In the midst of a partial government shutdown due to an impasse over border security, the US State Department has had to cancel an international conference focused on that very issue. As it entered its 32nd day on Tuesday, FBI agents are warning the record-breaking shutdown is also hampering investigations into sex crimes and presenting other threats to national security. The US Attorney's Office is also unable to issue grand jury subpoenas.

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The 45th

23 JANUARY

Shutdown woes for FBI, State, TSA 

In the midst of a partial government shutdown due to an impasse over border security, the US State Department has had to cancel an international conference focused on that very issue. As it entered its 32nd day on Tuesday, FBI agents are warning the record-breaking shutdown is also hampering investigations into sex crimes and presenting other threats to national security. The US Attorney's Office is also unable to issue grand jury subpoenas.

Meanwhile, approximately one in 10 Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents called in sick over the Martin Luther King Day holiday weekend. Many are reportedly doing so because they can no longer afford to work without pay. The lack of screeners has forced major airports in Miami and Atlanta to close some screening areas, causing delays. Some of the 800,000 federal government employees forced to go on unpaid leave or work without wages report that they are running up credit card debt, taking out loans and even flocking to pawn shops.

President Trump’s legislation to reopen the government appeared almost certain to stall in the Senate this week, as Democrats condemned its proposed changes to asylum rules and the Supreme Court on Tuesday undercut the central plank of Trump’s effort to draw Democratic support.

 
George Washington

NEWS WRAP

Kamala Harris enters the race

  • US senator and former California attorney general Kamala Harris has announced she will seek the Democratic nomination in the 2020 presidential election. If she succeeds, Harris would be the first woman to hold the presidency and the second African-American. She joins senators Elizabeth Warren and Kirsten Gillibrand, congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard and former Obama administration housing chief Julian Castro in the Democratic race so far. READ MORE HERE. 
     

  • BuzzFeed News is standing by its report last week that alleged President Trump had directed his former lawyer to lie to Congress about a Trump Tower project in Moscow. Special Counsel Robert Mueller's office made the extraordinary step of calling parts of the report "inaccurate" in a rare statement last week. Senior advisor Jared Mondschein joined the 2020Vision podcast this week to discuss the high stakes for Trump and the media depending on the accuracy of this report. LISTEN HERE.
     
  • The 116th Congress is now underway despite the partial government shutdown, and the Democrat-controlled House and leadership of its powerful committees means Trump's cabinet and senior officials are about to experience an extremely hostile two years of examination. Visiting fellow and former Democratic Party advisor Bruce Wolpe has written an extensive analysis of the new committee leadership and what they're likely to pursue during the remainder of Trump's term. READ MORE HERE.
     
  • The White House is forging ahead with plans to hold the State of the Union next week despite House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's request that President Trump delay his address while the government remains partially shuttered. The Washington Post reports that Trump is preparing two versions of his annual speech — one that could be delivered in Washington and another that would be held somewhere else in the country, according to a senior White House official. READ MORE HERE.
     
  • The Supreme Court has revived Trump’s ban on transgender troops. The court voted 5-4 to grant a Trump administration request to lift injunctions blocking the policy while challenges continue in lower courts. The policy prohibits "transgender persons who require or have undergone gender transition" from serving in the military. READ MORE HERE.
 

One of my favourite quotes from Dr King was 'now is the time to make real the promises of democracy'. You think of how he changed America. He inspired us to change through the legislative process to become a more perfect union. That's exactly what President Trump is calling on the Congress to do: Come to the table in a spirit of good faith. We'll secure our border, we'll reopen our government.

Vice President Mike Pence compares Martin Luther King Jr. to Donald Trump
(CBS' Face the Nation)
20 January 2018

 

ANALYSIS

Missile Defense Review gets its launch

Brendan Thomas-Noone
Research Fellow, Foreign Policy & Defence Program

“I will accept nothing less for our nation than the most effective, cutting-edge missile defence systems,” President Trump said at the Pentagon last week. He was there to launch the Missile Defense Review (MDR), the final major national security review of his first term. “We have the best anywhere in the world. It’s not even close,” he surmised.

The MDR is a comprehensive review of US capability to defend itself against missiles of all types: ballistic missiles, cruise missiles and new hypersonic weapons being developed by China and Russia. But for US allies like Australia, the MDR could have significant implications and foreshadows some tough debates that may be ahead for the alliance.

The review follows the release of the National Security Strategy in 2017 and the National Defense Strategy and Nuclear Posture Review, both released last year. The MDR, rumoured to have been completed for more than a year, was delayed due to ongoing negotiations with North Korea. The administration was fearful that releasing a policy which promised to invest significant money in new technologies and strategies with the aim of countering Pyongyang’s ballistic missile capability would derail any talks taking place.

This appears to have been overly cautious. Negotiations with North Korea are still ongoing, and in the end the MDR is for the most part a status-quo document. It follows many of the prescriptions of the Obama administration’s Ballistic Missile Defense Review released in 2010, but has expanded to cover all varieties of missiles and the protection of military forces overseas, as well as the American homeland.

The most worrisome idea that the Trump administration was toying with was not fully embraced by the MDR: investing in space-based missile interceptors. Essentially a resurrection of the Strategic Defense Initiative – or as Senator Ted Kennedy labelled the Reagan administration’s missile defence plans, ‘Star Wars’ – the MDR calls for a six-month review into the feasibility of space-based interceptors; kicking the can down the road. While it’s unclear whether the technology is available or if the costs are even acceptable, placing missile defences in space would be extremely destabilising, encouraging arms racing and potentially even the eventual placement of missiles or weapons in space as other countries sought ways to overcome them. Even then, there’s no guarantee the idea would work.

While the MDR doesn’t go as far as placing interceptors in space, it does call for a new network of missile-detecting sensors to be installed in orbit. The main reason for this is that the technological landscape is shifting rapidly when it comes to missiles, with advances in new capabilities, like hypersonic vehicles, outpacing efforts to defend against them.

Hypersonics, using either 'scramjet' or 'boost-glide' technologies, are highly manoeuvrable and can travel between 5,000 and 25,000 kilometres per hour, faster than many current missiles. If they are successfully deployed, modern defences that work by shooting down enemy missiles in the three phases of their flight path – ‘boost’, ‘mid-course’ or ‘terminal’ – will not be able to stop them. China has conducted several successful tests of hypersonic vehicles and is reportedly “concentrating” significant resources in their research and development. The Trump administration’s response to this problem is to build a network of space-based sensors that will allow rapid, early detection of missiles “almost anywhere on the globe”.

The implication is that once these missiles are detected while still on the ground, the best defence may be a good offence. The MDR talks about developing a strategy of “active missile defense” where US combatant commanders will be asked to develop “complementary attack operations” that will supplement traditional missile defence capabilities. Allies, it says, will be needed to integrate their capabilities for “active missile defense” and “as appropriate, attack operations capable of striking the entire range of infrastructure supporting adversary offensive missile operations”.

This new strategy of ‘active missile defence’ could have significant implications for US allies like Australia. For one, Indo-Pacific Command will likely seek to more fully integrate Australia and the ADF into its regional military plans, using Australian military forces to help locate and potentially destroy adversary missile launchers and infrastructure, including those still based within their territory. This could be highly risky – adversaries may misperceive an allied strike on its territory as threatening its nuclear arsenal or regime survival, leading to a spiral of uncontrolled escalation that may not be in Australia’s interests.

The other implication is an Australian role in facilitating access to a new space-based sensor network. Research by the late Des Ball – recently popularised in ABC’s televised drama Pine Gap – reveals that the joint-facility near Alice Springs is heavily involved in the relay, processing and analysis of data from American intelligence satellites, and already plays a critical role in detecting missile launches like those from North Korea. Any new, advanced, space-based sensors will require terrestrial relay and processing centres like that at Pine Gap, making facilities in Australia a critical node in any next-generation ‘active’ US missile defence system. This may open-up such facilities as critical targets for adversaries in the region looking to disable or prevent any regional US missile defence strategy.

 

DIARY

The week ahead

  • 22-25 January: World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland.
     

  • Saturday, 26 January: G’Day USA Los Angeles Gala.
     

  • Tuesday, 29 January: G’Day USA US-Australia Dialogue on Cooperation in the Indo-Pacific.
     

  • Tuesday, 29 January: President Trump is scheduled to deliver his State of the Union address to Congress.

 

VIDEO

Giuliani: I never said there was no collusion in the [Trump] campaign

Rudy
 

THE WEEK IN TWEETS

#WhiteHousePressBriefing

 

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The United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney is a university-based research centre, dedicated to the rigorous analysis of American foreign policy, economics, politics and culture. The Centre is a national resource, that builds Australia’s awareness of the dynamics shaping America — and critically — their implications for Australia.
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