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Letter to the
Editor
Austin Carson
Dear Editor,
On October 1, Peter Huessy
responded to my article, “Tool
of First Resort” (In the National Interest,
Sept 24), rebutting my contention that arms control
continues to play an essential role in preventing
proliferation. I write to respond to his attacks on
arms control and his defense of the Bush
Administration’s unilateral counter-proliferation
strategy.
In my original article, I explained that arms control
makes a unique contribution in controlling proliferation
in three ways: restricting supplies necessary for
proliferation; creating non-partisan and internationally
legitimate bodies for inspecting possible violations;
and expanding the base of international cooperation by
giving countries in diverse regions of the world a
vested interest in an effective nonproliferation regime.
Huessy’s letter to the editor focuses on enforcement
problems in arms control agreements. He argues that, in
many instances, these agreements have no practical
mechanism to force countries to comply, rendering arms
control a mere diplomatic prayer. In truth, enforcement
is the weakest link in the chain of arms control, but it
is no Achilles’ heal.
Other authors in other places have defended the
enforcement record of arms control – it is not my intent
to review these arguments. I will focus on the narrow,
yet important, issue of the political importance of arms
control inspections and their potential to provide for
robust nonproliferation enforcement. In short,
effective inspections enable the political will to
enforce U.S. nonproliferation goals; more unilateral or
deterrence-based strategies cannot. As my original
article emphasized, the prevention of nuclear
proliferation in the next decade will require
international support at every level – from supply
restrictions to economic and military reprisals. Only
arms control will enable the U.S. to harness these
coalitions to prevent the spread of technology and
weapons.
The failure to enforce arms control agreements is
usually a political failure – parts of the international
community cannot be convinced that violations of arms
control agreements have occurred and are worth enforcing
through economic sanctions or military action. As
Huessy rightly points out, enforcement usually involves
breaching the sovereignty of the proliferating state –
all countries hesitate before supporting such action.
However, if inspectors are vigilantly supported by the
U.S.
and the international community, their findings can both
verify that a violation has occurred and can provide the
much-needed political justification for supporting
economic sanctions or military force.
A quick look at U.S. diplomacy in the run-up to the Iraq
war illustrates the political significance of inspectors
and their consequent effect on enforcement. In late
2002 and early 2003, the Bush Administration was
unsuccessful in assembling political support in the UN
Security Council for a resolution authorizing military
action to enforce Iraq’s obligations on weapons of mass
destruction. The primary obstacle to getting this
support was the opposition of France and Germany.
French and German opposition was almost entirely an
outgrowth of massive domestic public opposition to using
military force against Iraq. Despite intense efforts by
the Bush Administration to demonstrate the threat from
Iraq, German and French public opposition held.
The Administration’s failure to shift global opinion
illustrates the incredible importance of an
internationally legitimate means of verifying breaches
in arms control agreements. Skeptical publics in Europe
and elsewhere were simply unconvinced that the quantity
and quality of evidence presented by the
U.S. demonstrated
violations and a threat. Had an entity perceived as
unbiased and internationally legitimate, such as UNMOVIC
or a successor body, come to similar conclusions, the
international reaction would have been profoundly
different. While there is no way to speak with absolute
certainty, it is extremely unlikely the U.S. would have
faced fatal opposition at the UN if its case had been
backed – even partially – by international inspectors.
Thus, the intersection between inspectors and
enforcement: in a world with war-averse publics often
imposing political straightjackets on European and other
US allies – most of whom are democracies – only
internationally legitimate verification can generate the
political support for enforcing a nonproliferation
agenda.
One last point: Huessy’s attacks on arms control
enforcement cut both ways, raising equally troubling
questions about Bush’s strategy of aggressive
counter-proliferation. Simply put, with or without arms
control, the U.S. will still need strong allied support
to prevent proliferation. Nuclear proliferation is an
international problem: supplied by international
companies, fuelled by international threats, and
enforced only with international solidarity. Tony
Blair’s experience with the British public does not bode
well for Bush’s arms-control-free “coalition of the
willing.” Now, more than ever, internationally
legitimate proof of proliferation guilt will be
essential in convincing skeptical audiences from France
to Germany to South Korea. The question is: would the
U.S. like to try to assemble global support to prevent
proliferation with or without the political help of arms
control agreements? In this instance, the freedom in
“going it alone” is a liability, not an asset.
Austin Carson
Austin Carson is a
Research Analyst in the International Security Program
at the Center for Strategic & International Studies. He
specializes in non-proliferation and arms control with a
focus on South Asia and the former Soviet Union.
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