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Apocalypse
Soon
By Robert S. McNamara
Foreign Policy
May/June 2005 Issue
Robert McNamara is worried. He knows how close we've come. His counsel
helped the Kennedy administration avert nuclear catastrophe during the
Cuban Missile Crisis. Today, he believes the United States must no longer
rely on nuclear weapons as a foreign-policy tool. To do so is immoral,
illegal and dreadfully dangerous.
It is time - well past time, in my view - for the United States to cease
its Cold War-style reliance on nuclear weapons as a foreign-policy tool.
At the risk of appearing simplistic and provocative, I would characterize
current US nuclear weapons policy as immoral, illegal, militarily unnecessary,
and dreadfully dangerous. The risk of an accidental or inadvertent nuclear
launch is unacceptably high. Far from reducing these risks, the Bush administration
has signaled that it is committed to keeping the US nuclear arsenal as
a mainstay of its military power - a commitment that is simultaneously
eroding the international norms that have limited the spread of nuclear
weapons and fissile materials for 50 years. Much of the current US nuclear
policy has been in place since before I was secretary of defense, and
it has only grown more dangerous and diplomatically destructive in the
intervening years.
Today, the United States has deployed approximately 4,500 strategic,
offensive nuclear warheads. Russia has roughly 3,800. The strategic forces
of Britain, France, and China are considerably smaller, with 200–400
nuclear weapons in each state's arsenal. The new nuclear states of Pakistan
and India have fewer than 100 weapons each. North Korea now claims to
have developed nuclear weapons, and US intelligence agencies estimate
that Pyongyang has enough fissile material for 2–8 bombs.
How destructive are these weapons? The average US warhead has a destructive
power 20 times that of the Hiroshima bomb. Of the 8,000 active or operational
US warheads, 2,000 are on hair-trigger alert, ready to be launched on
15 minutes' warning. How are these weapons to be used? The United States
has never endorsed the policy of "no first use," not during
my seven years as secretary or since. We have been and remain prepared
to initiate the use of nuclear weapons - by the decision of one person,
the president - against either a nuclear or nonnuclear enemy whenever
we believe it is in our interest to do so. For decades, US nuclear forces
have been sufficiently strong to absorb a first strike and then inflict
"unacceptable" damage on an opponent. This has been and (so
long as we face a nuclear-armed, potential adversary) must continue to
be the foundation of our nuclear deterrent.
In my time as secretary of defense, the commander of the US Strategic
Air Command (SAC) carried with him a secure telephone, no matter where
he went, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year. The telephone
of the commander, whose headquarters were in Omaha, Nebraska, was linked
to the underground command post of the North American Defense Command,
deep inside Cheyenne Mountain, in Colorado, and to the US president, wherever
he happened to be. The president always had at hand nuclear release codes
in the so-called football, a briefcase carried for the president at all
times by a US military officer.
The SAC commander's orders were to answer the telephone by no later
than the end of the third ring. If it rang, and he was informed that a
nuclear attack of enemy ballistic missiles appeared to be under way, he
was allowed 2 to 3 minutes to decide whether the warning was valid (over
the years, the United States has received many false warnings), and if
so, how the United States should respond. He was then given approximately
10 minutes to determine what to recommend, to locate and advise the president,
permit the president to discuss the situation with two or three close
advisors (presumably the secretary of defense and the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff), and to receive the president's decision and pass
it immediately, along with the codes, to the launch sites. The president
essentially had two options: He could decide to ride out the attack and
defer until later any decision to launch a retaliatory strike. Or, he
could order an immediate retaliatory strike, from a menu of options, thereby
launching US weapons that were targeted on the opponent's military-industrial
assets. Our opponents in Moscow presumably had and have similar arrangements.
The whole situation seems so bizarre as to be beyond belief. On any
given day, as we go about our business, the president is prepared to make
a decision within 20 minutes that could launch one of the most devastating
weapons in the world. To declare war requires an act of congress, but
to launch a nuclear holocaust requires 20 minutes' deliberation by the
president and his advisors. But that is what we have lived with for 40
years. With very few changes, this system remains largely intact, including
the "football," the president's constant companion.
I was able to change some of these dangerous policies and procedures.
My colleagues and I started arms control talks; we installed safeguards
to reduce the risk of unauthorized launches; we added options to the nuclear
war plans so that the president did not have to choose between an all-or-nothing
response, and we eliminated the vulnerable and provocative nuclear missiles
in Turkey. I wish I had done more, but we were in the midst of the Cold
War, and our options were limited.
The United States and our NATO allies faced a strong Soviet and Warsaw
Pact conventional threat. Many of the allies (and some in Washington as
well) felt strongly that preserving the US option of launching a first
strike was necessary for the sake of keeping the Soviets at bay. What
is shocking is that today, more than a decade after the end of the Cold
War, the basic US nuclear policy is unchanged. It has not adapted to the
collapse of the Soviet Union. Plans and procedures have not been revised
to make the United States or other countries less likely to push the button.
At a minimum, we should remove all strategic nuclear weapons from "hair-trigger"
alert, as others have recommended, including Gen. George Lee Butler, the
last commander of SAC. That simple change would greatly reduce the risk
of an accidental nuclear launch. It would also signal to other states
that the United States is taking steps to end its reliance on nuclear
weapons.
We pledged to work in good faith toward the eventual elimination of
nuclear arsenals when we negotiated the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
(NPT) in 1968. In May, diplomats from more than 180 nations are meeting
in New York City to review the NPT and assess whether members are living
up to the agreement. The United States is focused, for understandable
reasons, on persuading North Korea to rejoin the treaty and on negotiating
deeper constraints on Iran's nuclear ambitions. Those states must be convinced
to keep the promises they made when they originally signed the NPT - that
they would not build nuclear weapons in return for access to peaceful
uses of nuclear energy. But the attention of many nations, including some
potential new nuclear weapons states, is also on the United States. Keeping
such large numbers of weapons, and maintaining them on hair-trigger alert,
are potent signs that the United States is not seriously working toward
the elimination of its arsenal and raises troubling questions as to why
any other state should restrain its nuclear ambitions.
A Preview of the Apocalypse
The destructive power of nuclear weapons is well known, but given the
United States' continued reliance on them, it's worth remembering the
danger they present. A 2000 report by the International Physicians for
the Prevention of Nuclear War describes the likely effects of a single
1 megaton weapon - dozens of which are contained in the Russian and US
inventories. At ground zero, the explosion creates a crater 300 feet deep
and 1,200 feet in diameter. Within one second, the atmosphere itself ignites
into a fireball more than a half-mile in diameter. The surface of the
fireball radiates nearly three times the light and heat of a comparable
area of the surface of the sun, extinguishing in seconds all life below
and radiating outward at the speed of light, causing instantaneous severe
burns to people within one to three miles. A blast wave of compressed
air reaches a distance of three miles in about 12 seconds, flattening
factories and commercial buildings. Debris carried by winds of 250 mph
inflicts lethal injuries throughout the area. At least 50 percent of people
in the area die immediately, prior to any injuries from radiation or the
developing firestorm.
Of course, our knowledge of these effects is not entirely hypothetical.
Nuclear weapons, with roughly one seventieth of the power of the 1 megaton
bomb just described, were twice used by the United States in August 1945.
One atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. Around 80,000 people died immediately;
approximately 200,000 died eventually. Later, a similar size bomb was
dropped on Nagasaki. On Nov. 7, 1995, the mayor of Nagasaki recalled his
memory of the attack in testimony to the International Court of Justice:
Nagasaki became a city of death where not even the sound of insects
could be heard. After a while, countless men, women and children began
to gather for a drink of water at the banks of nearby Urakami River, their
hair and clothing scorched and their burnt skin hanging off in sheets
like rags. Begging for help they died one after another in the water or
in heaps on the banks.… Four months after the atomic bombing, 74,000
people were dead, and 75,000 had suffered injuries, that is, two-thirds
of the city population had fallen victim to this calamity that came upon
Nagasaki like a preview of the Apocalypse.
Why did so many civilians have to die? Because the civilians, who made
up nearly 100 percent of the victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, were unfortunately
"co-located" with Japanese military and industrial targets.
Their annihilation, though not the objective of those dropping the bombs,
was an inevitable result of the choice of those targets. It is worth noting
that during the Cold War, the United States reportedly had dozens of nuclear
warheads targeted on Moscow alone, because it contained so many military
targets and so much "industrial capacity."
Presumably, the Soviets similarly targeted many US cities. The statement
that our nuclear weapons do not target populations per se was and remains
totally misleading in the sense that the so-called collateral damage of
large nuclear strikes would include tens of millions of innocent civilian
dead.
This in a nutshell is what nuclear weapons do: They indiscriminately
blast, burn, and irradiate with a speed and finality that are almost incomprehensible.
This is exactly what countries like the United States and Russia, with
nuclear weapons on hair-trigger alert, continue to threaten every minute
of every day in this new 21st century.
No Way to Win
I have worked on issues relating to US and NATO nuclear strategy and
war plans for more than 40 years. During that time, I have never seen
a piece of paper that outlined a plan for the United States or NATO to
initiate the use of nuclear weapons with any benefit for the United States
or NATO. I have made this statement in front of audiences, including NATO
defense ministers and senior military leaders, many times. No one has
ever refuted it. To launch weapons against a nuclear-equipped opponent
would be suicidal. To do so against a nonnuclear enemy would be militarily
unnecessary, morally repugnant, and politically indefensible.
I reached these conclusions very soon after becoming secretary of defense.
Although I believe Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson shared
my view, it was impossible for any of us to make such statements publicly
because they were totally contrary to established NATO policy. After leaving
the Defense Department, I became president of the World Bank. During my
13-year tenure, from 1968 to 1981, I was prohibited, as an employee of
an international institution, from commenting publicly on issues of US
national security. After my retirement from the bank, I began to reflect
on how I, with seven years' experience as secretary of defense, might
contribute to an understanding of the issues with which I began my public
service career.
At that time, much was being said and written regarding how the United
States could, and why it should, be able to fight and win a nuclear war
with the Soviets. This view implied, of course, that nuclear weapons did
have military utility; that they could be used in battle with ultimate
gain to whoever had the largest force or used them with the greatest acumen.
Having studied these views, I decided to go public with some information
that I knew would be controversial, but that I felt was needed to inject
reality into these increasingly unreal discussions about the military
utility of nuclear weapons. In articles and speeches, I criticized the
fundamentally flawed assumption that nuclear weapons could be used in
some limited way. There is no way to effectively contain a nuclear strike
- to keep it from inflicting enormous destruction on civilian life and
property, and there is no guarantee against unlimited escalation once
the first nuclear strike occurs. We cannot avoid the serious and unacceptable
risk of nuclear war until we recognize these facts and base our military
plans and policies upon this recognition. I hold these views even more
strongly today than I did when I first spoke out against the nuclear dangers
our policies were creating. I know from direct experience that US nuclear
policy today creates unacceptable risks to other nations and to our own.
What Castro Taught Us
Among the costs of maintaining nuclear weapons is the risk - to me an
unacceptable risk - of use of the weapons either by accident or as a result
of misjudgment or miscalculation in times of crisis. The Cuban Missile
Crisis demonstrated that the United States and the Soviet Union - and
indeed the rest of the world - came within a hair's breadth of nuclear
disaster in October 1962.
Indeed, according to former Soviet military leaders, at the height of
the crisis, Soviet forces in Cuba possessed 162 nuclear warheads, including
at least 90 tactical warheads. At about the same time, Cuban President
Fidel Castro asked the Soviet ambassador to Cuba to send a cable to Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev stating that Castro urged him to counter a US
attack with a nuclear response. Clearly, there was a high risk that in
the face of a US attack, which many in the US government were prepared
to recommend to President Kennedy, the Soviet forces in Cuba would have
decided to use their nuclear weapons rather than lose them. Only a few
years ago did we learn that the four Soviet submarines trailing the US
Naval vessels near Cuba each carried torpedoes with nuclear warheads.
Each of the sub commanders had the authority to launch his torpedoes.
The situation was even more frightening because, as the lead commander
recounted to me, the subs were out of communication with their Soviet
bases, and they continued their patrols for four days after Khrushchev
announced the withdrawal of the missiles from Cuba.
The lesson, if it had not been clear before, was made so at a conference
on the crisis held in Havana in 1992, when we first began to learn from
former Soviet officials about their preparations for nuclear war in the
event of a US invasion. Near the end of that meeting, I asked Castro whether
he would have recommended that Khrushchev use the weapons in the face
of a US invasion, and if so, how he thought the United States would respond.
"We started from the assumption that if there was an invasion of
Cuba, nuclear war would erupt," Castro replied. "We were certain
of that…. [W]e would be forced to pay the price that we would disappear."
He continued, "Would I have been ready to use nuclear weapons? Yes,
I would have agreed to the use of nuclear weapons." And he added,
"If Mr. McNamara or Mr. Kennedy had been in our place, and had their
country been invaded, or their country was going to be occupied …
I believe they would have used tactical nuclear weapons."
I hope that President Kennedy and I would not have behaved as Castro
suggested we would have. His decision would have destroyed his country.
Had we responded in a similar way the damage to the United States would
have been unthinkable. But human beings are fallible. In conventional
war, mistakes cost lives, sometimes thousands of lives. However, if mistakes
were to affect decisions relating to the use of nuclear forces, there
would be no learning curve. They would result in the destruction of nations.
The indefinite combination of human fallibility and nuclear weapons carries
a very high risk of nuclear catastrophe. There is no way to reduce the
risk to acceptable levels, other than to first eliminate the hair-trigger
alert policy and later to eliminate or nearly eliminate nuclear weapons.
The United States should move immediately to institute these actions,
in cooperation with Russia. That is the lesson of the Cuban Missile Crisis.
A Dangerous Obsession
On Nov. 13, 2001, President George W. Bush announced that he had told
Russian President Vladimir Putin that the United States would reduce "operationally
deployed nuclear warheads" from approximately 5,300 to a level between
1,700 and 2,200 over the next decade. This scaling back would approach
the 1,500 to 2,200 range that Putin had proposed for Russia. However,
the Bush administration's Nuclear Posture Review, mandated by the US Congress
and issued in January 2002, presents quite a different story. It assumes
that strategic offensive nuclear weapons in much larger numbers than 1,700
to 2,200 will be part of US military forces for the next several decades.
Although the number of deployed warheads will be reduced to 3,800 in 2007
and to between 1,700 and 2,200 by 2012, the warheads and many of the launch
vehicles taken off deployment will be maintained in a "responsive"
reserve from which they could be moved back to the operationally deployed
force. The Nuclear Posture Review received little attention from the media.
But its emphasis on strategic offensive nuclear weapons deserves vigorous
public scrutiny. Although any proposed reduction is welcome, it is doubtful
that survivors - if there were any - of an exchange of 3,200 warheads
(the US and Russian numbers projected for 2012), with a destructive power
approximately 65,000 times that of the Hiroshima bomb, could detect a
difference between the effects of such an exchange and one that would
result from the launch of the current US and Russian forces totaling about
12,000 warheads.
In addition to projecting the deployment of large numbers of strategic
nuclear weapons far into the future, the Bush administration is planning
an extensive and expensive series of programs to sustain and modernize
the existing nuclear force and to begin studies for new launch vehicles,
as well as new warheads for all of the launch platforms. Some members
of the administration have called for new nuclear weapons that could be
used as bunker busters against underground shelters (such as the shelters
Saddam Hussein used in Baghdad). New production facilities for fissile
materials would need to be built to support the expanded force. The plans
provide for integrating a national ballistic missile defense into the
new triad of offensive weapons to enhance the nation's ability to use
its "power projection forces" by improving our ability to counterattack
an enemy. The Bush administration also announced that it has no intention
to ask congress to ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), and,
though no decision to test has been made, the administration has ordered
the national laboratories to begin research on new nuclear weapons designs
and to prepare the underground test sites in Nevada for nuclear tests
if necessary in the future. Clearly, the Bush administration assumes that
nuclear weapons will be part of US military forces for at least the next
several decades.
Good faith participation in international negotiation on nuclear disarmament
- including participation in the CTBT - is a legal and political obligation
of all parties to the NPT that entered into force in 1970 and was extended
indefinitely in 1995. The Bush administration's nuclear program, alongside
its refusal to ratify the CTBT, will be viewed, with reason, by many nations
as equivalent to a US break from the treaty. It says to the nonnuclear
weapons nations, "We, with the strongest conventional military force
in the world, require nuclear weapons in perpetuity, but you, facing potentially
well-armed opponents, are never to be allowed even one nuclear weapon."
If the United States continues its current nuclear stance, over time,
substantial proliferation of nuclear weapons will almost surely follow.
Some, or all, of such nations as Egypt, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and
Taiwan will very likely initiate nuclear weapons programs, increasing
both the risk of use of the weapons and the diversion of weapons and fissile
materials into the hands of rogue states or terrorists. Diplomats and
intelligence agencies believe Osama bin Laden has made several attempts
to acquire nuclear weapons or fissile materials. It has been widely reported
that Sultan Bashiruddin Mahmood, former director of Pakistan's nuclear
reactor complex, met with bin Laden several times. Were al Qaeda to acquire
fissile materials, especially enriched uranium, its ability to produce
nuclear weapons would be great. The knowledge of how to construct a simple
gun-type nuclear device, like the one we dropped on Hiroshima, is now
widespread. Experts have little doubt that terrorists could construct
such a primitive device if they acquired the requisite enriched uranium
material. Indeed, just last summer, at a meeting of the National Academy
of Sciences, former Secretary of Defense William J. Perry said, "I
have never been more fearful of a nuclear detonation than now.…
There is a greater than 50 percent probability of a nuclear strike on
US targets within a decade." I share his fears.
A Moment of Decision
We are at a critical moment in human history - perhaps not as dramatic
as that of the Cuban Missile Crisis, but a moment no less crucial. Neither
the Bush administration, the congress, the American people, nor the people
of other nations have debated the merits of alternative, long-range nuclear
weapons policies for their countries or the world. They have not examined
the military utility of the weapons; the risk of inadvertent or accidental
use; the moral and legal considerations relating to the use or threat
of use of the weapons; or the impact of current policies on proliferation.
Such debates are long overdue. If they are held, I believe they will conclude,
as have I and an increasing number of senior military leaders, politicians,
and civilian security experts: We must move promptly toward the elimination
- or near elimination - of all nuclear weapons. For many, there is a strong
temptation to cling to the strategies of the past 40 years. But to do
so would be a serious mistake leading to unacceptable risks for all nations.
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