Bush-Putin Nuclear
Arms Cuts Are Not Enough
by David Krieger*, November 2001
Presidents Bush
and Putin announced jointly that their countries “have overcome
the legacy of the Cold War.” While the new cooperative relationship
between the US and Russia is to be applauded, what their Presidents
said and what was left unsaid about nuclear arms reductions still
resonated with Cold War logic.
President Bush announced that he would
be reducing the US arsenal of long-range nuclear weapons by two-thirds
from some 7,000 weapons to somewhere between 2,200 and 1,700 over
a ten-year period. President Putin said, “we will try to
respond in kind.” These cuts, which need to be viewed in
the context of the post Cold War world, will not make us two-thirds
safer.
It was Presidents Bush Sr. and Yeltsin that agreed
back in 1993 in the START II agreements to cut long-range nuclear
arsenals to 3,500 each by the beginning of 2003. Presidents Clinton
and Yeltsin moved this date back to the end of 2007, but also
agreed in principle to go beyond this in a next step to 2,500
long-range nuclear weapons in START III negotiations.
Since entering office, President Putin has let
it be known that he is prepared to reduce the long-range nuclear
arsenals of the two sides to 1,500 or less. Some of his aides
have said privately that President Putin was prepared to go down
to 1,000 or less. Chances are he still is prepared to move to
lower levels.
Still lower levels of nuclear armaments would be
consistent with leaving behind the legacy of the Cold War, while
improving the security of both countries. If the US and Russia
are no longer using these weapons to deter each other from attacking
(since there is no reason to do so), for what reason do they need
these weapons at all? It is widely understood that nuclear weapons
have no military utility other than deterrence, and even this
was shown to be ineffective in preventing terrorist attacks on
September 11th.
China has a minimal deterrent force of only some
500 weapons with only some 20 missiles capable of reaching the
United States. India and Pakistan also have small nuclear arsenals,
but surely they pose no threat to the US or Russia. The UK, France
and Israel also have small nuclear arsenals, but pose no threat
to either the US or Russia.
North Korea, Iran and Iraq have neither nuclear
weapons nor missiles with which to attack the US or Russia, and
they would certainly be foolish to do so, given the conventional
military power alone of these two countries.
The greatest danger posed to both countries is
not from each other or any other country. It is from terrorists,
but terrorists cannot be deterred by nuclear weapons. Certainly
this was one crucial lesson of September 11th.
The US and Russia need to ensure that nuclear weapons
do not fall into the hands of terrorists. The best way to do this
is to reduce the numbers of nuclear weapons in all states to a
level that can be controlled with certainty and to institute controls
on weapons-grade fissile materials.
To achieve such controls, which are truly in the
security interests of both countries, will require even deeper
cuts made with far more sense of urgency. Such cuts are necessary
to keep Russian “loose nukes” out of the hands of
terrorists and to demonstrate to the world the US and Russia are
truly committed to achieving the nuclear disarmament they promised
when they signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty more than
three decades ago.
Presidents Bush and Putin have also left some important
things unsaid in regard to nuclear arms. They have made no mention
of the continued high alert status of their nuclear weapons. Currently
each country has some 2,250 nuclear weapons on hair-trigger alert,
ready to be launched within moments of an order to do so. This
tempts fate unnecessarily, and could lead to an accidental nuclear
war.
Neither have the two Presidents made reference
to tactical nuclear weapons, the smaller battlefield nuclear weapons
that would be most likely to be used and that could most easily
fall into the hands of terrorists. Nor has President Bush made
mention of the serious implications for global stability if the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty is amended or abrogated, as the
US is seeking, to allow for the testing of space based weaponry.
President Bush has said that he is prepared to
reduce the US nuclear arsenal unilaterally, but this means that
it is also possible to reverse this decision unilaterally. Several
thousand US and Russian nuclear warheads will be dismantled in
the coming ten years, but their nuclear cores will presumably
be stored and available for reassembly on short notice. The decision
to reduce nuclear arsenals should be committed to writing and
made irreversible, such that the nuclear cores are unavailable
for future use and subsequent administrations in both countries
will be bound by the commitment.
In the year 2000, the parties to the nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty agreed that the principle of irreversibility should apply
to nuclear disarmament. The US and Russia also agreed, along with
the UK, France and China, to an “unequivocal undertaking…to
accomplish the total elimination of their nuclear arsenals.”
If the US and Russia truly want to prevent future
nuclear terrorism, this is the time for leadership to accomplish
the “total elimination” that has been promised. The
US and Russia are the only countries capable of providing this
leadership, but it is unlikely that they will do so unless pressed
by the American and Russian people. And this will only happen
if our peoples grasp the extent of the nuclear dangers that still
confront us.
We should not be lulled into thinking that reductions
of long-range nuclear weapons to 2,200 to 1,700 in ten years time
are sufficient. Such arsenals will continue to place at risk our
cities as well as civilization and most of life.
*David Krieger,
an attorney and political scientist, is President of the Nuclear
Age Peace Foundation.
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