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Election 96 and Star Wars

Introduction

Star Wars--Clever Politics in the Service of Bad Policy September/October 1996 FAS Public Interest Report (2 October 1996)

Americans Believe Increased Spending On Missile Defenses Is "Throwing Good Money After Bad" according to public opinion polls and focus groups conducted by the Coalition to Reduce Nuclear Dangers.


Missile defense fails to take spot among campaign issues By Bill Gertz THE WASHINGTON TIMES 22 October 1996

The question of whether to de ploy a national defense against missile attack has received little attention during the presidential campaign.

The issue was once slated to be a top campaign theme for Republican nominee Bob Dole. Mr. Dole refers in his stump speech to the need for a missile defense system, but he has not made it a center- piece of his campaign.

Foreign Policy `Success' By Jim Hoagland Thursday, September 12 1996; Page A27 The Washington Post

" ... Dole is leaving criticism of Clinton foreign policy to campaign surrogates John McCain and Richard Lu\gar. Trailing Clinton by 15 points in their own internal polling data, Dole and his campaign strategists believe that the candidate's only chance is to sell his tax cut, attack Clinton on drugs and relegate foreign policy to the back burner.

"Campaigning is about winning, not about running a foreign policy seminar," one of Dole's close associates says. "And he now has fewer than 60 days to convince the public that they have a direct, positive stake in his economic plan. Barring a disaster for American troops in Bosnia, foreign policy is not going to be Bob Dole's topic this year."

Missile Defense Failing To Launch as Voting Issue By Bradley Graham, Washington Post, Sunday, July 28 1996; Page A06 notes:

Led by GOP presidential candidate Robert J. Dole, Republicans have pointed repeatedly to President Clinton's refusal to commit to deploying an antimissile system as an example of what they call the president's shortsighted, irresponsible management of national security affairs. Dole and House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) have introduced legislation, called the Defend America Act, to require installation of a system by 2003 that would protect against at least limited missile attack.

But apart from the surprise expressed when people learn no such shield exists, there is little evidence to suggest the issue is catching on among voters. And some GOP candidates for Congress acknowledge doubts about its vote-getting potential, particularly given the subject's complexity.

Candidates Blow Missile-Defense Issue Out of Proportion; Politics: Republicans denounce a 'soft' defense policy. Democrats decry a 'Star Wars' revival. But both sides want essentially the same system.; By ART PINE - Los Angeles Times, Sunday, July 28, 1996 Home Edition Section: PART A Page: A-15

Listen to the mounting debate over building a new national missile-defense system and you would think that the two major presidential candidates, Bill Clinton and Bob Dole, are worlds apart.
... ... ...
But defense analysts say that despite the intensity of the debate, the cross-fire is basically a tempest in a missile silo--a classic example of how candidates, under pressure to come up with a winning issue for the campaign, can blow an issue out of proportion.

In reality, both candidates believe that the United States should be developing a missile-defense system that would be ready to deploy by 2003, and both sides have the same plan in mind: using existing technology to build a system with limited clout.

  • New push for missile defense Dole and Clinton put plans forward By Michael Kranish, Boston Globe, 10/03/96
    It is the most expensive yet least-publicized spending program proposed in this presidential campaign. It is Bob Dole's plan to build a US missile defense system that some are calling "Star Wars - Part II."

    Dole hasn't publicized the contentious proposal because President Clinton has sought to co-opt the issue by pushing his own $10 billion missile-defense plan. In fact, one of the biggest differences between Clinton and Dole's proposed defense budgets for the next five years is what they would spend on missile defense systems.

    Head-to-Head

    Ballistic missile defense was not mentioned in the debates.

    But in other published head-to-head candidate statements on national security issues, BMD figured more prominently:

    Dole

    The primary legislative vehicle Dole used to inject this issue into the campaign was the Defend America Act.

    This issue hasn't exactly dominated the headlines, but other media coverage will be added as it becomes available. Dole has a long record of supporting ballistic missile defense. Writing in the Spring 1995 issue of Foreign Policy magazine, in an article entitled "Shaping America's Global Future" he contended that:
    ... the "doves"were wrong all along in the Cold War ... The doves opposed SDI and supported the nuclear freeze and other arms control measures, arguing that weapons, not ideology and intentions, posed the threat to the United States.... effective ballistic missile defenses would do more to enhance American and allied security by providing real protection against limited and accidental strikes than would nonproliferation policies, which rely on the goodwill and cooperation of others to halt the spread of nuclear technology and weapons of mass destruction to rogue states."

    In the early months of the campaign, Dole was mentioning the Star Wars issue frequently.

    But at other times ballistic missile defense seems to slip in and out of focus in the Dole campaign.

    There are a variety of online resources on the Republican campaign.

    Clinton

    Although Clinton has not entirely emulated Dole on Star Wars, and has attacked some of the more ridiculous elements of Dole's plan, the campaign has sought to avoid excessive daylight between Clinton and Dole where possible.

    General Resources


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