Index

APPENDIX 1

Memorandum submitted by Dr Malcolm Chalmers, University of Bradford

INTRODUCTION

  1.  The global nuclear non-proliferation regime is now at a cross-roads. The 1990's saw several important successes for this regime, most notably the renunciation of nuclear weapons by several key states (including Brazil, South Africa and Ukraine), the indefinite extension of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and agreement by all recognised nuclear weapon states to a Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT).

  2.  In recent years, however, a number of setbacks have substantially eroded the benefits obtained from these achievements. Nuclear tests by India and Pakistan in 1998 have been followed by the US Senate's 1999 refusal to ratify the CTBT. Intensive efforts to contain the WMD programmes of Iran, Iraq and North Korea have been only partially successful, further eroding confidence in global WMD regimes.

  3.  Concerns over WMD proliferation have been reinforced by concerns over the proliferation of ballistic missile technology. Primarily because of the large-scale export of Scud missiles during the Cold War, as many as 38 countries may now possess operational ballistic missiles with ranges of over 100 km. The main focus of NATO concern, however, is the possibility that several potentially hostile states may soon acquire ballistic missiles with much longer ranges. According to a recent CIA estimate.

  4.  US concerns over the proliferation of ballistic missiles to so-called "rogue states" are sufficiently serious that they are now calling into question the survival of existing strategic arms control treaties, first agreed between the US and the Soviet Union in the late 1960s. In the near future (and possibly as early as summer 2000), the US President is likely to order work to commence on construction of a National Missile Defence (NMD) site in Alaska, with the intention of providing defence of the continental US against limited missile attack by 2005 or shortly thereafter. Such a deployment would be in breach of the ABM Treaty in its current form. The US administration has made clear, however, that it is prepared if necessary to withdraw from the Treaty in order to go ahead with NMD deployment.

  5.  US withdrawal from the ABM Treaty would be a major, and perhaps terminal, blow to international non-proliferation norms. The indefinite renewal of the NPT in 1995 was based on clear commitments by existing nuclear weapon states to continue the processes of disarmament that were under way, albeit belatedly, in the early 1990s. If existing bilateral US / Russian treaties are repudiated, however, the NPT is also likely to come under increasing pressure. Regional nuclear-weapon-free zones—for example in Latin America, South-East Asia and sub-Saharan Africa—have a good chance of surviving, even if the NPT collapses. The strong security guarantees provided by NATO, and increasingly perhaps in future by the EU, may also help to prevent proliferation within Europe (though questions might arise for Turkey, given its particular vulnerability). Over time, however, the erosion of the normative basis of the NPT will make it increasingly difficult to mobilise international opinion against states in the Middle East and the rest of Asia that seek to withdraw from the NPT in future. The collapse of the START and ABM Treaties will also increase the likelihood of arms racing between the US, Russia and China, increasing international tension and wasting considerable economic resources that might better be deployed for more useful purposes.

  6.  If such a dismal prospect is to be avoided, efforts to save the ABM and START Treaties will have to be intensified. At present, the likelihood of a successful conclusion to such efforts does not appear high. Much time has been lost due to both the Russian Duma's refusal to ratify the START 2 Treaty and the US government's refusal to start START 3 negotiations until START 2 ratification takes place.[2] The probable election of Putin as Russian President in March will present a new opportunity for START 2 ratification. Yet the conditions attached to such ratification are likely to make clear that Russia will no longer be bound by the Treaty if the ABM Treaty collapses due to US withdrawal. START 2 ratification, therefore, would provide an opportunity rather than a solution.

  7.  The key to the future of nuclear arms control, therefore, lies in whether Russia and the US can reach agreement on a "grand bargain", in which Russia agrees to modify the ABM Treaty in return for US concessions on the content of a START 3 treaty.[3] With domestic pressure for NMD deployment in the US growing, the window of time in which such an agreement could be reached is already narrowing sharply. Even if there are no further major international upsets to the bilateral political relationship (as have occurred recently over Iraq and Kosovo), the negotiation of a new ABM/START package deal will require a sustained commitment of energy from the political leadership of both countries.

  8.  Yet a convergence of interests between Russia and the US means that a deal is still possible. For Russia, there are several reasons why a deal would be in its interests.

  9.  The US could also gain considerably from a new strategic arms control deal:

  10.  Yet many issues will have to be settled before a START 3/ABM Treaty bargain can be finalised. Amongst the key problems that will be confronted are the following:

  In the interests of rapid progress towards a deal on ABM Treaty modification, it might be possible to postpone agreement on some of these issues into future rounds of talks. The US may be prepared, for example, to concede some limited Russian re-MIRVing in return for US NMD deployment. The issues of SLCM's and warhead numbers might initially be tackled through confidence-building and transparency measures, with a view of agreeing limits in future. Such an agreement could meet the Russian desire to maintain strategic parity, together with an affordable capacity for assured retaliation. It would allow the US to deploy an NMD force capable of providing some degree of protection against North Korea, but not against Russia.

  13.  The wider international community also has considerable interests in a new US / Russian arms control deal:

BEYOND START 3: THE ROLE OF CHINA

  14.  The immediate priority is for a US/Russia settlement. Yet such a deal cannot be agreed without considering the potential impact on what may already be the world's third nuclear power, China.

  15.  The SALT, START and ABM Treaties were all based on the unrivalled superpower status of the US and the Soviet Union during the Cold War. Ten years later, however, the US is the world's single military superpower, with a defence budget at least five times greater than that of Russia.[7] Both the START and ABM Treaties continue to be useful as a means of managing the rundown of the massive arsenals acquired by the US and Soviet Union during the Cold War. But future agreements will also have to take into account the arsenals, and interests, of other nuclear weapon states such as China.

BEYOND START 3: EUROPE'S RESPONSE

A.  Arms Control

  16.  EU member states have no direct involvement in ABM /START negotiations. Both as custodians of the NPT and as permanent UN Security Council members, however, Britain and France have a particular responsibility to ensure that the outcome of these talks is consistent with wider international concerns.

  17.  If a START 3 Treaty is successfully negotiated, moreover, Britain and France could play an important role in pressing for a five-power nuclear transparency regime.[8] Such a regime could play an important role in allaying US and Russian concerns about third-country nuclear build-up and help to verify European "no increase" commitments, while postponing the fraught question of how to set ceilings in a five-power reduction agreement. Five power discussion might also play a role in persuading the US and Russia to adopt a more European approach to defining "how little is enough?" for minimum deterrence.

B.  European Strategic Defences

  Europoean Union states also have an interest in ensuring that future versions of the ABM Treaty do not exclude the possibility of US NMD technologies being used in future for the defence of Europe. If countries such as Iran and Iraq do obtain long-range missiles, and the US is building its own defences against these potential threats, it will be hard for European governments to resist domestic pressure for preparation of their own. If the US were to agree to a Treaty that allowed it to deploy its own national defences, but forbade it from helping Europe to do the same, the effects on NATO cohesion could be extremely damaging.

  Deployment of European strategic defences is still some time away, and is unlikely to become a serious possibility until a much greater consensus on the threat is reached. No such defence can be leak-proof, so vulnerability to coercion will remain even after deployment. The more quickly that EU states move towards deployment, moreover, the more expensive it is likely to be. While there is a good argument for the UK and other EU governments to commission precautionary research on NMD options, therefore, proposals for more substantial investments will have to be weighed against other, arguably more pressing, defence priorities. European states should keep their options open, while postponing hard decisions for as long as possible.

CONCLUSION: A THREE TRACK APPROACH

  The dangers posed by nuclear weapons to human survival have not disappeared with the end of the Cold War. The UK, as one of five recognised nuclear weapon states, has a particular responsibility for ensuring an adequate response to these dangers:

Arms Control

  The top nuclear arms control priority over the next year is to ensure that the US and Russia reach agreement on a START / ABM Treaty "grand bargain" before the US carries out its threat to pull out of the ABM Treaty unilaterally. The UK should do everything in its power to encourage both sides to make the necessary compromises, while urging the US to avoid precipitate actions which could have serious consequences for wider international non-proliferation efforts. In parallel with these efforts, the UK government should also make clear its support for five-power nuclear talks, commencing after a successful START 3 accord. Such talks would bring all five nuclear-weapon states into formal negotiations for the first time, and would help to fulfil their collective NPT commitment to actively pursue nuclear disarmament.

Politics

  The UK, along with its allies, should continue to give a high priority in foreign and security policy to efforts to contain, and if possible reverse, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. Recent setbacks in efforts to persuade Iraq and North Korea to abandon WMD programmes should not be used to justify an abandonment of these efforts, and it should not be pessimistically assumed that proliferation is inevitable.

Defence

  Yet there remains a substantial possibility that these anti-proliferation efforts will not be successful. As a result, Western Europe (including the UK) could soon be vulnerable to WMD-armed ballistic missiles, fired from potentially hostile states in the Middle East. As long as such deployments remain a real possibility, the UK and its NATO allies should not rule out the long term option of European strategic defences. Given their likely cost and partial effectiveness, however, European governments should not seek to replicate US efforts at rapid deployment of such defences.


1   National Intelligence Council, Foreign Missile Developments and the Ballistic Missile Threat to the US through 2015, CIA Publications, September 1999.START 3 AND THE ABM TREATY: TIME FOR A "GRAND BARGAIN"? Back

2   The START 2 Treaty was signed by Presidents Yeltsin and Bush in January 1993. It was ratified by the US Senate in January 1996. The Treaty was submitted to the Russian Duma in June 1995, but progress was halted by Russian opposition to NATO air strikes in Bosnia. It was resubmitted to the Duma in April 1998, but then postponed by the international political crisis (in August) and US-led attacks on Iraq (in December). NATO operations against Yugoslavia in March 1999 led to a further delay in Duma consideration of the Treaty. Alexander Pikayev, "The Rise and Fall of START II: The Russian View", Carnegie Endowment Working Papers No 6, September 1999, p 7. Back

3   Sam Nunn, Brent Scrowcroft and Arnold Kanter, "A Deal with Russia on Arms Control?", Boston Globe, 13 September 1999. Back

4   Stephen I Schwartz (ed), Atomic Audit: The Costs and Consequences of US Nuclear Weapons since 1940, Brookings Institution, 1998 p 31. Back

5   Walter B Slocombe, US under-secretary of defense for policy. "Testimony to the House Armed Services Committee", 13 October 1999 Back

6   Alexander Pikayev, op cit p 29. Back

7   USS, The Military Balance 1999-00, 1999 estimates Russian defence spending at $55 billion in 1998. Estimates by Russian analysts suggest a much bigger gap. Alexei Arbatov, for example, estimates Russia's 1997 defence budget at only $25-30 billion. Alexei Arbatov, "Milatary reform in Russia: Dilemmas, Obstacles and Prospects", International Security, Spring 1998-97 Back

8   For further discussion, see Malcolm Chalmers, "Bombs Away"? Britain and nuclear weapons under New Labour", Security Dialogue, Vol 30, No 1, 1999 pp 61-74; Malcolm Chalmers, "UK nuclear weapons policy after the SDR", Brassey's Defence Yearbook 1999, 1999, pp 253-266. Back