Dealing with the Threat of Cruise Missiles


Book Description

How can the core transatlantic Allies make coalitions more effective? One year on from Kosovo, disparities in the capabilities of the coalition partners, as well as uneven levels of prior coordination, persist. To address these problems will require much greater force planning in peacetime. This stimulating and influential work offers one of the most comprehensive independent assessments to date of the Kosovo campaign, and of the performance of the NATO allies. An important subject area in which there is a great deal of international interest.




Missile Contagion


Book Description

Most books on missile proliferation focus on the spread of ballistic missiles or cruise missiles, not both. Gormley's work, however, explains why cruise missiles are beginning to spread widely, but does so by explaining their spread in the context of ballistic missile proliferation. It therefore treats both ballistic and cruise missile proliferation as related phenomenon. This work also focuses evenhandedly on both nonproliferation and defense policy (including missile defenses and counterforce doctrines) to fashion a set of integrated strategies for dealing with ballistic and cruise missile proliferation. Signs of missile contagion abound. In this study, Gormley argues that a series of rapid and surprising developments since 2005 suggest that the proliferation of missiles capable of delivering either weapons of mass destruction or highly accurate conventional payloads is approaching a critical threshold. The surprising fact is that land-attack cruise missiles, not ballistic missiles, constitute the primary problem. Flying under the radar, both literally and figuratively, land-attack cruise missiles add a dangerous new dimension to protecting U.S. security interests and preventing regional military instability. Gormley asserts that cruise missiles are not destined to supplant ballistic missiles; rather, they are likely to join them, because when both are employed together, they could severely test even the best missile defenses. Worse yet, Gormley argues, land-attack cruise missiles are increasingly being linked to preemptive strike doctrines, which are fueling regional arms races and crisis instability. This work explains why an epidemic of cruise missile proliferation, long forecasted by analysts, has only recently begun to occur. After first assessing the state of ballistic missile proliferation, Gormley explores the role of three factors in shaping the spread of cruise missiles. These include specialized knowledge needed for missile development; narrative messages about reasons for acquiring cruise missiles; and norms of state behavior about missile nonproliferation policy and defense doctrine. This book then addresses the policy adjustments needed to stanch the spread of cruise missiles in the first place, or, barring that, cope militarily with a more demanding missile threat consisting of both cruise and ballistic missiles.




Dealing with Cruise Missile Proliferation: The Emerging Threat and Nonproliferation Challenges


Book Description

A militarily significant land-attack cruise missile (LACM) threat to U.S. interests could emerge within a decade. Key indicators of the emerging threat include, (1) the rapid growth of Commercially available enabling technologies usable in cruise missiles, (2) the globalization of the manned aircraft industries and expertise required to develop and integrate cruise missile technologies and equipment, and (3) the potential for exports from the industrialized world of Sensitive technologies usable in the development of advanced cruise missiles. In its Introduction, this paper will describe unique aspects of the threat posed by LACMs---they can be designed for exceptional pre-launch survival, air-defense penetration, and highly accurate weapon delivery. Low-flying cruise missiles are a particularly effective delivery means for chemical and biological weapons. These features might be so attractive to rogue states that cruise missiles could in the future be the delivery system of greatest concern to U%5. and allied defense planners. Section 1 of the paper will examine the diverse sources of cruise missiles and related technologies and equipment, a diversity that makes these weapons particularly difficult to control. The paper will focus on how advanced cruise missiles could be acquired by rogue or unstable countries. To illustrate the threat, classified technical analysis will be presented on a state-of-the-art foreign LACM that has been offered for export. The paper will next examine ASCM conversion, a potential "shortcut" to LACM acquisition. Over 70 countries possess ASCMs and at least one rogue state may have already converted ASCMs for land-attack missions. Technical analysis of ASCM conversion options will be derived from a new classified study (Morphing the Silkworm: A Case Study in the Conversion of Antiship Cruise Missiles for Land Attack) completed by the authors for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.




Missile Contagion


Book Description

Political Science/International Relations/Arms Control




Dealing with the Threat of Cruise Missiles


Book Description

How can the core transatlantic Allies make coalitions more effective? One year on from Kosovo, disparities in the capabilities of the coalition partners, as well as uneven levels of prior coordination, persist. To address these problems will require much greater force planning in peacetime. This stimulating and influential work offers one of the most comprehensive independent assessments to date of the Kosovo campaign, and of the performance of the NATO allies. An important subject area in which there is a great deal of international interest.




Cruise Missile and UAV Threats to the United States


Book Description




Evaluating Novel Threats to the Homeland


Book Description

Changes in technology and adversary behavior will invariably produce new threats that must be assessed by defense and homeland security planners. An example of such a novel threat is the use of cruise missiles or unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) by terrorist groups. Individual threats cannot be assessed in isolation, however, since adversaries always have many options for staging attacks. To examine this threat, RAND utilized a ?red analysis of alternatives? approach, wherein the benefits, costs, and risks of different options are considered from the point of view of a potential adversary. For several types of attacks, the suitability of these systems was compared against other options. This approach can help defense planners understand how the capabilities that different attack modes provide address key adversary operational problems. Given the insights this analysis produced about when these systems would likely be preferred by an attacker, RAND explored defensive options to address the threat. UAVs and cruise missiles represent a ?niche threat? within a larger threat context; therefore, defenses were sought that provide common protection against both this and other asymmetric threats. The monograph concludes with a discussion of cross-cutting lessons about this threat and the assessment of novel threats in general.




Cruise Missiles


Book Description

The cruise missile is the principal innovation in U.S. weaponry in the early 1980s. Because it is inexpensive and versatile, it is likely to be used for a wide range of military missions. At the same time, it has become a delicate issue in arms control and alliance politics. Although cruise missile programs are among the most dynamic elements in the U.S. defense buildup, their consequences have not been fully appreciated. This book assesses the complex set of technological, budgetary, strategic, diplomatic, and political implications of this new weapon as a contribution to public understanding of its pervasive influence on diplomacy and military affairs. Cruise missile technology and development programs are dealt with in chapters by John C. Toomay; Godron MacDonald, Jack Ruina, and Mark Balaschak; Ron Huisken; and John C. Baker. Military uses and arm control implications are discussed by Bruce Bennett and James Foster; Roger H. Palin; Richard Burt; Michael MccGwire; George H. Quester; and William H. Kinkade. Diplomatic and national political questions are analyzed by Raymond L. Garthoff; Robert J. Art and Stephen E. Ockenden; Gregory F. Treverton; Lawrence D. Freedman; and Catherine McArdle Kelleher.







Ballistic and Cruise Missile Threat


Book Description

Overall, the threats posed by ballistic missile delivery systems are likely to continue to increase and grow more complex over the next decade. Current trends indicate adversary ballistic missile systems are becoming more mobile, survivable, reliable, and accurate while also achieving longer ranges. Prelaunch survivability is also likely to increase as potential adversaries strengthen their denial and deception measures and increasingly base missiles on mobile sea- and land-based platforms. Adversarial nations are adopting technical and operational countermeasures to defeat missile defenses. Ballistic missiles are already in widespread use and will continue to increase in number and variety. The availability of weapons of mass destruction for use on ballistic missiles vastly increases the significance of this threat. Despite an ongoing reduction in the size of the Russian strategic missile force, Russia probably will retain the largest force of strategic ballistic missiles outside the United States. China is producing technologically advanced ballistic missiles and has sold ballistic missile technology to other countries. North Korea is continuing development of the TD-2 ICBM/SLV, has unveiled a new road-mobile ICBM, has an IRBM in development, and maintains a large SRBM inventory. North Korea has exported ballistic missile systems and will probably continue to do so. Iran has ambitious ballistic missile and space launch development programs and continues to attempt to increase the range, lethality, and accuracy of its ballistic missile force. Iranian ballistic missile forces continue to train extensively in highly publicized exercises. The proliferation of LACMs will expand in the next decade. At least nine countries will be involved in producing these weapons. The majority of new LACMs will be very accurate, conventionally armed, and available for export. The high accuracy of many LACMs will allow them to inflict serious damage, even when the missiles are armed only with conventional warheads. US defense systems could be severely stressed by low-flying stealthy cruise missiles that can simultaneously attack a target from several directions.