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WORD COUNT
638
JUNE 3, 2009
NUKES
REMAIN OUR BIGGEST SECURITY ISSUE – by Kingston Rief
“"There
are no second acts in American lives,” the famous author F. Scott
Fitzgerald once wrote. Tell that to U.S. and Russian officials who met
in Moscow in mid-May to begin negotiating a new nuclear arms reduction
agreement. Left for dead during the Bush administration, nuclear arms
control is back for an encore performance – and not a moment too soon.
The
landmark 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) greatly reduced
the dangers posed by U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals. Under the
Treaty, the United States and Russia cut their deployed nuclear arsenals
from about 10,000 warheads at the end of the Cold War to less than 6,000
by December 2001. The agreement also limited each country to no more
than 1,600 strategic delivery vehicles, the bombers and missiles used to
covey nuclear warheads.
Despite
the success of START, the Bush administration had a different view about
how to deal with nuclear arms. In May 2002, the United States and Russia
signed the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty, also known as the
Moscow Treaty, which commits the two countries to reduce their deployed
nuclear arsenals to between 1,700 and 2,200 warheads apiece by the end
of 2012.
Unlike
START, the Moscow Treaty did not impose limits on delivery vehicles or
on how many strategic warheads the United States and Russia could keep
in storage or reserve. Nor did it contain any monitoring or verification
provisions. Instead, the two sides agreed to rely on the START
infrastructure to verify implementation and compliance.
But START
expires on December 5, of this year, three years before the Moscow
Treaty limit takes effect. Faced with the impending expiration of START,
the Bush administration claimed that the United States and Russia no
longer needed formal arms control agreements to manage their strategic
relationship.
In keeping
with his campaign promise, President Barack Obama already has taken
steps to reverse this approach. On April 1, Obama and Russian President
Dmitry Medvedev issued a joint statement in which they “agreed to pursue
new and verifiable reductions in our strategic offensive arsenals in a
step-by-step process, beginning by replacing the Strategic Arms
Reduction Treaty with a new, legally-binding treaty.”
U.S. and
Russian official pronouncements indicate that the follow-on agreement
will call for reductions in deployed warheads below the level of the
Moscow Treaty, perhaps in the range of 1,000 to 1,500 warheads.
This
renewal of the formal arms control process is important for three key
reasons. First, together the United States and Russia possess some
20,000 nuclear weapons, about 95 percent of all these in the world.
Designed for the Cold War, such massive arsenals don’t help against
current threats like terrorism. Today, more nuclear weapons mean more
opportunities for accidents or theft.
Second,
though the United States and Russia have serious differences on several
foreign policy issues, the formal arms control process can bring
predictability and stability to U.S.-Russian relations and greatly limit
the incentives for renewed strategic competition.
Third,
deeper nuclear reductions can reinforce the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty. Such demonstrations of good faith are essential for retaining
the continued commitment of non-nuclear weapons states not to pursue
nuclear arsenals.
But don’t
just take President Obama’s (and my) word for it. There is broad and
wide support, even among conservative Republicans, for reducing the size
and role of nuclear weapons in U.S. and Russian national security
policies. The recently released report of the bipartisan Congressional
Commission on the Strategic Posture of the United States concluded, “the
moment appears ripe for a renewal of arms control with Russia, and this
bodes well for a continued reduction in the nuclear arsenal.”
Minimizing
the global danger posed by nuclear weapons is a top U.S. national
security priority and something we owe to future generations. Achieving
deep, verifiable, and legally binding nuclear reductions is a necessary
first step toward achieving that goal.
--
Kingston
Reif is the Deputy Director of Nuclear Non-Proliferation at the Center
for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation in Washington, D.C.
www.armscontrolcenter.org.
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