Farewell to the
ABM Treaty
by David Krieger*, June 13, 2002
Without a vote
of the United States Congress and over the objections of Russia
and most US allies, George W. Bush has unilaterally withdrawn
the US from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty, rendering
it void. His withdrawal from this solemn treaty obligation became
effective today, June 13, 2002.
Bush’s action is being challenged
in US federal court by 31 members of Congress, led by Rep. Dennis
Kucinich (D-OH). We should be thankful that there are still members
of Congress with the courage and belief in democracy to challenge
such abuse of presidential power.
Since becoming president, Bush has
waged a campaign against international law. Withdrawal from the
ABM Treaty is but one of a series of assaults he has made, including
pulling out of the Kyoto Accords on Climate Change, withdrawal
of the US from the treaty creating an International Criminal Court,
opposing a Protocol to the Biological Weapons Convention that
would allow for inspections and verification, and failing to fulfill
US obligations related to the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty.
Bush told the American people that he was withdrawing
from the ABM Treaty so that the US could proceed with the deployment
of missile defenses defenses that most independent experts believe
are incapable of actually providing defense. The president has
traded a long-standing and important arms control treaty for the
possibility that there might be a technological fix for nuclear
dangers that would allow the US to threaten, but not be threatened
by, nuclear weapons. In doing so, he has pulled another brick
from the foundation of international law and created conditions
that will undoubtedly make the US and the rest of the world less
secure. He has also moved toward establishing an imperial presidency,
unfettered by such constitutional restraints as the separation
of powers.
In 1972, when the US and USSR agreed to a treaty
limiting anti-ballistic missile (ABM) systems, they did so for
good reasons, which are described below in the Preamble to the
treaty to which I have added some comments.
Proceeding from the premise that nuclear war would
have devastating consequences for all mankind, [Nothing has changed
here, except that 30 years later we might better use the term
“humankind.”]
Considering that effective measures to limit anti-ballistic
missile systems would be a substantial factor in curbing the race
in strategic offensive arms and would lead to a decrease in the
risk of outbreak of war involving nuclear weapons, [This relationship
between offensive and defensive systems still holds true.]
Proceeding from the premise that the limitation
of anti-ballistic missile systems, as well as certain agreed measures
with respect to the limitation of strategic offensive arms, would
contribute to the creation of more favorable conditions for further
negotiations on limiting strategic arms, [The recent treaty signed
by Bush and Putin only applies limits to actively deployed nuclear
weapons and at levels high enough to still destroy civilization
and most life on the planet.]
Mindful of their obligations under Article VI of
the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, [The United
States under the Bush administration has been contemptuous of
the Non-Proliferation Treaty and its Article VI obligations to
achieve nuclear disarmament.]
Declaring their intention to achieve at the earliest
possible date the cessation of the nuclear arms race and to take
effective measures toward reductions in strategic arms, nuclear
disarmament, and general and complete disarmament, [These promises
remain largely unfulfilled 30 years later.]
Desiring to contribute to the relaxation of international
tension and the strengthening of trust between States….
[The US missile defense program and related US plans to weaponize
outer space have the potential to again send the level of international
tensions skyrocketing, particularly in Asia.]
The ABM Treaty was meant to be for an “unlimited
duration,” but allowed for withdrawal if a country should
decide “that extraordinary events related to the subject
matter of this Treaty have jeopardized its supreme interests.”
Bush never bothered to explain to the American people or to the
Russians how the treaty jeopardized the supreme interests of the
United States. It is clear, though, that withdrawal from the treaty
as a unilateral act of the president has undermined our true “supreme
interests” in upholding democracy and international law.
*David Krieger
is president of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
|