Civilian missile defense.

AuthorFantle, Will
PositionSouthwesterners oppose weapons testing

Ramah, New Mexico Mary Lou Jones has her eyes on the western skies. She's one of the leading opponents of a Star Wars plan for firing Scud-like missiles from northern New Mexico and southern Utah and then shooting them down over the White Sands Missile Range in southern New Mexico. The missiles' 200-to-400-mile flight path would carry them over her home and other populated areas, Indian reservations, and national forests and monuments. Along the way, booster rockets weighing as much as 3,000 pounds would fall to the earth. Should anything go wrong in the air, the missile's flight would be terminated, showering the ground with more debris.

"It's insane to test weapons over people," says Jones, who is the president of the 500-member Zuni Mountain Coalition. More than 100 missiles could be launched between 1995 and the year 2000, under current plans. Jones's coalition has been working with the Navajo and Zuni Indians and the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance to prevent the mock missile war.

The kitchen table in Jones's home near Grants, New Mexico, is piled high with documents detailing the missile proposal. She edits and publishes the coalition's lively paper, the Zuni Mountain News. She and her husband, Scott, have been speaking out and organizing protests against the missile plan ever since they realized the military was going ahead with it. "Nobody took it seriously at first, it was such a goofy idea," she says.

In 1991, Congress directed the Army to develop a "theater missile-defense program." This task fell to the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization, the successor to Star Wars. None of the current military-testing ranges is sufficient for realistic testing of "defensive intercepts," so the Army is studying the White Sands site and three other locations for possible use.

In a test last October, a missile blew up over a New Mexican rancher's land. The missile contained 300 to 900 bowling-ballsized bomblets that fell, along with other debris, about one and a half miles from the surprised and angry rancher's home. Further tests were subsequently...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT