Research for BMD

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November 1, 1989
The body of this research memorandum was written before the Baker-Shevardnadze meeting in Wyoming. It presented evidence suggesting that the Soviet Union might agree to a compromise at the Wyoming meeting that defers the issue of Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD) negotiations to a later stage in arms reductions, thus facilitating a first-stage cut in offensive arms without an explicit Soviet endorsement of the Strategic Defense Initiative. In this approach, Wyoming, then, was expected to be only a first move in the Soviet negotiating strategy for a grand compromise on strategic defense. As explained in the afterword added to this paper, the actual events at Wyoming seem consistent with this interpretation.
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August 1, 1987
Since March 1983 when President Reagan unveiled his Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), the Soviet political military rhetoric has been overwhelmingly negative. This paper analyzes the three major Soviet arguments against SDI: (1) that it is offensive; (2) that it is a catalyst to the arms race; and (3) that it is destabilizing.
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