weaponry and
    intelligence.
    
    I can see where Andy was going with his line of thinking.  Since the
    new change over in SA, I think it'd be prudent for the US to closer
    review DOD expenditures on their behalf given the political and
    terrorist inclinations of their current President.
    
    If a communist/socialist government would come into power in either
    England or France, we'd better review our DOD expenditures and exposure
    in light of that political development.
    
    Wordy, you an ace at broadbrushing and labeling and generalizing. 
    Course that goes with the limolib agenda.  The answer to every problem
    is MONEY!  Except of course when it comes to giving incentives for
    businesses [the true EVYL EMPIRE!]
74.72There is not a defense deficit.MIMS::WILBUR_DTue Dec 06 1994 12:0110
    
    
    
    Two Republican senators want to increase defense spending by 90 Billion
    over five years.
    
    The written Pentagon response, "Any suggestion that there is a defense
    deficit is wrong."
    
    
74.73It's forced...GAAS::BRAUCHERTue Dec 06 1994 13:116
    
    The Clinton administration has proposed a $25 billion increase also.
    
    C'mon - no pay raise in 7 years !  They haven't got a choice.
    
      bb
74.74If THEY don't want it, who are we to argue?TNPUBS::JONGSteveTue Dec 06 1994 16:037
    Well, I think the Clinton Administration is caving in with their
    proposed $25 billion increase, even though (1) it's over 6 years, and
    (2) it's for things I have absolutely no argument with, like pay raises
    and readiness increases.
    
    But there you have it -- even the PENTAGON says they don't need the
    money!  Why the heck do we need to give it to them?
74.75WAHOO::LEVESQUEwhat's the frequency, Kenneth?Tue Dec 06 1994 17:142
     That's funny: it wasn't more than a month ago that Perry was saying we
    weren't ready to fight a war in two theaters...
74.76DTRACY::CHELSEAMostly harmless.Tue Dec 06 1994 17:378
    Apparently the Pentagon and buddies want to keep investing in older
    technologies that are not only becoming obsolete but are very
    expensive.  The Army wants new tanks.  The Navy wants great big
    aircraft carriers (aka sitting ducks) and subhunters.  The Air Force
    wants more fighters.  The thing is, missile technology has reached the
    point where they can find subs better than subhunters and outfly most
    human-piloted fighters.  It's not enough for the armed forces to
    embrace the electronic age, they need to shed the mechanical age.
74.77SOLVIT::KRAWIECKIgrep this!Tue Dec 06 1994 18:056
    
    RE: aircraft carriers (aka sitting ducks)
    
    How would you get fighter/bomber support to a theatre of operations
    quickly without a permanent land-based airfield available?
    
74.78DTRACY::CHELSEAMostly harmless.Wed Dec 07 1994 15:503
    Apparently VTOL technology is becoming more of a reality; that would
    allow smaller aircraft carriers, as opposed to the enormous beastie
    currently under development.
74.79SMURF::BINDERvitam gustareWed Dec 07 1994 15:592
    vtol has been a reality for quite some time.  vtol aircraft are called
    helicopters.
74.80Harriers...SOLVIT::KRAWIECKIgrep this!Wed Dec 07 1994 16:031
    
74.81SMURF::BINDERvitam gustareWed Dec 07 1994 16:061
    yeah, them, too.
74.82Missle aren't that good ...ISLNDS::MCWILLIAMSWed Dec 07 1994 16:2721
    Re: Note 74.76 by DTRACY::CHELSEA 
    
    No.  Missle technology while impressive is nowhere near that good. 
    Another problem is that you have to get the missle near enough to get
    to the target, ... that requires a platform, be it plane, tank, or sub.
    
    The best soviet SAM in wide deployment (SA-12) has virtually no chance
    of downing an F-117 Stealth Fighter, and only a 20% chance
    (theoretical) of downing the much larger F-15.  If the F-15 knows of
    the SAM threat, counter measures can be taken, making the chance of
    succesful engagement even lower.
    
    Most hunter missles have maximum ranges in the the 60 km range.  So you
    have to get something to carry the missle close enough to get a lock.
    
    Carriers are 'sitting ducks' except that they project their force to
    prevent anybody from getting close enough to get a missle off. How
    else are you going to get an airfield near where there is trouble.?
    
    /jim
    
74.83DTRACY::CHELSEAMostly harmless.Wed Dec 07 1994 17:2933
    Re: .82
    
    >Missle technology while impressive is nowhere near that good. 
    
    That's not what the article said.
    
    >that requires a platform, be it plane, tank, or sub.
    
    Yes, but those platforms would be tailored for missile delivery.  They
    wouldn't be tailored for anachronistic tactics.  (This would tend to
    make them smaller and cheaper to build.)
    
    >If the F-15 knows of the SAM threat, counter measures can be taken,
    
    Do those countermeasures consist of the human pilot trying to outfly
    the missile?  Or do those countermeasures consist of things like
    jamming and/or distortion?  The article was saying that the pet plane
    project that Air Force is pushing wasn't as effective at dodging
    missiles as some other type(s) of planes.
    
    >So you have to get something to carry the missle close enough to get a 
    >lock.
    
    Yes, but not a great, big expensive sub with all sorts of equipment
    that mostly isn't effective in locating subs.
    
    >except that they project their force to prevent anybody from getting 
    >close enough to get a missle off.
    
    They can try to prevent penetration of their zone.
    
    Missiles are relatively small and relatively cheap to produce, which
    means their technology should be advancing at a pretty rapid clip.
74.84Better on defense ?GAAS::BRAUCHERTue Feb 14 1995 16:2313
    
    Well, the House is going to start on this shortly (still in committee).
    Bonior was waxing irate on the floor last night abouts how the majority
    isn't allowing adequate time for debate (10 hours) given that "this is
    one of the most important issues the 104th Congress will face".  "They
    (pointing at Armey) will jeopardize their nation's security, just so
    they can punch another little hole in their Contract summary.  But you
    cannot defend you country playing ticket conductor..."
    
    Actually, I think the honorable gentleman from Michigan is warming to
    his role as minority whip.
    
      bb
74.85Actually watched C-SPAN last nightREFINE::KOMARMy congressman is a crookTue Feb 14 1995 20:1411
	Did you see the same thing I did?

	Instead of talking about the issues raised, the Dems WHINED 
about the rules.  What I liked was during the Special Orders part of
the Congressional session, a Republican mentioned how much time was 
spent on debate in Congress about Haiti, the change in policy in
Somolia, and a few other things.

	Bonior, IMHO, has become the minority WIMP.

ME
74.86MPGS::MARKEYLlamas are larger than frogsTue Feb 14 1995 20:163
    Whining is better than winning. Give me dems whining anyday.
    
    -b
74.87REFINE::KOMARMy congressman is a crookTue Feb 14 1995 20:183
This is very true.

ME
74.88Blah, blah, blah...GAAS::BRAUCHERThu Feb 16 1995 12:428
    
     For all the hyperbole, the debate is between Clinton's 246B budget
    proposal and the 253B GOP alternative.
    
     But from listening to the parties, the difference is whether the
    universe is saved.
    
     bb
74.89BIGQ::SILVASquirrels R MeThu Feb 16 1995 13:118
| <<< Note 74.88 by GAAS::BRAUCHER >>>


| But from listening to the parties, the difference is whether the
| universe is saved.

	Oh great.... they can't save the country, so they want to try and save
the universe.....
74.90They mostly resolved it.GAAS::BRAUCHERThu Feb 23 1995 14:2112
    
    The Democrats, aided by some Republican crossovers, quietly scrubbed
    most of the SDI stuff in the bill, before passing it.  Aside from
    some shuffling around, it's not much different than the Clinton-
    Perry requests.  The biggest difference is probably the GOP anti-UN
    provisions.  The raise, the modernization/readiness, the housing,
    is all basically not in dispute.
    
    This bill turns into a kitten.  I think this is because more Defense
    is perceived as the least popular of the Contract promises.
    
      bb