Once upon a time, when choosing a new president, a
factor for many voters was the perennial question: “Whose finger do you want on
the nuclear button?” Of all the responsibilities of America’s top executive,
none may be more momentous than deciding whether, and under what circumstances,
to activate the “nuclear codes” -- the secret alphanumeric messages that would
inform missile officers in silos and submarines that the fearful moment had
finally arrived to launch their intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs)
toward a foreign adversary, igniting a thermonuclear war.
Until recently in the post-Cold War world, however,
nuclear weapons seemed to drop from sight, and that question along with it. Not
any longer. In 2016, the nuclear issue is back big time, thanks both to the
rise of Donald Trump (including various unsettling comments he’s made about nuclear weapons) and actual
changes in the global nuclear landscape.
With passions running high on both sides in this
year’s election and rising fears about Donald Trump’s impulsive nature and
Hillary Clinton’s hawkish one, it’s hardly surprising that the “nuclear button”
question has surfaced repeatedly throughout the campaign. In one of the
more pointed exchanges of the first presidential debate, Hillary Clinton
declared that Donald Trump lacked the mental composure for the job. “A
man who can be provoked by a tweet,” she commented, “should not have his fingers anywhere near the
nuclear codes.” Donald Trump has reciprocated by charging that Clinton is
too prone to intervene abroad. “You’re going to end up in World War III over
Syria,” he told reporters in Florida last month.
For most election observers, however, the matter of
personal character and temperament has dominated discussions of the nuclear
issue, with partisans on each side insisting that the other candidate is
temperamentally unfit to exercise control over the nuclear codes. There
is, however, a more important reason to worry about whose finger will be on
that button this time around: at this very moment, for a variety of reasons,
the “nuclear threshold” -- the point at which some party to a “conventional”
(non-nuclear) conflict chooses to employ atomic weapons -- seems to be moving dangerously lower.
Not so long ago, it was implausible that a major
nuclear power -- the United States, Russia, or China -- would consider using
atomic weapons in any imaginable conflict scenario. No longer.
Worse yet, this is likely to be our reality for years to come, which means that
the next president will face a world in which a nuclear decision-making point
might arrive far sooner than anyone would have thought possible just a year or
two ago -- with potentially catastrophic consequences for us all.
No less worrisome, the major nuclear powers (and some
smaller ones) are all in the process of acquiring new
nuclear arms, which could, in theory, push that threshold lower still.
These include a variety of cruise missiles and other delivery systems capable
of being used in “limited” nuclear wars -- atomic conflicts that, in theory at
least, could be confined to just a single country or one area of the world
(say, Eastern Europe) and so might be even easier for decision-makers to
initiate. The next president will have to decide whether the U.S. should
actually produce weapons of this type and also what measures should be taken in
response to similar decisions by Washington’s likely adversaries.
Lowering the Nuclear Threshold
During the dark days of the Cold War, nuclear
strategists in the United States and the Soviet Union conjured up elaborate
conflict scenarios in which military actions by the two superpowers and their
allies might lead from, say, minor skirmishing along the Iron Curtain to
full-scale tank combat to, in the end, the use of “battlefield” nuclear
weapons, and then city-busting versions of the same to avert defeat. In
some of these scenarios, strategists hypothesized about wielding “tactical” or
battlefield weaponry -- nukes powerful enough to wipe out a major tank
formation, but not Paris or Moscow -- and claimed that it would be possible to
contain atomic warfare at such a devastating but still sub-apocalyptic
level. (Henry Kissinger, for instance, made his reputation by preaching
this lunatic doctrine in his first book, Nuclear Weapons and Foreign
Policy.) Eventually, leaders on both sides concluded that the only
feasible role for their atomic arsenals was to act as deterrents to the use of
such weaponry by the other side. This was, of course, the concept of “mutually assured destruction,” or -- in one of the most classically apt acronyms
of all times: MAD. It would, in the end, form the basis for all
subsequent arms control agreements between the two superpowers.
Anxiety over the escalatory potential of tactical
nuclear weapons peaked in the 1970s when the Soviet Union began deploying the SS-20 intermediate-range
ballistic missile (capable of striking cities in Europe, but not the U.S.) and
Washington responded with plans to deploy nuclear-armed, ground-launched cruise
missiles and the Pershing-II ballistic missile in Europe. The
announcement of such plans provoked massive antinuclear demonstrations across
Europe and the United States. On December 8, 1987, at a time when worries
had been growing about how a nuclear conflagration in Europe might trigger an
all-out nuclear exchange between the superpowers, President Ronald Reagan and
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev signed the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty.
That historic agreement -- the first to eliminate an
entire class of nuclear delivery systems -- banned the deployment of
ground-based cruise or ballistic missiles with a range of 500 and 5,500
kilometers and required the destruction of all those then in existence.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Russian Federation inherited the
USSR’s treaty obligations and pledged to uphold the INF along with other
U.S.-Soviet arms control agreements. In the view of most observers, the
prospect of a nuclear war between the two countries practically vanished as
both sides made deep cuts in their atomic stockpiles in accordance with already
existing accords and then signed others, including the New START,
the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty of 2010.
Today, however, this picture has changed
dramatically. The Obama administration has concluded that
Russia has violated the INF treaty by testing a ground-launched cruise missile
of prohibited range, and there is reason to believe that, in the
not-too-distant future, Moscow might abandon that treaty altogether. Even
more troubling, Russia has adopted a military doctrine that favors the early
use of nuclear weapons if it faces defeat in a conventional war, and NATO is
considering comparable measures in response. The nuclear threshold, in
other words, is dropping rapidly.
Much of this is due, it seems, to Russian fears about its military inferiority vis-à-vis the
West. In the chaotic years following the collapse of the USSR, Russian
military spending plummeted and the size and quality of its forces diminished
accordingly. In an effort to restore Russia's combat capabilities,
President Vladimir Putin launched a multi-year, multi-billion-dollar expansion
and modernization program. The fruits of this effort were apparent in the
Crimea and Ukraine in 2014, when Russian forces, however disguised, demonstrated better
fighting skills and wielded better weaponry than in the Chechnya wars a decade
earlier. Even Russian analysts acknowledge, however, that their military
in its current state would be no match for American and NATO forces in a
head-on encounter, given the West’s superior array of conventional
weaponry. To fill the breach, Russian strategic doctrine now calls for the
early use of nuclear weapons to offset an enemy’s superior conventional forces.
To put this in perspective, Russian leaders ardently
believe that they are the victims of a U.S.-led drive by NATO to encircle their
country and diminish its international influence. They point, in
particular, to the build-up of
NATO forces in the Baltic countries, involving the semi-permanent deployment of
combat battalions in what was once the territory of the Soviet Union, and in
apparent violation of promises made
to Gorbachev in 1990 that NATO would not do so. As a result, Russia has
been bolstering its defenses in areas bordering Ukraine and the Baltic states,
and training its
troops for a possible clash with the NATO forces stationed there.
This is where the nuclear threshold enters the
picture. Fearing that it might be defeated in a future clash, its military
strategists have called for the early use of tactical nuclear weapons, some of
which no doubt would violate the INF Treaty, in order to decimate NATO forces
and compel them to quit fighting. Paradoxically, in Russia, this is
labeled a “de-escalation” strategy, as resorting to strategic nuclear attacks
on the U.S. under such circumstances would inevitably result in Russia’s
annihilation. On the other hand, a limited nuclear strike (so the
reasoning goes) could potentially achieve success on the battlefield without
igniting all-out atomic war. As Eugene Rumer of the Carnegie Endowment of
International Peace explains, this strategy assumesthat such
supposedly “limited” nuclear strikes “will have a sobering effect on the enemy,
which will then cease and desist.”
To what degree tactical nuclear weapons have been
incorporated into Moscow’s official military doctrine remains unknown, given
the degree of secrecy surrounding such matters. It is apparent, however,
that the Russians have been developing the means with which to conduct such
“limited” strikes. Of greatest concern to Western analysts in this regard
is their deployment of the Iskander-M short-range ballistic missile, a modern version
of the infamous Soviet-era “Scud” missile (used by Saddam Hussein’s forces during the
Iran-Iraq war of 1980-1988 and the Persian Gulf War of 1990-1991). Said
to have a range of 500 kilometers (just within the INF limit), the Iskander can
carry either a conventional or a nuclear warhead. As a result, a targeted
country or a targeted military could never be sure which type it might be
facing (and might simply assume the worst). Adding to such worries, the
Russians have deployed the
Iskander in Kaliningrad, a tiny chunk of Russian territory wedged between
Poland and Lithuania that just happens to put it within range of many western
European cities.
In response, NATO strategists have discussed lowering
the nuclear threshold themselves, arguing -- ominously enough -- that the
Russians will only be fully dissuaded from employing their limited-nuclear-war
strategy if they know that NATO has a robust capacity to do the same. At
the very least, what’s needed, some of them claim, is a
more frequent inclusion of nuclear-capable or dual-use aircraft in exercises on
Russia’s frontiers to “signal” NATO’s willingness to resort to limited nuclear
strikes, too. Again, such moves are not yet official NATO strategy, but
it’s clear that senior officials are weighing them seriously.
Just how all of this might play out in a European
crisis is, of course, unknown, but both sides in an increasingly edgy standoff
are coming to accept that nuclear weapons might have a future military role,
which is, of course, a recipe for almost unimaginable escalation and disaster
of an apocalyptic sort. This danger is likely to become more pronounced
in the years ahead because both Washington and Moscow seem remarkably intent on
developing and deploying new nuclear weapons designed with just such needs in
mind.
The New Nuclear Armaments
Both countries are already in the midst of ambitious
and extremely costly efforts to “modernize” their nuclear arsenals. Of all the weapons now
being developed, the two generating the most anxiety in terms of that nuclear
threshold are a new Russian ground-launched cruise missile (GLCM) and an
advanced U.S. air-launched cruise missile (ALCM). Unlike ballistic
missiles, which exit the Earth’s atmosphere before returning to strike their
targets, such cruise missiles remain within the atmosphere throughout their
flight.
American officials claim that the Russian GLCM,
reportedly now being deployed, is of a type outlawed by the INF Treaty.
Without providing specifics, the State Department indicated in
a 2014 memo that it had “a range capability of 500 km [kilometers] to 5,500
km,” which would indeed put it in violation of that treaty by allowing Russian
combat forces to launch nuclear warheads against cities throughout Europe and
the Middle East in a “limited” nuclear war.
The GLCM is likely to prove one of the most vexing
foreign policy issues the next president will face. So far, the White
House has been reluctant to press Moscow too hard, fearing that the Russians
might respond by exiting the INF Treaty altogether and so eliminate remaining
constraints on its missile program. But many in Congress and among
Washington’s foreign policy elite are eager to see the
next occupant of the Oval Office take a tougher stance if the Russians don’t
halt deployment of the missile, threatening Moscow with more severe economic
sanctions or moving toward countermeasures like the deployment of enhanced
anti-missile systems in Europe. The Russians would, in turn, undoubtedly
perceive such moves as threats to their strategic deterrent forces and so an
invitation for further weapons acquisitions, setting off a fresh round in the
long-dormant Cold War nuclear arms race.
On the American side, the weapon of immediate concern
is a new version of
the AGM-86B air-launched cruise missile, usually carried by B-52 bombers.
Also known as the Long-Range Standoff Weapon (LRSO), it is, like the
Iskander-M, expected to be deployed in both nuclear and conventional versions,
leaving those on the potential receiving end unsure what might be heading their
way. In other words, as with the Iskander-M, the intended target might
assume the worst in a crisis, leading to the early use of nuclear
weapons. Put another way, such missiles make for twitchy trigger fingers and are likely to lead to a heightened risk of
nuclear war, which, once started, might in turn take Washington and Moscow
right up the escalatory ladder to a planetary holocaust.
No wonder former Secretary of Defense William J. Perry called on President
Obama to cancel the ALCM program in a recent Washington Post op-ed
piece. “Because they... come in both nuclear and conventional variants,” he
wrote, “cruise missiles are a uniquely destabilizing type of weapon.” And this
issue is going to fall directly into the lap of the next president.
The New Nuclear Era
Whoever is elected on November 8th, we are evidently
all headed into a world in which Trumpian-style itchy trigger fingers could be
the norm. It already looks like both Moscow and Washington will contribute
significantly to this development -- and they may not be alone. In response to
Russian and American moves in the nuclear arena, China is reported to be
developing a “hypersonic glide vehicle,” a new type of nuclear warhead better able to evade
anti-missile defenses -- something that, at a moment of heightened crisis,
might make a nuclear first strike seem more attractive to Washington. And don’t
forget Pakistan, which is developing its
own short-range “tactical” nuclear missiles, increasing the risk of the quick
escalation of any future Indo-Pakistani confrontation to a nuclear exchange.
(To put such “regional” dangers in perspective, a local nuclear war in South
Asia could cause a global nuclear winter and, according to one study,
possibly kill a billion people worldwide, thanks to crop failures and the
like.)
And don’t forget North Korea, which is now testing a
nuclear-armed ICBM, the Musudan, intended to strike the Western United
States. That prompted a controversial decision in
Washington to deploy THAAD (Terminal High Altitude Area Defense)
anti-missile batteries in South Korea (something China bitterly opposes), as well
as the consideration of other countermeasures, including undoubtedly scenarios
involving first strikes against the North Koreans.
It’s clear that we’re on the threshold of a new
nuclear era: a time when the actual use of atomic weapons is being accorded
greater plausibility by military and political leaders globally, while war
plans are being revised to allow the use of such weapons at an earlier stage in
future armed clashes.
As a result, the next president will have to grapple
with nuclear weapons issues -- and possible nuclear crises -- in a way unknown
since the Cold War era. Above all else, this will require both a cool
head and a sufficient command of nuclear matters to navigate competing
pressures from allies, the military, politicians, pundits, and the foreign
policy establishment without precipitating a nuclear conflagration. On
the face of it, that should disqualify Donald Trump. When questioned on
nuclear issues in the first debate, he exhibited a
striking ignorance of the most basic aspects of nuclear policy. But even
Hillary Clinton, for all her experience as secretary of state, is likely to
have a hard time grappling with the pressures and dangers that are likely to
arise in the years ahead, especially given that her inclination is to toughen
U.S. policy toward Russia.
In other words, whoever enters the Oval Office, it may
be time for the rest of us to take up those antinuclear signs long left to
molder in closets and memories, and put some political pressure on leaders
globally to avoid strategies and weapons that would make human life on this
planet so much more precarious than it already is.
Michael T. Klare, a TomDispatch regular, is a professor of peace and world security studies
at Hampshire College and the author, most recently, of The Race for What’s Left. A documentary movie version of his book Blood and Oil is available from the Media
Education Foundation. Follow him on Twitter at @mklare1.
Copyright 2016 Michael T. Klare
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.