Disarmament Diplomacy
Issue No. 42, December 1999
Does NMD Stand For "No More Disarmament" As Well As "National
Missile Defence"?
By George Bunn
Introduction
The United States is conducting research with the goal of
building a limited national missile defence (NMD) to protect its
entire territory from possible attack by a small number of
long-range missiles from North Korea, Iraq or Iran. All these
countries are reported to have missile programmes, nuclear reactors
or other nuclear capability and, quite possibly, biological and/or
chemical weapons. In theory, at least, nuclear, biological or
chemical weapons could be carried by long-range ballistic missiles
launched by these three countries and could cause many deaths in
areas around their point of impact.
Such a nationwide missile shield, even though limited, would
violate the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty of 1972. That
treaty now permits Russia and the United States to build a regional
shield for the defence of part of its territory but contains
various limitations to prevent either country from building a
foundation for a nationwide defence. In the Treaty's first article,
each promises "not to deploy ABM systems for a defence of the
territory of its country and not to deploy a base for such a
defence…"
The Clinton Administration seeks agreement from Russia to amend
the ABM Treaty to permit a limited national defence. The
administration argues that such a defence would not threaten the
counterattack capability of Russia's thousands of nuclear warheads
carried by long-range missiles. Thus, say US negotiators, Russia
could maintain its deterrent against a US attack even if the US
built a limited missile shield. However, the negotiations have so
far produced only strong Russian refusal to amend the Treaty.
Conservative Republicans in the US Senate believe that the ABM
Treaty, though negotiated by the Republican Nixon Administration,
should be killed in order to permit any defence system the US
wants. Indeed 16 of them, led by Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott
and Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Jesse Helms, wrote
to President Clinton in 1998 saying the ABM Treaty was already dead
because the other party to the Treaty in 1990, the Soviet Union,
had died at the end of that year. They argued that Russia, the new
country with most of the territory and population of the Soviet
Union, did not inherit this particular Treaty from the Soviet
Union. However, Russia has been accepted by the international
community as the successor to other Soviet treaties dealing with
international security. These include the UN Charter and its
provision giving the Soviet Union a permanent seat and veto on the
UN Security Council - as well as bilateral and multilateral arms
control treaties.
Congressional Republicans strongly support building at least a
limited national defence. In a compromise with them in April
1999, President Clinton signed into law a statute saying: "It is
the policy of the United States to deploy as soon as
technologically possible an effective [national missile defence]
system capable of defending the territory of the United States
against limited ballistic missile attack…."
The technological feasibility required by this statute has not
yet been proven. But in October 1999 there was a successful test of
some elements of a missile defence system showing that, in a
favourable situation, these elements could launch a missile to hit
an incoming missile in space. Political momentum to build a missile
shield for the entire United States is now strong.
Democrats in the Congress overwhelmingly voted for the new
statute because they were not inclined to enter the 2000 election
campaign appearing to oppose the defence of their constituents from
"rogue state" missiles.
However, they won some concessions. The statute makes clear that
it is not an authorisation for appropriations of money to build the
defence system. This means that before a missile shield can be
built there will have to be additional decisions by Congress and
the President to pay for the cost of building a system, costs
running into billions of dollars depending on the size of the
system. The statute also says that a decision to deploy should take
into account the impact of deployment on arms control
negotiations.
The Impacts of NMD Deployment: Russian Concerns
The Russians see the statute as proof that the United States has
already made a decision to build a missile shield. They do not
believe the United States wants one just to deal with "rogue state"
missiles. They have long faced much more realistic threats much
closer to where they live. They do not accept US estimates of the
North Korean threat. They point out that the North Koreans have
agreed in negotiations with the US to cease their long-range
missile tests. Moreover, since the origin of a North Korean missile
in North Korea can be determined by US radar and other sensors, the
North Koreans would not use missiles to attack America, say the
Russians. They would fear overwhelming US retaliation. To avoid
that if they wanted to bomb America, the North Koreans would use
safer methods. They could probably find someone to drive a truck or
van carrying biological weapons across the border from Canada or
Mexico. Or they could explode a nuclear weapon on board an old
steamer in a US harbour such as New York City. Or they could shoot
a much smaller missile carrying chemical weapons from an old
steamer off the US Pacific coast. In any of these cases, the North
Korean source of the weapon might remain secret, and retaliation
might be avoided.
Since US fears of the North Korean threat seem irrational to the
Russians, they believe the US wants a missile shield to protect
against Russian missiles, and that what the US is proposing is just
the beginning of what will become a less limited missile shield
against their missiles and those of the Chinese. And, as Russia
knows, US Defence Department plans call for second and third stage
additions to the initial system with many more interceptors and
sensors. With these additions, the US system might well be
expandable into a missile shield against Russian missiles.
Given such US plans, the Russians say they cannot reduce their
missiles pursuant to the existing START agreements, or agree to
further reductions. If they did, they might not have enough
missiles to penetrate the new US defences in order to retaliate
against a US attack. Given this, many Russians do not believe that
the US goal is just a defence against rogue states. As they see it,
they would have to modernise their ballistic missile fleet to
assure that it can penetrate the proposed US defence. That means no
negotiation of START III, no Duma ratification of START II, and,
possibly, Russian breakout from START I. The US-Soviet and
US-Russian missile limitation and reduction agreements of the last
30 years would be thrown out the window.
The Russians already feel threatened by NATO's expansion closer
to their border to now include the Czech Republic, Hungary and
Poland. They feel threatened by NATO's bombing of Yugoslavia
without authority to do so from the UN Security Council. If the
Russian veto in the Security Council will not protect them from an
attack by NATO, they believe they need to pay more attention to
their defences. They are already planning much greater reliance on
small nuclear weapons as a partial substitute for their
conventional troops and weapons. Russian conventional defences are
weaker than they used to be and their annual defence budget is only
around three percent of that of the United States. They distrust
the United States, yet do not have the funds to build either a
strong conventional defence against NATO conventional forces or a
strong missile defence against US missiles.
The US Senate's recent rejection of the CTBT suggests to Russia
that the US may no longer be interested in arms control treaties.
Remarks by Republican Senate conservatives against such treaties,
and US plans for a missile shield which Russia perceives as having
the effect of ending the ABM Treaty, make the same point. Indeed,
US Defense Department officials have said publicly that if the
Russians do not agree to amend the ABM Treaty, the United States
will withdraw from it in order to build a national missile shield.
Some Russians now perceive the US as their main enemy.
Chinese Concerns
The Chinese are also opposed to US missile defence deployment
plans. Unlike the Russians, however, they have been very concerned
about US plans for theatre missile defences (TMD), plans which got
a boost from Iraqi missile launches against Israel, Saudi Arabia
and US forces during the Gulf War in 1991. The Chinese are
particularly concerned that the United States will build TMD for
Taiwan, making that island even more inclined to insist upon its
independence from mainland China. The US has not proposed such a
defence to Taiwanese officials because former US President Nixon
and every US administration that has followed his has agreed with
mainland China that there are not two Chinas (the island of Taiwan
and mainland China) but only one, and that Chinese reunification
should come about peacefully through negotiations. But the US has
continued to supply Taiwan with weapons, including relatively
short-range Patriot anti-missile weapons that are improvements on
the Patriots used in the Gulf War. Moreover, some in Taiwan have
talked about building a missile defence for all of Taiwan.
As the Chinese see it, a US national missile shield could also
threaten them. Like the Russians, they cannot believe the United
States is building a shield just against "rogue state" missiles.
They have about 20 intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs)
capable of reaching the US. Even a limited US national defence
might threaten the viability of China's deterrent missiles. As they
see it, they are likely to have to deploy more missile warheads if
the US builds a new shield, even a first stage limited one. They
have already announced that they will no longer be able to
negotiate a treaty banning production of nuclear materials for
weapons if the US goes ahead with its missile shield. And, given
the US Senate's rejection of the CTBT, they will probably now
receive less criticism for rejecting that treaty and testing
nuclear weapons again if they feel the need to do so to produce
smaller warheads in response to a new US missile shield.
A US missile shield may drive the Chinese and Russians together.
A Russian delegation recently went to Beijing to talk about the US
missile defence plans and other common problems. One product is a
joint resolution for adoption by the UN General Assembly condemning
NMD and calling for observance of the ABM Treaty. Using language
from the treaty, this resolution calls on each party to the ABM
Treaty to refrain from deployment of "anti-ballistic missile
systems for a defence of the territory of its country and not to
provide a basis for such a defence". Voting on this resolution
shows the discomfort of many other countries about US plans.
Reactions of Other Countries
The First Committee of the UNGA approved this resolution by a
vote of 80 to 4 with 68 abstentions. Opposed of course was the
United States. It was joined only by Israel, Latvia and Micronesia.
France voted with China and Russia for the resolution. Most other
US friends and allies abstained.
The French have been the most vocal of US allies in criticising
American missile defence plans. If the Russians build more ICBMs as
a result of US plans, the smaller French deterrent will be
perceived as even smaller in relation to Russia's deterrent. The
French have long relied upon mutual deterrence rather than missile
defence, and do not see the need for change to active defence. As
some French see it, a US missile shield would "decouple" the US
from Europe and help create a new "Fortress America" state of mind
in American politicians. Americans could hide behind the shield and
forget about Europe.
The Geneva Conference on Disarmament
The Conference on Disarmament (CD) has been stalled this last
year in part because of US missile defence plans. A compromise
negotiating agenda seemed close to agreement when the conference
adjourned for the year, except for the US opposition. The
compromise agenda would provide conference subcommittees to deal
with key outstanding issues:
Firstly, the proposal of the US and others for a fissban, a
proposed agreement to halt further production of nuclear material
to make weapons, the treaty the Chinese say they can no longer
negotiate if the Americans build an NMD;
Secondly, the proposal of many countries for talks in Geneva
relating to further nuclear reductions and nuclear disarmament;
Thirdly, a Chinese proposal to begin talks on agreements to
prevent an arms race in outer space (PAROS).
The US has opposed the second and third proposals. On nuclear
disarmament, the US has been joined by the other four
nuclear-weapon States (NWS) recognized in the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). The Five - Britain,
China, France, Russia and the US - do not want to negotiate nuclear
reductions with over 60 countries at the CD in Geneva. However, a
compromise from a few non-NWS, which are also members of NATO,
appeared likely to satisfy the US and other NWS on this second
proposal.
The US appears to be alone in opposing talks on the third
proposal: preventing an arms race in outer space (PAROS). The
American reasons appear to be its plans for a missile shield, which
includes sensors on space satellites and tests to destroy missiles
in space. Missile defence using space is, of course, what China
wants to prevent.
The proposed compromise for a Geneva conference work plan
required agreement to all three agenda items, or none at all. So
Geneva got nowhere in 1999.
The US plans for a missile shield seem to be stalling both
bilateral US-Russian nuclear arms reduction talks and multilateral
talks in Geneva. In addition, the plans threaten the multilateral
conference to review the NPT in April-May 2000.
NPT 2000 Review Conference
At a similar conference in 1995 when the term of the 1968 NPT
was extended indefinitely from its first period of 25 years, the
five NPT nuclear weapon powers promised to achieve a Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) by 1996 and to negotiate in good faith to
achieve nuclear disarmament, as they had agreed to do in the NPT
itself.
The US Senate CTBT vote has frustrated the first promise; the US
plan for a missile shield will be seen by many as frustrating the
second, for the reasons described above. What will happen at the
Review Conference as a result is difficult to say, but the
prospects are gloomy. Will some countries withdraw from the NPT on
the grounds that the five NPT nuclear powers have violated their
promises made in 1995 and in the 1968 NPT itself? Will the
conference be unable to agree on any recommendations for the
future?
Conclusions
As indicated above, the new US policy statute requires
consideration of what the impact of a US missile defence system is
likely to be on arms control negotiations.
Based upon news reports, many in Washington seem to have
forgotten that provision of the statute. The Clinton Administration
promises to announce a decision on the technical feasibility of its
NMD plans by June 2000. Then, before the US election in November,
President Clinton is to announce his decision on whether to build
the missile shield. It is in this decision, not that scheduled for
June, that the consequences for arms control of building an NMD
system are to be considered.
Democrats running for office in November do not want to face the
inevitable criticism from their Republican opponents that they will
not support a limited defence to protect their constituents from
"rogue state" missiles. The top three Republican candidates for the
presidency have each announced support for NMD, as has Vice
President Gore. The incumbents from both parties in the Congress
have already voted overwhelmingly for the missile defence policy
statute quoted at the outset. If the Defence Department announces
in June that a limited shield is technologically feasible, there
will be strong momentum for a decision to go ahead.
The December 1999 Russian Parliamentary elections have produced
a Duma that may be more willing to approve START II even if only to
put the blame back on the Americans for stalling progress in
strategic arms reductions. If the Russian Parliament approves START
II, the treaty must be returned to the US Senate because of an
agreed amendment extending its term. This amendment became
necessary for the Russians because of many delays in approval and
implementation. The amendment was not before the Senate when the
Senate voted and must therefore be approved by the Senate before
START II formally goes into effect as a treaty. But the Senate is
not likely to approve the amendment anytime soon because the Duma's
approval of START II is likely to be conditioned upon the
continuation of the ABM Treaty without its amendment.
Moreover, the Senate is highly unlikely to approve the START II
amendment unless President Clinton also submits to the Senate the
Memorandum of Understanding. in which his administration agreed
that Russia had succeeded to the Soviet Union's rights and
obligations under the ABM Treaty. The Senate, on present form, is
likely to reject the Memorandum of Understanding because
conservative Republicans consider its approval as the only thing
that could give new life to the ABM Treaty, which they believe died
when the Soviet Union died. Thus, the Duma's approval of START II
would not end the stalemate on strategic arms reductions.
The appointment of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin as acting
Russian President and his likely election as president at the end
of March could improve the chances for amending the ABM Treaty to
permit a limited NMD. He has already urged the Duma to approve
START II. In addition, some Americans have ideas for joint
Russian-US defences against "rogue state" missiles that might
threaten both countries, ideas that might be of interest to
Russians after their elections are over. However, not knowing who
will win the elections in the US in November, and therefore not
knowing what the chances of approval of any agreed ABM Treaty
amendment by a new president and a changed Senate might be, the
Russians are not likely to make significant compromises before next
November.
It may be that by that time an agreement in which North Korea
promises not to test long-range missiles again will be possible. In
return for concessions from the US, North Korea has already
promised to keep its current moratorium on such tests in effect for
the time being. If a longer-term agreement with North Korea were
reached, it is possible that the American love affair with NMD
might cool a little.
Unless this happens, or a compromise with the Russians can be
worked out after the 2000 elections on both sides, the US is likely
to go ahead with some missile defence no matter which party
predominates in the American elections and no matter what the
effect is upon the START treaties or upon negotiations for further
reductions in strategic missiles.
Therefore, the consequences of building a US national defence
shield without Russian agreement may be threefold:
Firstly, the end of the ABM Treaty and other strategic nuclear
agreements of the last 30 years - with no prospects for agreements
to substitute for them.
Secondly, frustration of the 1968 and 1995 US NPT promises to
negotiate in good faith towards nuclear disarmament, abandonment of
US arms control leadership and, perhaps, creation of a "Fortress
America" mentality - US withdrawal from the world behind a missile
shield.
Thirdly, the erosion of confidence in the NPT norm against
additional countries developing nuclear weapons. This could make it
easier for North Korea, Iraq, Iran and perhaps many others to join
India and Pakistan in acquiring nuclear weapons.
If so, this is a recipe for encouraging proliferation, which in
turn threatens to undermine the disarmament process itself.
George Bunn is consulting professor at Stanford
University's Center for International Security and Cooperation. He
was general counsel to the United States negotiators of the NPT, as
well as US Ambassador to the disarmament conference in
Geneva.
© 2000 The Acronym Institute.
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