We May
Be at a Greater Risk of Nuclear Catastrophe Than
During the Cold War
Astounding increases in the danger of nuclear
weapons have paralleled provocative foreign
policy decisions that needlessly incite tensions
between Washington and Moscow.
By Conn Hallinan
July 23,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "FPIF"
-
“Today,
the danger of some sort of a nuclear catastrophe
is greater than it was during the Cold War,”
warns William Perry, “and most people are
blissfully unaware of this danger.”
A
former U.S. defense secretary from 1994 to 1997,
Perry has been an inside player in the business
of nuclear weapons for over 60 years. And his
book,
My Journey at the Nuclear Brink, is a
sober read. It’s also a powerful counterpoint to
NATO’s current European strategy, which
envisions nuclear weapons as a deterrent to war:
The purpose of nukes “is to prevent major war,
not to wage wars,” argues the Alliance’s
magazine,
NATO Review.
But as
Perry points out, it’s only by chance that the
world has avoided a nuclear war — sometimes by
nothing more than dumb luck — and, rather than
enhancing our security, nukes “now endanger it.”
The
1962 Cuban missile crisis is generally
represented as a dangerous standoff resolved by
sober diplomacy. In fact, it was a single man —
Russian submarine commander Vasili Arkhipov —
who countermanded orders to launch a nuclear
torpedo at an American destroyer that could have
set off a full-scale nuclear exchange between
the Soviet Union and the United States.
There
were numerous other incidents that brought the
world to the brink. On a quiet morning in
November 1979, a NORAD computer reported a
full-scale Russian sneak attack with land and
sea-based missiles, which led to scrambling U.S.
bombers and alerting U.S. missile silos to
prepare to launch. But it turned out there was
no Soviet attack — just an errant test tape.
Lest
anyone think the incident was an anomaly, a
little more than six months later NORAD
computers erroneously announced that Soviet
submarines had launched 220 missiles at the
United States. This time the cause was a
defective chip that cost 49 cents — again
resulting in scrambling interceptors and putting
the silos on alert.
But
don’t these examples prove that accidental
nuclear war is unlikely? That conclusion is a
dangerous illusion, argues Perry, because the
price of being mistaken is so high — and because
the world is a more dangerous place than it was
in 1980.
A
Worsening Climate
It’s
been 71 years since atomic bombs destroyed
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and humanity’s memory of
those events has dimmed. But even were the
entire world to read John Hersey’s Hiroshima,
it would have little idea of what we face today.
The
bombs that obliterated those cities were tiny by
today’s standards, and comparing “Fat Man” and
“Little Boy” — the incongruous names of the
weapons that leveled both cities — to modern
weapons stretches any analogy beyond the
breaking point. If the Hiroshima bomb
represented approximately 27 freight cars filled
with TNT, a one-megaton warhead would require
a train 300 miles long.
Each
Russian RS-20V Voevoda intercontinental
ballistic missile packs 10 megatons.
What’s
made today’s world more dangerous, however,
aren’t just advances in the destructive power of
nuclear weapons, but a series of actions by the
last three U.S. administrations.
First
was the decision by President Bill Clinton to
abrogate a 1990 agreement with the Soviet Union
not to push NATO further east after the
reunification of Germany or to recruit former
members of the defunct Warsaw Pact.
NATO
has also reneged on a 1997 pledge not to install
“permanent” and “significant” military forces in
former Warsaw Pact countries. This month NATO
decided to deploy four battalions on or near the
Russian border, arguing that since the units
will be rotated, they’re not “permanent” or
large enough to be “significant.” It’s a
linguistic slight of hand that doesn’t amuse
Moscow.
Second
was the 1999 U.S.-NATO intervention in the
Yugoslav civil war and the forcible
dismemberment of Serbia. It’s somewhat ironic
that Russia has been accused of using force to
“redraw borders in Europe” by annexing Crimea,
which is exactly what NATO did to create Kosovo.
The U.S. subsequently built Camp Bond Steel,
Washington’s largest base in the Balkans.
Third
was President George W. Bush’s unilateral
withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile
Treaty and the decision by the Obama
administration to deploy anti-missile systems in
Romania and Poland, as well as Japan and South
Korea.
Last is
the decision by the current White House to spend
upwards of $1 trillion upgrading its nuclear
weapons arsenal, which includes building bombs
with
smaller yields, a move that many critics
argue blurs the line between conventional and
nuclear weapons.
Strategic
Uncertainty
The
Yugoslav War and NATO’s move east convinced
Moscow that the U.S.-led alliance was
surrounding Russia with potential adversaries,
and the deployment of anti-missile systems, or
ABMs — supposedly aimed at Iran’s non-existent
nuclear weapons — was seen as a threat to
Russia’s nuclear deterrent.
One
immediate effect of ABMs was to chill the
possibility of further cuts in the number of
nuclear weapons. When Obama proposed another
round of warhead reductions, the Russians turned
it down cold, citing the anti-missile systems as
the reason. “How can we take seriously this idea
about cuts in strategic nuclear potential while
the United States is developing its capabilities
to intercept Russian missiles?” asked Deputy
Prime Minister
Dmitry Rogozin.
When
the U.S. endorsed the 2014 coup against the
pro-Russian government in Ukraine, it ignited
the current crisis that has led to several
dangerous incidents between Russian and NATO
forces — at last count, according to the
European Leadership Network, more than 60.
Several large war games were also held on
Moscow’s borders. Former Soviet president
Mikhail Gorbachev went so far as to accuse
NATO of making “preparations for switching from
a cold war to a hot war.”
In
response, the Russians have also held war games
involving up to 80,000 troops.
It is
unlikely that NATO intends to attack Russia, but
the power differential between the U.S. and
Russia is so great — a “colossal asymmetry,”
Dmitri Trenin, head of the Carnegie Moscow
Center, told the Financial Times — that
the Russians have abandoned their “no first use”
of nuclear weapons pledge.
It’s
the lack of clear lines that makes the current
situation so fraught with danger. While the
Russians have said they would consider using
small
tactical nukes if “the very existence of the
state” was threatened by an attack, NATO is
being deliberately opaque about its possible
tripwires.
According to NATO Review, nuclear
“exercises should involve not only nuclear
weapons states… but other non-nuclear allies,”
and “to put the burden of the doubt on potential
adversaries, exercises should not point at any
specific nuclear thresholds.”
In
short, keep the Russians guessing. The immediate
problem with such a strategy is: What if Moscow
guesses wrong?
That
won’t be hard to do. The U.S. is developing a
long-range cruise missile — as are the Russians
— that can be armed with conventional or nuclear
warheads. But how will an adversary know which
is which? And given the old rule in nuclear
warfare — use ‘em or lose ‘em — uncertainty is
the last thing one wants to engender in a
nuclear-armed foe.
Indeed,
the idea of no “specific nuclear thresholds” is
one of the most extraordinarily dangerous and
destabilizing concepts to come along since the
invention of nuclear weapons.
Cold Wars
of Choice
There
is currently no evidence that Russia
contemplates an attack on the Baltic states or
countries like Poland. Given the enormous power
of the United States, which offers a security
guarantee to NATO members, such an undertaking
would court national suicide.
Nor do
Russia’s recent border conflicts suggest
otherwise. Moscow’s “aggression” against Georgia
and Ukraine was provoked. Georgia attacked
Russia, not vice versa, and the Ukraine coup
torpedoed a peace deal negotiated by the
European Union, the United States, and Russia.
Imagine Washington’s view of a Moscow-supported
coup in Mexico, followed by an influx of Russian
weapons and trainers.
In a
memorandum to the recent NATO meetings in
Warsaw, the group Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity
argued as much. “There is not one scintilla
of evidence of any Russian plan to annex Crimea
before the coup in Kiev and coup leaders began
talking about joining NATO,” the members
insisted. “If senior NATO leaders continue to be
unable or unwilling to distinguish between cause
and effect, increasing tension is inevitable
with potentially disastrous results.”
The
organization of former intelligence analysts
also sharply condemned the
NATO war games that followed. “We shake our
heads in disbelief when we see Western leaders
seemingly oblivious to what it means to the
Russians to witness exercises on a scale not
seen since Hitler’s army launched ‘Unternehmen
Barbarossa’ 75 years ago, leaving 25 million
Soviet citizens dead.”
While
the NATO meetings in Warsaw agreed to continue
economic sanctions aimed at Russia for another
six months and to station four battalions of
troops in Poland and the Baltic states — along
with separate
U.S. forces in Bulgaria and Poland — there
was an undercurrent of
dissent. Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras
called for deescalating the tensions with Russia
and for considering Russian President Vladimir
Putin a partner rather than an enemy.
Greece
was not alone. German Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier called NATO maneuvers on
the Russian border “warmongering” and “saber
rattling.” French President Francois Hollande
said Putin should be considered a “partner,” not
a “threat,” and France tried to reduce the
number of troops being deployed in the Baltic
and Poland. Italy has been increasingly critical
of the sanctions as well.
Rather
than recognizing the growing discomfort of a
number of NATO allies and that beefing up forces
on Russia’s borders might be destabilizing, U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry recently
inked defense agreements with Georgia and
Ukraine.
After
disappearing from the radar for several decades,
nukes are back, and the decision to modernize
the U.S. arsenal will almost certainly kick off
a nuclear arms race with Russia and China.
Russia is already replacing its current ICBM
force with the more powerful and long range
“Sarmat” ICBM, and China is loading its own
missiles with multiple warheads.
Add to
this volatile mixture military maneuvers and a
deliberately opaque policy in regards to the use
of nuclear weapons, and it’s no wonder that
Perry thinks that the chances of some
catastrophe is a growing possibility.
Conn Hallinan can be read at
dispatchesfromtheedgeblog.wordpress.com and
middleempireseries.wordpress.com