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The Evolving Nuclear Strategy of
the United States and the United Kingdom and its Implications for
the NPT
Speaker: Nigel Chamberlain, British American Security Information
Council
Mr. Chairman, Distinguished Delegates,
Counter-proliferation theory has been in gestation for many years
and, following the terrible events of September 11, 2001, made its
entry onto the world stage, with a vengeance. The proponents of
aggressive military intervention had attained control over the defense
establishment in the most powerful military nation in history and
proceeded to implement their program of action.
Technological developments have always had a determining effect
on military strategy but so too has the political analysis of educated,
determined, and influential individuals and organizations. The end
of the Cold War promised much for the cause of nuclear disarmament
but delivered very little as nuclear weapons strategy was redefined
to met the perceived and real threats of the last decade of the
20th Century and the start of the third Millennium.
Nuclear deterrence is a belief system masquerading as a scientific
theory. Since the first and second use of nuclear weapons by the
United States on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, adherents of nuclear deterrence
have been in the ascendancy in those countries who have maintained
their “right” to possess them as initially permitted
under the terms of the Non-Proliferation Treaty. They have constructed
edifices at great financial, human and environmental cost. The belief
system has been nurtured by a veritable production line of learned
proponents and perpetuated by an insufficiently questioning education
system and largely acquiescent media. Nuclear deterrence has endured,
but it has also evolved.
But there is no ‘indefinite right’ to possess nuclear
weapons, even under the discriminatory provisions of the NPT. The
signatories to the treaty accepted this discrimination on the basis
that the gap between the nuclear “haves” and the nuclear
‘have nots’ would be narrowed and eventually eliminated.
It hasn’t happened. Some of the ‘have nots’ are
understandably impatient and some have perhaps decided to attempt
to join the unofficial nuclear club of the three nations who refused
to sign up to the NPT from the start.
Substantive progress on nuclear disarmament has been blocked by
the refusal of the Nuclear Weapons States (NWS) to consider that
their possession of nuclear weapons is anything other than their
ultimate guarantee of national security. Yet they also manage to
maintain that nuclear weapons in the hands of anybody else are dangerous
and destabilizing. This is what unquestioned belief systems can
lead its adherents to do- inhibit their own rational thinking.
Ill-defined ‘rogue’ states made their appearance on
the world stage soon after the Soviet Union took its final curtain
call. President Gorbachev's brave attempt to halt and reverse the
arms race was taken as a sign of weakness and the advantage just
had to be pressed home in what had been presented as a zero-sum
game, winner takes all. The reality was somewhat different and the
legacy of the Cold War is still with us.
The rationale for the indefinite possession of nuclear arsenals
was modified and repackage. The proponents of multilateralism were
marginalized; international treaties stagnated or were abrogated.
International law and engaged diplomacy were out; national security
and interventionist military expeditions overseas were in. Counter-proliferation
was the new buzzword; non-proliferation was discarded like an old
hat, first in the United States and then in the United Kingdom,
officially just two weeks before the start of this conference. This
isn't just a change of wording; it brings with it a new range of
assumptions and a new toolkit to ensure its coercive implementation.
The time is past when the US and its NATO allies can simply assert
their compliance with the NPT and associated security assurances.
Changes in nuclear use doctrine over the period since the last Review
Conference mean that they must now demonstrate their good faith
efforts to implement the NPT and the associated parts of the non-proliferation
regime.
The US abandonment of the ABM Treaty, the refusal to press for
ratification of the CTBT, the acceptance of the nuclear status of
India and Pakistan, the termination of the START process in favor
of the questionable viability of the SORT process, together with
the inadequate support for the threat reduction and non-proliferation
programmes, are all signs that this administration has abandoned
diplomatic non-proliferation. The ‘End of Arms Control’
has been announced in Washington DC, and the end of non-proliferation
is implicit in the Nuclear Posture Review, the National Security
Strategy, and the latest Strategy to Combat WMD. NATO too, at US
insistence, amended its position on the CTBT in two communiqués
in 2001.
Questions about nuclear strategy must also be answered by all NATO
member states, not just the ‘declared’ nuclear weapon
states. NATO conducted its own nuclear policy review following the
US Nuclear Posture Review, and in June 2002 NATO ministers are believed
to have adopted revisions to the NATO Strategic Concept to bring
NATO nuclear doctrine more in line with US doctrine. IT is likely
that the NATO doctrine is less explicit than the US version, such
is the nature of a compromise paper, but the meaning is clear. NATO
now reserves the right to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear
states.
Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Italy, Greece and Turkey participate
in the controversial nuclear sharing programs within the alliance.
These countries need to state if they would be prepared to sanction
the use of nuclear weapons against a non-nuclear state if called
upon to do so by the Alliance Supreme Command. An exercise in the
spring of 2002 posed this very question in the context of a chemical
or biological weapons threat to Turkey, and resistance to even conventional
pre-emptive strikes by NATO was strong. But the NPT regime is threatened
from within as much as from without, and member states of ANTO,
nuclear sharing countries in particular, must decide if they stand
behind the norms of the NPT, or behind the emerging policies of
the United States.
As new language is introduced, old words are imbued with new meaning
and previously understood demarcation lines are undercut, thus blurring
the distinction between recognizably conventional means of waging
war and hitherto decidedly unconventional means of waging war. For
example, the generic and emotive term ‘Weapons of Mass Destruction’
has replaced the differentiation that ‘nuclear, chemical and
biological weapons’ offered. This has resulted in policy drifts
in both the US and the UK that have sought to legitimize the threatened
use of nuclear weapons against a perceived chemical or biological
attack- or even actual use pre-emptively. Perversely, pre-emption
is the new deterrence, or even the new nuclear deterrence. Lip service
has been paid to continued support for the security assurances that
NWS gave to the NWSS, but very much as an after thought, and after
it had been pointed out they were being marginalized, perhaps in
preparation for being discarded altogether.
The United States must account to this forum for the inconsistencies
between the Nuclear Posture Review and the National Strategy to
Combat WMD with the NPT and with the negative security assurances.
A simple statement that the US respects the latter will not suffice.
Not only has the Administration in the United States declined to
ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, it is now proposing to
develop modified and even new nuclear weapons designed to destroy
deeply buried, hardened targets. Disturbingly, new legislation will
reduce the preparation time to resume full-scale nuclear explosions
should the order be given. The Administration has also indicated
its desire to rescind a legislative prohibition on the development
of low-yield nuclear weapons below 5 kilotons. Should these developments
be put into practice, then the effect will be to lower the nuclear
threshold and make the use of nuclear weapons more likely, as they
become a mere extension of hugely destructive conventional warfare.
The implications of what we have described to you today for the
NPT are grave. Perhaps you should be debating changing the title
to the Counter-Proliferation Treaty? You certainly should be concentrating
on strengthening the NPT by demanding greater transparency, more
compliance with its provisions by all States Parties, an enhanced
safeguards and inspection regime, legally binding security assurances
which take precedence over national nuclear strategies and progress
on nuclear disarmament.
Unless, and until, the Nuclear Weapons States acknowledge that
their adherence to nuclear deterrence, in all its various manifestations,
stands in fundamental contradiction to their NPT obligations, a
nuclear weapons free world will remain an admirable, but unobtainable
aspiration.
Thank you.
Convenor: Nigel Chamberlain and Kathy Crandall, BASIC
777 UN Plaza - 6th Floor - New York, NY - 10017 - Ph: 212.682.1265 - Fax: 212.286.8211 - info@reachingcriticalwill.org
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