Pushing the Edge on Nuclear War
Official Washington’s neocons and liberal hawks are ratcheting up
tensions again over Ukraine with the goal of humiliating and even
destabilizing nuclear-armed Russia – and there’s no modern-day JFK
to tamp down the enthusiasm, an existential risk that ex-U.S.
diplomat William R. Polk examines.
By William R. Polk
August 30, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Decisions on nuclear weapons are and
will remain the most important part of our quest for world security
since even small mistakes or wrong actions would probably be
catastrophic. We now seem to be moving closer to the danger point of
provoking their use. So I want particularly to emphasize four points
on the issues we all face and then raise a few other general
considerations:–Technical mistakes are
always possible. More have happened than is generally known. In the
Eisenhower administration, NORAD at least once spotted on radar a
flight of geese over Iceland and went to Red Alert. It took a
critical period of minutes to recognize the cause and stand down the
alert. During that time, the danger of a missile launch or an
aircraft attack was clear and present.
Some years later, a nuclear bomb was actually
dropped on America (by a U.S. Air Force bomber flying where it
should not have been while carrying a weapon it should not have been
carrying). Fortunately, the firing mechanism was faulty and the
bomb did not go off. Had it detonated, in the confusion SAC and
other formations would have been hard to stop from reacting to the
supposed attacker. These are just two of many incidences of
dangerous times.
I fear that we are again heading into dangerous
times.
–Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) is often said
to be “stable” under certain conditions. It follows that it becomes
unstable under others. Thus, we can predict that since our world is
in rapid transformation, we cannot rely upon temporary stability.
For years, as former Secretary of Defense Robert
McNamara observed, we have had at least 500 missiles armed with
nuclear weapons on “hair trigger” alert in Europe. If you multiply
the number of missiles by the number of months, the scattering of
sites over a large area and continuous changes of personnel, it is
obvious that even the best designed systems of command and control
are always fragile.
Much more fragile is the situation in countries
that do not spend the enormous amount of money (and talent) required
to maintain missiles and nuclear weapons. Without “upkeep,” both
missiles and bombs are inherently dangerous. And dangerous both to
the country in which they are located and to their assumed targets.
I find this particularly worrisome in the confrontation between
India and Pakistan.
–Decisions on war and peace are often discussed in
the abstract. That is, the assumption is that decision on their use
is determined by “national” interests. As has been said, “The risk
and consequences of nuclear war are so great as to outweigh any
possible advantage in trying to use them.” That gives some analysts
and practitioners a sense of security. They should not have it.
That is because decisions are not made by
“nations” but by people. And, in the aftermath of the Cuban Missile
Crisis, the deadly serious war game (designed by Thomas Schelling)
played in the Pentagon (by teams of the most senior U.S. officials)
demonstrated that there were circumstances in which even sober,
well-informed and intelligent officials would find that their less
ruinous choice would be opting for general war. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “Ukraine
War: A Reverse Cuban Missile Crisis.”]
Ironically, I think we owed much of the “success”
we had in the Cuban Missile Crisis not to the agreement to withdraw
the Jupiter missiles from Turkey, although this was clearly
necessary and I had long been advocating it, but to the bravery or
even foolhardiness of Nikita Khrushchev. He risked a coup
d’état and certain death by accepting the humiliation we necessarily
imposed on him.
And Kennedy, of course, deserves great credit for
partially masking the Russian defeat. That was the real significance
of the withdrawal of the Jupiters. Had other men been in the White
House or the Kremlin, the outcome might have been very different. I
might not be writing or you reading. We both would probably have
long since been dead (or for those of you born after 1962, you might
never have lived).
–Since human beings make the decisions, we must be
aware of decision makers’ vulnerabilities. During the Cuban Missile
Crisis, I was one of about 25 civilians fully engaged in the events.
I was not at the center but in the second or third “echelon.” So I
did not feel the full strain, but by the Thursday of the Crisis, I
was thoroughly exhausted. My judgment must have been impaired even
though I was not aware of it.
I do remember, however, a terrible episode –
fortunately lasting only a few minutes – at which I thought to
myself, “let’s just get it over with.” When later I met with my
Soviet counterparts, I got the impression, although they denied it,
that my feelings were not unique. How the strain impacted on the
inner group I can only guess. But reading McNamara’s later remarks,
I suspect they were far stronger than on me.
Now, please consider a few other random issues:
First, contrast North Korea and Iraq: the logical
deduction from the contrast of our approach to North Korea (which
does have weapons) and Iraq (which did not) is that having a nuclear
arsenal is the ultimate, sometimes the only, defense.
If defense is decided upon as a national
objective, as presumable all governments will
decide, nuclear weapons must be acquired covertly to avoid attack in
the acquisition phase. This is presumably and logically still a
danger in the Iran case if the Congress turns down the current
agreement.
Second, Iran (along with Japan and other
countries) illustrates that the division between nuclear bomb possession and
nuclear bomb potential is fungible. If the Bush
administration had pushed even harder toward a war with Iran or had
Israeli threats been even more dire, Iran might have added to its
extant and growing nuclear establishment, which then did not produce
weapons, weapons from North Korea or Pakistan – and/or gone all out
to build its own.
That would not have been an irrational act by “mad
mullahs” but, under the circumstances, a wise move. Under parallel
circumstances, the United States certainly would have done
it. Russia, China, India and Pakistan did it. Israel is a different
but comparable case.
Third, the India-Pakistan confrontation raises
another related question. Even though Pakistan took much punishment
in three wars without using its nuclear weapons, we should not be
deluded into thinking that it never will. There must be a
“red line” beyond which a nuclear war is inevitable.
Fourth, some commentators have argued that the
risks of escalating to nuclear exchanges are so obvious and so well
known that they will have a conservative effect on
everyone. Generally that is true, but we have seen situations where
decision-making is variable, unpredictable, even irrational.
And, events which appear “singular” are actually
steps in a process. Thus, when an act is taken and fails to produce
the desired result or calls for a reaction, it may and usually does
become step “A.” Step “B” becomes the logical extension. And
somewhere down the alphabet successive steps became inevitable.
In the Cuban Crisis, JFK was acutely aware of
this. He was determined not to be trapped by sequence, but it was
difficult to avoid. Our military, as I had reason personally to see,
was not so aware or so guided by concern with “process.”
Would the Pakistani general staff be smarter than
ours? Does Pakistan have a civilian commander to take the place of
JKF? And, finally, does Pakistan have a group that could perform
like the Crisis Management Committee and other advisers in and
around the presidency? If so, I have not seen them.
Fifth, Americans, and presumably all other
peoples, have very short memories. This may be less true of
officials than of the general public, but my reading of history and
my experience in government make me doubt it.
I would wager that if one tested even supposedly
well-informed college students on the report Carl Sagan orchestrated
with some our leading scientists on the effects of nuclear weapons
he would find little knowledge, understanding – or fear. And beyond
students, I shudder to think what the result would be. (It would be
a very useful contribution to world peace to republish Sagan’s
report. I
summarized it in a previous article.) To call it horrifying is
to mince words.
Since we cannot predict how our own successors
will act – and certainly cannot predict how other governments in the
future will act – I argue that in anyone’s hands, nuclear
weapons are deadly threats to us all. It follows that we must try,
as we intermittently and feebly have tried in the past, to get rid
of them before they get rid of us.
The argument is often made that reduction to
a “sufficient” deterrent number could work, but what that number
would be, who could determine it for the several nation-states and
how it could be enforced is, I think at best, problematical. Beyond
zero, everything is slippery.
Sixth, Henry Kissinger to the contrary, there is
no such thing as limited nuclear war. Kissinger, Schelling,
Kahn, Wolhstetter et al were perhaps deluding themselves, but they
certainly were deluding us.
This was the major result of the Pentagon war game
I cited above. The war game showed conclusively that the basis of
our Cold War strategy was perhaps just lucky but certainly was not
decisive. However, no one wanted to consider the result. We had
invested in a whole industry of Cold War rhetoric and were
determined not to give it up.
Last, while the minute hand on the clock on the
cover of The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists is probably
now a bit further from midnight than at various times in the past,
there are fresh warning signs that:
–We are moving back toward a confrontation with
Russia over Ukraine. And, while Russia is not so formidable as it
appeared a generation ago, it still has a nuclear arsenal as large
and as deployable as ours. Led by us, NATO is moving into areas of
great sensitivity;
–While North and South Korea seem to have reached
a sort of deal over at least propaganda and artillery exchanges, all
the elements are in place for further trouble;
–While the fate of Kashmir and the division of
water between India and Pakistan catch our attention less often, the
risks of a serious confrontation remain;
–While Israeli threats to bomb Iran appear to have
worn somewhat thin, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
continues to threaten war;
–While the United States has backed off from its
blockade and sanctions program against Iran, the prospects for
hostilities remain if Congress refuses to recognize the Iran nuclear
agreement
If we want our children and grandchildren to live,
we had better use the “minutes” before midnight to get our act in
better shape, rather than just sitting back and relaxing. We have
much to do and now is the time to get started.
William R.
Polk is a veteran foreign policy consultant, author and
professor who taught Middle Eastern studies at Harvard. President
John F. Kennedy appointed Polk to the State Department’s Policy
Planning Council where he served during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
His books include:
Violent Politics: Insurgency and
Terrorism; Understanding Iraq; Understanding Iran; Personal History:
Living in Interesting Times;
Distant Thunder: Reflections on the
Dangers of Our Times;
and
Humpty Dumpty: The Fate of Regime
Change.