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- <text id=91TT1778>
- <title>
- Aug. 12, 1991: America Abroad
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 12, 1991 Busybodies & Crybabies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 27
- AMERICA ABROAD
- A Defense We Can Live With
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Strobe Talbott
- </p>
- <p> What was once said of Wagner's music also applies to the
- logic of the agreement between the U.S. and the Soviet Union to
- stand naked before each other's nuclear missiles: it's better
- than it sounds. To feel safe, both superpowers must be
- confident they can retaliate against an attack. The more defense
- one side has, the more offense the other will think it needs and
- the greater the danger that competition will spin out of
- control. Conversely, only when defenses are constrained can
- offenses be reduced. That's the connection--the "linkage," as
- the diplomats and strategists call it--between the accord
- limiting antiballistic missiles (ABMs) that Richard Nixon and
- Leonid Brezhnev concluded in 1972 and the treaty capping the
- Strategic Arms Reduction Talks (START) that George Bush and Mi
- khail Gorbachev signed last week.
- </p>
- <p> Between those two milestones, 19 years apart, the U.S. had a
- President who never bought the theory of mutual deterrence or
- its perverse-sounding corollary, mutual vulnerability. Ronald
- Reagan dreamed of pure, total defense. His Strategic Defense
- Initiative, or Star Wars, was a testament of faith that Yankee
- ingenuity could produce exotic missile-killing satellites that
- would render offensive weapons "impotent and obsolete."
- </p>
- <p> Most American scientists think an impregnable astrodome
- over the U.S. is sheer fantasy. Yet even a faulty SDI would
- force the Soviets to take costly countermeasures. Gorbachev put
- Reagan on notice that if the U.S. proceeded with SDI, the
- Kremlin would have no choice but to pull out of START. Soviet
- officials reiterated that warning last week.
- </p>
- <p> Bush has never been a true believer in SDI, although as
- Vice President he paid lip service to the program as part of
- the catechism of the Reagan Administration. SDI is still sacred
- to the Republican hard right, so Bush lets his Vice President,
- Dan Quayle, champion the latest Star Wars brainstorm:
- "Brilliant Pebbles," an orbiting complex of miniaturized rockets
- that makes about as much sense as the name suggests. Since even
- the testing of space-based interceptors is prohibited by the ABM
- treaty and would therefore jeopardize Moscow's continued
- compliance with START, Brilliant Pebbles is more of a threat to
- arms control than to Soviet missiles.
- </p>
- <p> It's fashionable these days to dismiss nuclear diplomacy
- as all but irrelevant, given the end of the cold war and the
- tumult in the U.S.S.R. But precisely because the future of that
- country is so uncertain, it's all the more important to make
- sure that one factor in the Soviet equation--the size and
- composition of the Strategic Rocket Forces--remains
- predictable.
- </p>
- <p> There's another reason for protecting the gains of START
- and proceeding briskly to START II: only if the two largest
- nuclear powers continue to reduce their arsenals can they induce
- other countries to cooperate in curbing the further spread of
- nukes and the ballistic technology to launch them.
- </p>
- <p> Yet, paradoxically, while meeting the challenge of
- proliferation means more stringent limits on U.S. and Soviet
- offenses, it may also require fewer restrictions on defense.
- </p>
- <p> Six months ago, the world watched as Iraqi Scuds hurtled
- down on Israeli and Saudi Arabian cities. American Patriot
- antiballistic missiles foiled many of those strikes. Now a
- standard feature on the TV evening news is the cat-and-mouse
- game that Saddam Hussein is playing with international
- inspectors looking for evidence of his Manhattan Project.
- </p>
- <p> Imagine a more adroit Saddam armed with an
- intercontinental version of the Scud, and you've got the stuff
- of which a new nightmare is made. Arms control should make an
- attack by a Third World country on the U.S. less plausible
- rather than more so. To fend off scores or even hundreds of
- warheads, the U.S. needs not SDI but a network of ground-based
- interceptors at perhaps three to five sites. The ABM treaty
- allows only one site, but it could be amended to permit more.
- At the same time, the ban on testing and deployment of
- space-based systems should be strengthened, since those are what
- could undermine the purpose of the treaty and the viability of
- deterrence itself.
- </p>
- <p> For 2 1/2 years Sam Nunn, the Democratic chairman of the
- Senate Armed Services Committee, has been advocating what he
- calls a "limited-protection system." Last week the Senate
- endorsed that goal. The gung-ho SDI enthusiasts don't like the
- scheme because they believe, correctly, that Nunn doesn't want
- Brilliant Pebbles to get off the ground. On the other side are
- arms-control purists who see the ABM treaty as holy writ and
- fear it can't survive any tinkering.
- </p>
- <p> That ought not to be true. As one of its original
- negotiators, Sidney Graybeal, notes, "The treaty was meant to
- be a living document, therefore subject to updating as the world
- changes." And the world has indeed evolved in ways the Soviets
- surely recognize. While Saddam and Bush are at the top of each
- other's hate list today, Iraq is geographically much closer to
- the U.S.S.R. than to the U.S. So is China, which has a sizable
- arsenal, much of it aimed at Soviet targets. So is Pakistan,
- with its own nuclear ambitions.
- </p>
- <p> As they made clear last week, Bush and Gorbachev already
- realize that their countries have a lot more to worry about than
- each other. Perhaps, before their next summit, they could
- acknowledge a shared interest in easing the terms of the ABM
- treaty while preserving its essence.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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