The Crawford Summit
by David Krieger, November 2001
Presidents Bush and Putin will be meeting at the
Bush ranch in Crawford, Texas from November 13-15 at what has
been billed as the Crawford Summit. One major purpose of this
summit is to discuss reductions in nuclear arsenals. For a few
years the Russians have been calling for reducing US and Russian
nuclear arsenals to 1,500 or less strategic nuclear weapons. The
US has said that it needs to evaluate its nuclear posture, and
is now in the process of doing so.
President Bush has said that he wants to move forward
with reductions in nuclear arsenals, but he has tried to tie these
reductions to Russian agreement on amending the Anti Ballistic
Missile (ABM) Treaty to allow the US to conduct missile defense
tests that are currently banned by the ABM Treaty. In other words,
President Bush has been using reductions in nuclear arsenals as
a bargaining chip to gain Russian assent to amending the ABM Treaty.
Perhaps it is not yet clear to President Bush that
significant reductions in the Russian nuclear arsenal will make
the US safer. In fact, leadership by the US and Russia to eliminate
all nuclear weapons, as they are obligated to do in the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, would be strongly in the interests of
both countries as well as the world at large.
Why is the US so eager to amend the ABM Treaty?
I would suggest that there are three major reasons. First, the
US wants to use theater missile defenses to protect its forward
based forces throughout the world. This will give the United States
greater degrees of freedom to use its military troops anywhere
in the world without concern that US bases and troops will be
vulnerable to missile attacks in response.
Second, the US wants to weaponize outer space and
wants to be rid of Article V, Section 1 of the ABM Treaty in which
each party to the treaty "undertakes not to develop, test,
or deploy ABM systems or components which are sea-based, air-based,
space-based or mobile land-based." The US views missile defenses
as a way to develop and test space based weaponry.
Third, amending the ABM Treaty will allow the US
to transfer billions of taxpayer dollars to defense industries
to develop, test and deploy missile defenses -- defenses that
have little potential for actually protecting Americans from either
major threats such as terrorism or virtually non-existent threats
such as missile attacks from so-called rogue states.
If the Russians do not go along with an amendment
to the ABM Treaty, the Bush administration has already announced
that it plans to withdraw from the treaty a treaty that Vladimir
Putin as well as most of our allies throughout the world consider
the cornerstone of strategic stability.
US withdrawal from the ABM Treaty would be viewed
throughout the world as a symbol of US arrogance and unilateralism.
It would certainly have negative effects on our ability to hold
together a coalition against terrorism, on future cooperative
efforts with Russia and China, and on the prospects for nuclear
disarmament.
*David Krieger is President
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
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