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Harold Brown (Secretary of Defense)

Harold Brown (September 19, 1927 – January 4, 2019) was an American nuclear physicist who served as United States Secretary of Defense from 1977 to 1981, under President Jimmy Carter. Previously, in the John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson administrations, he held the posts of Director of Defense Research and Engineering (1961–1965) and United States Secretary of the Air Force (1965–1969).[2]

Harold Brown
14th United States Secretary of Defense
In office
January 21, 1977 – January 20, 1981
PresidentJimmy Carter
Preceded byDonald Rumsfeld
Succeeded byCaspar Weinberger
3rd President of the California Institute of Technology
In office
1969–1977
Preceded byLee Alvin DuBridge
Succeeded byRobert F. Christy (acting)
8th United States Secretary of the Air Force
In office
October 1, 1965 – February 15, 1969
PresidentLyndon B. Johnson
Preceded byEugene M. Zuckert
Succeeded byRobert Seamans
2nd Director of Defense Research and Engineering
In office
May 8, 1961 – September 30, 1965
PresidentJohn F. Kennedy
Lyndon B. Johnson
Preceded byHerbert York
Succeeded byJohn S. Foster Jr.
Personal details
Born(1927-09-19)September 19, 1927
New York City, New York, U.S.
DiedJanuary 4, 2019(2019-01-04) (aged 91)
Rancho Santa Fe, California, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic[1]
Spouse
Colene Dunning McDowell
(m. 1953)
Children2
EducationColumbia University (BS, MS, PhD)
Scientific career
FieldsNuclear physics
Atomic physics
InstitutionsLawrence Livermore National Laboratory
California Institute of Technology
ThesisBeta-spectra of gaseous argon-41 and oxygen-15 (1951)
Doctoral advisorIsidor Isaac Rabi

A child prodigy, Brown graduated from the Bronx High School of Science at age 15, and earned a Ph.D. in physics from Columbia University at age 21.[3] As Secretary of Defense, he set the groundwork for the Camp David Accords, took part in strategic arms negotiations with the Soviet Union , and supported, unsuccessfully, ratification of the SALT II treaty.

Early life and career

 
Brown as President of the California Institute of Technology in 1970

Brown was born in Brooklyn, New York, the son of Abraham, a lawyer who had fought in World War I, and Gertrude (Cohen) Brown, a diamond merchant's bookkeeper.[4][5] His parents were secular Jews and strong supporters of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.[3] From a very young age Brown was drawn to mathematics and physics; he enrolled as a student at the Bronx High School of Science, from which he graduated at age 15 with a grade average of 99.5.[3][5] He then immediately entered Columbia University, earning an A.B. summa cum laude at 17 years of age, as well as the Green Memorial Prize for the best academic record. He continued as a graduate student at Columbia, and was awarded a Ph.D. in physics in 1949 when he was 21.[3][5][6][7][8]

After a short period of teaching and postdoctoral research, Brown became a research scientist at the Radiation Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley. At Berkeley, he played a role in the construction of the Polaris missile[5] and the development of plutonium.[7] In 1952, he joined the staff of the University of California Radiation Laboratory at Livermore and became its director in 1960, succeeding Edward Teller,[5] of whom he was a protégé.[4] At Livermore, Brown led a team of six other physicists, all older than he was, who used some of the first computers, along with mathematics and engineering, to reduce the size of thermonuclear warheads for strategic military use. Brown and his team helped make Livermore's reputation by designing nuclear warheads small and light enough to be placed on the Navy's nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs).[3] During the 1950s he served as a member of, or consultant to, several federal scientific bodies and as senior science adviser at the 1958-1959 Conference on the Discontinuance of Nuclear Tests.[2]

Brown worked under United States Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara as Director of Defense Research and Engineering from 1961 to 1965,[5][7] and then as United States Secretary of the Air Force from October 1965 to February 1969,[5][7] first under McNamara and then under Clark Clifford.[5][7]

From 1969 to 1977, he was President of the California Institute of Technology (Caltech).[5][7][9]

U.S. Secretary of Defense

Appointment and initial agenda

 
Brown's official portrait.

Although Brown had accumulated almost eight years of prior service in the Pentagon, he was the first natural scientist to become secretary of defense.[5][10] He involved himself in practically all areas of departmental activity. Consistent with the Carter administration's objective to reorganize the federal government, Brown launched a comprehensive review of defense organization that eventually brought significant change. But he understood the limits to effective reform. In one of his first speeches after leaving office, "'Managing' the Defense Department-Why It Can't Be Done," at the University of Michigan in March 1981, he observed:[2]

 
Secretary of Defense Harold Brown and Chairman of The Joint Chiefs of Staff General George S. Brown testifies on Capitol Hill on a defense budget in 1977.

... I want to note again the basic limitation of any attempt to manage the Defense Department in an idealized textbook fashion. The pull of the need to be able to fight a war, if necessary, will always limit the peacetime efficiency of the defense establishment. ... The pull of conflicting domestic interests represents democratic government. ... To manage defense efficiently and at the lowest possible cost along presumed business lines of management and organization is a useful standard. But there are prices we cannot afford to pay for meeting it exactly. One is the abandonment of democratic control. Another is the loss of a war. Defense cannot be "managed" like a business. But it can be led so as to preserve most effectively our national security interests.

With regard to strategic planning, Brown shared much the same concerns as his Republican predecessors—the need to upgrade U.S. military forces and improve collective security arrangements—but with a stronger commitment to arms control. Brown adhered to the principle of "essential equivalence" in the nuclear competition with the Soviet Union. This meant that "Soviet strategic nuclear forces do not become usable instruments of political leverage, diplomatic coercion, or military advantage; nuclear stability, especially in a crisis, is maintained; any advantages in force characteristics enjoyed by the Soviets are offset by U.S. advantages in other characteristics; and the U.S. posture is not in fact, and is not seen as, inferior in performance to the strategic nuclear forces of the Soviet Union."[2] His later writings in his 2012 memoir, Star-Spangled Security, reinforced this agenda:[7]

When I became secretary of defense in 1977, the military services, most of all the army, were disrupted badly by the Vietnam War. There was general agreement that the Soviet Union outclassed the West in conventional military capability, especially in ground forces in Europe.

According to The New York Times, experts say in retrospect that contrary to a popular narrative which asserts that President Ronald Reagan increased defense spending to ramp up competition with (and ultimately bankrupting) the Soviet Union,[4] it was Carter and Brown who began "maintaining the strategic balance, countering Soviet aircraft and ballistic innovations by improving land-based ICBMs, by upgrading B-52 strategic bombers with low-flying cruise missiles and by deploying far more submarine-launched missiles tipped with MIRVs, or multiple warheads that split into independent trajectories to hit many targets".[4]

Nuclear missiles

Brown considered it essential to maintain the triad of ICBMs, SLBMs, and strategic bombers; some of the administration's most important decisions on weapon systems reflected this commitment. Although he decided not to produce the B-1 bomber, he did recommend upgrading existing B-52s and equipping them with air-launched cruise missiles, and gave the go-ahead for development of a "stealth" technology, fostered by William J. Perry, under-secretary of defense for research and engineering, that would make it possible to produce planes (bombers as well as other aircraft) with very low radar profiles, presumably able to elude enemy defenses and deliver weapons on targets. The administration backed development of the MX missile, intended to replace in the 1980s the increasingly vulnerable Minuteman and Titan intercontinental missiles. To insure MX survivability, Brown recommended deploying the missiles in "multiple protective shelters"; 200 MX missiles would be placed in Utah and Nevada, with each missile to be shuttled among 23 different shelters of its own located along roadways-meaning a total of 4,600 such shelters. Although this plan was expensive and environmentally controversial, Brown argued that it was the most viable scheme to protect the missiles from enemy attack. For the sea leg of the triad, Brown accelerated development of the larger Trident nuclear submarine and carried forward the conversion of Poseidon submarines to a fully MIRVed missile capability.[2][4]

 
Secretary of Defense Harold Brown with Chairman of The Joint Chiefs of Staff General George S. Brown and Deputy Secretary of Defense Charles W. Duncan Jr and the other members of The Joint Chiefs of Staff at The Pentagon.

By early 1979, Brown and his staff had developed a "countervailing strategy", an approach to nuclear targeting that past secretaries of defense Robert McNamara and James R. Schlesinger had both earlier found attractive; but, never formally codified. As Brown put it, "we must have forces and plans for the use of our strategic nuclear forces such that in considering aggression against our interests, our adversary would recognize that no plausible outcome would represent a success-on any rational definition of success. The prospect of such a failure would then deter an adversary's attack on the United States or our vital interests." Although Brown did not rule out the assured destruction approach, which stressed attacks on urban and industrial targets, he believed that "such destruction must not be automatic, our only choice, or independent of any enemy's attack. Indeed, it is at least conceivable that the mission of assured destruction would not have to be executed at all in the event that deterrence failed."[2]

Official adoption of the countervailing strategy came with President Carter's approval of Presidential Directive 59 (PD 59) on July 25, 1980. In explaining PD 59 Brown argued that it was not a new strategic doctrine, but rather a refinement, a codification of previous explanations of our strategic policy. The heart of PD 59, as Brown described it, was as follows:[2]

It is our policy-and we have increasingly the means and the detailed plans to carry out this policy-to ensure that the Soviet leadership knows that if they chose some intermediate level of aggression, we could, by selective, large (but still less than maximum) nuclear attacks, exact an unacceptably high price in the things the Soviet leaders appear to value most—political and military control, military force both nuclear and conventional, and the industrial capability to sustain a war. In our planning we have not ignored the problem of ending the war, nor would we ignore it in the event of a war. And, of course, we have, and we will keep, a survivable and enduring capability to attack the full range of targets, including the Soviet economic base, if that is the appropriate response to a Soviet strike.

Because the almost simultaneous disclosures of PD 59 and the stealth technology came in the midst of the 1980 United States presidential election campaign; some critics asserted that the Carter administration leaked them to counter charges of weakness and boost its re-election chances. Others charged that PD 59 made it more likely that the United States would initiate a nuclear conflict, based on the assumption that a nuclear war could somehow be limited. Brown insisted that the countervailing strategy was not a first strike strategy. As he put it, "Nothing in the policy contemplates that nuclear war can be a deliberate instrument of achieving our national security goals. ... But we cannot afford the risk that the Soviet leadership might entertain the illusion that nuclear war could be an option – or its threat a means of coercion – for them."[2]

NATO

 
Brown and Joseph Luns in Europe (1979)

Brown regarded the strengthening of NATO as a key national security objective and worked hard to invigorate the alliance. With the assistance of Robert W. Komer, at first his special adviser on NATO affairs and subsequently under-secretary of defense for policy, Brown launched a series of NATO initiatives shortly after taking office. In May 1978 the NATO heads of government endorsed a long term defense program which included 10 priority categories: enhanced readiness; rapid reinforcement; stronger European reserve forces; improvements in maritime capabilities; integrated air defenses; effective command, control, and communications; electronic warfare; rationalized procedures for armaments collaboration; logistics co-ordination and increased war reserves; and theater nuclear modernization. To implement the last item, NATO defense and foreign ministers decided in December 1979, to respond to the Soviet deployment of new theater nuclear weapons—the SS-20 missile and the Backfire bomber—by placing 108 Pershing II missiles and 464 ground-launched cruise missiles (GLCMs) in several Western European countries beginning in December 1983. The NATO leaders indicated that the new missile deployment would be scaled down if satisfactory progress occurred in arms control negotiations with the Soviet Union.[2] At Brown's urging, NATO members pledged in 1977 to increase their individual defense spending three percent per year in real terms for the 1979-86 period. The objective, Brown explained, was to ensure that alliance resources and capabilities-both conventional and nuclear-would balance those of the Soviet bloc. Although some NATO members hesitated to confirm the agreement to accept new missiles and did not always attain the three percent target, Brown was pleased with NATO's progress. Midway in his term he told an interviewer that he thought his most important achievement thus far had been the revitalization of NATO.[2]

Brown also tried to strengthen the defense contributions of U.S. allies outside of NATO, particularly Japan and South Korea. He repeatedly urged the Japanese government to increase its defense budget so that it could shoulder a larger share of the Western allies' Pacific security burden. Although the Carter administration decided in 1977 on a phased withdrawal of United States ground forces from South Korea, it pledged to continue military and other assistance to that country. Later, because of a substantial buildup of North Korean military forces and opposition to the troop withdrawal in the United States, the president shelved the plan, leaving approximately 40,000 U.S. troops in Korea. In establishing diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China (PRC) on January 1, 1979, the United States formally recognized the PRC almost 30 years after its establishment. A year later Brown visited the PRC, talked with its political and military leaders, and helped lay the groundwork for limited collaboration on security issues.[2]

Arms control

Arms control formed an integral part of Brown's national security policy. He staunchly supported the June 1979 SALT II treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union and was the administration's leading spokesman in urging the Senate to approve it. SALT II limited both sides to 2,250 strategic nuclear delivery vehicles (bombers, ICBMs, SLBMs, and air-to-surface ballistic missiles), including a sublimit of 1,200 launchers of MIRVed ballistic missiles, of which only 820 could be launchers of MIRVed ICBMs. It also placed restrictions on the number of warheads on each missile and on deployment of new land-based ballistic missile systems, except for one new type of light ICBM for each side. There was also a provision for verification by each side using its own national technical means.[2]

Brown explained that SALT II would reduce the Soviet Union's strategic forces, bring enhanced predictability and stability to Soviet-U.S. nuclear relationships, reduce the cost of maintaining a strategic balance, help the United States to monitor Soviet forces, and reduce the risk of nuclear war. He rebutted charges by SALT II critics that the United States had underestimated the Soviet military buildup, that the treaty would weaken the Western alliance, that the Soviet Union could not be trusted to obey the treaty, and that its terms could not really be verified. Partly to placate Senate opponents of the treaty, the Carter administration agreed in the fall of 1979 to support higher increases in the defense budget. However, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 ensured that the Senate would not accept the treaty at that time, forcing the president to withdraw it from consideration. When his term ended in 1981, Brown said that failure to secure ratification of SALT II was his greatest regret.[2][4] The U.S. and the Soviet Union still followed the terms of the pact, even though it was non-binding, until 1986, when President Ronald Reagan accused the Soviet Union of violating the terms and withdrew from the pact.[4]

Regional matters

Panama Canal

Besides broad national security policy matters, Brown had to deal with several more immediate questions, among them the Panama Canal issue. Control of the Panama canal zone had been a source of contention ever since Panama achieved its independence from Colombia in 1903 and granted the United States a concession "in perpetuity". In the mid-1960s, after serious disturbances in the zone, the United States and Panama began negotiations that went on intermittently until September 7, 1977, when the countries signed two treaties, one providing for full Panamanian control of the canal by the year 2000 and the other guaranteeing the canal's neutrality. The Defense Department played a major role in the Panama negotiations. Brown championed the treaties through a difficult fight to gain Senate approval (secured in March and April 1978), insisting that they were both advantageous to the United States and essential to the canal's future operation and security.[2]

Middle East

In Middle East affairs, Brown supported President Carter's efforts as an intermediary in the Egyptian-Israeli negotiations leading to the Camp David Accords of September 1978 and the signing by the two nations of a peace treaty in March 1979.[2][4] Elsewhere, the fall of the Shah from power in Iran in January 1979 eliminated a major U.S. ally and triggered a chain of events that played havoc with American policy in the region. In November 1979, Iranian revolutionaries occupied the U.S. embassy in Tehran and took more than 50 hostages. Brown participated closely in planning for a rescue operation that ended in failure and the loss of eight U.S. servicemen on April 24–25, 1980. Not until the last day of his administration, on January 20, 1981, could President Carter make final arrangements for the release of the hostages.[2][4]

Soviet invasion of Afghanistan

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 to bolster a pro-Soviet Communist government further complicated the role of the United States in the Middle East and Southwest Asia. In response to the events in Iran and Afghanistan and in anticipation of others, Brown activated the Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force (RDJTF) at MacDill Air Force Base, Florida, on March 1, 1980. Although normally a planning headquarters without operational units, the RDJTF could obtain such forces from the several services and command them in crisis situations. Brown explained that the RDJTF was responsible for developing plans for contingency operations, particularly in Southwest Asia, and maintaining adequate capabilities and readiness for such missions.[2]

Budget

As with all of his predecessors, budget matters occupied a major portion of Brown's time. During the 1976 campaign, President Carter criticized the defense spending levels of the Ford administration and promised cuts in the range of $5 billion to $7 billion. Shortly after he became secretary, Brown suggested a series of amendments to Ford's proposed fiscal year 1978 budget, having the effect of cutting it by almost $3 billion, but still allowing a Total Obligational Authority (TOA) increase of more than $8 billion over the fiscal year 1977 budget. Subsequent budgets under Brown moved generally upward, reflecting high prevailing rates of inflation, the need to strengthen and modernize conventional forces neglected somewhat since the end of the Vietnam War, and serious challenges in the Middle East, Iran, Afghanistan, and elsewhere.[2]

The Brown Defense budgets by fiscal year, in TOA, were as follows: 1978, $116.1 billion; 1979, $124.7 billion; 1980, $141.9 billion; and 1981, $175.5 billion. In terms of real growth, there were slight negative percentages in 1978 and 1979, and increases in 1980 and 1981. Part of the increase for fiscal year 1981 resulted from supplemental appropriations obtained by the Reagan administration; but the Carter administration by this time had departed substantially from its early emphasis on curtailing the department of defense budget. Its proposals for fiscal year 1982, submitted in January 1981, called for significant real growth over the TOA for fiscal year 1981.[2]

In his 2012 memoir, Star-Spangled Security, Brown boasted that "the Defense Department budget in real terms was 10 to 12 percent more when we left than when we came in", which he opined was not an easy accomplishment,[7] especially considering Carter's campaign promise to cut defense spending, and pressure to that effect from congressional Democrats.[7] With the increased budget, Brown oversaw the development of "stealth" aircraft,[4] and the acceleration of "the Trident submarine program and the conversion of older Poseidon submarines to carry MIRVs".[4]

Departure

Brown left office on January 20, 1981, following President Carter's unsuccessful bid for re-election.[2][7] During the 1980 campaign, Brown actively defended the Carter administration's policies, speaking frequently on national issues in public.[2][7]

Brown received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Carter in 1981[2][5] and the Enrico Fermi Award from President Bill Clinton in 1993.[2][5][11]

Later life

 
Brown in June 2013

After leaving the Pentagon, Brown remained in Washington, D.C., joining the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies as a visiting professor and later the university's Foreign Policy Institute as chairman.[5] He continued to speak and write widely on national security issues, and in 1983 published "Thinking About National Security: Defense and Foreign Policy in a Dangerous World"/[2] In later years, Brown was affiliated with research organizations and served on the boards of a number of corporations, like Altria (previously Philip Morris).[2]

Brown was honored with Columbia College’s John Jay Award for distinguished professional achievement in 1980 and Alexander Hamilton Medal in 1990.[12][13]

On January 5, 2006, he participated in a meeting at the White House of former Secretaries of Defense and State to discuss United States foreign policy with Bush administration officials.

In July 2011, Brown became a member of the United States Energy Security Council,[14] which seeks to diminish oil's monopoly over the U.S. transportation sector and is sponsored by the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security (IAGS).[15]

Brown died of pancreatic cancer on January 4, 2019, at the age of 91.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Harold Brown, Former U.S. Defense Secretary and Secretary of the Air Force, Dies at 91". RAND Corporation. January 5, 2019. Retrieved January 27, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y . History.defense.gov. Office of the Secretary of Defense - Historical Office. Archived from the original on November 22, 2018. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e Edward C. Keefer, Harold Brown: Offsetting the Soviet Military Challenge, 1977–1981, 2017, Historical Office, Office of the Secretary of Defense
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l McFadden, Robert D. (January 5, 2019). "Harold Brown, Defense Secretary in Carter Administration, Dies at 91". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 5, 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Harold Brown, former U.S. defense secretary and secretary of the air force, dies at 91". RAND.org. January 5, 2019. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
  6. ^ Brown, Harold (1951). Beta-spectra of gaseous argon-41 and oxygen-15 (PhD). Columbia University. OCLC 459393268. ProQuest 302087185.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lester, Will (January 6, 2019). "Former defense secretary Harold Brown dies at 91". Associated Press. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
  8. ^ "Harold Brown '45, GSAS'49, Carter Administration Secretary of Defense". Columbia College Today. Spring 2019. Retrieved June 25, 2021.
  9. ^ "Caltech Mourns the Passing of Harold Brown". mr.caltech.edu. January 5, 2019. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
  10. ^ . January 3, 1977. Archived from the original on December 15, 2008 – via www.time.com.
  11. ^ Otis, John (January 5, 2019). "Harold Brown, Carter defense secretary who advocated arms buildup, dies at 91". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 6, 2019.
  12. ^ "ALEXANDER HAMILTON MEDAL". Columbia College Alumni Association. Retrieved June 25, 2021.
  13. ^ "JOHN JAY AWARDS". Columbia College Alumni Association. Retrieved June 25, 2021.
  14. ^ "United States Energy Security Council - Home". www.usesc.org.
  15. ^ Security, IAGS, Institute for the Analysis of Global. "Energy Security in Focus: Institute for the Analysis of Global Security". www.iags.org.

Further reading

  • Keefer, Edward C. Harold Brown: Offsetting the Soviet Military Challenge, 1977—1981 (Washington: Historical Office of the Secretary of Defense, 2017), xxii, 815 pp.

External links

  • Annotated Bibliography for Harold Brown from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues August 4, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  • Air Force biography February 8, 2004, at the Wayback Machine
  • Department of Defense Biography
  • Harold Brown at Find a Grave
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
Political offices
Preceded by Director of Defense Research and Engineering
May 8, 1961 – September 30, 1965
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Secretary of the Air Force
October 1, 1965 – February 15, 1969
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Secretary of Defense
January 21, 1977 – January 20, 1981
Succeeded by
Academic offices
Preceded by President of the California Institute of Technology
1969–1977
Succeeded by

harold, brown, secretary, defense, other, people, named, harold, brown, harold, brown, disambiguation, harold, brown, september, 1927, january, 2019, american, nuclear, physicist, served, united, states, secretary, defense, from, 1977, 1981, under, president, . For other people named Harold Brown see Harold Brown disambiguation Harold Brown September 19 1927 January 4 2019 was an American nuclear physicist who served as United States Secretary of Defense from 1977 to 1981 under President Jimmy Carter Previously in the John F Kennedy and Lyndon B Johnson administrations he held the posts of Director of Defense Research and Engineering 1961 1965 and United States Secretary of the Air Force 1965 1969 2 Harold Brown14th United States Secretary of DefenseIn office January 21 1977 January 20 1981PresidentJimmy CarterPreceded byDonald RumsfeldSucceeded byCaspar Weinberger3rd President of the California Institute of TechnologyIn office 1969 1977Preceded byLee Alvin DuBridgeSucceeded byRobert F Christy acting 8th United States Secretary of the Air ForceIn office October 1 1965 February 15 1969PresidentLyndon B JohnsonPreceded byEugene M ZuckertSucceeded byRobert Seamans2nd Director of Defense Research and EngineeringIn office May 8 1961 September 30 1965PresidentJohn F KennedyLyndon B JohnsonPreceded byHerbert YorkSucceeded byJohn S Foster Jr Personal detailsBorn 1927 09 19 September 19 1927New York City New York U S DiedJanuary 4 2019 2019 01 04 aged 91 Rancho Santa Fe California U S Political partyDemocratic 1 SpouseColene Dunning McDowell m 1953 wbr Children2EducationColumbia University BS MS PhD Scientific careerFieldsNuclear physicsAtomic physicsInstitutionsLawrence Livermore National LaboratoryCalifornia Institute of TechnologyThesisBeta spectra of gaseous argon 41 and oxygen 15 1951 Doctoral advisorIsidor Isaac RabiA child prodigy Brown graduated from the Bronx High School of Science at age 15 and earned a Ph D in physics from Columbia University at age 21 3 As Secretary of Defense he set the groundwork for the Camp David Accords took part in strategic arms negotiations with the Soviet Union and supported unsuccessfully ratification of the SALT II treaty Contents 1 Early life and career 2 U S Secretary of Defense 2 1 Appointment and initial agenda 2 2 Nuclear missiles 2 3 NATO 2 4 Arms control 2 5 Regional matters 2 5 1 Panama Canal 2 5 2 Middle East 2 5 3 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan 2 6 Budget 2 7 Departure 3 Later life 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEarly life and career Edit Brown as President of the California Institute of Technology in 1970 Brown was born in Brooklyn New York the son of Abraham a lawyer who had fought in World War I and Gertrude Cohen Brown a diamond merchant s bookkeeper 4 5 His parents were secular Jews and strong supporters of President Franklin D Roosevelt 3 From a very young age Brown was drawn to mathematics and physics he enrolled as a student at the Bronx High School of Science from which he graduated at age 15 with a grade average of 99 5 3 5 He then immediately entered Columbia University earning an A B summa cum laude at 17 years of age as well as the Green Memorial Prize for the best academic record He continued as a graduate student at Columbia and was awarded a Ph D in physics in 1949 when he was 21 3 5 6 7 8 After a short period of teaching and postdoctoral research Brown became a research scientist at the Radiation Laboratory at the University of California Berkeley At Berkeley he played a role in the construction of the Polaris missile 5 and the development of plutonium 7 In 1952 he joined the staff of the University of California Radiation Laboratory at Livermore and became its director in 1960 succeeding Edward Teller 5 of whom he was a protege 4 At Livermore Brown led a team of six other physicists all older than he was who used some of the first computers along with mathematics and engineering to reduce the size of thermonuclear warheads for strategic military use Brown and his team helped make Livermore s reputation by designing nuclear warheads small and light enough to be placed on the Navy s nuclear powered ballistic missile submarines SSBNs 3 During the 1950s he served as a member of or consultant to several federal scientific bodies and as senior science adviser at the 1958 1959 Conference on the Discontinuance of Nuclear Tests 2 Brown worked under United States Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara as Director of Defense Research and Engineering from 1961 to 1965 5 7 and then as United States Secretary of the Air Force from October 1965 to February 1969 5 7 first under McNamara and then under Clark Clifford 5 7 From 1969 to 1977 he was President of the California Institute of Technology Caltech 5 7 9 U S Secretary of Defense EditAppointment and initial agenda Edit Brown s official portrait Although Brown had accumulated almost eight years of prior service in the Pentagon he was the first natural scientist to become secretary of defense 5 10 He involved himself in practically all areas of departmental activity Consistent with the Carter administration s objective to reorganize the federal government Brown launched a comprehensive review of defense organization that eventually brought significant change But he understood the limits to effective reform In one of his first speeches after leaving office Managing the Defense Department Why It Can t Be Done at the University of Michigan in March 1981 he observed 2 Secretary of Defense Harold Brown and Chairman of The Joint Chiefs of Staff General George S Brown testifies on Capitol Hill on a defense budget in 1977 I want to note again the basic limitation of any attempt to manage the Defense Department in an idealized textbook fashion The pull of the need to be able to fight a war if necessary will always limit the peacetime efficiency of the defense establishment The pull of conflicting domestic interests represents democratic government To manage defense efficiently and at the lowest possible cost along presumed business lines of management and organization is a useful standard But there are prices we cannot afford to pay for meeting it exactly One is the abandonment of democratic control Another is the loss of a war Defense cannot be managed like a business But it can be led so as to preserve most effectively our national security interests With regard to strategic planning Brown shared much the same concerns as his Republican predecessors the need to upgrade U S military forces and improve collective security arrangements but with a stronger commitment to arms control Brown adhered to the principle of essential equivalence in the nuclear competition with the Soviet Union This meant that Soviet strategic nuclear forces do not become usable instruments of political leverage diplomatic coercion or military advantage nuclear stability especially in a crisis is maintained any advantages in force characteristics enjoyed by the Soviets are offset by U S advantages in other characteristics and the U S posture is not in fact and is not seen as inferior in performance to the strategic nuclear forces of the Soviet Union 2 His later writings in his 2012 memoir Star Spangled Security reinforced this agenda 7 When I became secretary of defense in 1977 the military services most of all the army were disrupted badly by the Vietnam War There was general agreement that the Soviet Union outclassed the West in conventional military capability especially in ground forces in Europe According to The New York Times experts say in retrospect that contrary to a popular narrative which asserts that President Ronald Reagan increased defense spending to ramp up competition with and ultimately bankrupting the Soviet Union 4 it was Carter and Brown who began maintaining the strategic balance countering Soviet aircraft and ballistic innovations by improving land based ICBMs by upgrading B 52 strategic bombers with low flying cruise missiles and by deploying far more submarine launched missiles tipped with MIRVs or multiple warheads that split into independent trajectories to hit many targets 4 Nuclear missiles Edit Brown considered it essential to maintain the triad of ICBMs SLBMs and strategic bombers some of the administration s most important decisions on weapon systems reflected this commitment Although he decided not to produce the B 1 bomber he did recommend upgrading existing B 52s and equipping them with air launched cruise missiles and gave the go ahead for development of a stealth technology fostered by William J Perry under secretary of defense for research and engineering that would make it possible to produce planes bombers as well as other aircraft with very low radar profiles presumably able to elude enemy defenses and deliver weapons on targets The administration backed development of the MX missile intended to replace in the 1980s the increasingly vulnerable Minuteman and Titan intercontinental missiles To insure MX survivability Brown recommended deploying the missiles in multiple protective shelters 200 MX missiles would be placed in Utah and Nevada with each missile to be shuttled among 23 different shelters of its own located along roadways meaning a total of 4 600 such shelters Although this plan was expensive and environmentally controversial Brown argued that it was the most viable scheme to protect the missiles from enemy attack For the sea leg of the triad Brown accelerated development of the larger Trident nuclear submarine and carried forward the conversion of Poseidon submarines to a fully MIRVed missile capability 2 4 Secretary of Defense Harold Brown with Chairman of The Joint Chiefs of Staff General George S Brown and Deputy Secretary of Defense Charles W Duncan Jr and the other members of The Joint Chiefs of Staff at The Pentagon By early 1979 Brown and his staff had developed a countervailing strategy an approach to nuclear targeting that past secretaries of defense Robert McNamara and James R Schlesinger had both earlier found attractive but never formally codified As Brown put it we must have forces and plans for the use of our strategic nuclear forces such that in considering aggression against our interests our adversary would recognize that no plausible outcome would represent a success on any rational definition of success The prospect of such a failure would then deter an adversary s attack on the United States or our vital interests Although Brown did not rule out the assured destruction approach which stressed attacks on urban and industrial targets he believed that such destruction must not be automatic our only choice or independent of any enemy s attack Indeed it is at least conceivable that the mission of assured destruction would not have to be executed at all in the event that deterrence failed 2 Official adoption of the countervailing strategy came with President Carter s approval of Presidential Directive 59 PD 59 on July 25 1980 In explaining PD 59 Brown argued that it was not a new strategic doctrine but rather a refinement a codification of previous explanations of our strategic policy The heart of PD 59 as Brown described it was as follows 2 It is our policy and we have increasingly the means and the detailed plans to carry out this policy to ensure that the Soviet leadership knows that if they chose some intermediate level of aggression we could by selective large but still less than maximum nuclear attacks exact an unacceptably high price in the things the Soviet leaders appear to value most political and military control military force both nuclear and conventional and the industrial capability to sustain a war In our planning we have not ignored the problem of ending the war nor would we ignore it in the event of a war And of course we have and we will keep a survivable and enduring capability to attack the full range of targets including the Soviet economic base if that is the appropriate response to a Soviet strike Because the almost simultaneous disclosures of PD 59 and the stealth technology came in the midst of the 1980 United States presidential election campaign some critics asserted that the Carter administration leaked them to counter charges of weakness and boost its re election chances Others charged that PD 59 made it more likely that the United States would initiate a nuclear conflict based on the assumption that a nuclear war could somehow be limited Brown insisted that the countervailing strategy was not a first strike strategy As he put it Nothing in the policy contemplates that nuclear war can be a deliberate instrument of achieving our national security goals But we cannot afford the risk that the Soviet leadership might entertain the illusion that nuclear war could be an option or its threat a means of coercion for them 2 NATO Edit Brown and Joseph Luns in Europe 1979 Brown regarded the strengthening of NATO as a key national security objective and worked hard to invigorate the alliance With the assistance of Robert W Komer at first his special adviser on NATO affairs and subsequently under secretary of defense for policy Brown launched a series of NATO initiatives shortly after taking office In May 1978 the NATO heads of government endorsed a long term defense program which included 10 priority categories enhanced readiness rapid reinforcement stronger European reserve forces improvements in maritime capabilities integrated air defenses effective command control and communications electronic warfare rationalized procedures for armaments collaboration logistics co ordination and increased war reserves and theater nuclear modernization To implement the last item NATO defense and foreign ministers decided in December 1979 to respond to the Soviet deployment of new theater nuclear weapons the SS 20 missile and the Backfire bomber by placing 108 Pershing II missiles and 464 ground launched cruise missiles GLCMs in several Western European countries beginning in December 1983 The NATO leaders indicated that the new missile deployment would be scaled down if satisfactory progress occurred in arms control negotiations with the Soviet Union 2 At Brown s urging NATO members pledged in 1977 to increase their individual defense spending three percent per year in real terms for the 1979 86 period The objective Brown explained was to ensure that alliance resources and capabilities both conventional and nuclear would balance those of the Soviet bloc Although some NATO members hesitated to confirm the agreement to accept new missiles and did not always attain the three percent target Brown was pleased with NATO s progress Midway in his term he told an interviewer that he thought his most important achievement thus far had been the revitalization of NATO 2 Brown also tried to strengthen the defense contributions of U S allies outside of NATO particularly Japan and South Korea He repeatedly urged the Japanese government to increase its defense budget so that it could shoulder a larger share of the Western allies Pacific security burden Although the Carter administration decided in 1977 on a phased withdrawal of United States ground forces from South Korea it pledged to continue military and other assistance to that country Later because of a substantial buildup of North Korean military forces and opposition to the troop withdrawal in the United States the president shelved the plan leaving approximately 40 000 U S troops in Korea In establishing diplomatic relations with the People s Republic of China PRC on January 1 1979 the United States formally recognized the PRC almost 30 years after its establishment A year later Brown visited the PRC talked with its political and military leaders and helped lay the groundwork for limited collaboration on security issues 2 Arms control Edit Arms control formed an integral part of Brown s national security policy He staunchly supported the June 1979 SALT II treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union and was the administration s leading spokesman in urging the Senate to approve it SALT II limited both sides to 2 250 strategic nuclear delivery vehicles bombers ICBMs SLBMs and air to surface ballistic missiles including a sublimit of 1 200 launchers of MIRVed ballistic missiles of which only 820 could be launchers of MIRVed ICBMs It also placed restrictions on the number of warheads on each missile and on deployment of new land based ballistic missile systems except for one new type of light ICBM for each side There was also a provision for verification by each side using its own national technical means 2 Brown explained that SALT II would reduce the Soviet Union s strategic forces bring enhanced predictability and stability to Soviet U S nuclear relationships reduce the cost of maintaining a strategic balance help the United States to monitor Soviet forces and reduce the risk of nuclear war He rebutted charges by SALT II critics that the United States had underestimated the Soviet military buildup that the treaty would weaken the Western alliance that the Soviet Union could not be trusted to obey the treaty and that its terms could not really be verified Partly to placate Senate opponents of the treaty the Carter administration agreed in the fall of 1979 to support higher increases in the defense budget However the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 ensured that the Senate would not accept the treaty at that time forcing the president to withdraw it from consideration When his term ended in 1981 Brown said that failure to secure ratification of SALT II was his greatest regret 2 4 The U S and the Soviet Union still followed the terms of the pact even though it was non binding until 1986 when President Ronald Reagan accused the Soviet Union of violating the terms and withdrew from the pact 4 Regional matters Edit Panama Canal Edit Besides broad national security policy matters Brown had to deal with several more immediate questions among them the Panama Canal issue Control of the Panama canal zone had been a source of contention ever since Panama achieved its independence from Colombia in 1903 and granted the United States a concession in perpetuity In the mid 1960s after serious disturbances in the zone the United States and Panama began negotiations that went on intermittently until September 7 1977 when the countries signed two treaties one providing for full Panamanian control of the canal by the year 2000 and the other guaranteeing the canal s neutrality The Defense Department played a major role in the Panama negotiations Brown championed the treaties through a difficult fight to gain Senate approval secured in March and April 1978 insisting that they were both advantageous to the United States and essential to the canal s future operation and security 2 Middle East Edit In Middle East affairs Brown supported President Carter s efforts as an intermediary in the Egyptian Israeli negotiations leading to the Camp David Accords of September 1978 and the signing by the two nations of a peace treaty in March 1979 2 4 Elsewhere the fall of the Shah from power in Iran in January 1979 eliminated a major U S ally and triggered a chain of events that played havoc with American policy in the region In November 1979 Iranian revolutionaries occupied the U S embassy in Tehran and took more than 50 hostages Brown participated closely in planning for a rescue operation that ended in failure and the loss of eight U S servicemen on April 24 25 1980 Not until the last day of his administration on January 20 1981 could President Carter make final arrangements for the release of the hostages 2 4 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan Edit The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 to bolster a pro Soviet Communist government further complicated the role of the United States in the Middle East and Southwest Asia In response to the events in Iran and Afghanistan and in anticipation of others Brown activated the Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force RDJTF at MacDill Air Force Base Florida on March 1 1980 Although normally a planning headquarters without operational units the RDJTF could obtain such forces from the several services and command them in crisis situations Brown explained that the RDJTF was responsible for developing plans for contingency operations particularly in Southwest Asia and maintaining adequate capabilities and readiness for such missions 2 Budget Edit As with all of his predecessors budget matters occupied a major portion of Brown s time During the 1976 campaign President Carter criticized the defense spending levels of the Ford administration and promised cuts in the range of 5 billion to 7 billion Shortly after he became secretary Brown suggested a series of amendments to Ford s proposed fiscal year 1978 budget having the effect of cutting it by almost 3 billion but still allowing a Total Obligational Authority TOA increase of more than 8 billion over the fiscal year 1977 budget Subsequent budgets under Brown moved generally upward reflecting high prevailing rates of inflation the need to strengthen and modernize conventional forces neglected somewhat since the end of the Vietnam War and serious challenges in the Middle East Iran Afghanistan and elsewhere 2 The Brown Defense budgets by fiscal year in TOA were as follows 1978 116 1 billion 1979 124 7 billion 1980 141 9 billion and 1981 175 5 billion In terms of real growth there were slight negative percentages in 1978 and 1979 and increases in 1980 and 1981 Part of the increase for fiscal year 1981 resulted from supplemental appropriations obtained by the Reagan administration but the Carter administration by this time had departed substantially from its early emphasis on curtailing the department of defense budget Its proposals for fiscal year 1982 submitted in January 1981 called for significant real growth over the TOA for fiscal year 1981 2 In his 2012 memoir Star Spangled Security Brown boasted that the Defense Department budget in real terms was 10 to 12 percent more when we left than when we came in which he opined was not an easy accomplishment 7 especially considering Carter s campaign promise to cut defense spending and pressure to that effect from congressional Democrats 7 With the increased budget Brown oversaw the development of stealth aircraft 4 and the acceleration of the Trident submarine program and the conversion of older Poseidon submarines to carry MIRVs 4 Departure Edit Brown left office on January 20 1981 following President Carter s unsuccessful bid for re election 2 7 During the 1980 campaign Brown actively defended the Carter administration s policies speaking frequently on national issues in public 2 7 Brown received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Carter in 1981 2 5 and the Enrico Fermi Award from President Bill Clinton in 1993 2 5 11 Later life Edit Brown in June 2013 After leaving the Pentagon Brown remained in Washington D C joining the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies as a visiting professor and later the university s Foreign Policy Institute as chairman 5 He continued to speak and write widely on national security issues and in 1983 published Thinking About National Security Defense and Foreign Policy in a Dangerous World 2 In later years Brown was affiliated with research organizations and served on the boards of a number of corporations like Altria previously Philip Morris 2 Brown was honored with Columbia College s John Jay Award for distinguished professional achievement in 1980 and Alexander Hamilton Medal in 1990 12 13 On January 5 2006 he participated in a meeting at the White House of former Secretaries of Defense and State to discuss United States foreign policy with Bush administration officials In July 2011 Brown became a member of the United States Energy Security Council 14 which seeks to diminish oil s monopoly over the U S transportation sector and is sponsored by the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security IAGS 15 Brown died of pancreatic cancer on January 4 2019 at the age of 91 4 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Harold Brown Harold Brown Award Membership discrimination in California social clubsReferences Edit Harold Brown Former U S Defense Secretary and Secretary of the Air Force Dies at 91 RAND Corporation January 5 2019 Retrieved January 27 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Harold Brown History defense gov Office of the Secretary of Defense Historical Office Archived from the original on November 22 2018 Retrieved January 10 2019 a b c d e Edward C Keefer Harold Brown Offsetting the Soviet Military Challenge 1977 1981 2017 Historical Office Office of the Secretary of Defense a b c d e f g h i j k l McFadden Robert D January 5 2019 Harold Brown Defense Secretary in Carter Administration Dies at 91 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 5 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Harold Brown former U S defense secretary and secretary of the air force dies at 91 RAND org January 5 2019 Retrieved January 10 2019 Brown Harold 1951 Beta spectra of gaseous argon 41 and oxygen 15 PhD Columbia University OCLC 459393268 ProQuest 302087185 a b c d e f g h i j k Lester Will January 6 2019 Former defense secretary Harold Brown dies at 91 Associated Press Retrieved January 10 2019 Harold Brown 45 GSAS 49 Carter Administration Secretary of Defense Columbia College Today Spring 2019 Retrieved June 25 2021 Caltech Mourns the Passing of Harold Brown mr caltech edu January 5 2019 Retrieved January 9 2019 The Nation Childe Harold Comes of Age January 3 1977 Archived from the original on December 15 2008 via www time com Otis John January 5 2019 Harold Brown Carter defense secretary who advocated arms buildup dies at 91 The Washington Post Retrieved January 6 2019 ALEXANDER HAMILTON MEDAL Columbia College Alumni Association Retrieved June 25 2021 JOHN JAY AWARDS Columbia College Alumni Association Retrieved June 25 2021 United States Energy Security Council Home www usesc org Security IAGS Institute for the Analysis of Global Energy Security in Focus Institute for the Analysis of Global Security www iags org Further reading EditKeefer Edward C Harold Brown Offsetting the Soviet Military Challenge 1977 1981 Washington Historical Office of the Secretary of Defense 2017 xxii 815 pp External links EditAnnotated Bibliography for Harold Brown from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues Archived August 4 2010 at the Wayback Machine Air Force biography Archived February 8 2004 at the Wayback Machine Department of Defense Biography The Enrico Fermi Award Harold Brown at Find a Grave Appearances on C SPANPolitical officesPreceded byHerbert F York Director of Defense Research and EngineeringMay 8 1961 September 30 1965 Succeeded byJohn S Foster Jr Preceded byEugene M Zuckert United States Secretary of the Air ForceOctober 1 1965 February 15 1969 Succeeded byRobert SeamansPreceded byDonald Rumsfeld United States Secretary of DefenseJanuary 21 1977 January 20 1981 Succeeded byCaspar WeinbergerAcademic officesPreceded byLee DuBridge President of the California Institute of Technology1969 1977 Succeeded byRobert Christy acting Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harold Brown Secretary of Defense amp oldid 1129844401, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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