U.S. POLICY TOWARD CONTROL OF SOVIET “NUKES” SUFFERS FROM WRONG DIAGNOSIS, DANGEROUS RX
(Washington, D.C.): In recent days,
the United States has gone to
extraordinary lengths to convey a single,
insistent demand: The newly independent
republics of the former Soviet Union must
submit the nuclear weapons on their
territory to the exclusive control of a
“unified, central authority”
and swiftly relocate them to the Russian
republic. The Bush Administration’s
expectation evidently is that such
weapons will then be dismantled or better
safeguarded by the Russian authorities.
So preoccupied is official Washington
with this problem that the Administration
has dispatched no less a figure than
Secretary of State James Baker to convey
its message directly to the leaders of
the new Commonwealth of Independent
States, as well as to the vestigial
leadership of the old USSR. Unfortunately
for the Administration, neither its
diagnosis of the problem nor its
prescription for remedying it are sound.
Unless President Bush recognizes this
reality swiftly, he stands to compound
the damage already done to future
relations with the emerging powers in the
old Soviet empire by his past
overinvestment in the Gorbachev regime.
Misdiagnosis of the Nuclear
Situation
- There is no
“unified command
structure” extant in the
former Soviet Union. As
a practical matter, the fractures
and fault lines that have riven
the Soviet state have also begun
to manifest themselves in the
imperial military establishment.
Loyalties are being divided along
ethnic, geographic and
organizational lines. Paychecks
once issued by Moscow center are,
for the moment, now being cut by
the Russian republic. - When republican officials — like
the leaders of the three founding
states of the new Commonwealth —
offer assurances that the nuclear
weapons are “under
control,” they do not
mean that they are controlled in
the same way as in the past. Now,
they contend that authority to
release Soviet “nukes”
is vested in a new tripartite
arrangement which represents a
fundamental departure from a
monolithic control approach. - There is little
willingness on the part of the
non-Russian republics to entrust
the state that has kept them in
thrall for centuries with
exclusive possession of nuclear
weapons. While the three
other republics with strategic
forces on their soil (Ukraine,
Byelorussia and Kazakhstan) have
expressed their intentions to
become “nuclear-free,” all
have subsequently imposed caveats
on that commitment or otherwise
postponed the day when it would
be realized. Kazakh President
Nursultan Nazarbayev actually
went so far yesterday as to tell
Secretary Baker explicitly that
his nation would retain its
nuclear weapons as long as the
Russian republic did so. - The picture is even more confused
with respect to the far larger
number of republics that have
short-range, tactical weapons on
their soil. It seems safe to
assume, however, that many — if
not virtually all — of these
republics will decide they would
prefer to have these nuclear arms
remain in place until such time
as circumstances permit them to
be safely destroyed in situ. - It is hard to imagine a
more dubious idea than that of
insisting that tens of thousands
of highly portable nuclear
weapons be swiftly put on the
roads, rail networks and air
routes of the former Soviet
Union. There is a real
danger that — under present
circumstances, at least — such
devices would be diverted, lost
or stolen in the process of their
being transported to Russia.
After all, millions of tons of
food and other valuable
commodities disappeared every
year en route from one locale to
another in the old USSR; it seems
a safe bet that the same fate
would befall at a minimum some of
the nuclear weapons stored in
non-Russian republics.
Prescription for U.S.
Policy
In light of these realities, the
United States would be well advised to
adopt a radically different strategy for
addressing its legitimate concerns about
the nuclear inventory of the former USSR.
Such a strategy would have three aspects:
First, it would incorporate a
“systemic” rather than
“symptomatic” approach to the
problem. Second, it would address the people
part of the disintegrating Soviet nuclear
arsenal. Finally, it would develop near-
and longer-term means of providing for
the effective control and destruction of
the former Moscow center’s thermonuclear
stockpile.
A “Systemic”
Approach: In the past, the
United States and its allies have pursued
a “symptomatic” approach to the
problem of the Soviet nuclear threat. It
was exemplified by the pursuit and
codification of various arms control
agreements. Underlying this approach was
the notion that the best the
West could hope to do was to moderate
the behavior of its Soviet adversaries by
mitigating somewhat the growth in or, at
best, the size of Moscow’s arsenal. The
Bush Administration’s present policy for
controlling the Soviet empire’s residual
nuclear weaponry amounts to a
continuation of this approach.
What is needed now, however, is a
radically different strategy — one that
has as its express purpose the dismantling,
not the preservation, of what remains of
the Soviet system. Such an approach can
be thought of as “systemic“
arms control. If the United States is
seen by the successors to the Soviet
empire as supportive of their efforts at
self-determination and responsible
self-governance, it is likely to be far
more influential on such questions as the
disposition of nuclear arms.
This approach would involve an
immediate shift in U.S. policy on at
least three fronts:
- Offer Recognition:
Garry Kasparov — the World Chess
Champion and a formidable figure
in the democratic movement in the
former Soviet Union — recently
told a press conference sponsored
by the Center for Security Policy
that if the Western democracies
wish to encourage the non-Russian
republics to eliminate the
nuclear arms currently on their
soil, the most useful thing to do
would be to recognize their
independence. He argued that
these republics view such
recognition as their best
protection against a resurgent
communist center or, in its
absence, renascent Russian
imperialism. According to
Kasparov, were these republics to
be equipped with the West’s
recognition, they would be far
less likely to see a need to
retain nuclear weaponry. - Encourage Proliferation
of Veto Power over
Nuclear Release: The
United States should recognize
that its interests (and those of
the whole world) are actually
best served by maximizing the
number of entities in the former
USSR whose permission is required
to release or to relocate nuclear
arms. Certainly, such a
“dual-key” (or,
multiple-key) arrangement would
appear vastly preferable to
reposing exclusive release
authority in the same cast of
characters whose antipathy to the
West helped drive the
accumulation of these massive
nuclear forces in the first
place. Happily, this is precisely
the sort of release mechanism the
charter members of the
Commonwealth have said they are
instituting for control of their
nuclear weapons. - Tie Future Aid and Trade
Relations Not Only to Republics’
Behavior on the Nuclear Front but
to Systemic Change:
Where governments are accountable
to their publics for defense
policy and resource allocation
decisions, the danger of such
governments engaging in
aggressive behavior is
appreciably diminished.
Similarly, if the market —
rather than the government —
acts as the preponderant force in
determining and effecting the
society’s spending priorities,
that society ceases as a
practical matter to have the
mechanisms necessary for the
routine diversion of funds to
excessive, and threatening,
military activities.
By making clear that it will use
its economic, financial,
technological and political power
to assist republics engaged in
both democratic and free market
institution-building and
responsible control of nuclear
weapons, the United States can do
much to encourage the creation of
conditions in which the old
Soviet threat will be permanently
eliminated.
The People Dimension:
Perhaps an even more troublesome and
immediate problem than the control of
Soviet thermonuclear arms is the question
of the possible transfer of weapons
technology should trained physicists and
engineers be recruited from the empire’s
military-industrial complex by nuclear
“wannabe” states. Three steps
would appear likely to make this problem
more manageable, however:
- Identify key personnel:
Republican authorities should be
required to provide a list of
those individuals who would be in
a position to transfer
significant information about
nuclear — and for that matter,
chemical, biological or missile
— technologies. - Engage them in the job of
neutralizing nuclear weapons:
The United States should
undertake to involve such
scientists, engineers and
physicists in the immense task of
disabling and destroying Soviet
weapons of mass destruction.
Ideally, this should be done in a
manner that promotes private
enterprise in the former USSR. - Serve notice on Soviet
weapons scientists that they will
be at risk if they are discovered
aiding pariah states:
The United States and other
civilized nations should make
clear their determination to
prevent the transfer of weapons
of mass destruction know-how by
direct action against individuals
engaged in such transfers. The
deterrent value of this message
can be powerfully reinforced if
concurred in by the
counterintelligence services of
these scientists’ home republics.
In addition, the sorts of structural
changes recommended above will do much
over time to alleviate the problem of
untoward Soviet technology transfers
through scientific emigration by creating
an economy better able to utilize and
remunerate such experts for their
talents.
Securing Soviet Weapons: Finally,
the United States should engage with the
republics to facilitate the earliest
possible disabling and elimination of
Soviet nuclear and other weapons of mass
destruction. As a practical matter, it
should be understood that this represents
a monumental technical challenge that
would — under the best of circumstances
— be extremely time-consuming to perform
in a safe manner. For example, special
facilities and highly skilled personnel
are required to dispose in a secure
manner of plutonium and highly enriched
uranium or to disassemble chemical arms.
Accordingly, the focus of American
policy at this time should be on
obtaining a rapid and complete inventory
of the quantity and whereabouts of all
weapons of mass destruction in the former
USSR. Once that is accomplished, rather
than encourage their prompt relocation
over an insecure transportation system,
the United States should be working with
the republics to neutralize these systems
in place. Until that can
be effected, the U.S. government —
perhaps with the collaboration of
specialists from the NATO alliance who
have vast experience in maintaining
nuclear weapons security — should
concentrate on ensuring that all such
weapons remain monitorably under wraps.
Conclusion
By properly perceiving and addressing
the problem of Soviet nuclear and other
weapons of mass destruction, the United
States can reasonably expect to
accomplish two things: First, it can
begin to undo the self-inflicted damage
to its relations with the newly
independent republics of the former USSR
caused by its past preoccupation with
Mikhail Gorbachev’s regime. And second,
it can set in train steps more likely to
prevent a near-term nuclear incident
while encouraging a real — and lasting
— diminution of what remains of the
Soviet threat.
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