1. THE PROGRESS AND EFFECTIVENESS OF NON-PROLIFERATION REGIMES, SPECIFICALLY THE NON-PROLIFERATION TREATY (NPT), THE COMPREHENSIVE TEST BAN TREATY (CTBT), THE PROPOSED FISSILE MATERIAL CUT-OFF TREATY AND THE ANTI-BALLISTIC MISSILE TREATY (ABM)
The Arms Control and Disarmament Consequences
of the Deployment of Ballistic Missile Defence Systems
The United States is choosing to develop a National
Missile Defence (NMD) system to create an inpregnable shield against
missile attack in response to the proliferation of ballistic missile
technology and weapons of mass destruction. The aim is to counter
the perceived threat of attack from "rogue" states such
as North Korea and Iran. This threat is arguably minimal. Current
plans also envisage the incorporation of spaced-based launchers
to destroy ballistic missiles, leading to the militarisation of
space. In addition there are proposals to deploy Theater Missile
Defence (TMD) systems in East Asia and the Middle East, to provide
protection in regional theatres of war. The Clinton Administration
has set the end of June 2000 as a deadline to decide whether to
proceed with the NMD system. The cost of the first phase of NMD
is estimated to be $10.4 billion over five years, but the total
cost of a full system could reach $100 billion. This would include
space-based components and new radar systems.
National Missile Defence systems against strategic
missile attacks are hard to rationalise. No current threat justifies
them and they are not cost effectiveit would be far cheaper
for the enemy to deploy more strategic ballistic missiles with
multiple warheards than for the defenders to develop and deploy
anti-ballistic missiles to attack them. These factors are not
likely to change in the foreseeable future.
Moreover, these plans violate the 1972 Anti-Ballistic
Missile (ABM) Treaty between the USSR and USA, which is meant
to stabilise policies of mutual assured destruction on which American
and Russian military postures depend. The ABM Treaty is widely
held to be the cornerstone of Cold War, and post-Cold War, bi-lateral
strategic stability. The US Administration is seeking to modify
the ABM Treaty to allow the deployment of NMD. Moscow is opposed
to any such modification. The controversy would spoil any chance
that the Duma will ratify the START II Treaty. The Russian concern
is that even a limited NMD could have significant capabilities
against Russia's dwindling ICBM force and would, therefore, destabilise
the US-Russian strategic nuclear balance.
The legality of Theatre Missile Defence systems
This raises another issue as to whether the
deployment of TMD systems would be legal under existing treaties.
The 1972 ABM Treaty restricts the testing and deployment of ballistic
missile defences. However, at the Helsinki summit on 21 March
1997, Presidents Clinton and Yeltsin agreed that each side might
deploy TMD systems if they do "not pose a realistic threat
to the strategic nuclear force of the other side and will not
be tested to give such systems that capability". Under the
agreement, TMD systems must not be tested against targets moving
faster than five kilometres a second. As long as this restriction
is obeyed any TMD system can be legally developed, tested and
deployed.
TMD systems fall into two categories: lower-tier
TMD and upper-tier TMD. A lower-tier TMD, like Patriot PAC-3,
Navy Lower Tier, MEADS and Arrow, designed to intercept ballistic
missiles of ranges up to 1,000 kilometres (re-entry speeds of
up to three kilometres a second) cannot intercept strategic missiles
and has nevery been restricted by the ABM Treaty. Until the 1997
Clinton-Yeltsin agreement, there was much debate about whether
upper-tier TMD systems that intercept ballistic missiles with
greater ranges and re-entry speeds are allowed by the ABM Treaty.
The Agreement removes any doubts. It is now legal to test and
deploy the US THAAD system, designed to intercept ballistic missiles
with ranges up to 3,500 kilometres (re-entry speeds of up to five
kilometres a second). (For comparison, an intercontinental ballistic
missile with a range of 10,000 kilometres has a re-entry speed
of seven kilometres per second.)
However, under the 1997 Clinton-Yeltsin agreement
it is not legal to deploy the US Navy Theater Wide System. The
illegality lies in the fact that if upper-tier TMD systems designed
to intercept missiles with ranges of up to only 3,500 kilometres
are effective, they will also be capable of intercepting intercontinental
ballistic missiles (ICBMs) with ranges up to 10,000 kilometres.
This would "pose a realistic threat to the strategic nuclear
force of the other side" as forbidden in the 1997 agreement.
In the words of the Union of Concerned Scientists:
"Unless the capability of an upper-tier theater defense is
marginal against theater missiles with a range of 3,500 kilometres
(which the defense is designed to intercept), it will have an
inherent capability against ICBMs. On the other hand, if such
defenses are not capable of intercepting an ICBM, then they would
have no or very limited capability against long-range theater
ballistic missiles." This is why the development and deployment
of upper-tier defenses is restricted by the 1972 ABM Treaty.
The guidance systems employed can also determine
the strategic capabilties of proposed TMD systems, This is because
the areas defended by upper-tier theatre defences are determined
more by the capabilities of the system radars, ground-based or
ship-borne, than by those of the interceptors. In this context
a 1998 Pentagon study concluded that the integration of the planned
US Navy Theatre Wide system into the planned ground-based NMD
system would add 600 or so Navy interceptors to the ground-based
NMD system, producing a much improved system. The Pentagon argues
that the Navy Theatre Wide system cannot intercept ICBMs, but
this is based on the radar (called SPY) carried on the Aegis cruisers
that will carry the system. However, if the interceptors are guided
by the more sophisticated sensors deployed with the planned NMD
system, such as the SBIRS-low space-based missile-tracking system
of the up-graded ground-based radars, to be deployed with the
US NMD system, then the Navy Theatre Wide system would have a
strategic capability.
The SBIRS-low satellite tracking system is designed
for use in both TMD and NMD systems. In particular, SBIRS-low
would transform the Navy Theatre Wide system from an upper-tier
theatre system not a wide-area system capable of intercepting
ICBMs that could augment, or even serve as, a NMD.
Russian and Chinese responses to an American NMD
The Russian Duma has reacted angrily to proposed
US amendments to the ABM Treaty. Russia is likely to respond to
any abrogation of the ABM Treaty by the USA by placing greater
reliance on its hair-trigger launch-on-warning doctrine, reducing
worryingly short decision-making times whilst increasing the risk
of unauthorised or accidental release of weapons. A Russian response
is also likely to focus dwindling resources on enhancing its offensive
nuclear capabilities in order to restore some credibility to is
deterrent. This would involve slowing down the rate of dismantlement
of its existing ICBMs equipped with Multiple Independently-targeted
Re-entry Vehicles (MIRVs). Russia could also respond to an American
NMD by equipping the new single-warhead mobile Topol-M (SSS-27)
ICBM with multiple warheads, perhaps three MIRVs per missile.
The Russians claim the Topol-M is equipped with counter-measures
against a ballistic missile defence systema lower trajectory
and a booster rocket that burns for a relatively short time. These
counter-measures would help the ICBM evade the NMD tracking system.
Russia is apparently deploying Topol-M ICBMs at a rate of about
10 a year. Whether or not Russia could afford to increase this
rate of deployment or to deploy effective counter-measures against
a US NMD is another question. China may also react to an American
NMD by expanding and modernising its strategic nuclear forces
at a faster pace than currently planned.
NATO AND US NMD
American plans for a NMD system are strongly
opposed by NATO allies who believe that such a system would provoke
a new arms race and erode European security. Western Europeans
fear that a national missile defence would, by protecting the
US, have adverse effects on the transatlantic alliance. European
NATO states are much wedded to the principle of shared risk in
which an attack on one is treated as an attack on all, a principle
that has been the basis of NATO strategy ever since the birth
of the alliance. If the US can retreat behind a missile defence
shield this principle would be violated. They are also concerned
about the fact that a new US system based in Alaska will have
serious consequences for China that has deployed relatively few
ICBMs. There is also the likelihood that a US system would set
off an Asian arms race involving Taiwan and Japan. US encouragement
to Taiwan and Japan to deploy missile defences may also provoke
an arms race in the Far East. Ballistic missile defences may,
therefore, destabilise regional and global strategic balances
in a most serious manner. The British Government would be wise
to oppose their development.
Submitted by Dr Frank Barnaby, Scientific And
Technical Consultant to Oxford Research Group. Dr Barnaby, a nuclear
physicist by training, worked at the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment,
Aldermaston (1951-57). He was Executive Secretary of the Pugwash
Conferences on Science and World Affairs (1967-70) and Director
of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (1971-81).
1. THE PROGRESS AND EFFECTIVENESS OF NON-PROLIFERATION REGIMES, SPECIFICALLY THE NON-PROLIFERATION TREATY (NPT), THE COMPREHENSIVE TEST BAN TREATY (CTBT), THE PROPOSED FISSILE MATERIAL CUT-OFF TREATY AND THE ANTI-BALLISTIC MISSILE TREATY (ABM)
A Treaty prohibiting the production of Fissile
Materials for Nuclear Weapons: will it be effective?
When the negotiation of a treaty banning the
production of fissile materials for nuclear weapons (often called
a cut-off treaty) gets underway, it is clearly important that
the negotiators attempt to achieve the most effective treaty possible.
An effective treaty would significantly strengthen the international
nuclear non-proliferation regime. An ineffective treaty is likely
to be counterproductive and may further weaken the regime. The
effectiveness of a treaty will depend firstly on whether or not
it includes existing stocks of fissile materials produced for
military purposes and, secondly, whether or not nuclear weapon-usable
civil fissile materials are included.
As defined in United Nations General Assembly
Resolution 48/75L, a treaty banning the production of fissile
materials would, at a minimum, cover the production of weapon-grade
plutonium (plutonium containing more than 93 per cent of the isotope
plutonium-239), weapon-grade highly-enriched uranium (uranium
enriched to over 90 per cent uranium-235), and uranium-233 for
nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices, or outside
of international safeguards. A more comprehensive cut-off than
this minimum one would include: plutonium of all isotopic compositions,
(except plutonium containing more than 80 per cent of the isotope
plutonium-238); uranium enriched to over 20 per cent in the isotope
uranium-235; and uranium-233. This would include all the weapon-usable
fissile materials.
We then have two possible types of cut-off:
STOCKS OF FISSILE MATERIALS
Plutonium
Currently, the world's total stock of plutonium,
civilian and military, is about 1,650 tonnes. Of this, about 1,400
tonnes are civil plutonium and about 250 tonnes are military plutonium.
About 90 tonnes of military plutonium are not currently being
used in nuclear weapons, the rest is situated in nuclear warheads.
The world's civil nuclear-power reactors are currently producing
about 70 tonnes of plutonium a year[64].
Currently, about 250 tonnes of civil plutonium have been separated
from spent nuclear-power reactor fuel elements in reprocessing
plants, like the British Sellafield plant. The remaining civil
plutonium is unprocessed and contained within nuclear waste. There
is, therefore, about the same amount of separated civil plutonium
in the world as military plutonium.
Nuclear weapons can be manufactured from plutonium
containing almost any combination of plutonium isotopes, although
some isotopic concentrations are more suitable than others. All
plutonium must be considered to be potentially nuclear weapon-usable,
except for plutonium containing 80 per cent or more of the isotope
plutonium-238[65].
Highly-enriched uranium
The situation with highly enriched uranium is
different from that with plutonium. The bulk of the world's stock
of highly enriched uranium (about 1,4000 tonnes) is military;
only about 1.5 per cent is civil. Moreover, the highly enriched
uranium removed from dismantled weapons can be disposed of relatively
easily by mixing it with natural or depleted uranium to produce
low-enriched uranium for nuclear-power reactor fuel. Low-enriched
uranium is not usable in nuclear weapons. However, the situation
is complicated by the fact that highly enriched uranium is used
to fuel nuclear-powered warships, a military use.
DIFFICULTY OF SAFEGUARDING CERTAIN CIVIL NUCLEAR FACILITIES
A serious problem facing the international nuclear
safeguards system, operated by the International Atomic Energy
Agency, is that the most sensitive plants with regard to the diversion
of weapon-usable materialsparticularly uranium-enrichment
facilties, plutonium reprocessing plants, and plants producing
mixed-oxide (MOX) nuclear fuelare impossible to safeguard
effectively[66].
Using existing and foreseeable safeguards technology it is not
possible for a safeguards agency to detect the diversion of quantities
of weapon-usable fissile materials, which could be used to fabricate
one or more, or even many, nuclear weapons. This is of serious
concern to the verification of a treaty banning the production
fissile-materials for nuclear weapons. For example, a commercial
plutonium-reprocessing plant (like the plant at Sellafield) cannot
be safeguarded with an effectiveness greater than about 98 per
cent (some say 95 per cent). This means that at least 2 per cent
of the plutonium throughput will be unaccounted for. Much of this
uncertainty is connected with the uncertainty about the amount
of plutonium entering the plant [67].
A typical plant will have a throughput of about seven tonnes of
plutonium a year. About 140 kilograms of plutonium a year, enough
to produce 10 or more nuclear weapons a year, will be unaccounted
for. This is a major and fundamental weakness in the international
nuclear safeguards system, a weakness which cannot be rectified
and which will apply to any safeguards system.
CONCLUSION
It is concluded that a ban on the production
of fissile materials for nuclear weapons would not be effective
unless it puts under international safeguards the military plutonium
and highly-enriched uranium already produced as well banning the
future production of these materials. Moreover, such a ban will
not be effective unless it includes the production of civil fissile
materials, particularly civil separated plutonium, which can be
used in nuclear weapons. The verification of a treaty banning
the production of fissile materials for nuclear weapons would
be much simplified if the treaty covered civil weapon-usable fissile
materials.
Submitted by Dr Frank Barnaby, Scientific and
Technical Consultant to Oxford Research Group. Dr Barnaby, a nuclear
physicist by training, worked at the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment,
Aldermaston (1951-57). He was Executive Secretary of the Pugwash
Conferences on Science and World Affairs (1967-70) and Director
of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (1971-81).
5. THE UK'S ROLE IN ENCOURAGING NON-SIGNATORY STATES TO SIGN APPROPRIATE TREATIES AND IN IMPROVING THE MONITORING OF COMPLIANCE WITH TREATY OBLIGATIONS
Nuclear weapons remain a predominant threat
to the planet. Of the 36,000 in existence, 4,500 of these are
still on hair-trigger alert and subject to accidental and unauthorised
firing. The world came close to accidental nuclear exchange in
January 1995 when a Norwegian weather rocket was interpreted by
Russian command and control as an incoming US Trident missile,
causing activation of the "nuclear briefcase" for the
first time in Soviet/Russian history. Eight minutes into the 10-minute
launch-on-warning decision-making timeframe the mistake was realised.
The perceived strategic stability derived from
the Cold War doctrine of mutually assured destruction has disappeared.
In its wake we find serious instability in (i) the deteriorating
Russian command, control, communications and intelligence infrastructure
(ii) the implications of proposed American abrogation of the Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty and (iii) the overt nuclearisation of the Indian
sub-continent.
Although the United States and the Russian Federation
are no longer locked into Cold War nuclear confrontation and have
taken some steps towards downsizing their excessive nuclear weapon
capabilities, they have proved themselves to a greater or lesser
extent unfit, both politically and technically, to manage the
complex of issues around nuclear arms control and can no longer
be relied upon to steer the nuclear non-proliferation regime in
a positive direction. Russian capabilities are severely limited
by political and economic problems, whilst the credibility of
declared US policy on a number of nuclear issues has been seriously
harmed by recent US actions. The relaxation of international tensions
and the arms control treaties of the early 1990s have given way
to disarmament deadlock and a return to Cold War rhetoric against
a background of continuing proliferation. This submission examines
possible roles for the British Government as a Nuclear Weapon
State (NWS) and as one of the five permanent members of the UN
Security Council.
BRINGING IN NON-SIGNATORY STATES INTO APPROPRIATE TREATIES
The nuclear tests conducted by India and Pakistan
in April 1998 represent the most direct challenge to the nuclear
non-proliferation regime. These tests were fuelled by an international
structure in which the perceived political utility of nuclear
weapons continues. Britain and the other NWS established this
structure through the Cold War doctrine of nuclear deterrence,
and continue to sustain it through their failure to fulfil their
nuclear disarmament commitments under Article VI of the Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT). The result is that power, status, and in the last
resort survival, are all still seen as enhanced by membership
of the nuclear club. It is this perception that strongly undermines
the non-proliferation regime, and played a part in the Indian
decision to test.
This structure was endorsed in the 1999 review
of the NATO Strategic Concept that reaffirmed the right to use
nuclear weapons first in any conflict scenario. The perpetuation
of this doctrine of first-use of nuclear weapons continues to
legitimise possession of, and attach a high political value to
those weapons, impeding non-proliferation efforts. It also invites
proliferation of chemical and biological weapons as readily obtainable
"force-levellers" to deter nuclear weapon state interference.
Not only has this structure acted as a driver
for South Asian nuclearisation but it will continue to act as
a driver in other regions of the world. Hence continued possession
of nuclear weapons by Britain as a politico-diplomatic tool serves
to promote nuclear proliferation to the detriment of British security,
and may reduce our international standing as we are seen as part
of the proliferation problem, rather than as part of the solution.
India, Pakistan and other non-signatories to
the NPT and Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) argue that they
cannot join a non-proliferation and disarmament regime that they
perceive as discriminatory and against their security interests.
The West has dismissed these claims and demanded that India, Pakistan
and others adhere unconditionally to the NPT and CTBT. This approach
will not result in nuclear roll back and lost all effectiveness
following the US Senate vote on the CTBT.
Only genuine multilateral steps towards nuclear
disarmament by the established NWS that reduce the saliency of
nuclear weapons in the international system will address these
concerns and bring non-signatory states into appropriate treaties.
Until then South Asia will remain one of several potent nuclear
flash points with very real and re-current risks of regional nuclear
exchange, with global consequences.
Underlying such steps is a need to move away
from the Cold War mentality that endures inside military bureaucracies
in all the NWS. The persistence of such thinking is one of the
main driving forces behind nuclear proliferation as it continues
to prioritise nuclear weapons as the crucial element of national
defence in a world very different from that of Cold War when the
doctrine of nuclear deterrence was initially espoused. In the
post-Cold War world global influence derives from many other factors,
such as economic strength, trade and effective international peace-keeping
operations. The possession of nuclear weapons is no longer a convincing
indicator of international power and authority.
In April 2000 a review of the NPT will take
place at the UN in New York. This review conference is of particular
significance as we approach a crossroads for the continued viability
of the treaty. A significant number of Non-Nuclear Weapon States
are dissatisfied with the progress of nuclear arms control and
fulfilment of disarmament obligations by the NWS, compounded by
the failed CTBT ratification vote in the US Senate. Further lack
of progress at the NPT review in April 2000 and de facto
recognition of India and Pakistan as possessing nuclear weapons
may lead to the unravelling of the NPT, and the development of
nuclear weapons by other states such as Iran, Iraq, North Korea,
Egypt etc within the next decade.
LEADERSHIP: THE ROLE BRITAIN CAN PLAY IN STEMMING AND REVERSING NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION
It becomes clear, therefore, that new international
leadership is urgently required if we are to prevent further nuclear
proliferation. Britain is in an ideal position to take this lead.
Our position within Europe and the Commonwealth is strong, as
is our relationship with the USA; we have the smallests nuclear
arsenal of the NWS, and we have unilaterally done much in the
1990s to further nuclear disarmament. We need to build on this
firm foundation.
Unilateral British progress towards fulfilment
of its duties under the NPT:
The NPT review conference in April presents
an excellent opportunity for Britain to propose further measures
in the same direction, in concert with other states. These could
represent the first multilateral steps towards the eventual safe
global elimination of nuclear weapons entirely in line with government
defence policy, and encourage non-signatory states to embrace
the non-proliferation regime.
We identify four short-term measures that the
British Government could realistically introduce:
CONCLUSION
Nuclear weapons disarmament remains an issue
of vital importance to British and global security in the light
of continuing proliferation. There is a need, and an opportunity,
for the smaller NWS to introduce and support positive steps, both
unilateral and multilateral, towards resolution of the global
nuclear weapons question. The present British government is in
an ideal position to take such a lead, which would find widespread
political support nationally and internationally. This would be
in line with Britain's good track record on promoting definitive
international measures for banning chemical and biological weapons;
to do the same for nuclear weapons would be both consistent and
an example of responsible national leadership in a dangerous world.
Britain would have far more credibility in encouraging current
non-signatory states to sign the appropriate treaties by adopting
a more pro-active stance rather than waiting for progress in fora
that are clearly failing. Such leadership in multilateral disarmament
would enhance our international status, prestige and long-term
security whilst improving our relations with non-nuclear regional
powers throughout the world.
65
Mark, J Carson, "Reactor-Grade Plutonium's Explosive Properties",
Nuclear Control Institute, Washington DC, August 1990. Back
66
Berkhout, F and Walker, W, "Safeguards at Nuclear Bulk
Handling Facilities", in Poole, J B and Guthrie, R, (eds),
Verification 1992, Verification Report 1992, Brassey's, London,
1992, p 199-209. Back
67
Johnson, S and Islam, N, The "Current IAEA Approach to
Implementation of Safeguards in Reprocessing Plants",
Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Facility
Operations-Safeguards Interface, 1991. Back