[In December 2016, Russian President Vladimir Putin declared: “We need
to strengthen the military potential of strategic nuclear forces ...
especially with missile complexes that can reliably penetrate any
existing and prospective missile defense systems.” Shortly afterwards,
President-elect Trump tweeted that “The United States must greatly
strengthen and expand its nuclear capability until such time as the
world comes to its senses regarding nukes.” Leaders in both states
clearly see a challenge to the existing strategic order posed by
missile defense and nuclear modernization.
...
Seeking cooperation on anti-ballistic missiles will help reverse the
deterioration in Russian-US relations. But improved relations are not
the only benefit that cooperation will bring. While missile defense
systems today do not threaten the fabric of mutually assured
destruction, this will not remain the case forever. The technology
continues to improve. To avoid a costly new arms race, it is critical
to increase bilateral transparency now, in the hopes of reaching a
comprehensive agreement later. Strategic stability depends on mutual
clarity of capabilities, technologies, and intentions. President Trump
has a unique opportunity to “bring sense” to nuclear security by
initiating a conversation with Russia on anti-ballistic missiles.]

http://thebulletin.org/new-life-new-start10792

New life for New START?
26 MAY 2017
Ian Johnson Joel Beckner Heng Qin Nadezhda Smakhtina

Joel Beckner is an active-duty US Army foreign area officer, working
towards his master’s degree in Russian, East European, and Eurasian
Studies at Stanford University.

Ian Johnson completed his doctorate in history at Ohio State
University in 2016, and is currently a postdoctoral fellow at the
Clements Center for National Security and a lecturer in the history
department at the University of Texas at Austin.

Heng “Amber” Qin is a senior majoring in political science at
Wellesley College. She also studies Russian and was an exchange
student at Moscow State Institute of International Relations.

Nadezhda Smakhtina is a graduate student at American University in
Washington, D.C., focusing on governance and security in Eurasia.

In December 2016, Russian President Vladimir Putin declared: “We need
to strengthen the military potential of strategic nuclear forces ...
especially with missile complexes that can reliably penetrate any
existing and prospective missile defense systems.” Shortly afterwards,
President-elect Trump tweeted that “The United States must greatly
strengthen and expand its nuclear capability until such time as the
world comes to its senses regarding nukes.” Leaders in both states
clearly see a challenge to the existing strategic order posed by
missile defense and nuclear modernization.

But this challenge may present an opportunity as well: a heightened
awareness of the need for the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, the
keystone of current US-Russia arms control agreements, which is set to
expire at the very beginning of 2021. In addition to his more
bellicose tweets, Trump has signaled an interest in decreasing
tensions with Russia. His presidency represents a chance to
reinvigorate bilateral cooperation on arms control issues.

To be sure, Putin and Trump are not the first leaders from Russia and
the United States to be concerned about the high stakes of the nuclear
age. At the height of the Cuban Missile Crisis, President John F.
Kennedy wrote to Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev that “I have not
assumed that you or any other sane man would in this nuclear age,
deliberately plunge the world into war which it is crystal clear no
country could win and which could only result in catastrophic
consequences to the whole world, including the aggressor.” Mutual
recognition of this reality eventually prevailed.

The Cuban Missile Crisis put into stark relief the need for some form
of arms control between the United States and the Soviet Union. Ten
months later, American Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko, and British Foreign Secretary Alec
Douglas-Home signed the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, marking the beginning
of the arms control era. Nine years later, in 1972, a much more
comprehensive pair of agreements—the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks
and the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty (ABM)—greatly reduced the risk
of nuclear confrontation.

It was not just the notion that a nuclear war was unwinnable that
drove the superpowers to curb the proliferation of their ABM systems.
Even before the advent of nuclear weapons, the United States and its
allies had begun wartime studies into the feasibility of technology
that promised to shoot down incoming German V-1 and V-2 rockets before
they hit their targets, but using a missile to shoot down a missile
mid-flight was not realistic in the days before high-speed computing.
Later, however, as technology improved, the possibility of shooting
incoming Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) out of the sky
proved tantalizing to both America and the Soviet Union, as it would
neutralize the other’s nuclear deterrent. Consequently, when both
nations became aware of the other’s development programs, the
perception of strategic stability came under threat. Both states were
intimately aware of the shortcomings of their own ABM capabilities,
yet they feared the other superpower would achieve a breakthrough.
This sense of vulnerability drove the United States and the Soviet
Union to sign the ABM Treaty.

Thirty years later, in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, the
Bush Administration withdrew from the ABM Treaty. In 2002, the White
House considered US-Russian relations as normalized, and Russia no
longer represented a significant threat. The administration perceived
the new threat to be non-state actors such as Al-Qaida and regimes
that had not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, such as
North Korea and Iran—who might be deterred by an effective missile
defense system. Ultimately, this decision delivered a major blow to
US-Russia relations. In response to the US withdrawal, Russia withdrew
from the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty II (START II) the same year,
a largely symbolic move.

After the American withdrawal in 2002, the Bush Administration
invested heavily in ABM systems. In 2007, the Bush Administration
began formal talks with Poland and the Czech Republic on the
possibility of basing Patriot interceptor missiles in those countries.
While the White House proposal was initially met with ambivalence by
the Donald Tusk administration in Poland and President Vaclav Klaus in
the Czech Republic, the Russia-Georgia conflict of 2008 reversed this
reluctance. That year, Poland and the United States agreed to allow
ground-based ballistic missile defense interceptors within Poland. In
response, the Russian government “objected vociferously.”

President Barack Obama attempted to ease Russian concerns over
American interceptors in Europe by eliminating the planned ABM bases
in Poland and the Czech Republic. Instead, the administration
announced the “European Phased Adaptive Approach” plan on September
17, 2009. This involved four stages, beginning with the dispatch of
American warships to Europe armed with AEGIS missiles capable of only
short- and medium-range interception. With maximum speeds of only 3
kilometers per second, they would be incapable of hitting Russian
ICBMs like the Bulava missile, which travels twice as fast. But the
Obama administration’s planned deployment of AEGIS-capable ships in
the Mediterranean and Black Sea raised additional Russian concerns
about their use. Further, after Obama’s decision to cancel the Bush
Administration’s plans, which received broad accolades in the Russian
media, the sudden announcement of the new European Phased Adaptive
Approach plan was seen by many Russian policymakers as a betrayal.

Anti-ballistic missiles remained a major point of contention during
the New START negotiations of the following year. Russian negotiators
repeatedly raised the issue of missile defense limitations, but the
United States shot down efforts to incorporate any language on ABMs
into the new treaty. The Putin administration eventually acknowledged
that “current US missile defenses do not threaten Russia’s deterrent”
in exchange for concessions on other issues incorporated into New
START.

The Russian government, however, made it clear that if NATO deploys “a
missile system capable of significantly reducing the effectiveness of
Russia’s strategic forces,”  then Russia would withdraw from its New
START obligations. The Kremlin also argued that not only might such a
system potentially blunt Russia’s nuclear capabilities, but it might
also function as an offensive weapon that could be aimed at Moscow.
But with escalating tensions over the Russian intervention in Ukraine
in 2014, NATO allies pushed for the continuation of the European
Phased Adaptive Approach plan. On May 12, 2016, NATO officially opened
its first land-based missile defense station in Deveselu, Southern
Romania. This station was armed with Raytheon SM-3 missiles and also
hosted a radar station. In 2018, the next NATO anti-ballistic missile
base will become operational at Redzikowo, Poland. In addition, the
United States has considerably increased the number of AEGIS
anti-ballistic missile equipped ships. By Phase 3 in 2018, NATO will
have 32 AEGIS-equipped vessels, accompanied 48 SM-3 IB land-based
interceptors. (Phase 4, which would have seen the deployment of
higher-speed interceptors that posed a greater threat to Russian
ICBMs, was cancelled by President Obama in 2013. This decision was
meant to ease Russian concerns and prevent a withdrawal from New
START.)

The issue remains highly charged. The European Phased Adaptive
Approach program was officially designed against threats from the
Middle East, to eliminate any potential “rogue missile” launches or
any deterrence power that a new nuclear-armed state like Iran might
try to use in reshaping the Middle East. But with the Iran deal
forthcoming, Russian President Vladimir Putin argued that the
continued existence of the NATO anti-ballistic missile program is
clear: “The whole purpose of this system is to reduce the nuclear
capabilities of all countries but the USA itself to zero.” Some have
argued that Russian rhetoric against the European Phased Adaptive
Approach has been political hyperbole for domestic use. But, given the
possibility of a future threat to Russian strategic deterrence,
withdrawal from New START now seems like a genuine possibility.
Consequently, compromise from either side is unlikely, as NATO remains
wary of the threat posed by states that have not signed the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, and is unlikely to dismantle the system that
guarantees “damage limitation” from such threats.

Today’s security landscape is remarkably different from the ‘70s. The
US decision to withdraw from the ABM Treaty in 2002 was largely in
response to these changes. When the ABM Treaty was signed in 1972, one
primary factor had handicapped the development of successful
anti-ballistic missile systems: an effective detection and targeting
system. Today, American capabilities in this area are far greater than
they were in 1972. Beginning in 1995, the United States conducted
yearly tests for its three main interceptor systems: Ground-Based
Midcourse Defense, Aegis, and Terminal High Altitude Area Defense. In
the first year, these systems failed every test. In 1998, there were
two successful tests out of the four conducted. In 2013, six of seven
interception tests were successful.

But despite these technical advancements, interceptors remain an
implausible threat to the fabric of deterrence. Theodore Postol, a
professor of Science, Technology and National Security Policy at MIT,
noted that “past, present, and foreseeable missile defense systems are
simply unable to discriminate between real warheads and decoys.” In
the words of retired Major General Pavel Zolotarev, the development of
a reliable ABM targeting system would be “worth the Nobel Prize in
mathematics.” As it stands, in the event of a nuclear exchange between
Russia and the United States, the interception of even a small
percentage of actual nuclear warheads would be an accomplishment. Yet
the technological progress of anti-ballistic missile systems
represents a future threat to the fragile strategic balance,
particularly in the absence of a limitation treaty.

This is a critical point. David Kearn’s Military Expectation Theory
argues that arms control agreements are most likely before a system’s
technological success makes it a potentially decisive strategic tool.
The best time to establish a framework for a new ballistic missile
treaty is before such systems become a real threat to deterrence.

There are reasons for optimism. The United States is currently far
ahead of the Russian Federation in defensive and early warning
technologies, ranging from interceptor missiles to the Upgraded Early
Warning Radar system. But while Russia is well along in its nuclear
arsenal modernization program, the United States is just beginning to
embark on its own trillion-dollar program. Given the American
technological lead in anti-ballistic missiles, now is the ideal time
for both sides to reach an agreement which could provide strategic
clarity and build mutual trust.

There are a number of concrete policies that could initiate this
process. Russian expert Lilia Shevtsova of the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace argued that “the construction of a joint missile
defense system could be a way out of” the current strategic deadlock.
Russian President Vladimir Putin made a similar argument at the Valdai
Club in 2015, proposing a “troika” of the United States, Europe, and
Russia identify mutual threats and share command of a network of joint
missile defense sites. While NATO member states in Eastern Europe may
be reluctant to engage with Russia to this extent, there are
intermediate steps that could be palatable to both sides. For
instance, President Trump could propose a permanent forum for the
exchange of technical information and threat assessments, open
communications for radar-site data sharing, and arrange exchanges of
military observers.

Seeking cooperation on anti-ballistic missiles will help reverse the
deterioration in Russian-US relations. But improved relations are not
the only benefit that cooperation will bring. While missile defense
systems today do not threaten the fabric of mutually assured
destruction, this will not remain the case forever. The technology
continues to improve. To avoid a costly new arms race, it is critical
to increase bilateral transparency now, in the hopes of reaching a
comprehensive agreement later. Strategic stability depends on mutual
clarity of capabilities, technologies, and intentions. President Trump
has a unique opportunity to “bring sense” to nuclear security by
initiating a conversation with Russia on anti-ballistic missiles.

(The authors of this article are members of the Stanford US-Russia
Forum (SURF), an independent organization for students dedicated to
cultivating cooperation between the two countries via spheres of
mutual interest.)



-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to