---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: john hallam <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, 12 Feb 2017 16:49:38 +1100
Subject: Why Did Trump Pick a Fight with Putin Over the Nuclear Weapons Treaty?

Why Did Trump Pick a Fight with Putin Over the Nuclear Weapons Treaty?

http://www.defenseone.com/ideas/2017/02/why-did-trump-pick-fight-over-nuclear-weapons-treaty/135321/

BY JOE CIRINCIONEREAD BIO

FEBRUARY 9, 2017

President Trump took a hard line over New START with Russia. It's an
odd battle to choose -- and a dangerous one.

President Donald Trump has already picked a fight with Russia’s
Vladimir Putin over nuclear weapons and the New START treaty. It is a
curious battle to choose. The treaty enjoys the overwhelming backing
of America’s top national security leaders and military commanders.
Trump reportedly didn’t know what the treaty was but seems to be
adopting the rhetoric of the far-right and their losing battle to
block it in the Senate since 2010. To back out now would uncap the two
largest nuclear arsenals in the world, worsening a burgeoning new arms
race. Even more worrying, it could leave Russia’s arsenal dangerously
uncounted.

We learned Thursday, in yet another leak to the press from concerned
White House staff, that Trump railed at Putin in their recent phone
call, denouncing the 2010 New START nuclear arms limitation pact as a
“bad deal.” It should have been a routine courtesy call. But according
to Reuters, “When Putin raised the possibility of extending the 2010
treaty… Trump paused to ask his aides in an aside what the treaty
was.” He then reprised campaign rhetoric about how one-sided the
treaty is, claiming that it gave Russia a strategic nuclear advantage.

Approved by a vote of 71-26, New START is a modest arms reduction
treaty that trims U.S. and Russian “operationally deployed strategic
weapons” to 1,550 on each side and extends crucial inspection and
verifications procedures, allowing each side to ensure that the other
is complying with the limits. It expires in 2021. Putin’s effort to
simply extend the agreement failed to get an answer from the irate
Trump.

Here’s the reality: “The New START Treaty has the unanimous support of
America’s military leadership — to include the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, all of the service chiefs, and the commander of the
U.S. Strategic Command, the organization responsible for our strategic
nuclear deterrent,” said then-Secretary of Defense Robert Gates in
2010, who served under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama.
“This treaty deserves [to be ratified by the U.S. Senate] on account
of the dangerous weapons it reduces, the critical defense capabilities
it preserves, the strategic stability it maintains, and, above all,
the security it provides to the American people.”

Then-Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen agreed, “I believe, and
the rest of the military leadership in this country believes, that
this treaty is essential to our future security.”

Some Senate opponents of the treaty blocked it for purely political
reasons; not wanting to give the Democratic president a victory is a
crucial election year. But others took their cues from hardliners such
as Frank Gaffney, head of the Center for Security Policy, who warned
that because of Russian aggression “the United States, its allies and
interests are at greater risk by the day. New START would actually
reward the Kremlin for such behavior, rather than end it.” They
preferred an arms race to arms control, calling then, as now, for an
increase in nuclear weapons with more “usable” designs and a broader
range of potential targets.

Military leaders warned about the consequences of this approach.
Former commander of STRATCOM Gen. Kevin Chilton, in testimony before
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said, “If we don’t get the
treaty, the Russians are not constrained in their development of force
structure and…we have no insight into what they’re doing. So it’s the
worst of both possible worlds.”

Seven former commanders of U.S. Strategic Air Command and Strategic
Command backed up Chilton, writing the Senate Armed Services
Committee, “Although the New START Treaty will require U.S.
reductions, we believe that the post-treaty force will represent a
survivable, robust and effective deterrent, one fully capable of
deterring attack on both the United States and America’s allies and
partners.”

Another reality check: Under New START the U.S. is still capable of
deploying 240 nuclear missiles on America’s submarine-launched nuclear
forces alone; each carrying up to 8 nuclear warheads for an estimated
900-1,000 warheads deployed at sea almost around the clock. We also
keep 400 intercontinental ballistic missies, or ICBMs, ready to launch
at a moment’s notice, and 60 strategic bombers capable of carrying
1,168 nuclear weapons.

This “bad deal” allows the United States to keep enough destructive
force to destroy all of human civilization several times over. Forget
deterrence, we are still well into Mad Max scenarios.

What if Trump backs out of this treaty?

“Without New START we will be compelled to waste military resources,
not to mention tax dollars,” warned retired Lt. Gen. John Castellaw,a
36-year veteran of the Marine Corps “A precise accounting of the
Russian arsenal and predictability going forward informs our strategic
force structure. Frankly, it is to our advantage to verifiably reduce
the Russian deployment because it allows us to use our resources more
effectively.”

As former Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger, George Shultz, James
Baker, Lawrence Eagleburger and Colin Powell wrote in 2010,
“Obviously, the United States does not sign arms control agreements
just to make friends. Any treaty must be considered on its merits. But
we have here an agreement that is clearly in our national interest,
and we should consider the ramifications of not ratifying it.”

Nor does it seem that the president consulted either his secretary of
state or secretary of defense prior to launching his diatribe. Both
support the agreement. Before Trump turns his tweets about a new
nuclear arms race into a terrifying new policy, the new president
might want to listen to the people who actually know what they are
talking about.

Joe Cirincione is president of Ploughshares Fund and the author of
Nuclear Nightmares: Securing the World Before It Is Too Late. FULL BIO





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