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Action for a Nuclear Weapons Free World
Change Nuclear Weapons Policy?
Yes, We Can.
Daryl Kimball
Foreign
Policy In Focus
November 25, 2008
For nearly 40 years, American presidents
have expressed their intention to fulfill the U.S. obligation under
the 1968 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) to pursue "effective
measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early
date and to nuclear disarmament." Still, few presidents have
taken that goal seriously, and those who did missed historic opportunities
to move closer toward a nuclear weapons-free world.
Under the presidential administration of Barack Obama, U.S. nuclear
weapons policy and nonproliferation diplomacy can and must change,
or else the global effort to reduce the risk of nuclear war, curb
proliferation, and prevent catastrophic terrorism will falter.
Record of Failure
The failure of the Bush administration and other nuclear weapon
states to make meaningful progress on their NPT-related disarmament
commitments — including deeper, verifiable, and irreversible
nuclear reductions; ratification and implementation of the 1996
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty; and negotiation of a global verifiable
fissile material cut off — has complicated the task of strengthening
the battered nuclear nonproliferation system.
The Bush administration's decision to virtually abandon the bilateral,
U.S.-Russian strategic nuclear arms control framework has also put
Moscow on edge and worsened an already strained relationship between
the two countries. In 2002, the administration withdrew from the
1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in order to pursue a costly and
rudimentary strategic missile defense system. Now, to Moscow's great
dissatisfaction, Bush has proposed the deployment of a third anti-missile
site in Poland.
Meanwhile, Presidents Bush and Putin did agree to the 2002 Moscow
Treaty mandating reductions of "operationally deployed"
strategic warheads to no more than 2,200 each by 2012. But the agreement
expires the day it goes into effect and contains no verification
provisions. An earlier agreement, the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty
(START) and its verification provisions, could expire at the end
of 2009, leaving behind no meaningful legal framework for regulating
U.S. and Russian strategic weapons.
Bush administration proposals to modify U.S. nuclear warheads to
improve their capabilities to strike deep underground targets and
build a new generation of "replacement" warheads have
further undermined confidence in Washington's commitment to uphold
its disarmament commitments. In response, states in the non-nuclear-weapon
majority have become increasingly resistant to new measures restricting
the spread of sensitive nuclear fuel cycle technology, strengthening
international safeguards against the use of civil nuclear programs
for weapons purposes, and responding more effectively to noncompliance.
For all these reasons and more, there are rising doubts about the
sustainability of the nonproliferation regime. As George Shultz,
William Perry, Henry Kissinger, Sam Nunn, and more than two dozen
other former Republican and Democratic government officials warned
in their seminal 2007 Wall Street Journal op-ed, we are approaching
"a nuclear tipping point."
Sea Change Ahead?
There is hope. A increasingly long list of U.S. congressional leaders
and foreign policy experts have joined Shultz et al in calling for
the United States to reaffirm the goal of a world free of nuclear
weapons and pursue immediate steps toward that end.
More importantly, Senator Obama was among the first legislators
to step forward to embrace this approach. In July 2007, Obama and
Senator Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) introduced "the Nuclear Weapons
Threat Reduction Act" (S. 1977), which outlines a comprehensive
strategy for progress on disarmament and the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty (NPT).
During the presidential campaign, Obama elaborated on his vision
in two major policy speeches,pledging to "set a new direction
in U.S. nuclear weapons policy and show the world that America believes
in its existing commitment under the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty
to work to ultimately eliminate all nuclear weapons."
Now, the president and his national security team must move quickly
on the most important elements of his nuclear weapons threat reduction
strategy. Concrete action in each of the following areas in 2009
would also signal a dramatic shift in U.S. nuclear policy and help
create the conditions necessary to build consensus among the 180-plus
parties to the NPT.
START with Russia
During the campaign, Obama called for "real, verifiable reductions
in all U.S. and Russian nuclear weapons.... [T]his process should
begin by securing Russia's agreement to extend essential monitoring
and verification provisions of START." Obama also pledged to
"immediately stand down all nuclear forces to be reduced under
the Moscow Treaty."
With START due to expire in less than a year, one of the first tasks
must be to begin talks with Moscow on a new START-plus deal that
achieves dramatically deeper reductions of U.S. and Russian nuclear
warheads, deployed and non-deployed, to 1,000 or less by 2012. If
necessary, the U.S. and Russian presidents should agree to extend
START until the new treaty comes into force.
To succeed, the new administration must adopt new approaches to
resolve key issues that have stalled progress. Russia has shown
interest in deeper reductions: less than 1,500 warheads each along
with specific limits on delivery systems.
Unfortunately, the Bush administration has rejected lower ceilings
on deployed warheads and further limitations on missiles and bombers.
To facilitate such reduction, Obama must direct the Pentagon and
other cabinet agencies to conduct a nuclear posture review based
on the principle that, so long as nuclear weapons exist, they shall
only serve the role of deterring the use of nuclear weapons by others.
Such a shift in thinking is long overdue. Two decades after the
end of the Cold War, there is no plausible reason for U.S. and Russian
leaders to maintain thousands of strategic nuclear weapons with
large numbers on high alert. Besides the United States and Russia,
no state possesses more than 300 nuclear warheads. China currently
only has about 20 nuclear-armed missiles capable of striking the
continental United States.
Dramatically deeper U.S.-Russian reductions would open the possibility
for the Obama team to fulfill another campaign pledge before the
end of the first term: "Initiating a high-level dialogue among
all the declared nuclear-weapon states on how to…move toward
meaningful reductions and the eventual elimination of all nuclear
weapons."
Missile Defense and CTBT
Early on, Obama will be faced with a decision about the future of
the Bush administration's plan to deploy strategic missile interceptors
in Poland and a supporting radar in the Czech Republic. Given that
Obama's policy is to "make sure any missile defense…has
been proven to work and has our allies' support before we deploy
it," the decision is easy. The new two-stage interceptor for
the European site has not yet been built and flight testing, which
can't begin until late 2009, would take several years to complete.
Czech legislators have not yet approved their role in the scheme
and many NATO members remain unconvinced, given that Iran is still
years away from successfully fielding a long-range missile.
Obama also pledged to "reach out to the Senate to secure the
ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) at the
earliest practical date and will then launch a diplomatic effort
to bring on board other states whose ratifications are required
for the treaty to enter into force." The CTBT remains a vital
disarmament and nonproliferation instrument. By prohibiting all
nuclear test explosions it impedes the ability of states possessing
nuclear weapons to field new and more deadly types of warheads,
while also helping to prevent the emergence of new nuclear-armed
states.
Given that it signed the CTBT and its test moratorium, the United
States bears most CTBT-related responsibilities. Yet, Washington's
failure to ratify has diminished its ability to prod other nations
to join the treaty and refrain from testing. At the same time, there
is no need — nor is there any political support — for
renewed U.S. testing for new nuclear warheads or for any other reason.
Roughly 60 senators already support ratification. Convincing two-thirds
of the Senate that the treaty is effectively verifiable and won't
compromise future efforts to maintain the shrinking U.S. nuclear
arsenal will be difficult but possible. To ensure success, Obama
should appoint a special senior CTBT coordinator, backed with substantial
interagency support and resources, who is solely focused on winning
necessary support in the Senate before the end of 2010.
Obama and his Senate allies must also avoid the temptation to pursue
unnecessary compromise measures that would undermine the purpose
of the test ban. Some have suggested adopting Bush's costly plan
for new, so-called "reliable" replacement warheads to
buy support from CTBT skeptics. Such an approach is unnecessary,
risky, and would contradict Obama's campaign pledge "not to
authorize the development of new nuclear weapons." The U.S.
capability to maintain existing stockpile warheads is more than
adequate. The production of a new generation of warheads could lead
to calls to test the new designs as well as undermining the chief
value of the CTBT to disarmament and the NPT, namely ending new
warhead development. If pursued, other states would see the United
States as circumventing the CTBT and conclude it is of little benefit.
Finally, in order to realize his pledge to lead a global effort
to "secure all nuclear weapons material at vulnerable sites
within four years," Obama should appoint a special high-level
coordinator to oversee government-wide efforts. This initiative
will require allocating significant additional funding — around
$500 million — for programs to end the commercial use of highly
enriched uranium and to accelerate and maintain nuclear material
security upgrades in Russian and sites in other countries.
The election of Barack Obama to the presidency represents a clear
mandate for change on a number of fronts, including transforming
outdated U.S. policy on nuclear weapons and reviving U.S. leadership
on disarmament and nonproliferation. The job now is to get the needed
support in Congress and the international arena.
Foreign Policy In Focus contributor Daryl G. Kimball
is executive director of the Washington-based Arms Control Association,
which produces the monthly journal, Arms Control Today. |