
#10
Vremya Novostei
No. 1
January 2003
RUSSIA NEEDS A TRANSPARENT DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME FOR
ITS STRATEGIC NUCLEAR FORCES
Some analysts predict that the ratification of the Strategic Offensive
Reductions Treaty signed by the presidents of Russia and the USA in May 2002 may
call for a compromise between Vladimir Putin and the State Duma. The December
17, 2002 closed session of the defence and foreign affairs committee partly
confirmed this forecast. The president forwarded to the State Duma a two-item
suggestion: to ratify the treaty and to enforce it as of its ratification, but
the deputies suggested a four-page list of conditions for withdrawal from the
treaty. A third variant provides for the approval of the president's draft
complemented with a State Duma resolution that will include the aforementioned
list.
A joint group of the defence and foreign ministries and the Foreign
Intelligence Service has been created and there will be closed hearings on the
ratification issue in January and open ones in February. There will be fierce
debates with unpredictable result. We asked Major-General Vladimir DVORKIN,
senior researcher of the Institute of World Economy and International Relations
of the Russian Academy of Sciences and an adviser for the PIR Centre, who had
headed the 4th Central Research Institute of the Defence Ministry until 2001, to
share his views on the issue.
The Strategic Reductions Treaty signed in Moscow is certainly a major
achievement of Russian diplomacy. It will maintain the strategic nuclear balance
between Russia (for whom nuclear forces are the last proof of its superpower
status) and the USA for 10-15 years at the least and ensure Russia a strategic
dialogue with the USA and a befitting place in the world.
On the other hand, the document signed in Moscow cannot be described as a
proper treaty. Washington made unprecedented concessions when it agreed to
regard as a treaty its own plans of the development of the strategic nuclear
triad, adopted more than six months before. Likewise, Moscow made public its
plans of maintaining its strategic nuclear forces at the level of 1,500 charges
in the future long before signing the treaty. In fact, the two presidents put
their signatures to their countries' unilateral programmes.
However, the importance of the new treaty must not be underrated. It freed
Russia from a number of limitations on the structure and composition of
strategic nuclear forces, allowing it to maintain strategic nuclear balance with
the USA at the level of roughly 2,000 warheads without additional outlays, but
mounting MIRVed warheads on ground-launched missiles. Russia can continue to
focus on the development of ground-based group of ICBMs (including their mobile
variant) as a cheaper, more effective and more easily controlled part of the
nuclear triad.
In conditions of growing strategic partnership and clear-cut policy of
integration with the West, adopted by the Russian president, a nuclear balance
with the USA underscores Russia's exceptional role in geopolitics and is an
insurance policy in case of unpredictable development of the military-political
situation. This is why the treaty should be ratified without procrastination.
The problem (during and after ratification) will boil down to a reasonable
use of possibilities afforded by the new treaty and the elaboration of a
rational and legally formalised programme of the development of the national
strategic nuclear forces. The thing is that the system of making strategic
decisions, including those bearing on the strategic nuclear forces, remains
moot. The presidential decree of 1998, which stipulated a balanced composition
of the strategic nuclear forces that would fit START-2 provisions, has not been
cancelled. In August 2000 the Russian Security Council approved a programme
which the media have criticised for the absence of any operational-strategic and
technical-economic substance.
That programme stipulated an accelerated reduction of ground-based ICBMs. It
was adopted to ensure the enforcement of START-2 and preserve the 1972 ABM
Treaty though specialists knew than neither had a future. When the USA withdrew
from the ABM treaty, the leadership of the Russian General Staff announced the
prolongation of the service life of MIRVed ICBMs, thus admitting gross strategic
mistakes made in the past. The question is, on the basis of which decisions,
resolutions or decrees should the Russian strategic nuclear forces develop
today? How should these decisions be substantiated? The law on the ratification
of the strategic offensive reductions treaty could provide the answer.
To ensure reliable deterrence of the potential adversary, Russia needs a
transparent programme of the development of its strategic nuclear forces that
would be adequate to the arising situation. The US nuclear policy and programmes
could provide an example in this sense because the USA always knows the number
and characteristics of ICBMs, missile submarines, SLBMs and strategic bombers it
would have. The nuclear programmes of Britain and France are also transparent.
Of the official members of the nuclear club, only Russia and China keep their
nuclear programmes secret. So, the question is: Are we moving east or west?
The reasons for this closeness of Russia can be explained not only by the
traditional secrecy (which is frequently not just useless but also harmful,
especially in the case of strategic nuclear forces, though their ability to play
the role of detergent should be apparent to everyone). Another reason is the
unwillingness to put the development programme of the strategic nuclear forces
on display and thus make it vulnerable to professional criticism.
Only recently, the programmes of the strategic nuclear forces, orbital groups
and such like were elaborated by expert commissions that consisted of chief
designers, key military specialists and leading scientists. The latest programme
of strategic nuclear forces, approved by the president in 1998, was elaborated
by an expert commission led by Academician Nikolai Laverov, vice-president of
the Russian Academy of Sciences. And the development programme for the orbital
group was elaborated by a similar commission led by Academician Yevgeny Velikhov.
This practice should be resumed, so that the basic provisions of a programme
approved by the president and adjusted to new conditions would be made public.
It would be also expedient to focus our attention back on the ground-based
MIRVed ICBMs and to retarget the bulk of strategic bombers to non-nuclear tasks.
This would enable us not just to maintain a stable nuclear balance but also to
reinforce the weakened general-purpose conventional forces and to keep cruise
missiles in reserve, for potential use in case of unpredictable developments in
the military-political situation, just as the USA plans to do.
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