
#7
Nezavisimaya Gazeta
December 19, 2002
ARMS RACE RENEWED
The US and Russia seem to have launched a new arms race
Author: Sergey Sokut
[from WPS Monitoring Agency, www.wps.ru/e_index.html]
PRESIDENT BUSH HAS ANNOUNCED PLANS FOR A GLOBAL MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEM.
ALTHOUGH TECHNICALLY THIS SYSTEM IS A MATTER OF THE REMOTE FUTURE, RUSSIA IS
ALREADY MAKING PLANS TO RESTORE THE STRATEGIC NUCLEAR BALANCE. IT HAS CHANGED
ITS NUCLEAR MISSILE PROGRAMS TO RAISE THE NUMBER OF WARHEADS.
President George W. Bush has officially announced plans for a missile defense
system meant to protect the US, as well as its friends and allies. The statement
of President Bush contains a number of fundamentally new elements.
First, it is clear that it is dictated by purely political considerations, as
technically the system is not ready to be deployed that soon. This, for example,
was shown by a recent failure test of the system's experimental segment.
Second, the president's statement implies the US is by no means creating a
"national missile defense", but a global comprehensive system which in
future must cover every area on the planet where ballistic missiles threaten
America's interests. Washington is not going to confine itself to the most
missile-dangerous - North Asian - direction. This is said by the address to the
UK and Denmark which are wished to give consent for using the facilities
existing on their territories in behalf of the missile defense system.
Announcing the missile defense system deployment, Bush demonstrated that the
US is not going to adjust or even discuss with Moscow its steps in the missile
defense area. It is not by chance that aide of the Russian president Marshal
Sergeyev said yesterday that Russia was not provided "any weighty arguments
that the missile defense system deployment will not lead to decline in the
efficiency of Russia's strategic nuclear forces".
The official response of Russia's Foreign Ministry was restrained and boiled
down to expressing "regret" in connection with "the activation of
the US attempts to create the so-called "global missile defense".
However, analysis of the real steps of the two sides shows that, evading public
confrontation which would be out of place against the background of joint fight
with terrorism, Washington and Moscow launched a new round of arms race about a
year ago.
Such conclusions can in particular be drawn from the development plans of the
Strategic Missile Troops (SMT) which this week have been made public by
Colonel-General Nikolay Solovtsov, commander of this combat arm that makes the
basis of Russia's nuclear forces (3,115 out of 5,517 warheads). These plans most
drastically disagree with the decisions made in 2000. Bitter debate between
Defense Minister Igor Sergeyev and Chief of the General Staff Anatoly Kvashnin
entailed then a decision on a radical reduction of the SMT. In particular, it
was assumed to completely liquidate or disarm multiple-charge missiles. The
program which is accomplished currently notably exceeds Sergeyev's maximal
version.
No missile or warhead will be liquidated before their warranty periods
expires, General Solovtsov says. At the same time, these periods will be
maximally increased. Heavy RS-20 missiles (SS-18 "Satan" according to
the western classification) will remain in arsenals until 2015-2020. Owing to
their 10 warheads with individual guidance, these missiles are the most
effective means to overcome that missile defense system which the US will be
able to deploy in the remote future. The present plan yields the previous one
only in the rates of putting new Topol-M missiles into operational deployment
(6- 10 missiles a year instead of 10-20).
Moscow is not even confused with the fact that the plans to preserve
multiple-charge missiles in its arsenals will have to be adjusted with the
obligations for the Treaty on Strategic Offensive Reductions. That document
prescribes to have 1700-2200 strategic nuclear warheads by December 2012.
Meanwhile, 1480 and 900 warheads are deployed only at the multiple-charge RS-20
and RS-18 ICBMs respectively. In theory, at least half of them can be preserved
by 2012.
It is of interest that the real strategy of the two sides that claim
partnership and even allied relations was made public practically
simultaneously, which is hardly a simple coincidence.
To close the topic, which, no doubt, is yet to be discussed in every aspect,
let's ask ourselves a question: why did Russia announce unilateral cuts in
2000-01, in the period of bargaining with Americans over the ABM and START
treaties, but after the case has been lost it is now trying to restore the
cracked strategic balance? Or is the point really that the debates of 2000 were
invented only for the sake of fighting for top jobs in the Armed Forces?
(Translated by P. Pikhnovsky )
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