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Seances by
Candlelight
Peter Huessy
The long simmering debate over Iraqi weapons of mass
destruction reveals deep fissures among policy makers
about the best means to both counter the proliferation
of such weapons as well as prevent their deployment. On
one side stand the so-called arms control organizations
that push for written legal treaties as the basis for
preventing rogue nations from acquiring weapons of mass
destruction, particularly nuclear weapons. The lynch pin
of their regime is the non-proliferation treaty (NPT)
which was established to regulate the use of civilian
nuclear power and ensure that spent fuel was not
diverted to the production of nuclear weapons. Given
that a number of nations had already deployed nuclear
weapons—the United States, Britain, France, China and
the former Soviet Union—the NPT made an implicit bargain
with those nations not yet nuclear powers to negotiate
in good faith to reduce nuclear weapons, end the “arms
race”, and eventually agree to eliminate nuclear weapons
altogether. The theology of pace through paper rests on
the assumption that if the United States moves toward
dramatic reductions in its nuclear weaponry, eliminates
nuclear testing and relies almost entirely on its
conventional military capability, rogue states such as
North Korea and Iran will cease their quest for nuclear
weapons and agree to intrusive inspection regimes to
verify that nuclear weapons programs are not being
undertaken surreptitiously.
The inspection regime established in
Iraq
after the first Gulf War has become the Holy Grail of
arms control. No criticism of its effectiveness can be
admitted. The fact that the regime of inspections was
only put in place after the U.S.-led coalition used
military force to push Iraq out of Kuwait is routinely
ignored, as if Iraq had voluntarily and without
resistance allowed such inspections to take place. Also,
the International Atomic Energy Administration, in
concert with the United Nations, was sound asleep while
North Korea,
Iraq and Iran, all signatories to the NPT, developed
clandestine nuclear weapons programs while being given a
clean bill of health by the IAEA.
As a result, the question of whether the inspection
regime in Iraq between 1991-98 was sufficiently
effective to eliminate most, if not all, of Saddam’s
weapons of mass destruction program becomes critical to
whether or not such inspection regimes, by themselves,
are an adequate non-proliferation or
counter-proliferation strategy. This is why the
cacophony of criticism of the Bush Administration has
come forward about the failure, to date, of the
coalition forces to find the stockpiles of chemical and
biological weapons supposedly hidden by Saddam Hussein
and the elements of a nuclear weapons program, including
centrifuges and uranium ore. Also, opponents of
military action against Iraq have claimed that military
action could only be justified if
Iraq
posed an imminent threat to the
United States and its
allies, which would of course require a fully
constituted weapons program and the means to effectively
deliver such weapons against either the continental
United States, our forces overseas or our allies. The
very fact that the Bush Administration repeatedly noted
that such a threat from Iraq was, in fact, not imminent,
a point made explicit by the President in at least four
separate speeches, appears to have completely befuddled
the arms control community, unable as they are to
understand that once a threat becomes imminent it is
probably too late to deal with it, a point made
eloquently by Senator Biden in July 2002, hardly a
partisan for this Administration.
On the other side of the arms control ledger stands the
Bush Administration and its allies who have sought to
expand the tools of counter- and non-proliferation to
include active and passive defenses, including missile
defense, deterrence, dissuasion, and denial, as well as
the traditional tools of arms control, sanctions and
export controls, such as the Missile Control Technology
Regime.
Ironically, the Bush Administration has tried to move
U.S.
policy makers away from the standard prism of the “Cold
War” in which
U.S. policy was firmly rooted for the past half century,
towards a more flexible and realistic policy regime that
takes into account the new realities of rogue regimes
and terrorism. Part of this policy has been the tool of
pre-emption, which while too often associated only with
the use of military force, also involves diplomacy, law
enforcement, counter-terrorism policies, and sanctions.
Left unanswered during the Cold War was the issue of
what one does when a nation deliberately seeks to make
an end run around an arms control treaty like the NPT to
surreptitiously build the very nuclear weapons they have
sworn not to deploy. How do you enforce such agreements?
The arms control community—misnamed as it is because
they are usually more concerned with stopping the U.S.
from deploying the arms it needs than stopping the
deployment of arms of rogue states—has reacted to this
dilemma with a neat rhetorical trick by blaming the
United States for such rogue state behavior. It is
argued by some that U.S. deployments of missile
defenses, for example, are undermining the deterrent
capability of North Korea, China or Iran. Or, it is U.S.
rhetoric that is to blame — how dare we call regimes
“evil” when we compel them to seek security through
terrorism.
When questioned what these nations are deterring the
United States from doing, it is grudgingly admitted that
while the United States is deterring these terrorists
from attacking their neighbors, it is somehow bad form
for the United States to deny these nations an
unfettered ability to coerce, blackmail or otherwise
attack their neighbors, whether the threatened nation is
Taiwan, South Korea or Israel.
Given the attacks against the United States by terrorist
organizations since at least the takeover of our embassy
in Tehran in 1979, the U.S. has faced the problem of
these same states and their allied terrorist
organizations attacking the U.S. and its interests
without warning and with weapons of greater and greater
destructive capability. It was one thing to deter the
former Soviet Union from invading Western Europe; we
could count the Russian units—whether tanks, missiles,
or airplanes. We could keep track of Soviet nuclear
weapons deployments through satellites, which we could
count to ensure compliance with SALT or START.
But following the collapse of the Soviet Union,
verifying the new types of threats against the U.S.
became far more difficult. Weapons deployments such as
missiles did not go through an extensive and visible
testing regime that would have given us fair warning of
possible future deployments. The Gulf War of 1991 also
contained a lesson as Iraq proceeded to bury their key
military and command assets deeper and deeper under tons
of steel and concrete.
During the 1993-2001 period, the Clinton Administration
sought to contain these growing threats through the
traditional arms control regimes such as the NPT, the
CTBT, the MCTR, in addition to a carrots and carrots
diplomacy that “pretended” to curtail weapons programs
in North Korea, for example, through food and energy
deals that left the business unfinished of how exactly
the North Korean nuclear program would be eliminated.
The IAEA, for example, would have had to engage in some
4 years of full inspections prior to being able to give
the North Koreans a clean bill of health, inspections
that would have required the full cooperation of the
regime in Pyongyang, which of course was never
forthcoming.
Three recent books—Dick Morris’s Off With Their Heads,
Gerald Posner’s Why America Slept and Richard
Minister’s Losing Bin Laden—all fully document
the flawed Clinton Administration policy of relying on
traditional and admittedly flimsy arms control
deals—“peace through paper”—to deal with the growing
threats from rogue states and terrorist webs. The shrill
criticisms from the supporters of such a policy now echo
in our nation’s newspapers and electronic media, not
because the exact nature of Saddam’s weapons of mass
destruction has any bearing on whether they would or
would not support using military force to further
“regime change” but because they are imprisoned in an
utopian fantasy that terrorists can be persuaded to
change their evil ways with only nice-nice blather, what
Tony Snow describes as international séances by
candlelight.
Peter
Huessy is President of GeoStrategic Analysis, a Maryland
defense consulting firm. He is Senior Defense Associate
at NDUF. He specializes in nuclear weapons, missile
defense, terrorism and rogue states. These views are his
own and do not necessarily reflect those of his
affiliated organizations.
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