Missile Defense
and the Maginot Line
By David Krieger*, February 2001
Following World War I, the French decided to build a line of defense
that would make them invulnerable to future attack by Germany.
They created a 400-mile stretch of defensive installations known
as the Maginot Line. It was considered quite high-tech for the
time, and the French took great pride in it. When the Germans
invaded and quickly defeated France in World War II, they simply
went around the Maginot Line. One wonders if there is a lesson
here that might apply to the current US plans to develop and deploy
a missile defense system to protect against ballistic missiles
launched by small hostile nations.
Imagine this scenario. The United States proceeds
with its plans to create a National Missile Defense system. The
system employs the latest technology considered capable of shooting
and destroying a ballistic missile launched at the United States.
The system costs some $100 to $200 billion that might have been
used to provide health care and education for America’s
youth. Nonetheless, proponents of the system are proud of their
accomplishment. They have built a defensive system that will protect
the United States against missile attacks by countries such as
North Korea, Iran and Iraq -- should these countries ever acquire
nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles capable of reaching the
United States.
Let’s further imagine that a decade into
the future Saddam Hussein succeeds in obtaining a few nuclear
warheads and a ballistic missile delivery system capable of reaching
the US. The proponents of the National Missile Defense system
feel justified in their vision because their system will protect
the US from a nuclear-armed missile attack by Saddam Hussein.
Now, Hussein may be belligerent, aggressive and hostile to the
United States, but he is not suicidal. He decides against attacking
an American city by means of a missile attack, which could be
traced back to him. Instead he arranges for a nuclear weapon to
be smuggled into the US by ship, truck or plane. Of course, only
a few trusted accomplices know that it is him who has made these
arrangements. In this modern-day Maginot Line-type scenario, a
determined enemy would simply go around the defense or, in this
case, under it.
In a different scenario, incoming missiles from
a potential enemy might go right through the missile shield. Many
experts believe that it will not be difficult to develop offensive
measures to overcome the defensive shield. MIT scientists Theodore
Postol and George Lewis write: “The Pentagon claims that
the warhead and the ineffective large balloon decoy it is testing
against are representative of the missile threat from an idealized
imagined adversary an adversary presumed to be capable of building
intercontinental range ballistic missiles, and nuclear warheads
that are sufficiently light and compact to be mounted on such
missiles, but at the same time so bungling as to be unable to
hide the warhead inside a Mylar balloon decoy released along with
empty balloons or to build warhead-shaped cone decoys.”
In other words, it is quite possible that after spending upwards
of $100 billion to create a missile defense, the shield will prove
to be ineffective against an adversary sophisticated enough to
develop decoys along with ballistic missiles and nuclear warheads.
Unfortunately, the fact that the planned National
Missile Defense is likely to be wasteful and ineffective is not
the worst of it. The truly dangerous aspect of moving forward
with deployment of missile defenses is what it will do to our
relations with Russia and China. Both countries are strongly opposed
to a US defensive shield because of their fear that it will create
a US first-strike potential. From the Russian and Chinese point
of view, the shield would allow the US to attack them in a surprise
first-strike, and then use the shield to destroy any of their
remaining missiles that might be launched at the US in response.
Their planners, like ours, must think in terms of worst-case scenarios.
In 1972 the US and the former Soviet Union entered
into a treaty, the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty, prohibiting
the development of a national missile defense. Both countries
understood that the development of defensive systems would further
spur offensive arms races, and that limitations on defense would
create the conditions necessary to reduce offensive nuclear arsenals.
The ABM Treaty has provided the basis for progress on nuclear
disarmament through the START I and II treaties.
The new US Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld,
has been dismissive of the ABM Treaty referring to it as “ancient
history,” and publicly suggesting that the treaty is no
longer relevant because the Soviet Union no longer exists. At
a recent meeting on European security policy in Munich, Rumsfeld,
referring to the ABM Treaty, stated: “It was a long time
ago that that treaty was fashioned. Technologies were noticeably
different. The Soviet Union, our partner in that agreement, doesn’t
exist any more.”
The Russians, however, continue to view this treaty
as the foundation of all current and future arms control agreements.
The Russian security chief, Sergei Ivanov, responded at the same
meeting, “Destruction of the ABM treaty, we are quite confident,
will result in the annihilation of the whole structure of strategic
stability and create prerequisites for a new arms race including
one in space.” Jacques Chirac, the President of France,
agrees, having stated that a US missile defense “cannot
fail to re-launch an arms race in the world.” This eventuality
stands in dramatic contrast to the Russian proposal by President
Putin to reduce nuclear arsenals to 1,500 strategic nuclear weapons
or below in START III negotiations.
Sha Zukang, the Director of the Chinese Foreign
Ministry’s Department of Arms Control and Disarmament, has
described the Chinese position on US missile defenses in this
way: “To defeat your defenses we’ll have to spend
a lot of money, and we don’t want to do this. But otherwise,
the United States will feel it can attack anyone at any time,
and that isn’t tolerable. We hope [America] will give this
up. If not, we’ll be ready.”
Thus, US plans for missile defenses are a high-stakes
game. While they aim at providing security against an improbable
future attack by a small nation, they antagonize the other major
nuclear powers in the world and are likely to lead to new arms
races. While this may be beneficial for weapons producers, it
is likely to undermine rather than enhance the security of people
everywhere, including Americans.
The United States agreed with more than 185 other
nations at the 2000 Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference
that it was necessary to preserve and strengthen the ABM Treaty
“as a cornerstone of strategic stability and as a basis
for further reductions of strategic offensive weapons.”
We also agreed, along with the other declared nuclear weapons
states to an “unequivocal undertaking” to achieve
the total elimination of nuclear weapons. By proceeding with plans
to deploy a National Missile Defense system, the US is turning
these promises made in the context of preventing nuclear proliferation
into empty rhetoric.
If the US is serious about keeping these promises
and achieving the elimination of nuclear weapons from the world,
it should take the following steps:
- Reaffirm its commitment to the 1972 ABM Treaty;
- Provide leadership in developing an effective
ballistic missile control regime to prevent the spread of this
technology;
- Continue negotiations with states of concern
such as North Korea in an effort to find solutions to outstanding
problems;
- Commence good faith negotiations to achieve
a Nuclear Weapons Convention requiring the phased elimination
of all nuclear weapons, with provisions for effective verification
and enforcement;
- Take steps to diminish the political importance
of nuclear weapons such as de-alerting nuclear weapons, separating
warheads from delivery vehicles, adopting clear policies of
No First Use of nuclear weapons, and ratifying the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty.
Security from nuclear threat does not reside in
building a Maginot Line in the Sky. Rather, it lies in making
the good faith efforts promised long ago to seek the total elimination
of nuclear weapons from the world. There is only one way to assure
that nuclear weapons will not be used again, and that is to abolish
them.
*David Krieger is the President
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
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