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Non-Proliferation after Iraq
Ira Straus
Why
were the non-proliferation standards set too low before
the war in Iraq? Why had WMD-interested states been able
to trick their way through the inspections game? Why can
the standards be raised now? Why was a war needed to
raise the standards?
Low
standards were all that was possible during the Cold
War. America and the Soviet Union were, first of all,
competing strategically, only secondarily cooperating on
proliferation issues. The standards were set by
multipolar negotiations among enemies, not by a cohesive
leadership group. The result was a system aimed at
slowing proliferation, not stopping or reversing it.
The
problem was that there was no single country or group of
countries willing and able to act as a reliable power
center on proliferation issues, pushing through the
necessary standards and taking the necessary steps to
enforce them. To be sure, in the early 1960s, Jack
Strachey, a reformed Labour leftist, advocated that the
U.S.
and USSR band together to constitute such a power
center, enforce tough inspection requirements and apply
preventive war in extremis. But the Cold War rivalry
forbade it.
Rather
than a forerunner of a future cohesive world order,
Strachey’s proposal looked like a fading tail-end of
efforts to get a truly robust global non-proliferation
regime. Back in the late 1940s, the Baruch Plan, backed
by the U.S., provided for global control and management
of uranium and for UN enforcement actions without veto.
It was meant to stop proliferation before it got
started; but the plan itself was stopped by the Soviet
veto.
Bertrand Russell and James Burnham advocated the only
way out of this logjam: a threat of preventive war
against the
Soviet
Union,
to keep the atom bomb from spreading beyond its initial
unipolar home in
America.
To improve chances of success and broaden the bases for
this policy, they advocated a Union of the free
countries of Europe with America, as a nucleus of world
order which might expand and bring in other countries as
they became free and modernized. Even then the outcome
would have been uncertain.
By the
1960s, far less seemed possible. To be sure, the Maoist
regime in China accused the two superpowers of
conducting a Strachey-style global “condominium” or “co-imperium”,
but it was in a sense attributing too much rationality
to them. Similarly, in the 1940s the Soviets accused
America of following Russell’s and Burnham’s policy;
they were attributing to America what they assumed any
rational power would do.
Of
course, it would have been a risky, heroic form of
rationality to follow a policy of preventive war against
a great power. In the 1940s, it would have required not
just nerves of steel, but, as Burnham and Russell
explained, a huge effort at expanding the base of action
by constructing a political union on the Atlantic level.
America, with half of the world’s functioning economy
and a nuclear monopoly, could have probably built such a
union had it wished, but it would have been no small
effort, and the unipolar strength of America, while then
temporary, created an illusion of lack of need. In the
1960s, it would have required an even more daring
effort: to build a quasi-Union, with a reliable joint
policy-and-enforcement structure, across the
Communism-democracy divide. Arguably that task was
impossible.
What
was done was more modest. The U.S. proposed the Baruch
Plan, but let the USSR veto it. The U.S. meanwhile
sponsored the building of a Euro-Atlantic community, as
Russell and Burnham advocated, but here it went only
half-way; it left all the heroic work of deep
integration to the European level. On the Atlantic
level, it built a military alliance and an economic
cooperation regime, which it also extended indirectly to
Japan. By providing military security and economic
stability and transmuting occupation into an
assymetrical alliance, it maintained and enhanced its
levers of influence and was able to prevent
proliferation within the alliance to Germany and Japan.
It was also able to slow proliferation beyond the
alliance through “suppliers clubs” for regulation of
dual-use sales. But a goal of reversing proliferation
was beyond its reach.
In the
1960s, similarly, the two superpowers did not reject the
Strachey proposal in total. They acknowledged a joint
interest and joint responsibility for non-proliferation,
but implemented it in a watered-down form: by playing a
leading role in creating the NPT-IAEA regime.
This
regime declared any further proliferation of nuclear
weapons illegitimate, and provided mechanisms to slow it
down. It was a continuation of the traditional
Westphalian view of the special responsibility of great
powers, a responsibility that always included special
rights and discriminatory enforcement -- nothing else
would be realistic or workable in a system of primarily
independent states. The responsibility had grown only
more urgent with the advent of nuclear weapons, and the
concomitant boiling down of the five great powers into
two superpowers.
However, as long as the Cold War continued, with its
mutual ideological enmity and the sometimes-nihilistic
enmity of the USSR toward the overall world order, the
responsibility could not be carried out adequately. The
superpowers were not cohesive allies, but enemies
competing for client states. The reality of competition
trumped the need for cooperation on
counter-proliferation. Each nuclear-seeking regime would
lean to one or the other side; a preventive attack on it
would change the strategic balance between the
superpowers. It would have required a miracle to agree
on mutual compensatory terms for proceeding with such
actions, much less to do so with consistency time after
time. Yet without consistency and reliability, no strong
enforcement regime could be viable or legitimate. One
reason why Russians eventually eliminated their
Communist regime was to put an end to this situation:
they came to realize it was against the true interests
of their country to be undermining the world order,
weakening the West whose civilization was closest to
their own, building up extremist client states and
movements against a West that was doing likewise in
reverse and competitively dissipating WMD technologies
around the world.
Today
the Cold War is over.
Russia
is, by the nature of things, a partner of the West, even
if the West has put off its overtures for an organic
alliance. Conditions are ripe for upgrading the
non-proliferation standards. Multipolarity and
bipolarity have been replaced by unipolarity, making
possible much tighter multilateral negotiations and much
more effective enforcement coalitions. Meanwhile the
urgency of non-proliferation has only grown: nuclear
knowledge and products have spread, and rogue states and
terrorist organizations have gotten into the act.
However, standards once lowered are not easy to raise
again. A major jolt was needed to raise them back
upward. Diplomacy alone would not have sufficed.
At the
same time, war alone does not suffice, either. Success
has come by supplementing coercive action on Iraq with
semi-coercive diplomacy on Libya and Iran.
More
diplomacy will be needed, as well as more threats of
force and the readiness to act on them. Among other
things, it will be necessary to consolidate the
upgrading of the non-proliferation regime through new
multilateral agreements. For this, America will need its
major allies like France and Germany and its big power
partners like Russia and India, not just an ad hoc
coalition. A cumulative diplomatic effort will be
needed, and effective use of a series of international
institutions -- NATO, suppliers clubs, IAEA, UN
--including a possibility of creating new ones to
consolidate a semi-global coalition into a working
regime. Initiatives will have to be taken, creative ways
will have to be found out of diplomatic logjams,
innovative methods will have to be proposed for
combining the interests of the major powers. And arms
will have to be twisted, diplomatically. The chances for
success would be good, because the upshot would be an
upgrading of the interests of all the responsible
powers, that is, an upgrading of the overriding common
interest in non-proliferation; and because the U.S. has
plenty of instruments for quiet arm-twisting without
torpedoing the whole effort.
The
first Gulf War, while it was fought to free Kuwait, went
on to create UNSCOM as part of the terms of truce. This
set a precedent of a new level of intrusive inspection
and of sharp limitation of Iraqi sovereignty. But there
was little follow-up on the precedent until the present
Iraq war; in the interim, the inspection regimes waned
and weakened.
The
period from the end of Soviet Communism in 1991 to the
terrorist attacks in 2001 was a wasted decade, from the
standpoint of the opportunity for reversing the tide of
proliferation. The intense, active counter-proliferatory
cooperation with Russia, which Jack Strachey had
envisaged in the 1960s, had finally become possible; but
was not pursued. All three Administrations in this
period let the chances slip through their fingers, while
the dangers metastasized as the worst clients of the two
sides of the Cold War proceeded to spin out of control
after the Cold War ended.
Mistake
after mistake was made. Diplomacy alone was relied on,
not force, apart from a few feel-good retaliatory
bombings. Coalitions and enforcement regimes were
allowed to wither; no energy was pumped in to regenerate
them. The West concentrated, not on integrating Russia
and developing a common global strategy with it, but on
integrating the small states of Eastern Europe and on
supporting the new despotisms in Central Asia and the
Caucasus in their independence from Russia. This was the
underlying reason for its acquiescence, or near-support
in the mid-90s, to
Pakistan’s
plan of bringing the Taliban to power. By 1998, many
Americans realized they were on the wrong side, and for
a moment in 1999 the President spoke of alliance with
Russia and India against terrorism, but he lacked the
character to carry through. America continued to oppose
any military action by
Russia
against the Taliban, and Russia reciprocated; each
continued, as if on autopilot, to fear the other’s
influence in the region more than the actual threat from
the Taliban.
September 11 finally changed that. The period since has
seen the problems addressed seriously. It started with
coercive diplomacy against the Taliban, coupled with
high-pressure diplomacy against pro-terrorist activities
of other regimes such as
Pakistan.
It moved on to preventive war against the Taliban,
laying a potential basis for stronger diplomacy against
pro-terrorist regimes elsewhere. It moved on further to
coercive diplomacy against
Iraq
on proliferation issues, and thence to war. It has
continued with semi-coercive diplomacy against
proliferatory programs in other countries: diplomacy
that is now bearing unprecedented, although as yet
uncompleted, fruits in Iran and Libya, and significant,
if still only preliminary fruits, in Pakistan, North
Korea and elsewhere.
The
roll-back of nuclear proliferation has finally begun.
The question today is how to proceed farther, and how
far it can go.
Ira
Straus is U.S. coordinator of the Committee on Eastern
Europe and Russia in NATO, and a lecturer in Atlantic
studies for universities in Europe and Russia.
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