Sleepwalking Into a Nuclear Arms Race with
Russia
By Chuck
Spinney and Pierre Sprey
February 24, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "RPI"
- The Nuclear Question is becoming
increasingly obfuscated by spin and lobbying as
the West sleepwalks into Cold War II — a walk
made all the more dangerous when the loose lips
of the US tweeter-in-chief announced that
another nuclear arms race is a great idea (see
link,
link,link).
Two Cold War II issues are central and almost
never addressed: What will be the Russians'
understanding of all the propaganda surrounding
the Nuclear Question and the looming American
defense spendup? And how might they act on this
understanding?
Background
Barack Obama first outlined his vision for
nuclear disarmament in a speech
in Prague on 5 April 2009, less than three
months after becoming President. This speech
became the basis for what eventually became the
New Start
nuclear arms limitation treaty. But Mr. Obama
also opened the door for the modernization of
our nuclear forces with this pregnant statement:
“To
put an end to Cold War thinking, we will
reduce the role of nuclear weapons in our
national security strategy, and urge others
to do the same. Make no mistake: As long as
these weapons exist, the United States will
maintain a safe, secure and effective
arsenal to deter any adversary, and
guarantee that defense to our allies –-
including the Czech Republic.”
Why
call for nuclear disarmament while opening the
door to nuclear rearmament?
Obama’s speech
paved the way
to his Nobel Peace Prize in October 2009, but he
was also trying to manipulate the domestic
politics of the Military - Industrial -
Congressional Complex (MICC). By 15 December
2009, 41 Senators sent a letter to President
Obama saying that further reductions of the
nuclear arsenal
would be acceptable only if
accompanied by "a significant program to
modernize our nuclear deterrent."
Viewed in retrospect, it is clear that the new
President — either naively or cynically —
acquiesced to that senatorial spending demand in
order to keep the powerful nuclear laboratories
and their allies in the defense industry and
Congress from lobbying against his new arms
limitation treaty. In April 2009 Obama took the
first steps that launched a
huge spending plan
to modernize US nuclear forces across the board.
Eight years later, during his first call to
President Putin on 28 January 2017, President
Trump locked that program in place by
denouncing
Obama’s New START as a “bad deal,” saying it
favored Russia.
A particularly dangerous component of the Obama
nuclear spending plan is the acquisition of
low-yield precision-guided nuclear
bombs/warheads. These weapons only make sense
within a radical strategy for actually fighting
a nuclear war -- as opposed to the almost
universally accepted idea that our nuclear
arsenal exists only to deter any thought of
using these weapons — since actual use is
unthinkable, with profoundly unknowable
consequences. Last December, the prestigious
Defense Science Board — an organization replete
with members closely connected to the nuclear
labs and their defense industry allies — added
its imprimatur to this radical strategy by
resurrecting the old and discredited ideas of
limited nuclear options
(LNOs). LNOs are based on the unproven — and
unprovable — hypothesis that a president could
actually detonate a few nukes to control a
gradually escalating nuclear bombing campaign,
or perhaps to implement a psychological tactic
of encouraging deterrence with a few small
"preventative" nuclear explosions.
Adding to Obama's expansion of our nuclear
posture is President Trump’s intention to
fulfill his campaign promises to strengthen all
nuclear offensive and defensive forces, with
particular emphasis on spending a lot more for
the ballistic missile defense (BMD) program —
which implies expanding the current deployments
of BMD weapons in eastern Europe within a few
hundred miles of the Russian border.
Early cost estimates — really guesses — for
Obama's entire nuclear modernization program are
for
one trillion dollars over the next 30 years.
No missile defense costs are included in this
estimate — nor are the costs of Trump's promised
expansions.
The components of the currently authorized
program — e.g., a new bomber, a new ballistic
missile carrying submarine, a new ICBM, a new
air-launched cruise missile, a complete
remanufacturing upgrade of the existing B-61
dial-a-yield tactical nuclear bomb that also
adds a precision guidance kit, a new family of
missile warheads, new nuclear warhead production
facilities, and a massive array of new
large-scale intelligence, surveillance, command
and control systems to manage these forces — are
all in the early stages of development. Assuming
business as usual continues in the Pentagon, the
one-trillion dollar estimate is really a typical
front-loaded or “buy-in” estimate intended to
stick the camel’s nose in the acquisition tent
by deliberately understating future costs while
over-promising future benefits.
The money for all of these programs is just
beginning to flow into hundreds of congressional
districts. As the torrent of money builds up
over the next decade, the flood of
sub-contracting money and jobs in hundreds of
congressional districts guarantees the entire
nuclear spend-up will acquire a political life
of its own — and the taxpayer will be burdened
with yet another unstoppable behemoth.
Readers who doubt this outcome need only look at
how the problem-plagued F-35 Strike Fighter
lives on, resisting reductions in money flows
and even receiving congressional add-ons,
despite mind-numbing effectiveness shortfalls,
technical failures and unending schedule delays
(e.g., see this recent
60 page report
by the Pentagon’s Director of Operational Test
and Evaluation).
Locking hundreds of congressmen and senators
into this nuclear modernization program
guarantees that the money flow and cost overruns
will increase without interference for the next
thirty to fifty years. Our many years of
observing and analyzing DoD’s largest
politically-engineered acquisitions makes it
obvious that the initial buy-in guess of a
trillion dollar total will turn into at least a
three trillion dollar price tag by the end of
three decades. In short, the Pentagon is
planting the seed money for another F-35-like
disaster, only this time on steroids.
But there is more. Once this multi-trillion
dollar, self-sustaining money gusher is sluicing
steadily into the boiler rooms of the Military -
Industrial - Congressional Complex (MICC), US
force deployments, alliances, treaties and
threat assessments will be shaped even more
heavily than now to support the domestic
politics of ever-increasing spending for the
MICC. Despite this, our nation’s foreign policy
mandarins seeking to steer the ship of state
from their perch on Mount Olympus will remain
oblivious to the fact that their "policy"
steering wheel is not connected to the ship’s
rudder.
As one perceptive Pentagon wag succinctly
observed years ago, “In the real world, foreign
policy stops at the water’s edge,” i.e., the
domestic politics of the MICC always trump
foreign policy. President Eisenhower understood
this, though he did nothing about it before
leaving office.
As of now, no one in the MICC really gives a
damn how the Russians (or the Chinese) might
actually react to America’s looming nuclear (and
non-nuclear) spending binge. This is clearly
seen in the cognitive dissonance of the Obama
Defense Department:
It was torn between
insisting the Russians are not the target of the
nuclear program but at the same time justifying
the nuclear build up as a means to counter
Russian conventional aggression. Equally
revealing, an 8 February
editorial in
the Pentagon's favored house organ, Defense
News, described President Trump’s upcoming
Nuclear Posture Review without once mentioning
the Russians or Chinese nor how they might react
to the looming American spending spree. On the
other hand, the editorial took great pains to
explain in detail how the forces of domestic
political consensus will ensure steady funding
for Obama’s nuclear spending plans throughout
the Trump Administration years.
Do Actions Trigger Reactions (1)?
So, how might the Russians react to the threat
of increased American defense budgets?
Lets try to look at the nuclear modernization
program — and the looming defense spendup — from
the Russian leadership's point of view.
The Russians, particularly those internal
political and industrial factions that benefit
from Russian defense spending, are very likely
to characterize the American spending program as
an aggressive sharpening of the US nuclear sword
and a strengthening of its nuclear shield,
synchronized with a threatening buildup of
America’s conventional force. And that will be
used to argue that Russia is spending far too
little on defense because it faces an
existential threat due to increased American
spending.
Don’t laugh, this is a mirror image of the
argument used successfully by President Ronald
Reagan in a televised address to the nation on
22 November 1982. His subject was also nuclear
strategy, as well as the need to increase
America’s entire defense budget.
Reagan said
[excerpted from pp. 3-5],
You
often hear that the United States and the
Soviet Union are in an arms race. The truth
is that while the Soviet Union has raced, we
have not. As you can see from this blue US
line in constant dollars our defense
spending in the 1960s went up because of
Vietnam and then it went downward through
much of the 1970s. Now, follow the red line,
which is Soviet spending. It has gone up and
up and up.” …
"The combination of the Soviets spending
more and the United States spending
proportionately less changed the military
balance and weakened our deterrent. Today,
in virtually every measure of military
power, the Soviet Union enjoys a decided
advantage” …
If my defense proposals are passed, it will
still take five years before we come close
to the Soviet level.
Mirror imaging Reagan’s argument, Russian
defense advocates emphasizing the dangers of the
US spendup are likely to point out that the
United States and its allies are already
spending far more on their military forces than
Russia is spending. Moreover, America certainly
intends to rapidly increase the size of this
spending advantage, because the large new
American nuclear modernization program is only
part of a yet-larger long term spending buildup.
After all, have not President Trump and Senator
McCain proposed huge increases to President
Obama’s defense budget to rebuild what Messrs.
Trump and McCain claim is a “depleted” military
(see
link 1 and
link 2 respectively)?
Advocates of increased Russian defense budgets
might also ask, are not Messrs. Trump and McCain
declaring an emergency by calling on Congress to
exempt defense spending from the spending
restrictions imposed by the
Budget Control Act of 2011?
Indeed, Russian politicians, echoing Mr. Reagan
in 1981, might construct a graphic using the
West’s own numbers
to prove their points, beginning perhaps with
something like this (Chart 2):
Chart 2
A Russian defense advocate using the Janes’
metric in Chart 2 could argue that (1) Russia is
now spending slightly less than Saudi Arabia,
less than India, and less than the UK; (2) the
size of Russia’s budget is only a quarter of
China’s; and (3) the size of Russia’s defense
budget is an astonishing one-twelfth of that of
the United States!
Add to the US defense budget the contributions
of its allies and close friends and the spending
balance in favor the US and its allies to that
of Russia alone becomes an astounding 21 to 1!
Even if Russia could trust China to be a
reliable ally — which it can’t — the current
spending imbalance is over four to one in favor
of the US and its allies on the one hand and
Russia and China on the other.
Advocates of increased Russian defense spending
might even argue their comparison does not
suffer from the gross distortions created by
Reagan’searlier chart because (1) the Ruble
was not convertible
into dollars in 1982 (whereas it is today), and
Reagan’s comparison severely overstated Soviet
spending levels using an artificial exchange
rate; and (2) the dollar numbers in their Chart
2 comparison start from zero, unlike the
deliberately truncated dollar scale (100 to 275)
Reagan used in Chart 1 to exaggerate his point.
Do Actions Trigger Reactions (II)?
Of course, from a Russian leader’s point of
view, the strategic threat goes well beyond the
madness implied by the asymmetries in defense
budgets.
They might see the Trumpian expansion of both
nuclear offense and missile defense as evidence
the US is planning to dominate Russia by
preparing to fight and win a nuclear war — a
radical shift from America's 50+ years of
building nuclear forces only for deterrence
(often referred to as Mutually Assured
Destruction or MAD).
Faced with such a threat, militarist factions
inside Russia are likely to insist on a rational
application of the
precautionary principle
by the Russian nation.
That principle will dictate a response,
presumably a massive Russian nuclear arms race
with the United States. The obvious fact that
the politically engineered US nuclear program
cannot be reined in or terminated by politicians
in the US is almost certainly understood by the
Russians. But that appreciation would serve
merely to magnify the sense of menace perceived
by patriotic Russian leaders.
Bear in mind, the Russians are unlikely to view
the emerging nuclear menace in isolation. For
one thing, there is the toxic question of NATO’s
expansion and the mistrust it created.
The vast majority of Russians, including former
President Gorbachev, President Putin, and Prime
Minister Medvedev, believe strongly that the US
and the West violated their verbal promises not
to expand NATO eastward in return for the Soviet
Union’s acquiescence to the unification of
Germany as a member of NATO. Many leaders of the
West have either denied any promises were made
or downplayed the import of any such
understandings. But reporters from the German
weekly Der Spiegel discovered documents in
western archives that supported the Russian
point of view, and on
26 November 2009 published an investigative
report concluding
…
“After
speaking with many of those involved and
examining previously classified British and
German documents in detail, SPIEGEL has
concluded that there was no doubt that the
West did everything it could to give the
Soviets the impression that NATO membership
was out of the question for countries like
Poland, Hungary or Czechoslovakia.”
One
thing is beyond dispute: The impression or
understanding or promise not to expand NATO was
broken by President Clinton — largely for
domestic political reasons — making a mockery of
President Gorbachev’s hopeful vision of a
greater European home.
Break
Free From The Matrix
|
Clinton announced support for NATO expansion in
October of 1996, just before the November
election, to garner conservative and hawk votes,
the votes of Americans of Eastern European
descent, and in response to an intense NATO
expansion lobbying campaign mounted by the MICC
— and to steal the issue from his conservative
opponent Senator Robert Dole.
The expansion of NATO eastwards combined with
President Bush’s unilateral
withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile
Treaty in June
2002, followed by the deployment of ABM systems
to Eastern Europe certainly increased the
Russians’ sense of mistrust and menace regarding
US intentions. To this day, Putin’s speeches
repeatedly refer to the broken American
promises.
There is more to an appreciation of the Russian
point of view. In parallel with the NATO
expansion, the
European Union (EU) expanded eastward,
precipitously like an expanding cancer,
beginning in 1995 and continuing to 2013. The
EU’s exclusion of Russia from the “greater
European home” further fueled an atmosphere of
mistrust and menace.
From a Russian perspective, the NATO and EU
expansions worked to deliberately isolate and
impoverish Russia — and the potential (though to
date frustrated) expansion by the West into
Ukraine and Georgia intensified the sense that
Russia had been hoodwinked by the West.
The perception of a deliberate US and EU
campaign to cripple Russia has a history dating
back to the end of the First Cold War in 1991:
Russian leaders, for example, are unlikely to
forget how, during the Clinton Administration,
US NGOS combined with American pressure,
supported the extraordinarily corrupt
privatization of the former Soviet state
enterprises in the 1990s (aka “Shock Therapy”).
In the
words of the
Nobel Prize winning economist, Joseph Stiglitz
(16 June 2000):
“In
the early 1990s, there was a debate among
economists over shock therapy versus a
gradualist strategy for Russia. But Larry
Summers [Under Secretary of the Treasury for
International Affairs, then Deputy Secretary
of the Treasury, now Secretary] took control
of the economic policy, and there was a lot
of discontent with the way he was driving
the policy.
The people in Russia who believed in shock
therapy were Bolsheviks--a few people at the
top that rammed it down everybody's throat.
They viewed the democratic process as a real
impediment to reform.
The grand larceny that occurred in Russia,
the corruption that resulted in nine or ten
people getting enormous wealth through
loans-for-shares, was condoned because it
allowed the reelection of Yeltsin.”
And
in a touch of irony, given the current hysteria
over President Putin’s alleged meddling in the
US presidential election, it gets worse. Russian
leaders are also unlikely to forget American
intervention on
behalf of Boris Yeltsin in the Russian elections
of 1996, including using American control of the
International Monetary Fund to float a $10.2
billion loan in March to 1996
to help the
corrupt and malleable Boris Yeltsin to win the
election in June.
July 15, 1996
So, from a Russian perspective, the recent
increasingly severe US sanctions are not only
hypocritical, they certainly reinforce the view
that the US led campaign to cripple the Russian
economy is ongoing and perhaps endless.
Moreover, the rapid, opportunistic expansion of
NATO and the EU created a kaleidoscope of
internal frictions. Now both institutions are in
trouble, riven by contradictions and
disharmonies. Great Britain is leaving the EU
but will remain in NATO. Northern Europe and the
EU bankers are imposing draconian austerity
measures on Southern Europe, particularly
Greece. Turkey, long a key NATO ally, is turning
to Russia while being rejected by the EU. The
destruction of Libya, Iraq and Syria, under US
leadership with European participation, has
created an unprecedented flood of refugees into
the EU, deeply threatening the EU'S organizing
principle of open borders. The increasing tide
of European instability and chaos, accompanied
by the looming specter of growing Fascist
movements from Spain to Ukraine, inevitably add
to the traditional Russian sense of being
endangered and encircled.
That sense of endangerment is certainly
heightened by a recent
creepy piece of
nuttiness coming out of Poland, perhaps the most
Russophobic member of the EU and NATO. The
German daily DW says Jaroslaw Kaczynski, a very
conservative former prime minister of Poland,
chairman of the ruling nationalist-conservative
Law and Justice party (PiS), has called for a
massive EU nuclear force — trading on Polish
fears that the United States will not sacrifice
Chicago to save Warsaw. That France and Britain
already have nuclear weapons and are members of
NATO is, of course, left unsaid in Kaczynski’s
demagoguery.
Russian leaders cannot ignore the fact that
Kaczynski called for a nuclear EU shortly after
the US
3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team
of the 4th Infantry Division (3,500 troops and
2,500 vehicles) deployed to Poland. Even worse,
the commanding officer promptly declared the
brigade is “ready to fight,” though it is
intended to “deter” any threat to Poland. One
brigade is a trip wire … or a kind of blank
check that might be exploited for nutty reasons
to trigger a shooting war — and as Kaczynski
just demonstrated, nuttiness is afoot in that
part of the world.
Now, if you were a Russian; and
(1) you remembered the West’s destruction to
your homeland beginning in 1812, 1914, and 1941
together with the recent string of broken
promises, economic exclusion, and destructive
meddling in Russian internal affairs that made a
mockery of the ideal of a post-Cold War common
European home; and …
(2) you faced a country that excluded you from
Europe, suborned your election and is intent on
crippling your economy, a country already
outspending you on defense by a factor of twelve
to one while expressing an intent to increase
that lopsided ratio in a major way; and …
(3) that country has already started a nuclear
arms race with a hugely expensive
across-the-board modernization program to buy
atomic weapons some of which can be justified
only in terms of fighting and winning nuclear
wars;
What would you do?
To ask such a question is to answer it. For
patriotic Americans interested in increasing
their real national security (rather than their
national securitybudget), the nuclear issue
boils down to a question of understanding the
powerful impact of America’s spending decisions
and actions on patriotic Russians. In other
words, it is a question of reasoned empathy and
pragmatic self-interest.
Yet the mainstream media and the politicians of
both parties in thrall to our MICC are working
day and night to pump up anti-Russian hysteria
and hype fear to ensure Americans remain
completely oblivious to the powerful, dangerous
impact of our senseless Obama-Trump nuclear
spend-up on the Russians — or on anyone else,
for that matter.
——————
Authors' background: Chuck Spinney and Pierre
Sprey, between them, have over 75 years of
Pentagon and industry experience in engineering
weapons as well as in analyzing military systems
effectivness and defense budgets. Sprey was one
of the early whiz kids in the Office of the
Secretary of Defense (OSD) in the 1960s. He led
the Air Force's concept design team for the
legendary A-10 attack aircraft and, together
with colonels Boyd and Riccioni, fathered the
enormously successful F-16 fighter. Working in
OSD in the 1980s, Spinney’s critical analyses of
the Pentagon’s defective planning and budgeting
landed him on the March 1983 cover of Time.
Leaving the Pentagon in 2003, he did an in-depth
interview on the
military-industrial-congressional complex with
Bill Moyers which resulted in a special Emmy
Award winning edition of Bill Moyers’Now that
aired on 1 August 2003. Sprey and Spinney have
testified before Congress on many occasions and
were founding members of the Military Reform
Movement led by their close colleague, the
renowned American fighter pilot and
strategist, Colonel John Boyd.
Reprinted with
permission from Chuck Spinney's
The Blaster.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing
House.
|
Click for
Spanish,
German,
Dutch,
Danish,
French,
translation- Note-
Translation may take a
moment to load.
What's your response?
-
Scroll down to add / read comments
Note to ICH
community. We are testing this new comment section. We
appreciate your sharing your experience regarding this new
system.
Please
read our
Comment Policy
before posting -
It is unacceptable to slander, smear or engage in personal attacks on authors of articles posted on ICH.
Those engaging in that behavior will be banned from the comment section.
|
|