home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT1754>
- <title>
- Aug. 05, 1991: Why Arms Control Is Obsolete
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 05, 1991 Was It Worth It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 68
- Why Arms Control Is Obsolete
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Charles Krauthammer
- </p>
- <p> Remember the Freeze? Ground Zero Week? The Day After?
- Remember when psychiatrists were blaming the Bomb for everything
- from violence to video games? It was barely a decade ago that
- America was in the grip of nuclear hysteria. Yet when, in
- London, Presidents Gorbachev and Bush dramatically announced the
- conclusion of START, the most substantial arms treaty in
- history, they were met with yawns.
- </p>
- <p> Why? Because in the interim, it has become clear to even
- the woolliest that nuclear weapons are not the threat. The
- threat is the intent to use them.
- </p>
- <p> That is why even the worst nuclear hysterics never got
- terribly worked up about the British and the French arsenals,
- both of which were quite capable of laying waste to a very large
- part of the U.S. No one worried about them because the French
- and the British are friends. The problem with the Soviets was
- not that they had thousands of nuclear weapons, but that they
- had thousands of nuclear weapons pointed at the U.S. And since
- no arms-control regime ever seriously proposed reducing nuclear
- weapons below the level needed to wipe out American society at
- least once, no arms-control regime could ever, even in
- principle, cure our nuclear nightmare.
- </p>
- <p> Arms control was always something between a sham and a
- sideshow. The end of the cold war has proved it. The U.S.S.R.
- today has thousands more nuclear warheads than it did 10 years
- ago. Yet we feel far more secure today. Why? Because security
- never depended on numbers. It depended on intentions. Soviet
- intentions have changed, and the change had nothing at all to
- do with arms control.
- </p>
- <p> Which is what makes START so irrelevant. Arms control is
- what you talk about when you have nothing to talk about. In the
- midst of the deepest cold war, the only thing we could possibly
- talk to the Soviets about was nuclear weapons: abstractions,
- tokens, numbers, weapons whose use was inconceivable. Arms
- control offered a kind of shadow substance when there was no
- real substance to discuss.
- </p>
- <p> Now we have real substance--the terms of Soviet entry
- into the community of the West. That substance was symbolized
- in one picture: Gorbachev in London, smiling, surrounded by the
- seven Western summiteers. That picture mocked the Bolshevik
- dream of overthrowing Western capitalism. It illustrated the
- Soviets' desperate desire to join the West. And it made START
- obsolete because, at the end of the day, a democratic Russia
- integrated into the West becomes no more a nuclear threat to us
- than Britain or France.
- </p>
- <p> But the end of the Soviet threat does not mean the end of
- nuclear danger. The real danger is proliferation, and
- proliferation has just begun. Within a decade, according to
- Defense Secretary Dick Cheney, 15 countries will acquire
- ballistic missiles. About half will have nuclear weapons on top
- of them. Moreover, Soviet leaders have been rational and thus
- deterrable. We went to the brink during the Cuban missile crisis
- but did not go over. Both sides understood and would not bear
- the cost of nuclear war. We cannot be so sure that will be true
- of Iraq, North Korea, Iran, Libya, the nuclear powers of the
- future.
- </p>
- <p> That is why the signing of START comes just in time. With
- luck, START marks the end of that most sterile of exercises,
- superpower arms control. It may finally free our attention for
- the real threat: the ballistic missile brandished by the
- smaller, newer, angrier powers of the very near future.
- </p>
- <p> What to do about the threat? First, pre-empt. The model is
- Iraq. Says British Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd: "One way or
- another we are going to prevent Iraq becoming a nuclear power."
- Hurd is refreshingly unconcerned about the legalities or
- political niceties of a great power with nuclear weapons
- dictating to a smaller power without them that it must remain
- without. The danger is too great. Iraq is a proven aggressor
- with a record of using every weapon it ever laid its hands on.
- The U.S., Britain and France, at least, aim to see that it does
- not lay its hands on nukes, even if that means military attack.
- </p>
- <p> But pre-emption is not enough. There will always be
- countries with programs clandestine enough to escape detection.
- One day our children will wake up to some crazy state's nuclear
- arsenal. Let us hope that we will have provided for them.
- </p>
- <p> How? With a defense. Hence the second requirement for the
- post-Soviet nuclear environment: the Strategic Defense
- Initiative. SDI, like arms control, was distorted and diverted
- by the Soviet threat. SDI never was and never will be an
- adequate response to a full Soviet attack. Ronald Reagan's
- pretense that it was did SDI great damage. Yet SDI remains
- vital. It is our only potential protection from nuclear attack
- by small countries or unauthorized launch from large ones (by
- a renegade Soviet general, for example).
- </p>
- <p> These are undeterrable threats. And the primitive Scuds of
- the gulf war have given us a taste of how terrible they will
- be. Yet the Congress is locked in an archaic cold war debate
- over SDI's architecture. On the one side are those who insist
- on ground-based systems only. On the other are those who demand
- an additional layer of defense based in space.
- </p>
- <p> It is hard to understand the theological objection to
- space-based defenses. The matter should be purely technical. If
- we can engineer an effective first line of defenses in space,
- why not the extra protection? A few decades from now many
- nations will be in space, using it for defensive and perhaps
- even offensive purposes. Why forfeit the opportunity to be the
- first into an absolutely critical area of strategic power when
- the road is open and the need is great?
- </p>
- <p> Nations are rarely given the opportunity to prepare in
- tranquillity for a looming threat. We must not sacrifice that
- opportunity to the theologies of arms control and cold war
- thinking. START is already obsolete. The cold war is quite dead.
- The danger is the proliferating ballistic missile. The answer
- is bold new thinking--and strategic defense.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-