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From The Associated Press
WASHINGTON – Harold Brown, who, as Defense Secretary of the Carter Administration, defended advanced combat technologies at During a tenure including the failed rescue of hostages in Iran, died at the age of 91.
Brown died Friday, said Rand Corp., a California-based think tank for which Brown has been a trustee for more than 35 years. His sister, Leila Brennet, said that he had died at his home in Rancho Santa Fe, California.
Brown was a nuclear physicist who had led the Pentagon to modernize its defense systems with weapons including precision guided cruise missiles, stealth aircraft, satellite surveillance, and improved communications and intelligence systems. He campaigned successfully to increase the Pentagon's budget during his tenure, despite skepticism at the White House and congressional Democrats.
This turbulent period included the invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union and the Iranian hostage crisis. In April 1980, an attempt to rescue the hostages failed. One of the mission's helicopters struck a tanker in eastern Iran and crashed, killing eight US soldiers.
"I considered the failed rescue attempt as my biggest regret and the most painful lesson I learned," Brown wrote in his book "Star Spangled Security."