Disarmament Diplomacy
Issue No. 23, February 1998
'The Risks of Nuclear Deterrence:
From Superpowers to Rogue Leaders,'
Speech by Retired General Lee Butler, former Commander of US
Strategic Command, National Press Club, Washington, 2 February
1998
Editor's note:
General Butler (Commander-in-Chief, United States Strategic Air
Command, 1991-92; Commander-in-Chief, United States Strategic
Command, 1992-94) delivered his remarks at the press conference
arranged to launch the abolition statement by civilian leaders
featured in Senator Cranston's article in this issue.
Extracts from Speech
"I have two roles to serve this afternoon, both very much akin
to the events marking my appearance here just over a year ago. As
your speaker, I intend to address two matters that go to the heart
of the debate over the role of nuclear weapons: why these artifacts
of the Cold War continue to hold us in thrall; and the severe
penalties and risks entailed by policies of deterrence as practised
in the nuclear age.
But first, it is my privilege to announce a compelling addition
to the roster of distinguished international figures who have
joined their voices in calling publicly for the abolition of
nuclear weapons. Last year General Goodpaster and I unveiled a list
of some 60 retired generals and admirals from a host of nations who
declared their strong conviction that the world would be better
served by the total elimination of these weapons. Today, at a press
conference following my remarks, Senator Alan Cranston and I will
present the names of more than one hundred present and former heads
of State and other senior civilian leaders who have signed their
names to a powerful statement of common concern regarding nuclear
weapons and who have endorsed a reasoned path toward abolition.
The willingness of this extraordinary assembly to speak so
publicly and directly to these issues is very much in keeping with
what I have experienced since I became engaged in the abolition
debate some two years ago. I have met legions of remarkable men and
women from every corner of the earth who have labored long and
patiently in this cause. Their ranks have now been swelled by tens
of millions of citizens of our planet who reject the prospect of
living in perpetuity under a nuclear sword of Damocles.
My purpose in entering the debate was to help legitimize
abolition as an alternative worthy of serious and urgent
consideration. My premise was that my unique experience in the
nuclear weapons arena might help kindle greater antipathy for these
horrific devices and the policies which justify their retention by
the nuclear-weapon States. My purpose this afternoon is to share
with you the abiding concern I harbor about the course of the
debate. I accepted the press club invitation because I believe this
forum is well suited to speak to that concern. In so doing, I
intend to render a much more explicit account than I have given to
date of the lessons I have drawn from over thirty years of intimate
involvement with nuclear weapons.
Permit me, however, to preface my remarks by postulating that
with respect to legitimizing the prospect of abolition, there is
much to applaud on the positive side of the ledger. Nuclear issues
now compete more strongly for the attention of policy makers and
the media that often shapes their interest. Converts are being won
on many fronts to the propositions that these issues matter, that
nuclear arsenals can and should be sharply reduced, that high alert
postures are a dangerous anachronism, that first use policies are
an affront to democratic values, and that proliferation of nuclear
weapons is a clear and present danger. I am persuaded that in every
corner of the planet, the tide of public sentiment is now running
strongly in favor of diminishing the role of nuclear weapons.
Indeed, I am convinced that most publics are well out in front of
their governments in shaking off the grip of the Cold War and
reaching for opportunities that emerge in its wake.
Conversely, it is distressingly evident that for many people,
nuclear weapons retain an aura of utility, of primacy and of
legitimacy that justifies their existence well into the future, in
some number, however small. The persistence of this view, which is
perfectly reflected in the recently announced modification of US
nuclear weapons policy, lies at the core of the concern that moves
me so deeply. This abiding faith in nuclear weapons was inspired
and is sustained by a catechism instilled over many decades by a
priesthood who speak with great assurance and authority. I was for
many years among the most avid of these keepers of the faith in
nuclear weapons, and for that I make no apology. Like my
contemporaries, I was moved by fears and fired by beliefs that date
back to the earliest days of the atomic era. We lived through a
terror-ridden epoch punctuated by crises whose resolution held
hostage the saga of humankind. For us, nuclear weapons were the
savior that brought an implacable foe to his knees in 1945 and held
another at bay for nearly a half-century. We believed that superior
technology brought strategic advantage, that greater numbers meant
stronger security, and that the ends of containment justified
whatever means were necessary to achieve them.
These are powerful, deeply rooted beliefs. They cannot and
should not be lightly dismissed or discounted. Strong arguments can
be made on their behalf. Throughout my professional military
career, I shared them, I professed them and I put them into
operational practice. And now it is my burden to declare with all
of the conviction I can muster that in my judgement they served us
extremely ill. They account for the most severe risks and most
extravagant costs of the US-Soviet confrontation. They intensified
and prolonged an already acute ideological animosity. They spawned
successive generations of new and more destructive nuclear devices
and delivery systems. They gave rise to mammoth bureaucracies with
gargantuan appetites and global agendas. They incited primal
emotions, spurred zealotry and demagoguery, and set in motion
forces of ungovernable scope and power. Most importantly, these
enduring beliefs, and the fears that underlie them, perpetuate Cold
War policies and practices that make no strategic sense. They
continue to entail enormous costs and expose all mankind to
unconscionable dangers. I find that intolerable. Thus I cannot stay
silent. I know too much of these matters, the frailties, the flaws,
the failures of policy and practice.
At the same time, I cannot overstate the difficulty this poses
for me. No one who ever entered the nuclear arena left it with a
fuller understanding of its complexity nor greater respect for
those with whom I served its purposes. I struggle constantly with
the task of articulating the evolution of my convictions without
denigrating or diminishing the motives and sacrifice of countless
colleagues with whom I lived the drama of the Cold War. I ask them
and you to appreciate that my purpose is not to accuse, but to
assess, to understand and to propound the forces that birthed the
grotesque excesses and hazards of the nuclear age. For me, that
assessment meant first coming to grips with my experience and then
coming to terms with my conclusions.
I knew the moment I entered the nuclear arena I had been thrust
into a world beset with tidal forces, towering egos, maddening
contradictions, alien constructs and insane risks. Its arcane
vocabulary and apocalyptic calculus defied comprehension. Its stage
was global and its antagonists locked in a deadly spiral of
deepening rivalry. It was in every respect a modern day holy war, a
cosmic struggle between the forces of light and darkness. The
stakes were national survival, and the weapons of choice were
eminently suited to this scale of malevolence.
The opposing forces each created vast enterprises, each giving
rise to a culture of messianic believers infused with a sense of
historic mission and schooled in unshakable articles of faith. As
my own career progressed, I was immersed in the work of all of
these cultures, either directly in those of the western world, or
through penetrating study of communist organizations, teachings and
practices. My responsibilities ranged from the highly subjective,
such as assessing the values and motivation of Soviet leadership,
to the critically objective, such as preparing weapons for
operational launch. I became steeped in the art of intelligence
estimates, the psychology of negotiations, the interplay of
bureaucracies and the impulses of industry. I was engaged in the
labyrinthian conjecture of the strategist, the exacting routines of
the target planner and the demanding skills of the aircrew and the
missilier. I have been a party to their history, shared their
triumphs and tragedies, witnessed heroic sacrifice and catastrophic
failure of both men and machines. And in the end, I came away from
it all with profound misgivings.
Ultimately, as I examined the course of this journey, as the
lessons of decades of intimate involvement took greater hold on my
intellect, I came to a set of deeply unsettling judgements. That
from the earliest days of the nuclear era, the risks and
consequences of nuclear war have never been properly weighed by
those who brandished it. That the stakes of nuclear war engage not
just the survival of the antagonists, but the fate of mankind. That
the likely consequences of nuclear war have no politically,
militarily or morally acceptable justification. And therefore, that
the threat to use nuclear weapons is indefensible.
These judgements gave rise to an array of inescapable questions.
If this be so, what explained the willingness, no, the zeal, of
legions of cold warriors, civilian and military, to not just
tolerate but to multiply and to perpetuate such risks? By what
authority do succeeding generations of leaders in the
nuclear-weapons States usurp the power to dictate the odds of
continued life on our planet? Most urgently, why does such
breathtaking audacity persist at a moment when we should stand
trembling in the face of our folly and united in our commitment to
abolish its most deadly manifestation?
These are not questions to be left to historians. The answers
matter to us now. They go to the heart of present day policies and
motivations. They convey lessons with immediate implications for
both contemporary and aspiring nuclear States. As I distill them
from the experience of three decades in the nuclear arena, these
lessons resolve into two fundamental conclusions.
First, I have no other way to understand the willingness to
condone nuclear weapons except to believe they are the natural
accomplice of visceral enmity. They thrive in the emotional climate
born of utter alienation and isolation. The unbounded wantonness of
their effects is a perfect companion to the urge to destroy
completely. They play on our deepest fears and pander to our
darkest instincts. They corrode our sense of humanity, numb our
capacity for moral outrage, and make thinkable the unimaginable.
What is anguishingly clear is that these fears and enmities are no
respecter of political systems or values. They prey on democracies
and totalitarian societies alike, shrinking the norms of civilized
behavior and dimming the prospects for escaping the savagery so
powerfully imprinted in our genetic code. That should give us great
pause as we imagine the task of abolition in a world that gives
daily witness to acts of unspeakable barbarism. So should it
compound our resolve.
The evidence to support this conclusion is palpable, but as I
said at the outset of these remarks for much of my life I saw it
differently. ... I was commissioned as an officer in the United
States Air Force as the Cold War was heating to a fever pitch. This
was a desperate time that evoked on both sides extreme responses in
policy, in technology and in force postures: bloody purges and
political inquisitions; covert intelligence schemes that squandered
lives and subverted governments; atmospheric testing with little
understanding or regard for the long term effects; threats of
massive nuclear retaliation to an ill-defined scope of potential
provocations; the forced march of inventive genius that ushered in
the missile age arm in arm with the capacity for spontaneous,
global destruction; reconnaissance aircraft that probed or violated
sovereign airspace, producing disastrous encounters; the menacing
and perilous practice of airborne alert bombers loaded with nuclear
weapons.
By the early 1960's, a superpower nuclear arms race was underway
that would lead to a ceaseless amassing of destructive capacity,
spilling over into the arsenals of other nations. Central Europe
became a powder keg, trembling under the shadow of armageddon,
hostage to a bizarre strategy that required the prospect of nuclear
devastation as the price of alliance. The entire world became a
stage for the US-Soviet rivalry. International organizations were
paralyzed by its grip. East-West confrontation dominated the
nation-State system. Every quarrel and conflict was fraught with
potential for global war. ...
What remained for me, as my career took its particular course,
was to master the intellectual underpinning of America's response,
the strategic foundation that today still stands as the central
precept of the nuclear catechism. Reassessing its pervasive impact
on attitudes toward nuclear weapons goes directly to my second
conclusion regarding the willingness to tolerate the risks of the
nuclear age.
That also brings me to the focal point of my remarks... For all
of my years as a nuclear strategist, operational commander and
public spokesman, I explained, justified and sustained America's
massive nuclear arsenal as a function, a necessity and a
consequence of deterrence. Bound up in this singular term, this
familiar touchstone of security dating back to antiquity, was the
intellectually comforting and deceptively simple justification for
taking the most extreme risks and the expenditure of trillions of
dollars. It was our shield and by extension our sword. The nuclear
priesthood extolled its virtues, and bowed to its demands. Allies
yielded grudgingly to its dictates even while decrying its risks
and costs. We brandished it at our enemies and presumed they
embraced its suicidal corollary of mutual assured destruction. We
ignored, discounted or dismissed its flaws and cling still to the
belief that it obtains in a world whose security architecture has
been wholly transformed.
But now, I see it differently. Not in some blinding revelation,
but at the end of a journey, in an age of deliverance from the
consuming tensions of the Cold War. Now, with the evidence more
clear, the risks more sharply defined and the costs more fully
understood, I see deterrence in a very different light.
Appropriated from the lexicon of conventional warfare, this simple
prescription for adequate military preparedness became in the
nuclear age a formula for unmitigated catastrophe. It was premised
on a litany of unwarranted assumptions, unprovable assertions and
logical contradictions. It suspended rational thinking about the
ultimate aim of national security: to ensure the survival of the
nation.
How is it that we subscribed to a strategy that required near
perfect understanding of an enemy from whom we were deeply
alienated and largely isolated? How could we pretend to understand
the motivations and intentions of the Soviet leadership absent any
substantive personal association? Why did we imagine a nation that
had survived successive invasions and mindnumbing losses would
accede to a strategy premised on fear of nuclear war? Deterrence in
the Cold War setting was fatally flawed at the most fundamental
level of human psychology in its projection of western reason
through the crazed lens of a paranoid foe. Little wonder that
intentions and motives were consistently misread. Little wonder
that deterrence was the first victim of a deepening crisis, leaving
the antagonists to grope fearfully in a fog of mutual
misperception. While we clung to the notion that nuclear war could
be reliably deterred, Soviet leaders derived from their historical
experience the conviction that such a war might be thrust upon them
and if so, must not be lost. Driven by that fear, they took
herculean measures to fight and survive no matter the odds or the
costs. Deterrence was a dialogue of the blind with the deaf. In the
final analysis, it was largely a bargain we in the west made with
ourselves. ...
Deterrence failed completely as a guide in setting rational
limits on the size and composition of military forces. To the
contrary, its appetite was voracious, its capacity to justify new
weapons and larger stocks unrestrained. Deterrence carried the
seed, born of an irresolvable internal contradiction, that spurred
an insatiable arms race. Nuclear deterrence hinges on the
credibility to mount a devastating retaliation under the most
extreme conditions of war initiation. Perversely, the redundant and
survivable force required to meet this exacting test is readily
perceived by a darkly suspicious adversary as capable, even
designed, to execute a disarming first strike. Such advantage can
never be conceded between nuclear rivals. It must be answered,
reduced, nullified. Fears are fanned, the rivalry intensified. New
technology is inspired, new systems roll from production lines. The
correlation of force begins to shift, and the bar of deterrence
ratchets higher, igniting yet another cycle of trepidation, worst
case assumptions and ever mounting levels of destructive
capability.
Thus it was that the treacherous axioms of deterrence made
seemingly reasonable nuclear weapon stockpiles numbering in the
tens of thousands. Despite having witnessed the devastation wrought
by two primitive atomic devices, over the ensuing decades the
superpowers gorged themselves at the thermonuclear trough. A
succession of leaders on both sides of the east-west divide
directed a reckless proliferation of nuclear devices, tailored for
delivery by a vast array of vehicles to a stupefying array of
targets. They nurtured, richly rewarded, even reveled in the
industrial base required to support production at such levels.
I was part of all of that. I was present at the creation of many
of these systems, directly responsible for prescribing and
justifying the requirements and technology that made them possible.
I saw the arms race from the inside, watched as intercontinental
ballistic missiles ushered in mutual assured destruction and
multiple warhead missiles introduced genuine fear of a nuclear
first strike. I participated in the elaboration of basing schemes
that bordered on the comical and force levels that in retrospect
defied reason. I was responsible for war plans with over 12,000
targets, many struck with repeated nuclear blows, some to the point
of complete absurdity. I was a veteran participant in an arena
where the most destructive power ever unleashed became the prize in
a no holds barred competition among organizations whose principal
interest was to enhance rather than constrain its application. And
through every corridor, in every impassioned plea, in every fevered
debate rang the rallying cry, deterrence, deterrence, deterrence.
...
Deterrence is a slippery conceptual slope. It is not stable, nor
is it static, its wiles cannot be contained. It is both master and
slave. It seduces the scientist yet bends to his creation. It
serves the ends of evil as well as those of noble intent. It holds
guilty the innocent as well as the culpable. It gives easy semantic
cover to nuclear weapons, masking the horrors of employment with
siren veils of infallibility. At best it is a gamble no mortal
should pretend to make. At worst it invokes death on a scale
rivaling the power of the creator.
Is it any wonder that at the end of my journey I am moved so
strongly to retrace its path, to examine more closely the evidence
I would or could not see? I hear now the voices long ignored, the
warnings muffled by the still lingering animosities of the Cold
War. I see with painful clarity that from the very beginnings of
the nuclear era, the objective scrutiny and searching debate
essential to adequate comprehension and responsible oversight of
its vast enterprises were foreshortened or foregone. The cold light
of dispassionate scrutiny was shuttered in the name of security,
doubts dismissed in the name of an acute and unrelenting threat,
objections overruled by the incantations of the nuclear
priesthood.
The penalties proved to be severe. Vitally important decisions
were routinely taken without adequate understanding, assertions too
often prevailed over analysis, requirements took on organizational
biases, technological opportunity and corporate profit drove force
levels and capability, and political opportunism intruded on
calculations of military necessity. Authority and accountability
were severed, policy dissociated from planning, and theory
invalidated by practice. The narrow concerns of a multitude of
powerful interests intruded on the rightful role of key
policymakers, constraining their latitude for decision. Many were
simply denied access to critical information essential to the
proper exercise of their office.
Over time, planning was increasingly distanced and ultimately
disconnected from any sense of scientific or military reality. In
the end, the nuclear powers, great and small, created
astronomically expensive infrastructures, monolithic bureaucracies
and complex processes that defied control or comprehension. Only
now are the dimensions, costs and risks of these nuclear nether
worlds coming to light. What must now be better-understood are the
root causes, the mindsets and the belief systems that brought them
into existence. They must be challenged, they must be refuted, but
most importantly, they must be let go. The era that gave them
credence, accepted their dominion and yielded to their excesses is
fast receding.
But it is not yet over. Sad to say, the Cold War lives on in the
minds of those who cannot let go the fears, the beliefs, and the
enmities born of the nuclear age. They cling to deterrence, clutch
its tattered promise to their breast, shake it wistfully at bygone
adversaries and balefully at new or imagined ones. They are gripped
still by its awful willingness not simply to tempt the apocalypse
but to prepare its way.
What better illustration of misplaced faith in nuclear
deterrence than the persistent belief that retaliation with nuclear
weapons is a legitimate and appropriate response to post-Cold War
threats posed by weapons of mass destruction. What could possibly
justify our resort to the very means we properly abhor and condemn?
Who can imagine our joining in shattering the precedent of non-use
that has held for over fifty years? How could America's
irreplaceable role as leader of the campaign against nuclear
proliferation ever be re-justified? What target would warrant such
retaliation? Would we hold an entire society accountable for the
decision of a single demented leader? How would the physical
effects of the nuclear explosion be contained, not to mention the
political and moral consequences? In a singular act we would martyr
our enemy, alienate our friends, give comfort to the non-declared
nuclear States and impetus to States who seek such weapons
covertly. In short, such a response on the part of the United
States is inconceivable. It would irretrievably diminish our
priceless stature as a nation noble in aspiration and responsible
in conduct, even in the face of extreme provocation.
And as a nation we have no greater responsibility than to bring
the nuclear era to a close. Our present policies, plans and
postures governing nuclear weapons make us prisoner still to an age
of intolerable danger. We cannot at once keep sacred the miracle of
existence and hold sacrosanct the capacity to destroy it. We cannot
hold hostage to sovereign gridlock the keys to final deliverance
from the nuclear nightmare. We cannot withhold the resources
essential to break its grip, to reduce its dangers. We cannot sit
in silent acquiescence to the faded homilies of the nuclear
priesthood. It is time to reassert the primacy of individual
conscience, the voice of reason and the rightful interests of
humanity."
Extracts from Questions-and-Answers
"Question (Doug Harbrecht, Moderator): '[Should the US
consider using nuclear weapons in] Iraq or in response to any
chemical or biological weapon threat?'
Butler: '... I had the opportunity to go through this
calculus. When I was the director of strategic plans and policy in
the 1989 to '91 time frame, it was my direct responsibility to draw
up the strategic objectives of our prospective war in the Persian
Gulf, to imagine outcomes and to set war termination
objectives.
At the very heart of that calculus was to imagine the prospect
of using nuclear weapons. And I would point out to those of you
here who might have read Colin Powell's memoirs that he goes
through this himself in the latter stages of his book, because he
was asked to imagine the kinds of targets in the Persian Gulf that
might be struck with nuclear weapons. I share his reservations
absolutely.
The first issue, of course, is the one that I posed in my
remarks. If we rightfully abhor and condemn the resort to the use
of a weapon of mass destruction, how is it we could possibly
justify - we, the United States, a democratic society - ourselves
steeping to such ends?
Number two, can you imagine the impact in a part of the world
where we worked so assiduously for so many years to build our
presence, to build support and credibility, of being the nation
that used a nuclear weapon against Arab peoples? Only the second
time in history that such a device had been used, and it would be
the United States, and it would be in a part of the world where
even today those actions raise powerful suspicions.
...thirdly, what would have happened to the coalition? How
painstakingly we worked to put together a coalition of some 30
nations from very disparate points on the ideological and cultural
compass in order to provide the proper underpinnings of the
international community for that war. Can you imagine the impact on
that coalition if we, the United States, had used a nuclear weapon,
even in response to the use of a weapon of mass destruction by the
Iraqis? It would have been devastating.
There's the question of targets. If you were the target planner
for the use of a nuclear weapon in the Persian Gulf, what would be
your choice? Surely it would not be the city of Baghdad. Would you
hold hundreds of thousands of people accountable for the acts of
their leader? Would it be an Iraqi division in the far western
reaches of that nation? You might be interested to know the
calculation of how many tactical nuclear weapons it requires to
bring even one division to its knees when it's spread over such a
vast expanse.
What would have happened to the fallout from the blast? If you
want to do maximum damage, you use a [surface aspirant]? How is it
that the fallout patterns would have arrayed themselves beyond the
borders of Iraq, perhaps even to the south if the wind had been
blowing in that direction? The real point of the exercise is that
the United States has put itself happily in a position where it has
no need to resort to weapons of mass destruction to respond to such
provocation. We brought Iraq to its knees conventionally. We could
have decimated that country. We could have occupied it as we did
Japan and Germany at the end of World War II. We chose not to do
that, but it was within our capacity to do so. And if we could do
that in 1991, when they had the fourth-strongest army in the world
and a significant air force, can you imagine the task today when
we've reduced all of that by at least two-thirds? It is wrong from
every aspect. It is wrong politically. It makes no sense
militarily. And morally, in my view, it is indefensible.' ...
Question (Mr. Harbrecht): 'What can be done to persuade
an emerging superpower like China to give up nuclear weapons? Would
such a decision have to wait for the emergence of democracy in
China?'
Butler: 'There's a story, perhaps apocryphal, but it's
been in the literature for many years, as to why it was that the
Chinese acquired nuclear weapons capability. The story goes that it
was proposed to Mao and he said, "Why should I do this?" And he was
told, "Well, other nations have them." And his answer purportedly
was, "Well, I guess we should have some."
If you look at the Chinese nuclear arsenal, it is far from
modern. Their forces are not on alert. They're struggling to bring
up its safety and security characteristics. China has avowed time
and again that they are a no-first-use nation and that they are
strongly on record in favor of nuclear abolition. I don't know what
it would take to persuade China to abandon their nuclear arsenals,
but I am comforted by what they say.
I believe that the keys to creating a climate in which the
Chinas of the world - Great Britain, France, the non-declared
States - are willing to join in a serious-minded, forthright and
concrete series of commitments and steps to move steadfastly toward
the abolition of nuclear weapons is for the United States and
Russia to take the lead.
I believe that we are missing priceless opportunities in what is
perhaps a perishable window of opportunity to move forward much
more swiftly and boldly in getting our forces off alert, bringing
tactical nuclear weapons home from Europe, declaring no-first-use
policies, and most importantly, reaching out to our friends in
Russia and making the decision that it is time to get on with
concrete measures for much more severe cuts in nuclear stockpiles
than we've been willing to acknowledge to date.
It is, in my view, a sad commentary on the current state of
thinking on this issue that we are comfortable with a goal for
reductions that would still have 3,500 operational nuclear weapons
on alert 10 years from now. It is a dismal commentary on the
current state of thinking that we still believe that distant
nuclear arsenals that measure in the hundreds is a low number. It
is time for the United States to act much more boldly and with
stronger leadership with respect to getting on with getting the
nuclear era to a close. ..."
© 1998 The Acronym Institute.
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