home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT2211>
- <link 91TT2765>
- <link 90TT1505>
- <link 89TT1294>
- <title>
- Oct. 07, 1991: Arms Control:Toward a Safer World
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991 Highlights
- The End of the Cold War
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 07, 1991 Defusing the Nuclear Threat
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 18
- COVER STORIES
- Toward a Safer World
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Breaking the dusty rules of arms control, Bush cuts the U.S.
- arsenal and invites Gorbachev to do the same. But Moscow should
- read the fine print.
- </p>
- <p>By STROBE TALBOTT
- </p>
- <p> It was a solid Bush-plus performance. In his televised
- address to the nation from the Oval Office on Friday evening,
- the President was proposing nothing less than a new set of
- guidelines for nuclear peace in the post-cold war world. He was,
- for once, ahead of the curve, demonstrating real leadership in
- his capacity as Commander in Chief of the doomsday arsenal.
- </p>
- <p> Yet this was no nuclear abolitionist, no Jimmy Carter
- daring to dream about the "elimination of all nuclear weapons
- from this earth." Nor was it Ronald Reagan, putting his faith
- in a pure defense that would render nuclear weapons "impotent
- and obsolete." Instead, it was classic George Bush, a
- traditionalist and pragmatist, striving for boldness without
- undermining a quality he values even more: prudence.
- </p>
- <p> Bush did his best -- which was very good indeed -- to make
- his initiative seem visionary, equitable, even magnanimous. For a
- sweetener, he announced several unilateral steps, such as
- removing all nuclear-tipped cruise missiles from U.S. surface
- ships and attack submarines. But these are for the most part
- minor gestures that will leave intact the main concepts and
- structures of American defense. In some cases, Bush was doing
- little more than accepting recommendations that experts have
- long been making for strictly military reasons. For example, a
- number of prominent specialists on naval warfare have argued for
- years that sea-launched nuclear cruise missiles are a bad idea
- in their own right.
- </p>
- <p> The implications of Bush's proposals are far more onerous
- for the U.S.S.R. In his own polite and statesmanlike way, he
- was all but dictating to the Kremlin how it should restructure
- its nuclear forces so as to diminish even further the threat
- they pose to the rest of the world.
- </p>
- <p> Bush's essential purpose is to accelerate the retirement
- of some of the Soviet Union's most advanced military programs
- while protecting key elements of the U.S.'s "strategic
- modernization": the B-2 Stealth bomber, the Trident II submarine
- missile, and a scaled-back version of the Star Wars antimissile
- defense.
- </p>
- <p> Arms-control proposals, like the arms themselves, have
- targets. Bush's plan is aimed squarely at two categories of
- nuclear weaponry: 1) intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs)
- with multiple warheads, known as independently targetable
- re-entry vehicles (MIRVs), and 2) short-range missiles and other
- so-called tactical weapons. Not coincidentally, those are the
- Soviet systems that most worry the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> MIRVed ICBMs have long been the principal villains in
- American strategists' scenarios for a "bolt from the blue"
- Soviet attack. Because the U.S.S.R. is a land power with a
- historical preference for heavy artillery, it has more of these
- hydra-headed monsters than the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Until last Friday it was U.S. policy to redress this
- imbalance in two ways: through negotiations, like the Strategic
- Arms Reduction Talks (START), that whittled away the Soviet
- advantage; and by developing America's own large, heavily MIRVed
- land-based missile, the 10-warhead MX. Bush said in effect,
- Let's go straight to the bottom line, which is zero; let's agree
- to eliminate MIRVed ICBMs altogether.
- </p>
- <p> That is a fairly easy sacrifice for the U.S. The MX is
- highly controversial in Congress, and only 50 have been
- deployed. The U.S. has 300 other, older MIRVed ICBMs. For their
- part, the Soviets would have to give up 763 such weapons.
- </p>
- <p> In targeting tactical nukes, Bush was addressing what has
- been a growing Western concern about the disintegration of the
- Soviet Union. For months, an interagency committee of the U.S.
- government has been quietly studying the danger that rebel or
- dissident groups might seize weapons and use them for
- intimidation or worse.
- </p>
- <p> "We've got the makings of one hell of a Tom Clancy novel
- here," said an Administration official during a White House
- meeting in January. The issue is not entirely hypothetical.
- There was at least one incident, in Azerbaijan, in which a band
- of reb els briefly broke into an installation at which nukes
- were stored. The U.S. committee concluded that the greatest risk
- was that tactical nuclear weapons, such as artillery shells,
- might fall into the wrong hands.
- </p>
- <p> Bush calculates, no doubt correctly, that Mikhail
- Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin are every bit as frightened of that
- prospect as he is, especially in the wake of the aborted coup
- in August.
- </p>
- <p> The central feature of last week's initiative -- the
- elimination of MIRVed ICBMs -- is recycled from a proposal that
- Bush first thought about putting to Gorbachev two years ago. In
- November 1989, when Bush was preparing for his first meeting as
- President with Gorbachev at Malta, the State Department floated
- the idea that the U.S. should seek a ban on mobile MIRVed ICBMs.
- The department tried to promote the plan at the White House as
- a way of giving a "Bush stamp" to a START treaty that was
- otherwise largely the inherited handiwork of the Reagan
- Administration.
- </p>
- <p> National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft, who had been
- pushing "de-MIRVing" for years, persuaded Bush to go the State
- Department one better and propose a ban on all MIRVed ICBMs,
- stationary as well as mobile. Scowcroft sold Bush on the idea,
- but Defense Secretary Dick Cheney objected so strenuously that
- the plan was dropped.
- </p>
- <p> Now that it has been revived, the objections may come from
- the Defense Ministry in Moscow. Since the Soviets have many
- more MIRVed ICBMs than does the U.S., Gorbachev's military
- advisers are likely to tell him that a prohibition on such
- weapons is a net disadvantage to them. Therefore, instead of
- merely accepting the U.S. proposal, the Soviets may carry the
- logic of Scowcroft's position a step further; they may say, If
- we're going to be truly serious about de-MIRVing, why stop at
- the water's edge? Why not ban MIRVs on submarine-launched
- ballistic missiles (SLBMs) as well?
- </p>
- <p> In the mind game of deterrence, MIRVed submarine missiles
- are the trump card in the American deck: even if American ICBMs
- were destroyed in their silos and American bombers vaporized on
- their runways or shot down trying to penetrate Soviet airspace,
- U.S. submarines would still be at the bottom of the ocean,
- running silent and running deep, invulnerable to pre-emption and
- bristling with missiles, each capable of exacting terrible
- revenge on the U.S.S.R. Older U.S. boats are equipped with
- missiles that carry as many as 14 warheads each, while the newer
- ones have missiles with eight to 12 warheads. The notion of
- limiting them to one each is almost unthinkable, particularly
- to the U.S. Navy.
- </p>
- <p> Beyond fine-tuning the balance of terror, Bush's proposal
- was intended to help him get a grip on a more general political
- problem: the difficulty that statesmen have in keeping up with
- events, particularly in a period of seismic changes in the
- geopolitical landscape. Bush opened his speech with the image
- of the world facing a "fresh page of history before yesterday's
- ink has even dried." He might have been speaking about the ink
- on two documents in particular.
- </p>
- <p> Last November the leaders of 22 nations met in Paris to
- sign a treaty on Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) that had
- been under negotiation for nearly 17 years. In July, during
- their summit meeting in Moscow, Bush and Gorbachev signed
- another pact capping a decade of START talks.
- </p>
- <p> By any reasonable standard, both treaties were estimable
- accomplishments. CFE blunted the threat of a Soviet-led
- blitzkrieg by the Warsaw Pact against Western Europe; START
- brought about a substantial reduction in MIRVed ICBMs,
- particularly Soviet ones, the potential instruments of a
- nuclear-age Pearl Harbor. However, by the time CFE was signed,
- the Warsaw Pact was nearly defunct, and one of its member
- states, East Germany, had ceased to exist -- or more to the
- point, had defected to NATO. Soviet divisions were pulling out
- of Eastern Europe for reasons that had nothing to do with CFE
- and everything to do with the anticommunist revolution that had
- swept the region. START too needs to be updated before it is
- even submitted to the Supreme Soviet and the U.S. Senate for
- ratification.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev had trouble getting his marshals, generals and
- admirals to accept numerous concessions in the negotiations.
- Granted, that was before the coup, and the military was still
- throwing its weight around. Now many of the more obstreperous
- senior officers have been summarily retired. Still, there are
- plenty of people in Moscow -- not all of them in uniform -- who
- are desperate to cling to Soviet strategic nuclear strength as
- the last symbol of their country's superpower status. For that
- reason alone they will resist further cuts.
- </p>
- <p> Yet the U.S.S.R. itself is shrinking. Ukraine is not only
- asserting its independence but, almost incidentally, moving to
- make itself a nuclear-free zone. There has been a similar
- reaction against the Soviet nuclear-weapons program in the
- Central Asian republic of Kazakhstan. Thus many if not all of
- the Soviet nukes in those two republics will be pulled out.
- Either they can be removed to new sites in the Russian
- Federation, or they can be taken out of commission altogether
- and destroyed.
- </p>
- <p> From the U.S. point of view, the fewer Soviet (or Russian)
- nukes the better. Moreover, it would be easier to verify the
- dismantling and destruction of weapons than keep track of them
- as they're redeployed.
- </p>
- <p> In planning what he would say Friday, Bush calculated that
- the Soviet leader will have an easier time persuading his
- military to swallow these additional cuts if they're part of a
- bilateral deal with the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> In that sense too, the initiative was classic Bush. Once
- again, part of his strategy is to help his pal Gorbachev. That's
- only prudent. But in this case, it's also plenty bold.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-