Nuclear Posture Review Leaks; Outlines Targets, Contingencies
A leaked version of the Bush administrations classified nuclear
posture review lists seven countries against which the United States
should be prepared to use nuclear weapons and outlines a broad range
of circumstances under which it could do so. The document also calls
for a large-scale revitalization of the nations nuclear weapons
infrastructure and discusses the development of new or modified
nuclear weapons.
Mandated by Congress to clarify U.S. nuclear deterrence policy
and strategy
for the next 5 to 10 years, the nuclear
posture review, produced by the Defense Department in consultation
with the Energy Department, was publicly summarized at a January
9 Pentagon briefing. (See ACT,
January/February 2002.) The review remains classified but was
obtained by The Los Angeles Times, which first reported on
it March 9, and The New York Times. Substantial excerpts
of the review were subsequently posted on the Web site of GlobalSecurity.org,
a policy organization.
The review states that greater flexibility in nuclear
forces and planning is needed to maintain a credible deterrent
against adversaries whose values and calculations of risk
and of gain and loss may be very different from and more difficult
to discern than those of past adversaries.
Despite press reports characterizing the Bush review as a break
with past policy on nuclear weapons use, former Clinton administration
officials said in March interviews that the review appears to represent
only a modest shift in emphasis compared with the previous posture
review, conducted in 1994.
Secretary of State Colin Powell rebutted criticism that the Bush
review had lowered the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons
in March 12 testimony before a Senate Appropriations subcommittee,
saying, There is no way to read that document and come to
the conclusion that the United States will be more likely or will
more quickly go to the use of nuclear weapons.
Discussing requirements for nuclear strike capabilities,
the report lists Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, and Syria as among
the countries that could be involved in immediate, potential, or
unexpected contingencies. Two former Clinton officials indicated
that, although the 1994 nuclear posture review addressed the problem
of rogue states, it concluded that the threat they posed
did not warrant significant changes in U.S. nuclear forces or policies.
The Bush review also indicates that the United States should be
prepared to use nuclear weapons against China, citing the
combination of Chinas still developing strategic objectives
and its ongoing modernization of its nuclear and non-nuclear forces.
Finally, although the review repeats Bush administration assertions
that Russia is no longer an enemy, it says the United States must
be prepared for nuclear contingencies with Russia and notes that,
if U.S. relations with Russia significantly worsen in the
future, the U.S. may need to revise its nuclear force levels and
posture. Ultimately, the review concludes that nuclear conflict
with Russia is plausible but not expected.
The nuclear posture set forth by the 1994 review was based on Russias
large nuclear arsenal. But despite Bush administration statements
that a threat from Moscow is no longer driving U.S. strategy, Russia
still appears to be the key driver of U.S. nuclear forces and policies,
as demonstrated by the administrations decision to maintain
a large strategic arsenal and substantial reserve forces.
President George W. Bush has said that the United States will reduce
its operationally deployed forces to 1,700-2,200 strategic warheads
within 10 years. A Defense Department official indicated in early
March that the administration has decided that by 2012 the United
States should deploy the upper limit of that range and maintain
an additional 2,400 reserve strategic warheads in operational condition,
all of which could be deployed within three years. The administration
also intends to stockpile additional strategic warheads in nonoperational
condition.
The policy of maintaining substantial warhead reserves while reducing
the deployed arsenal was established by the 1994 review.
The new review says nuclear weapons provide credible military
options to deter a wide range of threats, including WMD [weapons
of mass destruction] and large-scale conventional military force.
The review also says nuclear weapons could be employed against
targets able to withstand non-nuclear attack (for example, deep
underground bunkers or bio-weapon facilities). Three specific
nuclear strike contingencies the review discusses are
an Iraqi attack on Israel or its neighbors, a North Korean
attack on South Korea, or a military confrontation [with China]
over the status of Taiwan.
An official involved with the 1994 review indicated that the inclusion
of such contingencies in the review is not novel, saying the 1994
review specifically discussed nuclear contingency plans involving
North Korea and also China as a result of a crisis over Taiwan.
But the official also speculated that the administration appeared
to be seeking to enhance deterrence by adopting a less
veiled retaliatory stance toward possible attacks by non-nuclear-weapon
states.
President Bush buttressed that argument when he said March 23,
The reason one has a nuclear arsenal is to serve as a deterrence
.
Weve got all options on the table because we want to make
it very clear to nations that you will not threaten the United States
or use weapons of mass destruction against us or our allies or friends.
But using nuclear weapons against any of the five rogue states
identified in the review would violate a longstanding U.S. pledge,
termed negative security assurances, not to use nuclear
weapons against states that do not possess such weapons and are
members of the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT). A senior official
called the administrations adherence to that policy into doubt
last month, but State Department spokesman Richard Boucher subsequently
reiterated the policy in a February 22 briefing. (See ACT,
March 2002.)
However, consistent with statements by officials from previous
administrations, Boucher qualified the pledge, saying that, if a
weapon of mass destructiontypically defined as a nuclear,
chemical, or biological weaponwere used against the United
States, We will not rule out any specific type of military
response. Still, a pre-emptive nuclear attack against any
of the five states, all of which are members of the NPT, would violate
the declaration.
But appearing to broaden the range of scenarios in which the administration
might contemplate the use of nuclear weapons, General Richard Myers,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in a March 10 television
interview that the posture review preserves for the president
all the options that a president would want to have in case this
country or our friends and allies were attacked with weapons of
mass destruction, be they nuclear, biological, chemical, or for
that matter high explosives. Pentagon officials declined to
comment on whether Myers categorization of conventional explosives
as weapons of mass destruction represented a policy shift.
Consistent with its recommendation to give the president a broader
range of options, the posture review suggests the development of
new types of [nuclear] warheads that reduce collateral damage
as well as possible modifications to existing weapons to provide
additional yield flexibility. The review also specifically
cites the need to improve earth-penetrating weapons,
designed to threaten hard and deeply buried targets, such as command-and-control
and weapons storage bunkers.
An existing weapon designed to threaten such targets, the air-dropped
B61-11 bomb, is described in the review has having only a very
limited ground-penetration capability. That weapon was developed
as a result of a similar call for new capabilities in the 1994 review
and was deployed in late 1996. (See
ACT, March 1997.)
Asked at the January 9 briefing on the posture review if the Bush
administration planned to develop new nuclear weapons, Assistant
Secretary of Defense for International Security Policy J. D. Crouch
said, At this point, there are no recommendations in the report
about developing new nuclear weapons. But Crouch subsequently
qualified that statement, saying, We are trying to look at
a number of initiatives, including modifying existing nuclear
weapons to give them greater capability against
hard
targets and deeply buried targets. (See Energy
Department to Study Modifying Nuclear Weapons.)
The review highlights the need to establish a responsive
defense infrastructure. The ability to upgrade existing
weapons systems, surge production of weapons, or develop and field
entirely new systems
can discourage other countries from competing
militarily with the United States, the review says. Suggesting
a need for new weapons systems, the review states that it
is unlikely that a reduced version of the Cold War nuclear arsenal
will be precisely the nuclear force that the United States will
require in 2012 and beyond.
Highlighting past underinvestment in the infrastructure,
the review calls for a revitalized nuclear weapons complex
that will
be able, if directed, to design, develop, manufacture,
and certify new warheads in response to new national requirements
as well as maintain readiness to resume underground nuclear
testing if required. The review says the administration is
already restoring the ability to produce nuclear weapon components,
including both primary plutonium pits and thermonuclear
secondaries.
The review also details plans for the long-term maintenance and
modernization of U.S. delivery vehicles, citing the need for a new
ICBM by 2018, a new ballistic missile submarine and submarine-launched
ballistic missile by 2029, and new strategic bombers by 2040. According
to the review, possible new systems to meet these needs are already
under study.
The leaks generated little reaction from key U.S. allies but strong
critiques from nations listed as potential targets by the review.
There is a feeling that the document was written during the
Cold War, Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said March
13. We think this does not agree with the spirit of our relations
But after talks with senior U.S. officials, Russian Defense Minister
Sergei Ivanov said March 15 that Washingtons explanations
satisfy us, the Associated Press reported.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Sun Yuxi said March 11, Like
many other countries, China is deeply shocked by this report
and called on the United States to explain its policies, the official
Xinhua News Agency reported. Former Iranian President Ali Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani, a key centrist figure in Iranian politics, accused
the United States of intimidation, saying, America thinks
that if a military threat looms large over the heads of these seven
countries, they will give up their logical demands, according
to the official Islamic Republic News Agency.
North Koreas official Korean Central News Agency carried
a March 13 statement from a foreign ministry spokesman saying, Now
that nuclear lunatics are in office in the White House, we are compelled
to examine all agreements with the U.S., an apparent reference
to the 1994 Agreed Framework, under which North Korea committed
to dismantling its nuclear weapons program.
In the United States, Senator Joseph Lieberman (D-CT) voiced support
for the policies in a March 10 television appearance, saying they
would cause renegade nations such as Iran, Iraq, and
North Korea to think twice about the willingness of the United
States to take action to defend our people and our values and our
allies. Senator Jack Reed (D-RI), meanwhile, said March 12
that the report represented a profound shift
in our thinking
about arms control and suggested that it might expand the
potential uses of nuclear weapons.
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