Reagan Was Right About Ballistic Missiles
May 5, 2004
By Steve Andreasen
Historians sifting through President Ronald Reagan’s
papers may find no subject as riveting or controversial
as his policies on nuclear weapons and arms control.
Reagan challenged conventional orthodoxy and advocated
sweeping nuclear arms agreements with the Soviet Union
to reduce the potential for a cataclysmic war. The
nuclear threats that inspired Reagan’s vision have
changed dramatically since the end of his presidency,
but in many ways, the potential for nuclear catastrophe
has increased. Today, Reagan’s bold proposal to
eliminate offensive ballistic missiles could be more
than just an historical footnote, but rather, a roadmap
for a new generation of leaders.
Reagan sent Mikhail
Gorbachev a letter in July 1986 proposing the elimination of all U.S. and
Soviet offensive ballistic missiles. Three months later, at a summit
meeting with Gorbachev held in Reykjavik, Iceland, the U.S. president
offered to eliminate all offensive ballistic missiles within 10 years,
provided that each side would be then free to deploy strategic missile
defenses.
Much has changed
since that gray day in Iceland.
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, three successive U.S.
Presidents have declared the end of the Cold War. Yet, the most dangerous
manifestation of that war – long-range (greater than 5,500 kilometers)
ballistic missiles armed with nuclear warheads, both land (ICBMs) and sea
based (SLBMs) – remain a fixture of U.S. and Russian arsenals.
Even when the Moscow
Treaty is fully implemented in 2012, Russia and the United States will each
maintain thousands of nuclear warheads on hundreds of ballistic missiles
deployed on “hair-trigger” alert – ready for immediate launch and capable of
hitting their targets in minutes. Hair triggers on ballistic missiles put
tremendous pressure on leaders in both countries – in particular, Russia,
with an early warning system in serious disrepair and only a handful of
survivable nuclear warheads on day-to-day alert – to rely on “launch on
warning” or “launch under attack” strategies to ensure there can be no
advantage from a first strike. Under these circumstances, there continues
to be a risk that a decision to use ballistic missiles will be made in
haste, with disastrous consequences.
Perhaps even more
significant than the continued reliance of the U.S. and Russia on ballistic
missiles has been the proliferation of offensive ballistic missiles in the
Middle East, South Asia and the Korean peninsula. On top of this, China –
America’s most likely strategic competitor over the next two decades – has
begun a significant modernization of its long-range ballistic missile force.
Ballistic missiles
armed with nuclear warheads remain the most fearsome weapon system ever
devised. One missile fired in anger, by accident or miscalculation could
produce tens of millions of casualties within minutes; a few missiles could
destroy a society and trigger a global conflagration.
As is the case with
any weapons technology, one can always fall back on the argument that the
“genie is out of the bottle” and nothing can, or should, be done to reduce
the potential for catastrophe; or make the argument that it is political
factors, not weapons systems, that are the key to conflict resolution and
threat reduction (the geopolitical equivalent of “guns don’t kill people,
people kill people”).
But this kind of
thinking ignores the serious magnitude of the nuclear problem. President
Reagan was prepared to consider the elimination of our entire offensive
ballistic missile force at the height of the Cold War in exchange for the
elimination of Soviet missiles. Today, when Russia is our partner, it is
worth reexamining this proposal – applied globally – to address residual
Cold War threats and new threats emanating from missile proliferation.
Global ZBM
Under a notional global ZBM agreement:
·
The U.S. and Russia would
agree to eliminate over the next 10-15 years all offensive ballistic
missiles – land and sea-based, nuclear and conventional – with a range
greater than 500 kilometers. (The Intermediate Nuclear Forces [INF] Treaty
has already eliminated all U.S. and Russian ground-launched ballistic
missiles with a range between 500 and 5,500 kilometers.)
·
Space launch vehicles and
interceptors for ballistic missile defense – both of which incorporate
ballistic missile stages – would be permitted, with verification.
·
The U.S. and Russia would
seek a global ban on offensive ballistic missiles with a range in excess of
500 kilometers, to be concluded coincident with the U.S.-Russian agreement.
This global ban would seek to include at least those countries with
ballistic missiles with ranges greater than 500 kilometers – the UK, France,
China, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Syria, India, Pakistan and North Korea.
How would this
proposal address the security challenges posed by ballistic missiles?
Under Global ZBM,
nuclear bombers and cruise missiles would remain in U.S. and Russian
arsenals, effectively deterring those who can be deterred.
ZBM would reduce the
risk of an accidental or unauthorized launch by unraveling the dangerous
nexus between thousands of U.S. and Russian ballistic missile warheads on
hair trigger alert and huge gaps in Russia’s early warning system. More
broadly, ZBM would dramatically reduce the nuclear component of the
U.S.-Russia relationship.
ZBM would also
simplify the challenge of missile defense. First, the need for a “thick”
defense against ballistic missiles with ranges greater than 500 kilometers
would be greatly reduced as ZBM was implemented. Second, missile defense
could focus on the threat from short-range missiles not banned by Global ZBM
– that is, missiles with ranges less than 500 kilometers. For the
foreseeable future, defenses against shorter-range missiles whose warheads
have lower reentry velocities are likely to be more effective than defenses
against “faster-flying” longer-range systems, which typically are harder to
shoot down.
China
would forgo the limited capability it has today to strike the
United States with nuclear weapons. But
China would retain the ability to conduct nuclear strikes throughout Asia,
using aircraft, bombs and short-range ballistic missiles not banned by the
agreement (a major incentive for China). Under these circumstances, China
might well conclude it can maintain a sufficient nuclear deterrent – in
particular, if each of the other major nuclear powers was committed to
Global ZBM.
Global ZBM would have a greater impact on
Britain and France. Both have made greater investments than China in
long-range ballistic missiles – specifically, SLBMs – and thus would be
giving up more. And both have broader security commitments than China;
thus, they may feel less able to forgo ballistic missiles.
Still, there would
be important security gains for both countries, beginning with the
elimination of Russian and Chinese ballistic missiles that could devastate
Europe. In addition, the
UK and France would need to weigh the
potential benefits of Global ZBM from the standpoint of ballistic missile
proliferation.
ZBM would provide
what is sorely lacking in today’s international security policy mix: a bold
diplomatic approach to missile non-proliferation that can be applied
globally.
By eliminating
weapons optimized for preemptive strikes, ZBM could improve regional
stability. Most states in regional hotspots lack a ballistic missile early
warning system or reliable command and control to coordinate a response to a
ballistic missile attack. In a crisis, the state that delivers the first
blow could reap a significant advantage, putting these countries on their
own hair triggers.
Still, the
elimination of ballistic missiles with ranges greater than 500 kilometers
could prove a turning point in political relations between regional
antagonists (just as the Reagan-Gorbachev INF agreement was a turning point
in relations between Washington and Moscow). Moreover, Global ZBM would
markedly improve the threat environment for states that live under the
shadow of ballistic missile attack by removing the most dangerous weapons
from regional arsenals and making it easier to mount a conventional defense.
Negotiation of a
Global ZBM agreement would require a significant investment in multilateral
diplomacy – beginning with Washington and Moscow – at a time when the United
States is preoccupied with Iraq and the ongoing war on terror, and Russia
with post-Communist reforms and the war in Chechnya. From the outset, there
would be high negotiating hurdles – the kind that always exists when each
party is asked to give up something significant. Would the effort be
justified, even if ZBM were understood initially as an organizing principle
that could only be implemented in practice over a period of many years?
In 1962, President
John F. Kennedy said, “The vast resources on this planet are being devoted
more and more to the means of destroying, instead of enriching human life
but the world was not meant to be a prison in which man awaits his
execution.” Today, a bold approach to curbing ballistic missile threats is
both justified and essential. The world cannot wait for the catastrophic
event – the use of a nuclear ballistic missile – before acting with urgency
and imagination. To wait is to risk a tragedy of epochal proportions.
After Reykjavik,
President Reagan took some heat – from both sides of the political aisle in
Washington
and from European allies – for proposing that the most straightforward way
to eliminate ballistic missile threats was to eliminate ballistic missiles.
In hindsight, however, Reagan was right. Let’s get rid of these “god-awful”
missiles before they get us.
Steve Andreasen served during the Clinton
Administration as Director of Defense Policy and Arms Control on the
National Security Council and previously in the State Department during the
Bush and Reagan Administrations. He is a national security consultant and
teaches at the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs. This piece
is adapted from an article that appears in the Spring 2004 Issue of
Survival.
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