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The Proliferation Security Initiative: Can
Interdiction Stop Proliferation?
Jofi Joseph
This month, the United States joins 13 other nations in celebrating
the first anniversary of the launch of the Proliferation Security
Initiative (PSI). PSI combines the aggressive use of existing national
and international legal authorities with better intelligence sharing
and multilateral coordination in an effort to interdict the transport
of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons, delivery mechanisms,
and related components.
First elaborated upon in a speech by President George W. Bush in Krakow,
Poland, on May 31, 2003, and followed only days later by an initial
plenary session, PSI has quickly moved into an operational phase.
Over the past year, the United States and its PSI partners can point
to several successes, including the October 2003 interception of a
shipment of components for uranium centrifuge tubes to Libya. Nonetheless,
the initiatives core member states may wish to consider a number
of recommendations to render the initiative more effective in halting
trade in weapons of mass destruction (WMD). PSI members also should
recognize that a successful interdiction policy constitutes only one
element of a comprehensive nonproliferation policy.
What is PSI?
At its essence, PSI is a multilateral intelligence-sharing project
incorporating cooperative actions and coordinated training exercises
to improve the odds of interdicting the transfer of weapons of mass
destruction to and from states and non-state actors of proliferation
concern.[1]
The use of interdictions to interrupt the WMD trade is not a new tool,
but PSI seeks to utilize multilateral cooperation to improve the number
and success of future interdictions. PSI is an informal grouping of
a small group of core states (see chart); it maintains no organizational
framework or treaty agreements and does not seek universality. These
core states meet in regular plenary sessions, conduct joint training
exercises, and have issued a Statement of Interdiction Principles
outlining PSIs general approach.
Following an aggressive outreach effort in 2003, PSI core members
have proclaimed that more than 60 other nations support the initiative,
although it is unclear what these declarations signify. PSI members
have largely sought to work with existing domestic and international
legal authorities in implementing interdictions but encourage the
expansion of those powers through accepted channels. They have remained
quiet on specific operations conducted under the PSI umbrella but
have pointed to the October 2003 interception of a ship carrying uranium
centrifuges to Libya as the initiatives greatest success to
date.[2]
Origins of PSI
How did PSI begin? The catalyst came in December 2002, when U.S. intelligence
picked up the So San, an unflagged merchant ship that had departed
a North Korean harbor and was steaming toward an unidentified destination
in the Middle East. U.S. officials contacted the Spanish government
to ask that its navy stop the ship in the Mediterranean Ocean and
conduct an inspection to ensure no illicit cargo was on board. On
December 9, following initial attempts by the So San to evade boarding,
Spanish special forces rappelled onto the ship from helicopters and
discovered 15 complete Scud B missiles, 15 warheads, and missile fuel
oxidizer. Two days later, Yemen claimed ownership of the Scud missiles,
declaring that it had purchased the missiles from North Korea for
defensive purposes under a 1999 contract.[3]
According to U.S. government officials, the lack of international
treaties governing the trade or possession of ballistic missiles4
prevented the United States from retaining the Scud missiles and warheads.
Following telephone conversations between Vice President Dick Cheney
and Yemeni President Ali Abdallah Saleh, in which Saleh reaffirmed
a promise not to purchase additional missiles from North Korea, the
So San was released and arrived in Yemen on December 14. (To be sure,
skeptics contended that Yemens importance to the U.S. buildup
of forces in preparation for the Iraq war, not international law,
was the trump card in the U.S. decision to release the missiles.)
The Bush administration was chagrined over an embarrassing episode
where its actions did not match its tough rhetoric on nonproliferation.
The seizure and subsequent release of the So San preceded only by
days the release of the administrations National Strategy to
Combat Weapons of Mass Destruction, in which the U.S. government promised
an aggressive approach to halt WMD proliferation. As one senior official
told The New York Times, Bush was a very, very unhappy man
after the ships release.[5]
Ironically, although the So San episode was critical to the formulation
of PSI, the existence of PSI would have done nothing to change the
final outcome. Because PSI is only designed to exploit existing legal
authorities, not create new powers, were another So San episode to
occur today, the United States would still be bound by international
law to release the vessel. Still, the lesson of U.S. impotence in
the face of clear proliferation behavior was not lost on the White
House.
At the same time, another impetus came from increased U.S. intelligence
that North Korea was seeking to accelerate its highly enriched uranium
(HEU) program to supply fissile material for nuclear weapons. Such
a program would enable the North Koreans to pursue an alternative
to plutonium production, which had been frozen under the terms of
a 1994 U.S.-North Korean agreement known as the Agreed Framework.
To construct a working HEU program, North Korea would need to purchase
many individual components from foreign suppliers, requiring multiple
shipments to North Korea via a variety of land, sea, and air routes.
Understandably, therefore, active interdiction of these procurement
shipments emerged as an attractive option to U.S. policymakers interested
in blocking Pyongyangs new program. The United States could
not risk a formal blockade of North Korea because it would constitute
a formal act of war and invite diplomatic condemnation from U.S. allies.
So, PSI provided a potentially less risky, if indirect, alternative.
U.S. officials have always declined to attribute North Korea as PSIs
pre-eminent target, but the Chairmans Statement from the second
PSI plenary meeting in July 2003 in Brisbane, Australia, highlighted
countries of proliferation concern and non-state actors with
particular reference to North Korea and Iran.[6]
Finally, PSI appeals to many of the administrations instincts
regarding arms control and nonproliferation policy. Administration
officials have made clear their disdain for many international treaties
and the proceedings of multilateral organizations. By contrast, PSI
does not feature regular meetings, permanent staff, or formal procedures.
It is largely a U.S. creation and its continued success will strongly
depend upon active U.S. support. Should the United States decide in
five years that PSI no longer serves its interests, it will likely
wither away. In the eyes of many administration officials, that is
exactly as matters should stand.
Philosophical Approach
PSIs guiding precept can best be described, as one senior Department
of Defense official recently asserted, along the lines of the broken
tail light approach to stopping crime,[7]
whereby police officers stop vehicles whose passengers are suspected
of criminal activity on the basis of minor traffic infractions. Similarly,
PSI, in part, uses an aggressive approach to the enforcement of national
regulations and international law to try to stop any and all illicit
shipments.[8] For example,
in August 2003, Taiwanese authorities used a technical customs violation
to board a North Korean freighter docked at port and seized 158 barrels
of phosphorous pentasulfide, a potential precursor for chemical weapons
production. Although it does not appear that this interdiction fell
under the PSI aegis (Taiwan is not a core participant), its use of
a minor legal violation as a rationale to inspect and seize an illicit
shipment is illustrative of PSIs broad approach.
The initiatives core members are careful to emphasize that PSI
is an activity, not an organization.[9]
Accordingly, PSI members have not established an international organization
or even an informal secretariat to help carry out its mandate. They
have not adopted binding legal mandates or drafted a charter to define
its scope and mandate. Instead, PSIs core members have sufficed
with the September 2003 Statement of Interdiction Principles.
PSIs core members have chosen not to pursue an aggressive expansion
of the initiatives membership rolls. Earlier this year, three
new statesCanada, Norway, and Singaporejoined the original
group.[10] Other nations
will be asked to participate in PSI activities on a case-by-case basis,
depending on whether they can make a specific contribution to a particular
interdiction effort. The decision to maintain a small number of core
participants seems to reflect the U.S. desire to keep PSI flexible
and free of the constraints on decision-making concomitant with a
larger and more diverse group of members. Finally, members appear
to agree that fewer plenary meetings will be required in the future
now that the necessary legwork has been completed to make the initiative
operationally active.[11]
PSI is better understood as a framework than a formal structure. On
any given interdiction activity, only those PSI members who choose
to involve themselves will do so.[12]
PSI membership does not generate automatic commitments on the part
of nations. For example, if the United States were to ask for Frances
assistance in interdicting a suspected WMD shipment, France is free
to decline that request. Thus, the structure of PSI is emblematic
of the administrations preference for coalitions of the
willing in international activities.
One can liken PSI and its day-to-day execution to that of a deputized
posse: the United States and a group of other like-minded states,
using existing legal powers, have organized to hunt down illicit shipments
of dangerous weapons. On any particular day, some members of that
posse may choose not to ride out. Nor is the posse responsible for
tracking all illicit shipments; rather it targets only those it views
with particular concern as posing security threats. This flexibility
in means and goals of enforcement carries some practical benefits,
but it also raises various concerns.
Some of this flexibility is required. Only a handful of navies in
the world maintain a presence outside their immediate regions, and
only the United States maintains a global presence. So, if an operation
were to take place in the South China Sea against a suspected North
Korean freighter, it is unlikely France would participate because
its warships do not regularly patrol the area. Other PSI members,
such as Poland, are very limited in the number of naval and air assets
they can draw upon. Finally, Japan, a PSI core member, faces domestic
constitutional restrictions regarding its use of military assets outside
its sovereign territory.
PSI core members have also remained vague in describing the types
of shipments they are targeting, speaking only in general terms of
nuclear, chemical, or biological weapons and delivery systems and
related materials. They have not offered definitions for these terms,
even declining to reference specifically the international conventions
governing the possession of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons
and the spread of missile technology. Perhaps most vexing of all is
the lack of delineation of related materials.
Are the PSI members referring to only those components that are unambiguously
destined for a nuclear, chemical, or biological program; or do they
encompass dual-use materials? If the latter, how do PSI members reconcile
that approach with the fact that the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty,
the Chemical Weapons Convention, and the Biological Weapons Convention
all expressly provide signatory states the right to possess and trade
such dual-use materials?
Based upon the plenary statements and actions taken to date, PSI members
clearly have no intention of fleshing out these definitions. Not doing
so allows PSI members to maintain flexibility: the shipment of a dual-use
component such as phosphorous pentasulfide, potentially applicable
to a chemical weapons program but also carrying civilian uses, will
be viewed differently depending upon its ultimate destination. It
is likely unwise to ask PSI members to agree on a specific checklist
of items they can and cannot interdict. Circumstances evolve, technologies
change, and context always reigns supreme. This approach may be considered
unfair, but it remains in compliance with international law. In fact,
because PSI can only utilize existing legal authorities to conduct
interdictions and because the transfer of nuclear, chemical, and biological
weapons, missiles, and related components are not universally prohibited
under international law, the particular objects of PSI-sanctioned
interdiction operations matter less than the manner in which they
are carried out. A Pakistani vessel carrying a uranium-based nuclear
warhead to North Korea on the high seas cannot be interdicted, regardless
of PSIs existence. PSI members can, however, carry out a quick
inspection against an Iranian-flagged vessel docked in a participating
members port, even if the suspected equipment is harmless.
Other PSI critics have taken issue with its selective approach to
the targets of enforcement, primarily going after rogue states
such as North Korea and Iran. Is the initiative entitled to target
only the states and nonstate actors on the bad guy list,
as interpreted by PSI core members? Conversely, should it be an equal-opportunity
enforcement operation, targeting questionable shipments by friendly
states, even PSI members, diplomatic consequences be damned? In an
interview last November, Undersecretary of State for Arms Control
and International Security John Bolton responded to a question on
whether PSI should also focus on Israel, India, and Pakistan:
There are unquestionably states that are not within existing
treaty regimes that possess weapons of mass destruction legitimately.
Were not trying to have a policy that attempts to cover each
and every one of those circumstances. What were worried about
are the rogue states and the terrorist groups that pose the most immediate
threat.[13]
Boltons statement would seem to rule out an aggressive interdiction
effort to prevent the transfer of illicit goods to India or Israel,
two nations not considered threatening to the United States and the
other core PSI members, yet possessing weapons of mass destruction
outside existing international treaty mandates. In recent years, however,
several Indian companies have been charged with the export of sensitive
dual-use technologies and items to states of proliferation concern,
including Iraq, making Indian vessels and aircraft a potential target
for PSI activities. Should New Delhi initiate illicit trade with an
Iran or a Syria, PSI members cannot afford to ignore such actions.
There is also the question of ongoing Pakistani and Indian efforts
to procure more advanced ballistic missiles, on which to mount their
nuclear weaponsshould PSI target trading activities to halt
this arms race?
Although an approach that targets some nations to the exclusion of
others is inherently discriminatory, PSI should not be condemned for
taking such a selective approach when its members have never sought
universal application. Because it is a voluntary activity and is not
governed by treaty mandates, so long as PSIs member states operate
within the bounds of existing domestic and international law, they
are free to engage in selective enforcement in line with their preferences
and resources. Moreover, no reasonable observer would dispute that
shipments to and from North Korea and Iran should command the greatest
attention of PSI members. The real question critics should ask is
not whether other states should merit the same attention on grounds
of nondiscrimination, but whether they pose the same level of threat
to core members and thus deserve equivalent attention.
Which brings us to Pakistan. Boltons quoted comments may be
excused on grounds of diplomatic sensitivitieshe made his remarks
at a time when the United States was quietly presenting to Islamabad
the voluminous evidence of A.Q. Khans trading networkbut
they raise questions nonetheless. The Khan networks trading
activities represented just as much a threat to U.S. and international
security as any activities of Iran and North Korea, if only on the
grounds that the Khan network was the primary supplier of those two
nations clandestine uranium-enrichment programs. Following Khans
public confession and Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharrafs
pardon, Pakistan has pledged to turn a new leaf in its attitudes and
actions toward illicit proliferation. Nonetheless, Pakistans
track record offers little promise in this arena, and PSI members
are well advised to keep a close eye on shipments to and from Pakistan.
The PSI intercept of the Khan network shipment to Libya offers an
encouraging precedent.
Legal Questions
The chief criticism levied so far against PSI is that it skirts international
law. By establishing a framework for the forcible boarding, inspection,
and potential seizure of suspected cargo in ships and aircraft, the
initiative supposedly runs afoul of long-established international
law on the inviolability of international waters and airspace and
the right of ships to innocent passage within other nations
territorial waters. Some critics assert the selective focus of PSI
on shipments to and from states and non-state actors of proliferation
concern[14] is
inherently discriminatory and subjects certain states to an unfair
scrutiny of its trade and commerce. Others worry that its focus on
North Korea could be interpreted as a blockade and hence cited by
Pyongyang as an act of war.
What all of these criticisms share is a certain paranoia based more
on how PSI may evolve rather than a realistic interpretation of the
present-day PSI. What is noteworthy about PSI to date is the careful
diligence with which all of its plenary statements enunciate the commitment
to act consistent with national legal authorities and relevant
international law and frameworks, including the UN Security Council.[15]
Critics have focused on Boltons early statements in which he
claimed that PSI members endorsed the initiation of interdiction operations
in international waters and in international airspace based in part
on the general principle of self-defense. Officials of other PSI members
did not endorse those comments, and Bolton has not subsequently repeated
those remarks
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Proliferation Security
Initiative Participants
First announced
May 31, 2003 by President George W. Bush, the voluntary Proliferation
Security Initiative (PSI) currently numbers 14 core participants.
These 14 states have pledged to improve their individual and
collective capabilities to interdict shipments of weapons of
mass destruction at sea, on land, and in the air to and from
countries of proliferation concern. An asterisk denotes the
11 original PSI participants.
Australia*
Japan*
Singapore
Canada
Netherlands*
Spain*
France*
Norway
United Kingdom*
Germany*
Poland*
United States*
Italy*
Portugal*
Boarding Agreements
In addition, two states have signed boarding
agreements indicating their willingness to permit ships flying
their flag to be stopped and searched.
Liberia
Panama
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Certainly, PSIs operating principles do raise a number of legal
issues. One issue already discussed by core members at plenary sessions
involves the question of liability for unlawful boardings or seizures.
Do ships or their respective flag-states have the legal right to appropriate
compensation for interdictions undertaken on the basis of faulty intelligence
or incorrect application of legal authorities? Another issue involves
the traditional right of ships to innocent passage in
the territorial waters of coastal states. The right to innocent passage
is considered customary law and is enumerated specifically under Article
19 of the Law of the Sea Convention.[16]
Under innocent passage, ships may pass through territorial
waters so long as their passage does not jeopardize the peace,
good order, or security of the coastal state.[17]
To date, PSI members appear to have focused on inspections of naval
vessels when they are docked at national ports. Should innocent passage
emerge as a legal obstacle to desired PSI operations, one potential
remedy involves amending Article 19 to the Law of the Sea Convention,
but such a move would be difficult so long as the United States does
not ratify that treaty.[18]
Although PSI core members have agreed to work within existing legal
authorities, they are actively seeking to expand those authorities
to cast a wider net over illicit WMD shipments.[19]
One promising venue lies in draft amendments to the International
Maritime Organizations Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful
Acts Against the Safety of Maritime Navigation (SUA). The SUA Convention,
which entered into force in 1992, addresses physical threats to ships
and requires states-parties to take appropriate punitive measures
against offenders. In October 2003, the United States introduced a
series of proposals to amend the SUA Conventions Article 3 to
expand the series of offenses against naval vessels covered under
the convention. In particular, such offenses would include a specific
reference to the maritime transport of weapons of mass destruction
for the purpose of terrorist attacks, as well as broader language
encompassing the maritime transport of WMD or related components,
including dual-use items. It is unlikely that the latter provisions
will be approved, but even the former provisions alone could expand
the right of PSI members to stop ships on the high seas.
The most direct means for expanding international law lies in a UN
Security Council resolution. The administration has rejected that
course for now, but it has achieved the passage of another resolution
requiring states to strengthen domestic controls over WMD manufacture
and possession and to prohibit the transfer of weapons of mass destruction
and means of delivery to terrorist and other nonstate groups.[20]
Its language could be construed to authorize the interdiction of suspected
WMD transfers to nonstate groups on the high seas and in international
airspace.
Another provision specifically calls on states to cooperate where
necessary to detect, deter, prevent and combat the illicit
trafficking and brokering of weapons of mass destruction and their
means of delivery. The United States apparently sought to include
a specific reference to interdiction in this provision but was stymied
by Chinese opposition. Nevertheless, the passage of this resolution
provides a significant boost to PSIs underlying rationale: the
international community should undertake greater scrutiny of shipments
of weapons of mass destruction and related components.
The Verdict So Far
If one were to judge an international initiative solely on the speed
of its adoption and implementation, PSI would be deemed an overwhelming
success. Five plenary sessions have been held, resulting in the issuance
of a Statement of Interdiction Principles. By June 2004, 10 interdiction
training exercises will have been scheduled,[21]
improving working relationships among the navies, coastal authorities,
customs officials, and law enforcement officials of PSI core members
and the odds of success for future interdiction efforts. The Bush
administration has been publicly cagey about the number of operations
mounted under the initiative, but anonymous officials recently told
The New York Times that the number was roughly a dozen.[22]
Nevertheless, it is very difficult for outside experts to render a
rigorous assessment. PSI members have been tight-lipped on the operational
successes and/or failures to date, releasing few details on grounds
of operational security.[23]
Sometimes lost in the fanfare surrounding the initiative is the fact
that it was hardly the first instance of the interdiction of suspicious
international shipments. Both ships and airplanes have been intercepted
and inspected and had their cargos seized on countless occasions,
owing from suspicions of illegal activity to carrying no identifiable
flag or other marker indicating proper ownership and registration.
For example, in June 1999, Indian forces seized in its territorial
waters a North Korean ship carrying Nodong missile components and
destined for Pakistan during the midst of the Kargil conflict. Therefore,
a fair question to ask, but difficult to answer, is to what extent
PSI has made additional interdictions possible. Would interdictions
like the intercept of the Libya-bound freighter last fall have occurred
without the organizing framework of PSI?
Although government officials in PSI core states have discussed some
of their successes to date, no accompanying information has been provided
on failures. Have there been cases where a PSI participant identified
a suspicious naval vessel but was unable to convince the state where
the vessel was docked to undertake inspections? To what extent, if
any, have interdictions taken place in the air?
It is also instructive to consider how PSIs effectiveness will
vary based upon the types of shipments it is targeting. The success
of the initiative is dependent upon the collection of good intelligence;
only with knowledge of particular shipments can PSI members coordinate
activities to interdict these shipments. Yet, it remains easier to
detect the shipments of large items or large numbers of goods (i.e.,
missile frames and uranium centrifuges) than cargo such as fissile
material or biological agents. One can argue that PSI will be more
effective at halting the trade of the materials and equipment necessary
to construct weapons of mass destruction than the actual weapons themselves.
For example, should North Korea decide to begin exporting some of
the weapons-grade plutonium it has reprocessed over the past year,
it will be very difficult for PSI states to target such shipments,
absent extraordinary intelligence information.
PSI can be evaluated more conclusively after five or 10 years, when
outside scholars and experts can survey the broad currents of WMD
proliferation and better determine whether transfers of components
and materials between states or between states and terrorist groups
have declined. The release of documents from military and law enforcement
archives can shed light on what role its operations will have played
in restraining international trade in WMD components and materials.
For now, the picture remains incomplete.
Key Recommendations
The lack of a determinative judgment on PSI does not rule out suggestions
for possible improvement. Three recommendations are in order.
1) Transform PSI from an ad hoc effort into a more structured
mechanism.
Led by the United States, PSI core members have proclaimed the flexibility
of the initiative as one of its greatest strengths. Yet, this approach
carries some inherent weaknesses. PSI members have already indicated
their plans to hold fewer plenary meetings in the coming year because
the initiative has achieved an operational status. Although
frequent organizational meetings can be cumbersome and time-consuming,
they also keep members accountable and prevent members from drifting
from original objectives. This is especially helpful when one of the
members changes governments, as it cannot be certain that future governments
will view the importance of PSI with the same urgency as their predecessors.
The existence of a permanent staff can provide some institutional
memory. PSI does not require a large international organization like
the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to support
its activities. A more reasonable model lies with the Missile Technology
Control Regime (MTCR), which consists of 33 nations committed to limiting
the spread of missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles possessing WMD
delivery capability. The French Ministry of Foreign Affairs carries
out point-of-contact functions, including the distribution
of working papers to all members and the hosting of monthly experts
meetings. Every year, a different MTCR partner hosts the annual plenary
session. This combination of a small, informal secretariat
and regular meetings offers an appropriate model for PSI.
As the leading force behind the initiative, the United States also
needs to institutionalize PSI activities better within its national
security bureaucracy. Today, no specific formal organizational or
budgetary authority exists to support PSI activities. No funding was
requested in the presidents fiscal year 2005 budget request
this February, as the Pentagon maintains that existing U.S. capabilities
can support PSI activities.[24]
The overwhelming majority of intellectual energy and organizational
impetus for PSI appears to stem from one Department of State employee:
Bolton. So, what happens to PSI when Bolton leaves his position?
Without budgetary funding or an organizational home, future administrations
may be tempted to sacrifice PSI. Next years budget request should
include a specific line item (with new funding) for its support and
sustenance. An appropriate vehicle for this new funding is the Nonproliferation,
Anti-terrorism, Demining and Related Programs (NADR) account, which
already provides budgetary authority for the State Department to fund
other nonproliferation initiatives. Assigning the PSI portfolio to
specific deputy assistant secretaries of state and defense, each supported
by at least one action officer with full-time duties for the initiatives
stewardship, is another important bureaucratic step. Otherwise, the
international community may raise doubts over the genuine commitment
of the United States to the initiatives long-term future.
2) Use the recent U.S.-Liberia and U.S.-Panama boarding agreements
as the model for similar agreements with other flag of convenience
states, and seek to involve other PSI members by making such agreements
multilateral.
In February, the United States and Liberia signed a mutual boarding
agreement whereby each nation is authorized to inspect naval vessels
registered under the other countrys flag upon suspicion that
the vessel is transporting weapons of mass destruction, delivery systems,
or related items. The United States and Panama signed a similar agreement
in May. These agreements matter because Liberia and Panama are the
leading flag of convenience states in the world. More
than half of the worlds shipping, measured on the basis of gross
tonnage, now is registered in six states: Liberia, Panama, the Bahamas,
Malta, Cyprus, and the Marshall Islands.[25]
Liberia and Panama alone are responsible for nearly one-third.[26]
Those states, collectively known as flag of convenience (FOC) states,
feature bare-bones registration procedures, inexpensive fees, and
nonexistent oversight for ships listed under their flags. Accordingly,
many ships involved in illicit trade, including narcotics, counterfeiting,
and weapons shipments, register with FOC states to evade intrusive
questioning and seizure of assets.
In these two key, mutual boarding agreements, the United States is
granted power to search any ships flagged under the Liberian or Panamanian
flags if it has grounds for suspicion that their cargo includes weapons
of mass destruction or related components. To be sure, Liberia or
Panama still retain the right to reject any U.S. inspections, but
if they fail to take advantage of this prerogative within two hours
of an American request, U.S. officials are free to act.
The agreements with Liberia and Panama open a significant slice of
international shipping traffic to U.S. inspections. The administration
reportedly now is seeking to conclude similar bilateral agreements
with the other primary FOC states, but such agreements should not
remain at the bilateral level. Instead, they should incorporate all
of the core PSI members in a multilateral framework. Indeed, PSI members
discussed this very step last fall but stepped back from a final agreement
to avoid a lowest-common-denominator approach, a legitimate concern
when so many states are involved. Nevertheless, the two recent agreements
now provide a specific model, and the pacts themselves include a provision
allowing for the accession of third-party states. Imagine a world
where the 14 core PSI members and the six FOC states have established
a multilateral boarding agreement whereby any state can board another
states flagged vessels on grounds of suspicion of WMD-related
cargo. The overwhelming majority of the worlds shipping traffic
would become subject to interdictions and inspections at any time
on account of well-founded WMD suspicions.
3) Broaden PSIs writ by reaching out to Russia and China
and seeking an eventual UN Security Council resolution to permit the
interception of WMD shipments in international waters/airspace.
Although PSI encompasses an array of members across the world, two
key states stand out for their absence from PSI: Russia and China.
Both Moscow and Beijing have expressed concerns that PSI is an attempt
to substitute interdictions for established multilateral treaties
and is tailored to isolate specific states, including North Korea.
Genuine Russian and Chinese participation would significantly strengthen
PSI. Both nations are geographically proximate to some of the worlds
most proliferation-sensitive regions, including the Middle East and
Northeast Asia. As two of the five permanent members of the Security
Council, Russia and China will have powerful influence over any actions
taken by that body. Their continued absence will deny PSI a truly
global imprimatur and reinforce suspicions that it is yet another
club for Western powers only, Japans participation notwithstanding.
So, what should the United States do to convince Russia and China
to come onboard? The administration cannot be faulted for its efforts
at persuasion. Bolton has made repeated visits to Moscow in particular
to convince the Russian government to sign on, but to no avail. Some
press reports at the time of this articles publication indicate
that Russia may have decided finally to join PSIa most welcome
development. Nevertheless, if Russia continues to join China in resisting
PSI membership, it may be that the wrong messenger is delivering the
pitch. If PSI is a truly multilateral effort, it is time for other
countries, especially the European states, to take on the heavy diplomatic
lifting to achieve Russian and Chinese participation.
PSI members should also reconsider their initial decision to forgo
a push for a Security Council resolution granting an international
mandate for the interdiction of suspected WMD shipments in international
waters or in international airspace. Make no mistake: as the contentious
debate prior to passage of the U.S.-proposed resolution on criminalizing
WMD possession and transfers demonstrated, any PSI resolution will
be a difficult struggle. Many member states will wonder what criteria
will form the basis for forcible interdictions and how the resolution
will be enforced to prevent overreaching. Other states will raise
questions on disarmament obligations by the great powers and why that
is not being addressed.
Even if this effort takes several years, however, an enacted resolution
will be worthwhile. It will address the foremost gap in international
law today, the ability of states to transfer nuclear, chemical, and
biological weapons, missiles, and key components with no legal restraint
if they do not adhere to the governing international conventions.
Whereas Resolution 1540 addresses WMD shipments and related components,
including delivery means, to terrorist groups, it does not encompass
such transfers between states. Administration officials have argued
that existing legal authorities, both domestic and international,
provide adequate grounds for PSI and that the proper focus is on implementation
of the initiative without waiting for cumbersome international maneuvers.
Yet, pursuit of one objective does not mean sacrificing the other.
The United States and the other PSI members should continue to sharpen
intelligence sharing and coordinate interdiction exercises. At the
same time, they can pursue a comprehensive Security Council resolution
in the diplomatic arena to lay the foundation for the expansion of
PSIs legal authorities. In other words, PSI members should be
able to walk and chew gum at the same time.
Conclusion
PSI is a long-overdue effort to enhance multilateral cooperation in
interdiction efforts to disrupt illicit trade of nuclear, chemical,
and biological weapons and missiles and other delivery mechanisms
and their related components better. The United States and the other
core members are to be congratulated for recognizing the role of illicit
trade involving nation-states and black market entities and taking
an appropriate response to shut it down. Nevertheless, PSI should
always be viewed as only one component of a broader nonproliferation
toolbox. The other necessary elements include diplomacy;
treaty regimes; inspections; export controls; threat reduction efforts;
economic sanctions; and, as a last resort, the use of military force.
What PSI cannot be viewed as is a substitute for these other elements
of a nonproliferation policy. No interdiction effort can be 100 percent
effective. Intelligence will not always be accurate, ships may only
dock in ports of states that do not subscribe to the initiative, and
the indigenous capability to produce WMD components without foreign
assistance is rapidly spreading. The PSI, although useful and necessary,
is not a silver bullet against WMD proliferation. Any desire to view
it accordingly will only undermine the cause of nonproliferation.
ENDNOTES
1. Proliferation Security Initiative: Statement
of Interdiction Principles, September 4, 2003. Paris, France.
2. A strong debate has emerged over the true
reasons for Libyas decision to disarm itself of its WMD programs.
Whether Libya had shown a desire to disarm going back to the mid-1990s,
as some Clinton administration officials argue, or whether the Iraq
war was a principal forcing event, as Bush administration officials
contend, Libya had entered into talks with the United States and the
United Kingdom by mid-2003 on WMD dismantlement. Yet, Libya still
was not willing to describe its programs in full detail and invite
U.S. and British inspectors into the country. That attitude changed
following the October 2003 intercept operation, which highlighted
the scale and extent of Libyas covert nuclear program. Tripoli
promptly opened its nuclear facilities and chemical weapons stockpiles
for inspection, leading to the December 2003 announcement that Libya
had disavowed these programs.
3. Upon discovering an earlier shipment of North
Korean missiles to Yemen under this 1999 contract, the U.S. government
imposed sanctions against the responsible North Korean entity, but
chose to waive similar sanctions on the Yemeni government.
4. The Missile Technology Control Regime comprises
a series of political commitments and, in any case, does not include
Yemen or North Korea.
5. David E. Sanger and Thom Shanker, Reluctant
U.S. Gives Assent For Missiles to Go to Yemen, The New York
Times, December 12, 2002, p. A1.
6. Proliferation Security Initiative:
Chairmans Statement at the Second Meeting, Foreign Ministry
of Australia, July 9-10, 2003, Brisbane, Australia.
7. Mark Rosen, Global Security: The Proliferation
Security Initiative, Intellibridge, September 21, 2003.
8. A similar principle supports the implementation
of the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea Illicit Activities
Initiative, which sometimes is incorrectly confused with PSI. The
former is a separate effort, coordinated by the United States and
Japan, to crack down on North Koreas revenue gains from illegal
trade in narcotics, counterfeiting, and money laundering.
9. Proliferation Security Initiative:
Chairmans Statement at the Fifth Meeting, Palacia Foz,
March 4-5, 2004, Lisbon, Portugal. The groups core members have
declared as their mission to establish a more coordinated and
effective basis through which to impede and stop shipments of WMD
[weapons of mass destruction], delivery systems, and related materials
flowing to and from states and non-state actors of proliferation concern,
consistent with national legal authorities and relevant international
law and frameworks, including the UN Security Council.
10. Coming so soon on the heels of the Iraq
war, the participation of France and Germany surprised some observers.
Their decision to join PSI at the outset, perhaps like the decisions
of some of the other original members, may have been guided more by
the desire to influence and limit the reach of PSI as defined by the
United States.
11. Proliferation Security Initiative:
Chairmans Statement at the Fifth Meeting.
12. As the Chairmans Conclusions following
the fourth plenary meeting in October 2003 stated, The meeting
noted that participation would vary with the activity taking place,
and the contribution participants could provide. Some countries had
particular experience, assets or expertise relevant to all PSI activities;
other countries or organizations could be expected to contribute according
to their particular capabilities.
13. Wade Boese, The Proliferation Security
Initiative: An Interview with John Bolton, Arms Control Today,
December 2003, p. 37.
14. Proliferation Security Initiative:
Statement of Interdiction Principles, September 4, 2003. Paris,
France.
15. Ibid.
16. Benjamin Friedman, The Proliferation
Security Initiative: The Legal Challenge, The Bipartisan Security
Group, September 4, 2003, p. 3. The United States has not ratified
the Law of the Sea Convention, but every other core member of the
PSI has done so and is thus bound by Article 19.
17. UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, Article
19.
18. The status of PSI has emerged as one issue
in the ongoing debate over U.S. ratification of the Law of the Sea
Convention. Some critics have argued that the convention would outlaw
PSI or significantly constrain its execution by referencing Article
110, which provides that suspicions of terrorism or proliferation
are not grounds for boarding vessels on the high seas. That is a moot
point. Customary international law today already does not permit such
boardings for these reasons, and PSI members do not claim such a right.
19. The third Interdiction Principle
adopted by PSI members in September 2003 states that PSI participants
will [r]eview and work to strengthen their relevant national
legal authorities where necessary to accomplish these objectives,
and work to strengthen when necessary relevant international law and
frameworks in appropriate ways to support these commitments.
20. U.N. Security Council Resolution 1540,
passed in April 2004, Calls upon all States to refrain from
providing any form of support to non-state actors that attempt to
develop, acquire, manufacture, possess, transport, transfer, or use
nuclear, chemical or biological weapons and their means of delivery,
in particular for terrorist purposes. See Wade Boese, Security
Council Unanimously Adopts Resolution on Denying Terrorists WMD,
Arms Control Today, May 2004, p. 34.
21. Reports indicate that one scheduled exercise
may have been postponed or canceled.
22. Judith Miller, Panama Joins Accord
to Stem Ships Transport of Illicit Arms, The New York
Times, May 11, 2004.
23. Wade Boese, U.S., Allies Seek Right
to Board Ships in WMD Search, Arms Control Today, January/February
2004, p. 37.
24. David McGlinchey, Anti-Proliferation
Effort Will Receive No Separate Funding, Personnel, Government
Executive, March 15, 2004.
25. Rosen, Intellibridge.
26. Miller, The New York Times.
Jofi Joseph is a homeland security and defense
consultant based in Alexandria, VA. He recently left the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, where he spent three years as a Democratic Professional
Staff Member handling arms control and nonproliferation issues. The
views expressed in this article are those of the author alone.
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