
#7
Boston Globe
March 5, 2003
Moscow Treaty is full of holes
By John F. Kerry
John F. Kerry is a US senator from Massachusetts.
PRESIDENT BUSH claims that his Moscow Treaty ''will liquidate the legacy of
the Cold War'' by eliminating thousands of nuclear arms left over from a bygone
era when the United States and Russia faced each other across the nuclear
divide. In reality, it does no such thing. The treaty does not reduce the actual
number of nuclear forces -- it leaves these weapons and their lethal materials
stockpiled across Russia in constant danger of falling to terrorists or rogue
nations intent on doing great harm to the United States. Bush is correct that
our relationship with Russia should not be driven by Cold War anxieties. But
this hollow treaty misses an opportunity to address proliferation and lost or
loose nuclear weapons.
Despite its stated goal of reducing the number of US and Russian deployed
strategic nuclear warheads, the Moscow Treaty is missing the essential
components of a strong, enforceable, and meaningful agreement. It does not
require the destruction of missile launchers or the dismantlement of nuclear
warheads. It does not address the tactical nuclear weapons so sought after by
terrorists. It does not contain verification provisions.
The treaty's most dangerous weakness is the rejection of Ronald Reagan's
doctrine of ''trust but verify.'' The administration contends that verifying
compliance with the treaty is unnecessary given the new strategic relationship
with Russia. That view is shortsighted. Verification is a requirement to ensure
American security, even in nonadversarial relationships.
The central problem with the treaty is that it could increase the
opportunities for nuclear theft and terrorism by expanding Russian stockpiles of
nuclear materials.
It is no secret that there are those who are eager to capitalize on a deadly
market for nuclear materials held in unsecured facilities around the world. The
General Accounting Office has documented numerous failed attempts to smuggle
nuclear materials out of Russia. Out of 20 of these incidents over the last
decade, the materials involved in 13, and possibly 15, were traced back to
Russian sources. The potential consequences are undeniable. In October 2001, we
picked up warnings that terrorists had acquired a 10-kiloton nuclear bomb. If
detonated in New York City, hundreds of thousands of Americans would have died,
and most of Manhattan would have been destroyed.
If the war on terrorism is to be fought on all fronts, we should seek
verifiable reductions in Russia's nuclear arsenal and ensure the dismantlement
and destruction of its nuclear weapons and the secure storage of nuclear
materials.
It is troubling that this administration's approach to the menace of loose
nuclear materials is long on rhetoric but short on execution. It relies unwisely
on the threat of military preemption against terrorist organizations, which can
be defeated if they are found but will not be deterred by our military might.
We can make our world more secure. We must create mechanisms to help those
who would be responsible stewards but lack the financial and technical means to
succeed. We must establish worldwide standards for the security and safekeeping
of nuclear material and define a new standard of international legitimacy,
linking the stewardship of nuclear materials under universally accepted
protocols to acceptance in the community of nations. We must revitalize the
Cooperative Threat Reduction program by giving it the sustained leadership,
attention, and funding it deserves. Over the last decade, the United States has
spent about $7.5 billion to deactivate 6,000 warheads and destroy thousands of
delivery vehicles. We must make good on our pledge of $10 billion over 10 years
to the Group of Eight threat reduction partnership and encourage the good faith
participation of our allies.
But we can't stop there. A new diplomatic effort should be undertaken to fill
the holes in the Moscow Treaty. The United States and Russia should agree upon
transparency measures, data exchanges, on-site inspections, and eventually
eliminating excess strategic nuclear warheads and their delivery systems. We
must also work with Moscow on new arms control measures designed to eliminate
each nation's smaller, more portable, tactical nuclear weapons, thousands of
which remain in Russia.
The legacy of the Cold War is nuclear weapons. Today's danger is that these
weapons will wind up in the hands of terrorists or rogue nations. To
''liquidate'' this Cold War legacy in actions, not just words, will take more
than cosmetic treaties that leave Russia's nuclear arsenal in place.
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