
#9
Baltimore Sun
January 17, 2002
Playing numbers game with nuclear force cuts
By Ivo H. Daalder and James M. Lindsay
Ivo H. Daalder and James M. Lindsay are senior fellows in foreign policy
studies at the Brookings Institution.
WASHINGTON -- President Bush announced a widely praised decision in November
to unilaterally slash the size of the U.S. strategic nuclear arsenal.
His proposal, which would cut the number of U.S. warheads from 7,000 weapons
today to between 1,700 and 2,200 warheads a decade from now, was intended to
fulfill his campaign promise to "leave the Cold War behind."
Two months later, the bloom is coming off the Bush plan.
Just last week, the Pentagon made public the main conclusions of the yearlong
classified review it undertook to fill in the details of Mr. Bush's vision.
According to this Nuclear Posture Review, the administration wants to save
rather than scrap many, if not most, of the 5,000 weapons scheduled for
retirement.
Even when Mr. Bush first announced his plan, there were signs that the 1,700
- 2,200 figures were misleading.
To generate these numbers, Mr. Bush abandoned the longstanding rules used to
count warheads. Weapons on systems being inspected or refurbished -- and thus
not capable of actually being delivered -- no longer show up in the overall
tally. Because at any given moment roughly 400 warheads are on systems that are
off-line, Mr. Bush's target is actually slightly higher than the 2,000-2,500
level that President Bill Clinton proposed going to five years ago.
The Nuclear Posture Review also makes clear that the administration is
slowing down previous plans to retire weapons.
The 1993 START II agreement, which the elder George Bush negotiated but which
never went into effect, called for the United States and Russia to cut their
arsenals to between 3,000 and 3,500 weapons apiece by 2007. The Pentagon now
expects to have 3,800 operational weapons -- or about 4,200 weapons, using
traditional counting rules -- in 2007. So five years from now, the younger Mr.
Bush plans to have the United States deploy between 700 and 1,200 more warheads
than his father did.
Most important, the Nuclear Posture Review confirms that most -- the exact
number is still undecided -- of the retired warheads will not be destroyed.
Rather, many will be placed in a "responsive force" that will enable
the United States to return them to operation in weeks or months, if needed.
Others will be placed in the inactive stockpile. So cutting weapons doesn't mean
eliminating them.
Administration officials defend the decision to save warheads rather than
scrap them on the grounds that no arms control treaty actually required the
United States to destroy individual warheads. This is an odd defense given the
administration's disdain for arms control and its belief that the U.S.-Russian
relationship has changed fundamentally.
More broadly, the administration justifies the responsive force on the
grounds that the world is a dangerous and dynamic place and new threats could
arise at any moment. The only sensible way to respond to such danger and
uncertainty is to maximize America's flexibility.
The problem with this flexibility is that it can help create the very
circumstances it is designed to protect against. If Washington reserves the
right to rearm, so will Russia.
Perhaps the administration is right that our new friendship with Moscow is
permanent -- though it is unclear how we can be certain of this if the world is
in fact unpredictable. But are we really safer with thousands of Russian
warheads sitting in storage facilities vulnerable to theft?
Further complicating matters is the administration's commitment to defending
America against missile attack. Combining missile defenses with a large, active
and responsive nuclear force could be provocative. Russia, and even more so,
China, might conclude that Washington is seeking a first-strike capability that
it can use to coerce them. This might prompt Moscow to keep more of its own
weapons deployed. Beijing is likely to respond by expanding its own missile
forces.
It is not too late for Mr. Bush to fashion a nuclear weapons policy that
truly leaves the Cold War behind. As he has said repeatedly, Washington and
Moscow are friends, not enemies. No one worries about the British and French
strategic arsenals, and China possesses only two dozen long-range missiles.
So Mr. Bush should think in bolder terms. He should work with Moscow to
reduce each side's offensive forces to 1,000 weapons or less -- and scrap the
rest. The prospect of tens, let alone hundreds, of weapons exploding on one's
territory is sufficient to deter anyone. And he should accept Russia's offer to
conclude a legally binding treaty to make these truly radical cuts irreversible.
The Cold War ended more than a decade ago. The time has come for making sure
our nuclear force posture reflects that reality.
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