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#5 - RW 273
RIA Novosti
September 11, 2003
PREVENTIVE USE OF FORCE JUSTIFIED
Vladimir Dvorkin, Major General (ret.)
Despite the fact that world's leading powers constantly monitor proliferation
of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and their delivery systems, hundreds of
cases of violations and suspected violations of the non-proliferation regime are
registered every year around the world.
At present, more than 15 countries of the "third world" have at
their disposal and develop ballistic missiles of various ranges. The number of
such countries is constantly growing, and the most worrisome among them are
those situated in unstable regions of the world: North Korea, India, Pakistan,
Israel, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Libya and Egypt. For many of these countries,
ballistic missiles are the instrument of waging wars, a solid addition to combat
capabilities of conventional armed forces. Other countries consider ballistic
missiles as a deterrent, as a status quo symbol or a means of blackmailing their
neighbors.
The proliferation of long-range ballistic missiles, capable of delivering WMD
to designated targets, leads to changes in the strategic situation in the Middle
East and in Asia, and threatens a growing number of locations in these regions.
One of the most urgent threats is the close connection between
missile-development programs and research in the sphere of WMD. All research
work on the development of advanced ballistic missiles and the increase of their
range conducted in "rogue" countries worries experts all around the
world.
The danger lies not just in the threat of preventive nuclear strikes on the
territory of a neighboring country. After all, any dictator clearly realizes
that as a result of immediate retaliation he would lose everything once and for
all. In the mean time, for any dictator, possession of nuclear arsenal is the
key factor ensuring the stability of his regime under external pressure. We
should not exclude the possibility that the change of regime in Iraq through use
of force might force similar regimes to expedite frantically their efforts to
acquire WMD, primarily, nuclear weapons.
All these facts require the world community to provide an adequate response
to the threats posed by totalitarian regimes that seek nuclear weapons. The
world community is also aware of the three inter-related challenges to global
security: totalitarian regimes possessing or seeking WMD and their delivery
systems, which provoke regional conflicts; a hardly contained proliferation of
WMD and their delivery systems; and, finally, international terrorism.
All these threats are coming from totalitarian regimes. The danger is
increased significantly when such weapons end up in the hands of transnational
terrorist organizations that rely on support of these regimes. Moreover, only
the support of "rogue" regimes, where WMD labs, terrorist training
camps, medical and R&R centers are located, makes these organizations stable
structures. At the same time, terrorist organizations seeking acquisition of WMD
are not subjects of international policy and cannot be influenced by purely
political or diplomatic means. In such circumstances, the only way of destroying
such organizations could be preventive use of force.
I believe that the forms of such counteraction might vary and they should not
be limited to full-scale military operations against "rogue" regimes.
For example, in summer of 2002, before the beginning of the UN discussions on
Iraqi issue, thirty influential independent U.S. analysts suggested an
alternative way of destroying Iraqi WMD arsenal with the use of the so-called
compulsory inspections. The plan provided for inspections conducted with support
of air-transported mobile groups from the international contingent, at any
facility and at any time, for as long as necessary. It also allowed
disassembling or destroying any WMD facilities discovered in the course of
inspections.
Compulsory inspections also could have been conducted in other
"rogue" countries in accordance with UN resolutions. They could have
been supported by means of advanced instrumental reconnaissance and
international forces deployed near the borders of totalitarian regimes. Later,
such suggestions were voiced in Russia, by Mr. Yavlinski in particular. If such
an alternative way had been adopted, we would have had a chance to disarm Iraq
without conducting a full-scale military operation. However, nobody in Russia or
the United States, which had already decided to invade Iraq without the UN
resolution by that time, paid any attention to these suggestions.
One of the preventive measures of G8 countries and the UN Security Council
could be the legitimization of compulsory UN inspections supported by
international forces of varied strength and entrusted with monitoring the
adherence to the non-proliferation regime. The procedures for such inspections
might be extended to include terrorist training camps and centers of
international terrorism.
It certainly seems to be the sound method of neutralizing possible violations
of the international non-proliferation regime. Overall, we have to admit that it
is impossible to stave off WMD threat coming from totalitarian regimes or
international terrorism by purely defensive measures. Only preventive measures
implying in certain cases the use of force can be effective. Instead of simply
reacting on catastrophic outcome of terrorist actions, we need to develop a
coordinated strategy aimed at compulsory disarmament, change of regimes,
suppression of terrorist centers without violation of territorial integrity of
countries that harbor them.
For Russia, which does not have any other alternative but to pursue
military-political and economic integration with the West, it would have been
beneficial, indeed, to become one of the leaders of preventive counteraction to
totalitarian regimes, instead of positioning itself sometimes too close to
dictators, following the principle "he is a scoundrel, but at least he is
on our side."
CDI Russia Weekly #273 ~ Contents
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