The President's
Other Two Wars
by David Krieger*, January 2002
During his first year in office, George W. Bush
has engaged in three wars. His war against terrorism is widely
known and discussed. His resolve to fight against evildoers with
America’s military might is said to have defined his presidency.
The president’s other two wars have received
far less attention, but they may end up defining his presidency
even more than his war against terrorism. These are his war against
international law and his war against the international control
of armaments.
In the war against international law, the president
has shown remarkable boldness in his disdain for the remainder
of the international community. He has pulled out of the Kyoto
Accords on Global Warming, perhaps the most critical environmental
treaty of our time. He has also demonstrated his contempt for
the creation of an International Criminal Court that would hold
individuals accountable for the types of serious international
crimes that were prosecuted by the United States at Nuremberg
following World War II.
The president’s war against the international
control of armaments, however, has been his most successful undertaking.
In one area of arms control after another, he has demonstrated
that he plans to chart the course of US unilateralism when it
comes to decisions on controlling armaments.
He has made clear that he does not intend to resubmit
the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) to the Senate for ratification.
When the CTBT came up at the 2001 United Nations General Assembly,
the US was the only country to vote against carrying over an item
supporting the treaty to the next session of the General Assembly.
The president has also requested studies from
the Pentagon on the possible resumption of nuclear testing. When
the parties to the CTBT met last November to discuss ways to bring
the Treaty into force more rapidly, the US did not even bother
to show up and participate.
Mr. Bush has opposed signing the International
Treaty to Ban Landmines, despite the solid international support
to ban these weapons that go on killing civilians long after the
soldiers have left a war zone. At a UN conference on small arms,
the US blocked key provisions to stem the illegal traffic in small
arms, those most used in combat. The US also torpedoed a six-year
effort to create a Protocol to the Biological Weapons Convention
that would allow for verification procedures including on-site
inspections.
The president’s boldest act, however, in
his war against the international control of armaments was his
announcement that the US is withdrawing from the Anti-Ballistic
Missile (ABM) Treaty. Despite Russian opposition to taking this
step, the president gave his notice of withdrawal on December
13, 2001, starting the six months running for withdrawal under
the provisions of the treaty. Withdrawal from the ABM Treaty will
give the US the ability to test weapons for use in outer space,
leading to their deployment in outer space and the undermining
of the Outer Space Treaty as well.
In his November 2001 Crawford Summit with Russian
President Putin, Mr. Bush announced his intention to lower the
size of the US strategic nuclear arsenal to some 1,700 to 2,200
nuclear weapons over a ten year period. This unilateral action
did not even go as far as President Putin had been offering for
over a year (reductions to 1,500 strategic weapons or possibly
lower). The president’s plan will keep overkill the principal
US nuclear strategy for at least the next decade. Further, since
it has been unilaterally initiated, it will be subject to unilateral
reversal by Mr. Bush himself or a successor to the presidency.
In taking these steps, Mr. Bush has also demonstrated
his contempt for the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, in which
the US has promised to pursue good faith negotiations for nuclear
disarmament. The International Court of Justice has interpreted
this phrase to mean complete nuclear disarmament in all its aspects.
As recently as May 2000, the parties to the Non-Proliferation
Treaty promised to preserve and strengthen the ABM Treaty “as
the cornerstone of strategic stability and as a basis for further
reductions of strategic offensive weapons.” At the same
time, the US joined the other parties to the Non-Proliferation
Treaty in promising an “unequivocal undertaking…to
accomplish the total elimination of their nuclear arsenals.”
The president’s actions have helped convince our allies
and treaty partners that US promises are worth very little, but
perhaps this is to be expected when a president is engaged in
war on so many fronts.
*David Krieger is president
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
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