22 August 2000
Source: http://usinfo.state.gov/cgi-bin/washfile/display.pl?p=/products/washfile/latest&f=00082201.plt&t=/products/washfile/newsitem.shtml


US Department of State
International Information Programs

Washington File
_________________________________

22 August 2000

Cohen Says "Superpower" Label Attracts Asymmetrical Threats

(Cites chemical, biological, cyber warfare potential) (3730)

Since no other country has the military capability of the United
States, some states may seek to challenge this country in indirect
ways "in the form of chemical or biological or even cyber (warfare),"
Defense Secretary Cohen told the Veterans of Foreign Wars in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin August 21.

"What we have to do is intensify our anti-proliferation types of
measures to cut down on the technology that so many of our friends or
allies or adversaries are helping to spread around the world," he
said.

Cohen described the steps the defense establishment is taking to
prepare U.S. citizens for the kinds of conflict that they are likely
to face in the future.

He also spoke of past challenges, such as the war in Kosovo, and the
ways the nation faced them, and of U.S. troop forward deployments "to
send a signal to all of those in the world that we are there not to
conquer territory. . . .We are there to promote stability because
where there is stability, investment will follow." With investment, he
said, a nation "has a chance to develop and promote prosperity (with)
a much greater chance of promoting democracy."

Following is the text of Cohen's address as issued by the Defense
Department:

(begin text)

National Convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and The Ladies
Auxiliary 

Remarks as Delivered by Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen, Midwest
Express Center, Milwaukee, Wisconsin,
Monday, August 21, 2000 

Thank you [VFW] Commander [John] Smart, everyone's Mr. Wonderful, for
your warm words and also for your leadership of this great
organization. Let me also extend our words of congratulation to
Heather French, Miss America, for all that you've done on behalf of
our veterans and our soldiers. We look forward to a very special
ceremony later.

Lorraine Fryer, the National President of the Ladies Auxiliary,
congratulations on your award as well. You have just done an
outstanding job. And as you pointed out, your organizations work
together. You bring together all of the forces that help support our
[men and women] in the field and the veterans who have served, so we
are truly indebted to you and the Ladies Auxiliary as we are to the
veterans themselves.

Let me say to all the members of the VFW, Janet [Langhart Cohen] and I
were just talking as we were looking out into this vast audience, [and
discussing] how proud we are to be here amongst those of you who have
done so much not only for our veterans, but for those who serve and
for the contributions you make to humanity through the charitable
efforts that you undertake. We are truly proud to be here to share
just a few moments with you today.

Also, I want to say that you have been such a powerful voice not only
for our veterans, but for everybody who serves today in uniform. You
do so by standing up for our forces, their families, their quality of
life, by sustaining the ties of friendship that bind this extended
family together in such an extraordinary fashion, and by ensuring that
the fundamental principles at the heart of our democracy are preserved
and passed on to future generations.

I also want to say on a personal note of privilege that I am delighted
to be here today to address this distinguished gathering because this
afternoon you're going to be honoring my wife Janet for her
extraordinary work on behalf of all who serve in uniform today. I can
think of few, if any, who have been more active -- and none more
committed -- to the cause of service of our members in uniform and
those who have served in the past than my wife, Janet Langhart Cohen,
and I wanted to be here today to pay special tribute to her.

Ladies and gentlemen, I can't see all of you. I can feel you out there
in the audience. But I must say that Janet and I have not had an
opportunity to address an audience this large since we were privileged
to help kick off the Indy 500 where there were 500,000 patriots in
that audience. We spoke and then were able to take the lead car around
the lap. I recall that day very vividly. Both of us do. We had a
Harrier that flew over that crowd and then did a 360 [degree turn] in
front of everyone there that day. I recall the words of everybody who
was speaking and passing by, with the roar of that crowd and everybody
firing their engines. They looked up and they saw that Harrier and
they said, that is the sound of freedom, and thank God, those planes
are ours.

I can't tell you how proud we felt at that particular moment, and
virtually every day that we are privileged to serve this country.

First, I want to make one point. When I decided to leave public
service after over a quarter of a century of serving in public office,
I never expected to be called back. I never expected to receive a call
from President Clinton. I was on my way out the door into the privacy
and the anonymity of private life and I got a call from the White
House asking whether I would be willing to serve as his Secretary of
Defense.

I asked the President at that time, "Why do you want to do this?
You're a Democratic administration, I'm a Republican." He said, "I
want to send a signal. I want to send a signal to the country and to
the Congress that when it comes to national security there is no party
label. We are not Republicans, we are not Democrats. It's not a
question of moving left or right, Republican or Democrat, it's really
[a question] of moving forward. I want to send that signal."

I said, "Mr. President, on those terms I am happy to go back into
public service." I want you all to know that it's been the greatest
experience of my life and that of my wife Janet. Every day that we go
to the Pentagon we are uplifted. To be the civilian head of the
greatest military on the face of the earth is the most exciting,
extraordinary experience that one could ever hope to achieve. We are
grateful every day.

I want you to know that we have done a lot of traveling. I have
traveled almost 700,000 miles during the past three and a half years.
Janet has been on at least 300,00 to 400,000 of those miles. We have
been to Bosnia, to Kosovo, to Korea, to the Gulf, to the deserts of
Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and I want you to know how proud we are and
how proud you should be of the men and women who are serving us. They
are serving without complaint, they are serving with distinction. They
are happy to be doing the job that they're doing. They are helping to
spread the flag of freedom the world over. And today, more people are
sleeping under that blanket of freedom than any time in the history of
the world, thanks to our men and women in the military.

I know that there's always controversy in dealing with the military.
When I first took office I looked at what was happening and we were on
a downward descent. Frankly, after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the
collapse of the Soviet Union there was a tremendous demand for a peace
dividend. I heard it when I was on Capitol Hill and serving in the
Senate. My constituents from Maine were demanding it, as were people
around the country. [They were] saying that now that we no longer have
this visible enemy on the horizon, we need to restructure and
downsize; we need to start pouring more of our resources into building
our economy and to modernizing for the future with a smaller, more
capable, more agile, more lethal force. So spending started to go
dramatically lower.

When I arrived in office, I took a look at what we had and I saw that
Congress and the administration had taken the highest figure of what
they could agree upon and what we should spend for national security.
[I] was essentially told that this is what Congress and the
administration have agreed on, and that's likely to be the [level of
defense spending] for the foreseeable future.

Well after just 18 months, we decided that wasn't enough. We have now
begun the largest sustained increase in our military spending in a
generation. We were looking at $42-$43 billion being spent for
procurement, an all time low. This year - just three and a half years
later -- we have [increased procurement spending] to $60 billion.
Within five years we'll be at $70 billion and [we'll continue] to
climb into the future in order to recapitalize and rebuild this
wonderful military that we have.

So we have looked at the men and women and said, we can never pay them
enough, but we can pay them more. And that's precisely what we
recommended and what we've done. We now have secured the largest pay
raise in a generation. We now have returned retirement benefits from
40 percent back up to 50 percent. We are now focusing on rebuilding
our housing and our healthcare system, and as a result, we're starting
to see retention and recruitment increase once again.

It's been a tough environment. It's been a very tough environment. We
have the strongest economy we've had in over two decades, and we're
competing for the same people that the private sector wants. They want
the people that we want as well. They can pay two, three, four times
as much, so we've got to draw from that same pool, and not only draw
them in but then hold them. So recruitment and retention are now
starting to stabilize and increase as a result of what we've been able
to do on a bipartisan basis.

Again, I come back to this point: I am not here as a Republican. I am
not here on behalf of the Democratic administration. I came here today
to simply talk to all of you who have supported our military because
the contributions that you've made as members yourselves [has helped
to] sustain this great military that we have today.

That's the reason I wanted to be here today to talk to you. Yes, we
can always do better, and national defense is certainly a subject
matter that is open to debate and improvement. Hopefully that will be
the case whatever administration comes in next year. But I want you to
know something. We have the finest, the best led, the best equipped,
the best educated, the finest fighting force in the history of the
world. We have that today.

I can point to any place on the globe, but I want you to think back
just about a year ago. We were waging a war in Kosovo. It seems like a
lot longer in terms of the timeframe, but a year ago we waged the most
successful air campaign in the history of the world, and I want you to
think about it. We had 38,000 sorties that were flown during that
campaign. We lost two aircraft and no pilots. That's a record that has
never been equaled.

And let me say something to [Slobodan] Milosevic, Saddam Hussein or
anyone else who would ever want to challenge the United States again.
Saddam has been put into a box, and if he tries to move out of that
box and in any way threaten his neighbors, he's going to be hit and
hit hard.

We have been able [to contain Hussein] as a result of the commitment
that we've made globally to help stabilize the world for peace and
security and prosperity. That's the reason we're forward deployed.
That's part of our strategy to shape and respond [to world events] and
prepare [for the future]. We need to be forward deployed to send a
signal to all of those in the world that we are there not to conquer
territory. We're not there to try to grab land. We are there to
promote stability because where there is stability, investment will
follow. And if investment follows, it has a chance to develop and
promote prosperity. And if you have prosperity, you have a much
greater chance of promoting democracy. And when you have democracy you
have less chance for conflict and warfare.

That's why we are forward deployed around the world. That's why we
have 100,000 people spread throughout the Asia Pacific region. Why are
we there? Because if we were not there, who would fill the vacuum? If
we were to pull our forces out tomorrow, who would move into the Asia
Pacific region? Would it be China? Would it be Japan? Would it be
India? Would it be Pakistan? Who would move to fill the vacuum? And
what would that mean for stability in that part of the world?

The same thing applies to Europe where we have 100,000 [service
members] and in the Gulf where we have some 23,000. Yes, this puts a
strain and burden upon our country, but we are a superpower.

[Surely,] we have to continue to always examine what [being a
superpower] means? What are the benefits? What are the burdens? Are we
prepared to assume those benefits and burdens? And if we look at the
history of what we have done during the past 50 years you see that we
are the leader for freedom. Every other country looks to us as the
model - and to the Statue of Liberty holding up that flame - and says,
this is the country whose ideals we want to emulate.

If you look across the globe, you will find that freedom is ascendant.
Countries from Europe to Central Asia are looking to the United States
and saying, we want to embrace free market ideas. We know that through
a free market that we are able to prosper in a way that we could never
do under the old Soviet concept of a centralized economy.

So yes, [our global engagement] is costly; it's burdensome. Can we do
better? You bet. Can we improve in the future? We need to. But I hope
that during the course of this year and next year, whoever is in
office, that we always maintain that commitment to serve the men and
women who are serving us. And you play a vital role in that. You who
served, and you who serve as the models for them, are the ones who
help carry the torch on behalf of the United States of America. So I
wanted to thank you for all of that.

Ladies and gentlemen, it's my job as Secretary of Defense not only to
talk about current threats to our security, and there are a number. I
mentioned Saddam Hussein, I mentioned Milosevic. There may be others
that I could talk about today. But we're looking at what I call a
Superpower Paradox. There is no other country that can challenge us
directly. No other country has the capability that we do, be it ground
forces, be it our warships, be it our aircraft. No other country can
challenge us directly. So they look for indirect ways to challenge us
through asymmetrical types of conflicts. That can come in the form of
chemical or biological or even cyber [warfare]. And those are the
kinds of threats that we're seeing emerge today and that we will have
to face tomorrow.

Let me give you an example. There are probably at least two dozen
countries or more that are seeking to develop weapons of mass
destruction and the means to deliver them. So what we have to do is
intensify our anti-proliferation types of measures to cut down on the
technology that so many of our friends or allies or adversaries are
helping to spread around the world. [That is a] big challenge. [We
also have] to deter those weapons of mass destruction from ever being
used against our troops or against our population.

We have to be concerned about terrorists, those who are being
supported by people like Usama bin Laden. We know that threat is out
there. We saw the bombing of our embassies in East Africa. We know
that the same groups are seeking to develop and acquire chemical and
biological weapons.

We know a group in Tokyo a few years ago released sarin gas in a
subway. We know that that same group was also trying to release a
chemical weapon against American forces.

We know that Usama bin Laden is trying to acquire weapons of mass
destruction. We know that in the bombing of our [World] Trade Center a
couple of years ago the [culprits] were also experimenting with
chemical weapons. So all of that is out there, and we have to be
prepared to fight against that.

We know that other countries are forming cells of professionals
dedicated to finding ways to interrupt our [information]
infrastructure. If you can shut down our financial system, if you
could shut down our transportation system, if you could cause the
collapse of our energy production and distribution system just by
typing on a computer and causing those links to this globalization to
break down, then you're able to wage successful warfare, and we have
to be able to defend against that. We're taking these measures.

This morning is not the time for me to go through on a case by case
demonstration all that we're doing, but let me just talk about a
couple. Yes, we are concerned that some country will seek to release a
chemical or biological agent on American soil sometime in the future.
Some time ago a poet imagined [a scenario of] a man clutching a little
case, walking out briskly to infect a city who's terrible future has
just arrived.

We are anticipating that kind of terror. We are preparing our citizens
by going out to 120 different cities and preparing those who will be
required to respond to a chemical or biological attack. We are doing
all of those things in anticipation of the kinds of threats that we
are likely to face in the future. So I want you to know that we're not
only looking at what we have to defend against today, we are also
preparing ourselves for the kind of conflicts that we're likely to
face in the future.

I want you to know, once again, that our men and women in uniform are
performing magnificently. They are doing everything that we are asking
from them, and more. I wanted to be here today to say that to all of
you.

[The futurist Alvin] Toffler reminded us more than 25 years ago about
Future Shock --that we're going to have the winds of change sweep
across our country, our culture and our ideals. And we've seen that
take place. He said that technology has the potential to benefit all
of mankind, and we know that. Today, technology is empowering the
average citizen in ways that none of us contemplated just 10 or 20 or
25 years ago.

But there are two edges to this sword. The hand that wields it, as
Toffler pointed out, can sever the hand that's holding it. It's a
double-edged sword, and we have to be very, very concerned about how
we are empowering our citizens, our businessmen and women and our
consumers. We also have to be concerned that it is not turned and used
against us. So we are preparing for that eventuality as well by
devoting vast resources to developing the capability of protecting our
infrastructure, protecting our citizens and protecting our soldiers.

I feel like I am a former Senator just warming up. As you know,
Senators have the capacity to speak at length. I've put away my
senatorial robes as such, and assumed that of a chief executive for
the Pentagon.

So I want to conclude this morning by again telling you how very proud
I am to be in this position. I never imagined I would be here. I never
thought that anyone would call me and ask me to serve in this
capacity. And I will tell you once again that my wife and I have never
ever had the opportunity to be around people who are so devoted to
duty, so dedicated to their country, so patriotic, so hardworking, so
gifted, as we have in the military today, and we are terribly,
terribly proud. We have been blessed to have had this opportunity.

We also had the opportunity just a couple of months ago to attend the
opening of the D-Day Museum in New Orleans. Steven Ambrose [Chairman
of the National D-Day Museum] orchestrated that, and he also had
Stephen Spielberg, Tom Hanks, Tom Brokaw and others who arrived to
participate in this great opening.

Steven Ambrose has many books, but the one that always stayed with me
is Citizen Soldier. And in the end of Citizen Soldier he asks, "How
was it possible for this country of ours, so diverse and at that time
disorganized in terms of its military might, to take on this
mechanized evil that was going across the entire continent of Europe?
How were we able to defeat that enemy?" He said it all came down to
the citizen soldier. He said, "The citizen soldier knew the difference
between right and wrong, and he was unwilling to live in a world in
which wrong triumphed, and so he fought and we prevailed, and all of
us are the grateful beneficiaries of their sacrifice."

Ladies and gentlemen, many of you in this audience were part of that
greatest generation. You have been part of the generations that have
followed. And you have held up the torch of liberty and freedom, and
all of us here are the eternal beneficiaries for what you've done. God
bless you.

(end text)

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