Disarmament Diplomacy
Issue No. 43, January - February 2000
Establishing Legitimate & Effective Order in a Unipolar
World
By William Walker
Editor's Note: This article is adapted from a
presentation given by Professor Walker at the Wilton Park
Conference held in England, December 17, 1999.
If a single word sums up the current state of mind of the
nuclear arms control community, it must be "disorientation". The
last couple of years have brought a series of shocks culminating in
the realisation - the shock of all shocks for most of us - that the
United States, the main founder of the security order in which we
have lived our lives and a country whose judgement we have been
used to respecting, has decided to shift the furniture around. More
than that, it appears to have decided to move us all into a
different kind of house, a house whose architecture is unfamiliar
and instinctively unattractive.
Shocks, disorientation. This is familiar territory to
psychiatrists. Victims typically experience a loss of ability to
'make sense of the world', causing them to lose the capacity to
act, or to think how to act. Although we are not yet in that state,
it comes as no surprise that discussions during this conference
have often appeared unfocused, and that nothing resembling a
political strategy has emerged from them.
How can we again make sense of the world? What ideas should now
guide our actions? I would like to describe the story I have been
trying to construct for myself, and to draw out of it some
priorities for governments in these difficult times.
Two things are worth stressing at the outset. The first is that
I remain a qualified optimist despite all the upsets. In part, this
stems from observations about the nature of weapons of mass
destruction and the extreme risks they present to all states
and all peoples. They have an exceptional capacity to create
fear and disorder, but this very capacity eventually forces
everyone to concentrate on recreating order out of disorder. These
weapons carry with them a powerful ordering imperative which
kicks in whenever disorder becomes intolerable. The history of the
Cold War can be told in terms of cycles of order, disorder and
re-ordering.
Of course, this is ultimately an act of faith. We can never be
sure that order can be restored. Disorder can become so great that
governments' abilities to recover are overwhelmed. There has always
been a risk that one day we would lose control and the nuclear
missiles would fly. So far, it has not happened, but it could
happen.
Secondly, the current tendency among some states is to drift
towards a competitive unilateralism. While unilateral action may
bring short-term advantage, we must understand that, in this field
more than any other, such a tendency is bound to create more
problems than it will solve. Furthermore, it is bound to
result in a general loss of problem-solving capacity within the
international system. No state, however powerful, can hope to solve
the problems connected with weapons of mass destruction on its own
or just with its close allies.
It follows that states will be impelled to return to
cooperation, whatever the present trends, in pursuit of their
national and collective interests. It needs recognising that all of
the problems in the nuclear field that have been successfully
resolved in the 1990s have been addressed by blending co-operative
action, rooted in international law, with the judicious use of
state power.
So how should we begin to give our thoughts coherence in this
time? As always, it is useful to place events in some historical
perspective, and to try to think systemically. In this spirit, we
need to reflect on how the global security order has developed over
the past forty years.
Very briefly, the Cold War international order from the Cuban
missile crisis onwards can be described in terms of an equation and
a structure. The equation was:
Nuclear deterrence + arms control
(including non-proliferation) = coexistence and survival
The avoidance of war in this period relied upon a double restraint
emanating from deterrence and arms control. Both were
indispensable.
The structure emerged out of power balancing between
armed alliances. It was fundamentally bipolar, involving states
arranged in hierarchies presided over by the two 'superpowers'
which were locked in both competition and cooperation. This
structure was expressed in military institutions and strategies;
and its imprint can still be found in the constitution of the
nuclear non-proliferation regime.
The Cold War system was never stable and always frightening. But
the above equation and structure helped us to survive.
The second period began with the Gorbachev-Reagan summit in
Reykjavik in 1986 and lasted for about a decade. Again the security
order can be summarised as an equation and a structure - a
structure that was also a strategy. The equation, based on hope as
much as experience, was:
Marginalisation of military force
(including nuclear weapons) + economic interdependence +
democratisation = an international society which is at peace with
itself and can concentrate its efforts on solving common social,
economic and environmental problems
Economic globalisation was considered to be the dominant force
reshaping an international system in which the nation state would
increasingly take a back seat. According to this view, nuclear
weapons were anachronisms - the ultimate symbols of a conflictual
order that was passing into history.
The accompanying structure was multipolar, and the accompanying
strategy was co-operative security. This entailed amongst other
things an enhanced role for the United Nations and the UN Security
Council; increasing reliance upon international law; a consensual
approach to policy formation; and the rejection of power balancing
as the primary means of ordering relations between states.
The successes were extraordinary in this decade. They showed
that, given co-operation amongst leading players, the regimes and
measures born in the Cold War period had a tremendous potential for
solving problems. The successes in the nuclear field included:
- the INF and START treaties;
- the nuclear 'settlement' amongst the states formed out of the
Soviet Union;
- the voluntary disarmament of South Africa;
- the collective disarmament of Iraq (via UNSCOM and the IAEA)
and North Korea (via the Agreed Framework and KEDO);
- negotiation of the CWC and CTBT;
- indefinite extension of the NPT and agreement on the Principles
and Objectives for Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament;
and
- conclusion of the "93+2 Program" reforming the IAEA safeguards
system.
The third period began in the mid-1990s. Its main structural
feature has been a tendency towards unipolarity, with the United
States emerging as the dominant global power. This has come about
mainly because of economic and technological changes which have
unambiguously favoured the US. Other economic power centres have
experienced stagnation (Japan, Germany …), collapse (Russia,
parts of Asia and Africa …), or have started from too weak a
position to challenge the US in the near term (China, India
…). The political effects of these economic changes have
been reinforced by developments in military capabilities which have
again favoured the US, whose conventional military power has
burgeoned while that of other states has diminished in relative
terms (and absolute terms in Russia's case).
Suddenly, there have been very big winners and very big losers
in the international system. Their gains and losses have been
demonstrated in the most visible terms. The huge stock market and
currency gains in the United States have been paralleled by
collapses in Russia and elsewhere; and the uses of military power
in the Persian Gulf, Bosnia and Kosovo (and Chechnya) have shown
the chasm that has grown between US technological capabilities and
those of other states.
"How to establish legitimate and effective order in a unipolar
world?" has become the question in the late 1990s. Essentially,
unipolarity offers two choices:
restrained, unselfish hegemony: whereby the dominant
state checks its own power and seeks to govern by example and
through co-operative measures (regimes, norms etc), using military
resources only when broad international agreement can be reached on
their usage; or
unrestrained, selfish hegemony: whereby the dominant
state seeks to maximise its relative power and is prepared to
maintain order, including compliance with international
obligations, through unilateral decisions on coercive measures.
In the late 1990s, the perceived trend was towards the latter
state of affairs. The United States' recent rejection of the CTBT
and commitment to deploy a national missile defence (NMD) appear to
have confirmed the shift towards unrestrained hegemony especially
in the security field. Both decisions have been taken in defiance
of friends as well as foes and without apparent heed for the damage
that they might inflict on international treaties and regimes.
Why has this happened? Why has US security policy appeared to
move away from the well-tested principles and practices that the
United States itself established with great effort over many years?
We need a sympathetic understanding of this change of direction. I
would suggest four causes.
Firstly, there has been a profound change in threat perceptions
in the United States over the past five or so years. A great
anxiety has developed around the perception that irrational (even
suicidal) minor actors armed with lethal weapons (especially
biological weapons) pose major threats which cannot be countered by
the traditional deterrence and arms control. Against a background
of concern over civil order within the United States, an
un-coordinated but terrifying army of 'rogue states', 'terrorists'
and other actors has assembled in the public mind against the
American people.
These fears have probably been exaggerated (although outsiders
should hesitate before passing judgement, recognising that the
threats posed especially by biological weapons have been subjected
to a much more intense scrutiny in the United States than
elsewhere). But as always it is perceptions that count. The need to
find a response to these new threats became paramount for
many constituencies in the United States. This compulsion created
the political grounds for ballistic missile defences, even if those
defences would offer little or no protection against many of the
new threats.
Throughout this period, the United States has felt comparatively
invulnerable to traditional challenges, including nuclear
challenges, from other great powers. To some, China began to loom
as the most serious long-term threat to US interests, but even that
could be countered by US military and economic power. As a
consequence, US security analysts have been either careless of the
effects of ballistic missile defences and other measures on broad
strategic relations, or have been unworried by them given America's
perceived invincibility vis-à-vis China and Russia.
Secondly, the problem-solving capacity of regimes, and the
ordering capacity of co-operative security, appeared to diminish
when viewed from Washington as the 1990s wore on. Iraq seemed to
provide a telling illustration of these limitations - both in
regard to the limitations of international safeguards and UNSCOM
when faced with a determined opponent, and in regard to the loss of
cohesion amongst the five permanent members of the UN Security
Council. Of course, American reactions and over-reactions have on
occasion encouraged the very lack of cooperation that has hindered
common approaches - a typical vicious circle. The overall
consequence has been a US government that has felt less and less
able to forge international consensus, and less and less prepared
to place its trust in weakened proposals which are all that can be
agreed. It has thus been tempted to turn its back on consensual
politics and try to enforce its own solution, as in the Iraqi
case.
Where arms control is concerned, diplomatic and administrative
overload in Washington has also had negative effects. The various
treaty negotiations, now involving chemical and biological weapons
(and landmines) as well as nuclear weapons, the battles over
ratification, and the task of implementing complex measures in
various countries (not least Russia) have together required an
enormous and sustained commitment of individual and collective
energy. Viewed from the outside, government agencies in Washington
appeared to become less effective after 1995, giving rise to a
perception of drift and inattention. Exhaustion, the loss of key
personnel, and resource scarcity rather than disinterest may have
been partly to blame.
Thirdly, domestic politics have worked against arms control. At
this conference, various speakers commented on the growing
asymmetries that have bedevilled great power relations.
Unfortunately, there has been perfect symmetry between the US and
Russia in one notable respect - the relations between presidents
and national legislatures. In both countries, those relations have
become confrontational and at time venomous. Furthermore, elections
since 1993 have resulted in the ascendancy of nationalistic
political groupings in Congress and the Duma which have been
suspicious of foreign powers and antagonistic towards arms control,
and which have exploited popular anxieties in pursuit of their
special interests. START II, the CTBT and the ABM Demarcation
Agreement are just some of the examples of measures that have
fallen foul of adversarial politics in and between Washington and
Moscow.A
Fourthly, technological advances have begun to generate their
own political momentum. Developments in missile defence technology
over the past 20 years have reached a point where the United States
may be able to deploy an effective defensive system - at
least against small numbers of incoming missiles. To the advocates
of a defensive shield, the US has the chance to render its
territory invulnerable to external attack for the first time since
the early 1950s and to provide additional protection to close
allies such as Japan. Although this prospect has already shown its
capacity for disrupting relations with other nuclear powers,
opportunities to establish clear and lasting technological
leadership over rivals are always hard to resist, especially when
they seem to answer a popular craving for greater
protection.B
The US remains, of course, highly constrained in how it can and
cannot behave internationally. It is constrained, for instance, by
its membership and strong commitment to treaties such as the Treaty
on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). However, the
trend in US policy, especially as perceived in foreign
capitals, has been towards greater unilateralism. The US is not
alone in this, but as hegemon it sets the tone in international
politics more than any other state. Recent US actions, more than
any others, have been seen as confirming that international
relations are sliding towards the competitive unilateralism that we
hoped had been cast aside.
This trend nevertheless presents the US, as the dominant power,
with four grave problems which suggest that its own and other
states' drift into unilateralism will ultimately be
self-defeating.
Firstly, a selfish hegemony will also be a challenged
hegemony. States and other actors will try to balance power
against the US, and to force restraint upon the US, by whichever
means are available to them. Given US superiority in economic and
conventional military resources, WMD and terrorism provide the
obvious means of challenging US authority. Thus an attempt to
govern through imperial might and disregard could lead the US into
its worst nightmare.
Secondly, US capacities for problem solving would be reduced
still further in a world of challenged hegemony and
competitive unilateralism. As already indicated, coercion is
a blunt instrument when faced with an Iraq or a North Korea if
actions taken against such states lack international support and
are not founded in international law. A combination of increased
incentives to acquire WMD (or to expand existing arsenals), failing
non-proliferation regimes, weakening taboos, and unwillingness to
develop co-operative solutions would bring the worst of all
outcomes for the US. Confidence in crisis management would also be
imperilled by such trends. Abilities to handle crises in relations
between Russia and the US and China and the US in particular will
be diminished if there is no substratum of trust and
co-operation.C
Thirdly, unilateralism will be self-defeating if it undermines
the cohesion of alliances. The strains in the Western alliance over
missile defences and over Iraq already show the potential for
division. If current trends are allowed to continue, the result
will be political and institutional fragmentation, again weakening
the ability of the US and other great powers to protect their own
security interests.
Finally, an unspoken assumption in the US is that a retreat into
competitive unilateralism in the political sphere will have no
affect on economic performance - that the realms of economic
globalisation and international security are essentially
autonomous. I cannot believe this to be true. If the security
situation is allowed to deteriorate much further, the global
economy and thus the US economy must eventually be affected,
especially as a result of growing conflict over trade policy.
For all these reasons, national interest must surely bring
co-operative security - supported by the judicious use of military
and economic power - back into centre stage. It may be a hard road
to follow, but any other could lead us to disaster.
In these circumstances, what should be the priorities of those
concerned to arrest the deterioration in nuclear relations? Seven
come to mind.
1. To borrow a phrase used at this conference by our Russian
colleague, Viktor Slipchenko, hang on to what you have.
Concentrate on protecting the agreements, treaties and institutions
that have been established with great effort over the past forty
years. More than that, reaffirm them . In my view, the aim
of the 2000 NPT Review Conference should be to reaffirm States
Parties' commitments to the NPT, and to the realisation of the
Principles and Objectives on Nuclear Non-Proliferation and
Disarmament and the Resolution on the Middle East agreed in 1995.
Parties should beware of trying to negotiate a new set of
Principles and Objectives, or any other new agreement, at the
Conference in these difficult times. An act of re-dedication is
what is required.
2. Understand the risks. There needs to be much more
appreciation amongst politicians, and bureaucracies and publics of
the dangers of embarking on a unilateralist course and of weakening
the institutions of co-operative security, (including multilateral
treaties).D We hear much about the specific threats from
this rogue state or that terrorist organisation, but little about
the graver threats from decaying co-operative institutions. At the
same time, risks of whichever kind should not be exaggerated:
no-one gains from the unwarranted pumping up of anxieties.
3. Clarify the objectives of missile defence programmes.
It is clear that US policy on missile defence has become the
central issue for many states. American colleagues attending this
conference have tried to reassure the other participants on a
number of occasions that US programmes still have narrow objectives
(objectives which we can respect). This is not the impression
gained abroad. Rightly or wrongly, the perception has taken root
that US policy has moved from the limited goals implied by the ABM
Demarcation Agreement to an open-ended adventure designed to limit
the effectiveness of other states' nuclear deterrents. The actual
objective is in need of urgent clarification.
The policy process that has been instituted in Washington has
also not helped, to put it mildly. To have Congress mandating the
deployment of a national missile defence system without prior
consultation with other states, including America's closest allies,
and to have the US government feeling obliged to base its
deployment policy upon evidence from a handful of tests and to
underplay the consequences for foreign relations, is to invite
disarray.E
4. Address the North Korean problem. The North Korean
missile and nuclear programmes have arguably become the most
destabilising factor of all. Besides providing encouragement for
the US NMD programme, they are diminishing Japan's confidence in
its security arrangements. A decision by Japan to abandon its
renunciation of nuclear weapons would shatter the non-proliferation
regime. If China wishes to avoid a nuclear-armed Japan, or a Japan
committed to deploying missile defences with the United States, it
should renew its effort with the US and other powers to terminate
the North Korean programmes. If it believes, as Chinese colleagues
attending this conference have indicated, that North Korea is
simply a pretext for the US to deploy missile defences against
China, then it should call Washington's bluff.
5. Reach a new accord on Iraq. We await the outcome of
negotiations in New York on a new UN Security Council Resolution on
Iraq. Beyond its practical implications, a unanimous resolution
would have considerable symbolic importance at this time. It would
show that the P5 can still work together in the Security Council,
and that co-operative security is still alive. (Unfortunately,
subsequent developments inside and outside the UN Security Council
concerning the establishment of UNMOVIC have not been
reassuring).F
6. Address the issue of India and Pakistan's status.
Discussions have been held in the margins of this conference on how
the slight caused by the NPT's exclusion of India and Pakistan from
the ranks of the recognised nuclear weapon states might be
overcome. If there is desire and determination on all sides, a
solution can surely be found to this problem. These countries'
absence from the institutions of arms control brings no benefit to
anyone.G
7. Don't give up on multilateral initiatives. Last but
not least, the tasks of bringing the CTBT and the Additional
(safeguards) Protocols into force, negotiating the FMCT, concluding
and implementing the BWC Protocol, and pursuing other multilateral
initiatives must not be abandoned. Despite the setbacks and
frustrations, the show must be kept on the road.H
Finally, we must not forget that nuclear disarmament remains
humankind's ultimate aspiration and the obligation to realise it is
embedded in international law. Although recent developments may
have injured the prospects for disarmament, there remains a
pressing need to establish a forum in which states can collectively
discuss how to imagine and institute a nuclear weapon-free
world.
Editor's Footnotes
A. See News Review
B. See Documents and Sources
C. See Opinion and Analysis
D. See News Review
E. See Documents and Sources
F. See Disarmament Diplomacy,
Issues 41 & 42, and News Review
G. See News Review
H. See Geneva Update, BWC Update and Documents and Sources
William Walker is Professor of International Relations at
the University of St Andrews, Scotland.
© 2000 The Acronym Institute.
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