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WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
| ARTICLE:
Volume XIX, No 4, Winter 2002/03 |
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Prevention,
Not Intervention Curbing the New Nuclear Threat
William D. Hartung*
From the moment
he took office, President George W. Bush has been preoccupied with
the need to protect U.S. territory, forces, and allies from a nuclear
attack. He has followed through on this concern in a variety of
ways: abandoning the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, boosting missile
defense funding, striking a deal to reduce U.S. and Russian nuclear
arsenals, and unveiling a new nuclear doctrine that seeks to increase
U.S. capabilities to destroy underground nuclear, chemical, and
biological weapons facilities. But his most passionate anti-nuclear
sentiments have been reserved for his assertion that Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein’s pursuit of nuclear weapons represents the greatest
threat to peace and stability in the world today.
Bush’s anti-nuclearism
is a muscular affair, grounded in the unilateralist credo of "peace
through strength." His administration is not putting its trust
in treaties or the rule of law to diminish the nuclear danger, but
in its ability to use force or the threat of force to preempt the
development of these devastating weapons by hostile nations or terrorist
groups. Yet, in the real world, as opposed to the world that exists
in the imaginings of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and Vice
President Dick Cheney, overthrowing Saddam Hussein will have virtually
no impact on the future ability of al-Qaeda or some other terrorist
group to get its hands on a nuclear weapon. Just as Willie Sutton
robbed banks because "that’s where the money is," a terror
network intent on gaining access to nuclear weapons or the ingredients
thereof is likely to go where the bombs are. Bribing an underpaid
Russian security guard or infiltrating the Pakistani nuclear program
are far more promising avenues for terrorists seeking a nuclear
weapon than cutting a deal with Saddam Hussein’s regime, which on
present evidence does not possess nuclear weapons and would be extremely
unlikely to share them with an Islamic fundamentalist group if it
did. 1
Keeping nuclear
weapons out of the hands of aggressive regimes and terrorist groups
will require the use of a powerful foreign policy tool that the
Bush administration has never been entirely comfortable with—concerted,
consistent international diplomacy. 2 Specifically, it
will involve strengthening, rather than rejecting, the existing
network of treaties and bilateral agreements that have kept nuclear
weapons from becoming a far more pervasive problem. It will also
require the systematic reduction of global stores of nuclear weapons
and nuclear materials to the lowest possible levels. 3 Preventive
diplomatic efforts will be far more effective in stopping the new
nuclear danger than provocative military strikes.
What About
Iraq?
Arms control
skeptics in the Bush administration frequently point to Iraq as
the ultimate evidence for their argument that diplomacy is of minimal
value for dealing with regimes that are determined to acquire nuclear
weapons. But a comparison of the administration’s case for war against
Iraq with the recent historical record and current policy alternatives
suggests otherwise. The logic of the Bush administration’s stance
on war against Iraq is that Saddam Hussein is an adversary who has
not hesitated to use chemical weapons against his own people, and
that he would be likely to use nuclear weapons if he were allowed
to acquire them. In the administration’s view, an Iraqi bomb could
be used against U.S. troops or America’s allies, or passed on to
a terrorist group or brandished as a threat to gain greater influence
over the region’s oil resources. Since no one knows for sure when
Iraq might develop a nuclear weapon, administration strategists
assert that it is better to "take out" Saddam Hussein
sooner rather than later. As the president put it in a speech in
Cincinnati this past October, "We cannot wait for the final
proof—the smoking gun—that could come in the form of a mushroom
cloud." 4
But there is
no documented operational link between Iraq and al-Qaeda, nor is
there any reason to believe that Saddam Hussein would pass weapons
of mass destruction on to a terrorist group except as an act of
desperation. Second, the notion that a nuclear-armed Saddam Hussein
would be "undeterrable"— that he would use a nuclear weapon
against the United States at the risk of seeing himself and his
regime completely destroyed in a devastating counterattack— is not
in keeping with his behavior to date. Nor is there evidence to suggest
that Iraq is on the verge of developing or acquiring a nuclear weapon.
And most importantly, there are alternative policy options available
that would be more effective not only in keeping nuclear weapons
out of the hands of Saddam Hussein but in the still more important
task of keeping them out of the hands of terrorist groups.
Woolsey-Headed
Thinking
Try as it might,
the Bush administration has not been able to document an operational
link between Saddam Hussein’s regime and the al-Qaeda terror network.
This is no surprise to experts on the region. As former National
Security Council analyst Daniel Benjamin has put it, "Iraq
and Al Qaeda are not obvious allies.... They are natural enemies."
Nor would Hussein be liable to trust a fundamentalist like Osama
bin Laden, given his own troubles with internal Islamic opposition
groups. As Benjamin notes, "Mr. Hussein has remained true to
the unwritten rules of state sponsorship of terror: never get involved
with a group that cannot be controlled and never give a weapon of
mass destruction to terrorists who might use it against you."
5
Friends of
the administration like former CIA director and current Defense
Policy Board member R. James Woolsey have tried to conjure an Iraq–al-Qaeda
connection, citing as evidence such examples as an alleged meeting
in Prague between an Iraqi intelligence official and al-Qaeda suicide
hijacker Mohammed Atta prior to the September 11 attacks. Subsequent
investigation of the alleged meeting has since led Czech president
Vaclav Havel to conclude that no such meeting occurred, an assessment
corroborated by U.S. intelligence officials. Woolsey, a professional
Iraqophobe with strong ties to conservative think tanks and Iraqi
opposition groups that have long advocated the overthrow of Saddam
Hussein, argued in the wake of the September 11 attacks that not
only was Iraq the most likely "state sponsor" of al-Qaeda
but was a probable source of the anthrax that killed 5 Americans
and terrified millions more in the fall of 2001. 6
The closest
the administration has come to forging a link is a free-association
syllogism along these lines: if Iraq is evil, and al-Qaeda is evil,
Iraq and al-Qaeda must be part of the same evil. As National Security
Advisor Condoleezza Rice puts the case, "Terrorism is a problem,
weapons of mass destruction [are] a problem, the potential link
between the two is a problem. What September 11 did is to vivify
what [happens] if evil people decide that they’re going to go after
you, and that it doesn’t take much." 7 Or, as President
Bush put it in his Cincinnati speech, "Terror cells and outlaw
regimes building weapons of mass destruction are different faces
of the same evil." 8 But, as Kenneth Pollack, a
former National Security Council staffer and author of a book advocating
the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, notes, the idea of an Iraq–al-Qaeda
link is a particularly weak argument for intervention: "It
would be the dumbest thing in the world for Saddam to be supporting
anti-U.S. terrorism right now, and most of what we’ve seen from
him suggests he knows that." 9
A threat that
the administration’s policymakers do not appear to be taking seriously
is the possibility that by treating Iraq and al-Qaeda as a common
evil they may promote connections between the two that would not
otherwise have existed. As CIA director George Tenet noted in a
letter made public last fall at the insistence of then Senate Intelligence
Committee chairman Bob Graham, "Baghdad for now appears to
be drawing the line short of conducting terrorist attacks…against
the United States. Should Saddam conclude that a U.S.-led attack
could no longer be deterred, he probably would become much less
constrained in adopting terrorist actions. Saddam might decide that
the extreme step of assisting Islamist terrorists in conducting
a WMD [weapons of mass destruction] attack against the United States
might be his last chance to exact vengeance by taking a large number
of victims with him." 10
Softballs and
Tiddly-Winks
The evidence
put forth by the Bush administration regarding an imminent nuclear
threat from Iraq has also been less than persuasive. The impressionistic
tone of its case was exemplified by Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld’s
comments at a September 3 briefing. Asked what hard evidence the
U.S. government possessed that Iraq "may be getting close again
to obtaining a nuclear weapon," Rumsfeld replied: "To
the extent that they have kept their nuclear scientists together
and working on these efforts, one has to assume they have not been
playing tiddlywinks, that they have been focusing on nuclear weapons."
The secretary of defense asserted that more concrete evidence would
be forthcoming, "when the president decides he thinks it’s
appropriate." 11
President Bush
for his part has been no less evasive. In a joint appearance with
British prime minister Tony Blair at Camp David not long after Rumsfeld’s
statement, Bush cited a 1998 report by the International Atomic
Energy Agency suggesting that Iraq was then as few as six months
away from being able to develop a nuclear weapon. "I don’t
know how much more evidence we need," the president declared.
The problem is that no such report apparently exists. IAEA’s only
report on Iraq’s nuclear capabilities from that period stated that
"based on all credible information available to date…the IAEA
has found no indication of Iraq having achieved its programme goal
of producing nuclear weapons or of Iraq having retained a physical
capability for the production of weapon-usable nuclear material
or having clandestinely obtained such material." The report
did suggest that Iraq may have been between 6 and 24 months away
from developing nuclear weapons in 1991, before the Persian
Gulf War and before seven years of U.N. weapons inspections.
12
A White House
backgrounder released the following week asserted that Iraq "has
embarked on a worldwide hunt for materials to make an atomic bomb,"
citing as a prime example Iraqi attempts to buy aluminum tubes that
Bush officials claimed were to be used to build centrifuges for
the production of highly enriched, bomb-grade uranium. But independent
experts like former U.N. weapons inspector David Albright have suggested
that the tubes in question have many nonmilitary uses, and are not
of the type that would be particularly useful in enriching uranium.
And the British government’s dossier on Iraqi capabilities states
that there is "no definitive intelligence" linking the
tubes to a uranium enrichment project. In early January, the IAEA
reported that inspections in Iraq suggested that the "aluminium
tubes sought by Iraq in 2001 and 2002" were "consistent
with reverse engineering of rockets"—as Baghdad had asserted—
and "not directly suitable" for building centrifuges to
enrich uranium. 13
During his
October 7 speech in Cincinnati meant to justify military action
against Iraq, the president cited a 1998 statement from a "high-ranking
Iraqi nuclear engineer who had defected" that suggested that
"despite his public promises, Saddam Hussein had ordered his
nuclear program to continue." Bush failed to mention that the
defector in question, Khidhir Hamza, had not worked in the Iraqi
nuclear program since 1991, and had not been inside the country
since 1995. 14
The sketchiness
of the administration’s case regarding the Iraqi nuclear threat
is less surprising in light of the fact that the decision to attack
Iraq was by all accounts made by a handful of Bush advisers in October
2001 without benefit of a national intelligence estimate (NIE).
An NIE is a formal compilation of what U.S. intelligence agencies
know about a particular topic and is generally viewed as a precondition
for a major policy shift toward a potentially hostile state like
Iraq. But as Middle East expert Anthony Cordesman has noted, the
administration’s decision-making with respect to Iraq "bypassed
much of the intelligence community and many people in the U.S. Central
Command as well as the normal national security process." 15
The CIA’s estimate of Iraqi capabilities, which became public
last October, asserted that "Iraq is unlikely to produce indigenously
enough weapons-grade material for a deliverable nuclear weapon until
the last half of this decade." 16
Amidst this
fog of exaggeration, the most pressing specific concern expressed
by President Bush in Cincinnati was that "if the Iraqi regime
is able to produce, buy, or steal an amount of highly enriched uranium
a little larger than a single softball, it could have a nuclear
weapon in less than a year." Indeed, the uncertainties involved
in how a given regime might procure a readymade nuclear weapon or
the materials needed to assemble one represent the most urgent nonproliferation
challenge of this new era. The Baghdad regime is unlikely to be
able to "buy or steal" the active ingredients of a nuclear
weapon under the current glare of international publicity created
by the inspections and the looming possibility of war. Poorly guarded
nuclear weapons stockpiles and bomb-grade materials in Russia and
elsewhere remain the most likely avenue for an anti-U.S. regime
or a terrorist group to get its hands on a nuclear weapon. Forestalling
this frightening possibility has little to do with waging war on
Iraq, and everything to do with stepping up cooperative efforts
to neutralize, destroy, or secure the world’s bloated stockpiles
of nuclear weapons and weapons-grade materials.
Cooperative
Threat Reduction
In January
2001, shortly before President Bush’s inauguration, a bipartisan
task force chaired by former Senate majority leader Howard Baker
and former White House counsel Lloyd Cutler reported that "the
most urgent national security threat to the United States today
is the danger that weapons of mass destruction or weapons-usable
material in Russia could be stolen and sold to terrorists or hostile
nation states and used against American troops abroad or American
citizens at home." 17 The task force recommended
the development of a long-term project to safeguard, destroy, or
neutralize Russia’s vast nuclear stockpile, estimated to include
up to 40,000 strategic and tactical nuclear weapons, plus enough
enriched uranium and plutonium to build tens of thousands more.
If implemented, the plan, which would cost $3 billion a year, would
more than triple current U.S. government funding for these purposes.
The Baker-Cutler
task force was not proposing a novel new policy, but an intensification
of highly successful "cooperative threat reduction" programs
that had been initiated in the early 1990s under the leadership
of former Senate Armed Services Committee chairman Sam Nunn and
incoming Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman Richard Lugar.
The motivating theory was that the most effective way to limit the
risks of nuclear proliferation from Russia would be to provide aid
to dismantle nuclear weapons and nuclear production sites, secure
weapons-grade materials, and offer alternative employment to scientists
who might otherwise be tempted to sell their skills on the international
market. The combination of a crumbling military empire and a chaotic
post communist economy increased the likelihood that Russian nuclear
bombs or nuclear materials would be sold by impoverished military
or security personnel, or stolen as a result of under funded or
disorganized security procedures.
Despite inadequate
funding, cooperative threat reduction programs have done more than
any other single initiative to reduce the nuclear threat to the
United States by financing the deactivation of nearly 6,000 strategic
nuclear warheads, the destruction of over 700 long-range ballistic
missiles, and the elimination of tons of bomb-grade nuclear materials.
18 In one of the great unsung arms control achievements
of the first Bush and Clinton administrations, the former Soviet
republics of Belarus, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan were persuaded to
give up their nuclear weapons after the breakup of the Soviet Union
and sign on as non-nuclear members of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT), thereby sparing the world the danger of three new
nuclear states on the unstable periphery of the former Soviet Union.
Despite its
evident concern about nuclear weapons or nuclear materials falling
into the hands of terrorist groups or hostile states, the Bush administration
has been slow to implement the Baker-Cutler recommendations. As
a candidate, George W. Bush expressed support for the Nunn-Lugar
and related nonproliferation programs, but his first budget request
was for just $759 million, a $100 million cut from that proposed
by the outgoing Clinton administration. And neither the administration’s
September 2001 request for $40 billion in emergency antiterrorism
funding or subsequent supplemental requests for fighting the war
on terrorism have included additional funding for these critical
programs. It was only through the action of a bipartisan congressional
coalition that nonproliferation spending was boosted to more than
$1 billion per year, a level maintained in this year’s budget. To
put this in perspective, the federal government’s entire annual
budget for nonproliferation programs is the equivalent of roughly
four days’ expenditures for the Bush administration’s proposed military
intervention in Iraq, which the Congressional Budget Office has
estimated will cost about $9 billion a month. Tripling these programs
to the levels recommended by the Baker-Cutler task force would cost
the equivalent of less than two weeks of the proposed war in Iraq.
19
The problem
is not that the Bush team has abandoned nonproliferation, but rather
that it has failed to pursue it with the urgency, resources, and
commitment it deserves. The administration’s removal of enough highly
enriched uranium to make at least two bombs from a research laboratory
in Yugoslavia last August is a model for what needs to be done on
a broader scale. But that important step required a $5 million contribution
from the Turner Foundation due to the inability of the Bush administration
to secure the funds needed to close the deal. Given recent reports
of transfers of military equipment from Yugoslavia to Iraq, the
move to secure the bomb-grade uranium could not have been more timely.
But what will happen if there is no private funder available to
jump into the next breach?
The obvious
solution is to create a flexible, well funded government program
aimed at rapidly securing nuclear weapons and nuclear materials
in Russia and throughout the world. Unfortunately, the administration
has so far failed to support lawmakers who favor a global nonproliferation
fund to purchase and destroy nuclear weapons and nuclear materials
from any nation of concern, not just Russia.
The pledge
by the members of the Group of Eight (the world’s highly industrialized
nations, plus Russia) at the G8 summit in June 2002 to create a
ten-year, $20 billion "Global Partnership Against the Spread
of Weapons of Mass Destruction," was a step in the right direction,
but it does not commit the United States to spend much more on nonproliferation
than it is spending now. It remains to be seen whether the G8 pledge
is merely a "feel good" gesture, or whether the Bush administration
will begin to give this issue the priority it deserves. 20
Meantime, while personnel, equipment, and leadership resources
are being focused on Iraq, the greater proliferation threat—the
existence of huge stocks of poorly secured nuclear weapons and nuclear
materials—is not being addressed.
Going on the
Diplomatic Offensive
The Bush administration’s
prevailing view is that the arms control treaties of the 1960s,
1970s, and 1980s are Cold War relics premised on the outmoded notion
of mutual assured destruction, and thus no longer apply to a multipolar
world of unstable regimes and unpredictable actors. In this new
era, the argument goes, the United States needs maximum flexibility
to pursue the appropriate mix of military force and bilateral or
multilateral understandings necessary to protect U.S. territory,
U.S. allies, and U.S. troops from attack by weapons of mass destruction.
These arguments
surfaced during the administration’s campaign to justify U.S. withdrawal
from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. In a variation of the theme,
Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld suggested that arms control agreements
are entered into only by antagonists. And since Russian-U.S. relations
have warmed, Moscow, Rumsfeld maintained, need not fear the end
of the ABM Treaty or changes in the U.S. posture toward other major
arms agreements. It was not as if we needed arms control agreements
with Britain and France, Rumsfeld noted. 21
The argument
is an interesting rhetorical device, but it is also inaccurate.
Many existing arms control agreements—including the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty, the Biological Weapons Convention, and the Chemical Weapons
Convention—are multilateral agreements that include friends
and potential adversaries alike. Properly enforced, these arrangements
offer the best hope of stemming the spread of weapons of mass destruction
to renegade states or terror networks. To the extent that they are
flawed, the solution is not to relegate them to the junkyard but
to bolster them with additional measures directed at problem states,
ranging from bilateral agreements like the 1994 U.S.-North Korean
nuclear framework accord to multilateral initiatives like a streamlined
and strengthened sanctions and inspection regime for Iraq.
With 187 signatories—five
nuclear weapons states and 182 non-nuclear weapons states—the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty of 1970 is one of the most generally effective
arms control treaties of the modern era. In the early 1960s, with
four nations— the United States, France, the United Kingdom, and
the Soviet Union—already in possession of nuclear weapons, President
Kennedy worried that there might be 15 to 20 nuclear weapons states
within a decade unless concerted diplomatic efforts were undertaken.
Instead, there was only one addition to the nuclear club—China—and
the number of nations with nuclear arsenals remained relatively
stable for nearly 30 years, largely due to the creation of the NPT
and the commitment of the major powers to stem the spread of nuclear
weapons. It was not until the late 1990s, when nuclear tests by
India and Pakistan, and renewed concerns about the nuclear programs
of Iraq, Iran, and North Korea raised fears of a major new round
of nuclear proliferation, that the nonproliferation regime starting
showing serious strains. 22
It is important
to remember that the NPT continues to serve a critical function.
Eighteen industrialized states—Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada,
the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Japan,
the Netherlands, Norway, Slovakia, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, and
Switzerland—are sufficiently advanced to produce nuclear weapons.
They have abstained, pursuant to their commitments under the treaty.
In addition, six states—Argentina, Brazil, South Africa, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, and Ukraine—have renounced nuclear weapons or major
nuclear weapons development programs and joined the regime as non-nuclear
states. 23 If a collapse of the NPT regime caused even
one in three of these nations to pursue the nuclear option, the
number of nuclear weapons states in the world could quickly double.
The basic bargain
upon which the NPT is based—that nuclear weapons states will move
toward the elimination of their arsenals in exchange for a commitment
by non-nuclear weapons states to forswear the acquisition of nuclear
armaments—has been challenged from two directions. Three non-signatory
states—Israel, Pakistan, and India—have "gone nuclear,"
while three signatory states—Iraq, Iran, and North Korea, (Bush’s
"axis of evil")—have pursued the development of nuclear
weapons with varying degrees of determination.
From above,
the five "official" nuclear weapons states recognized
under the terms of the treaty—the United States, Russia, China,
France, and the United Kingdom— have failed to live up to their
obligation to take concrete steps toward the elimination of their
nuclear arsenals. At the conclusion of the NPT review conference
in 2000, the United States joined other parties in agreeing to an
action plan calling for "the engagement as soon as appropriate
of all the nuclear-weapon States in the process leading to the total
elimination of their nuclear weapons." 24 The United
States also endorsed a statement made to the conference on behalf
of the five major nuclear weapon states that signaled "an unequivocal
commitment to the ultimate goal of a complete elimination of nuclear
weapons." 25 The Bush administration’s plans to
develop a new generation of "bunker busting" nuclear weapons
and to spend billions to modernize the U.S. nuclear weapons development
and testing facilities in California, Colorado, New Mexico, South
Carolina, Nevada, Tennessee, and Texas clearly contradict this commitment.
26
The Bush-Putin
nuclear accord, with its relaxed time line for the reduction of
deployed U.S. and Russian nuclear warheads and its lack of any concrete
commitment to destroy the nuclear weapons taken off active deployment
status, represents a major missed opportunity. A more rigorous agreement
aimed at permanently reducing nuclear armaments—with an eye toward
their ultimate elimination—could have served as a stepping stone
to the first concrete multilateral nuclear arms reduction initiative
of the nuclear era.
The failure
of the major nuclear powers to honor their commitments to establish
a process for eliminating their arsenals has contributed to the
decisions of newer nuclear powers like India and Pakistan to develop
nuclear weapons. The Bush administration’s nuclear doctrine, with
its explicit embrace of scenarios involving the use or threat of
use of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear states, is also likely
to stimulate nuclear weapons development by weaker states and regional
powers. These pressures from above are obviously not the only factors
driving proliferation; there are also powerful regional issues such
as the attempt to match or neutralize the nuclear arsenals of nearby
states or to gain greater power within a region via acquisition
of nuclear weapons. But the ability of the major powers to serve
as honest brokers in curbing nuclear proliferation in volatile regions
like South Asia and the Middle East is severely compromised by their
own mixed records of meeting their commitments under the Non-Proliferation
Treaty.
The answer
to the crisis of nonproliferation is not to let the NPT wither away
in favor of ad hoc efforts. What is needed is a policy of NPT plus.
The elements of such a policy would include the following:
Reinforcing
the Bush-Putin accord’s commitment to reduce deployed U.S. and Russian
nuclear weapons by two-thirds over the next decade by means of a
binding agreement to accelerate the pace of reductions and destroy
all warheads withdrawn from service under the terms of the accord;
Creating a
global nonproliferation fund with the resources not only to deal
with the urgent task of destroying, securing, or neutralizing Russian
weapons-grade nuclear materials but to carry out similar programs
in other nations where proliferation is a concern; 27
Implementing
a streamlined and strengthened regime of sanctions and inspections
in Iraq that narrows the list of proscribed goods and services to
items of direct military concern, improves border and cargo monitoring,
provides economic incentives for Iraq’s neighbors to comply with
the sanctions regime, and implements more rigorous controls and
accounting procedures over the sale of Iraqi oil; 28
Resuming nuclear
talks with North Korea built upon the principles of the 1994 U.S.-North
Korea nuclear framework agreement, which called for the elimination
of Pyongyang’s nuclear capability in exchange for a program of economic
assistance and a U.S. pledge of non-aggression against North Korea;
Initiating
multilateral discussions among the five major nuclear weapons states
designed to set time lines for the deep reduction and ultimate elimination
of their nuclear weapons, accompanied by parallel regional discussions
on eliminating nuclear weapons and nuclear weapons development programs
in the Middle East and South Asia.
Tough Cases
In the case
of Iraq, it is important to remember that the inspections regime
in place from 1991 to 1998 accomplished a great deal more than is
commonly realized. As the British government’s September 2002 dossier
on Iraq noted, "Despite the conduct of Iraqi authorities toward
them, both UNSCOM [the U.N. inspection mission] and the IAEA Action
Team have valuable records of achievement in discovering and exposing
Iraq’s biological weapons programme and destroying very large quantities
of chemical weapons stocks and missiles as well as the infrastructure
of Iraq’s nuclear weapons programme." A 1999 report by a panel
of independent experts convened by the United Nations concluded
that "the bulk of Iraq’s proscribed weapons programmes have
been eliminated." As of 1998, the inspection mission had destroyed
all of Iraq’s nuclear and chemical weapons production facilities,
as well as its main biological weapons production site. 29
In short, while
Saddam Hussein’s efforts to thwart the inspections were maddening,
they did not prevent the first U.N. inspection mission from dismantling
most of his weapons of mass destruction capabilities. If the new
round of inspections is allowed to proceed, backed with Security
Council action— up to and including the use of force, if necessary—there
is no reason to believe it cannot eliminate the remnants of Iraq’s
weapons of mass destruction programs. The goal should not be perfection,
or demonstrating that Saddam has been miraculously transformed into
a paragon. The goal should be the substantial elimination of his
most dangerous military capabilities. If the Bush administration
were to put real energy into crafting a more robust sanctions and
monitoring regime, it could eliminate the threat of Iraqi weapons
of mass destruction for far less cost in blood, treasure, and instability
than by launching a war for "regime change."
The North Korean
case is also in need of closer scrutiny. As arms control expert
Leon V. Sigal has argued, the revelation of a secret North Korean
uranium enrichment "program"— which at this point appears
to be no more than a procurement effort that has acquired some components
that could eventually be used to build a uranium enrichment facility—was
probably Pyongyang’s usual backhanded way of trying to get U.S.-North
Korea nuclear negotiations back on track. If North Korea’s goal
was to build up its nuclear arsenal as quickly as possible, it could
have exploited its plutonium-fueled reactor at Yongbyon, finished
building two other partially completed reactors, and generated enough
material for up to 100 nuclear weapons.
It was these
activities that were proscribed by the 1994 framework agreement.
But even as it sought to challenge the Bush administration, North
Korea initially chose not to violate these fundamental features
of the accord. It instead chose to pursue a uranium enrichment capability,
a much more cumbersome route toward the possible development of
a nuclear device that was not explicitly covered by the agreement.
30 It was only in mid-December, after Spanish and U.S.
naval personnel intercepted a North Korean shipment of Scud missiles
bound for Yemen, that Pyonyang upped the ante by threatening to
restart the reactor at Yongbyon. By early January, the North Korean
crisis had intensified as Pyongyang kicked out IAEA inspectors and
announced its withdrawal from the Non-Proliferation Treaty. But
negotiations aimed at eliminating North Korea’s nuclear weapons
and ballistic missile programs remain the best available policy
option.
The history
of the U.S.-North Korea framework suggests that when the United
States has met its end of the bargain, Pyongyang has complied with
its obligations. When the United States has violated the letter
or the spirit of the accords—as the Bush administration did by suggesting
unilateral changes in the terms of the accord, expressing hostile
intent by publicly labeling North Korea as part of the "axis
of evil," and identifying it as a potential target of a U.S.
nuclear strike in its nuclear posture statement—Pyongyang has stepped
up its military activities in the hope of jolting Washington back
to the negotiating table.
The Korean
situation is a prime example of the limits of the Bush doctrine
of preemption. Given that Pyongyang may have one or two nuclear
weapons, constructed prior to the 1994 framework accord, and that
all the major players in the region want to resolve this new nuclear
crisis without risking a war, the prudent choice is a diplomatic
solution to the problems of North Korean nuclear weapons and ballistic
missile programs. The fact that Pyongyang’s main source of gas centrifuges
for its proposed uranium enrichment project is Pakistan, a major
U.S. ally in the war on terrorism, further underscores the point
that the Bush slogan of forcing nations to be either "with
us or against us" is of limited utility in implementing a serious
strategy for stopping the spread of nuclear weapons.
The only true
"undeterrables" in the new nuclear equation are the practitioners
of catastrophic terrorism, like the September 11 suicide hijackers.
Tyrants with state power are first and foremost survivors. Their
desire to survive can be exploited to create enforceable mechanisms
short of war for eliminating their ability to develop or use weapons
of mass destruction. Dealing with tough cases like Iraq and North
Korea through concerted diplomacy—backed up by force or the threat
of force only as a true last resort—would free up time, energy,
and resources for the urgent task of building a global coalition
to eliminate, secure, and protect the world’s stockpiles of weapons
of mass destruction so that terrorists seeking these awful weapons
will have the odds firmly stacked against them.
The dynamics
of the proliferation challenge are too complex for one country to
deal with on its own, no matter how awesome its military arsenal.
And the depth of cooperation required goes far beyond the Bush administration’s
preferred approach of announcing a forceful position and then rounding
up an ad hoc international posse to join the charge. When it comes
to stopping the spread of nuclear weapons, diplomacy works. •
*William
D. Hartung is a senior research fellow and director of the Arms
Trade Resource Center at the World Policy Institute.
Notes
1. No respected
governmental or independent source says that Iran or Iraq possess
nuclear weapons. There is dispute about the status of North Korea,
with some analysts suggesting that Pyongyang may have extracted
enough bomb-grade material to make one or two nuclear weapons before
the implementation of the 1994 U.S.-North Korea nuclear framework
agreement. In contrast, Israel is believed to have at least 100
nuclear weapons, India has an estimated 50 to 90, and Pakistan is
believed to have 30 to 50. (See Joseph Cirincione, ed., with Jon
B. Wolfstahl and Miriam Rajkumar, Deadly Arsenals: Tracking Weapons
of Mass Destruction [Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, 2002], pp. 35–43.)
2. For an overview
of the Bush nuclear doctrine, see William Arkin, "Secret Plan
Outlines the Unthinkable," Los Angeles Times, March
10, 2002.
3. According
to Cirincione et al., in Deadly Arsenals, current global
nuclear stockpiles include more than 30,000 strategic and tactical
nuclear weapons, the vast majority of which are in the possession
of the United States and Russia. Russia alone is believed to possess
enough highly enriched uranium and plutonium to make an additional
40,000 nuclear weapons. (See Howard Baker and Lloyd Cutler, A
Report Card on the Department of Energy’s Nonproliferation Programs
with Russia [Secretary of Energy Advisory Board, U.S. Department
of Energy, January 10, 2001], p. v.)
4. Office of
the White House Press Secretary, "President Outlines Iraqi
Threat," remarks by the president on Iraq, Cincinnati, Ohio,
October 7, 2002.
5. Daniel Benjamin,
"Iraq and Al Qaeda Are Not Allies," New York Times,
September 30, 2002.
6. R. James
Woolsey, "The Iraq Connection," Wall Street Journal,
October 18, 2001.
7. Susan Page,
"Showdown with Saddam: The Decision to Act," USA Today,
September 11, 2002.
8. "President
Outlines Iraqi Threat," p. 4.
9. David S.
Cloud, "Missing Links: Bush Efforts to Tie Hussein to al Qaeda
Lack Clear Evidence," Wall Street Journal, October 23,
2002. For a detailed review of Pollack’s book, see Brian Urquhart,
"The Prospect of War," New York Review of Books,
December 19, 2002.
10. David Rogers
and Greg Jaffe, "CIA Says Iraq on Brink of War Would Use Terror,"
Wall Street Journal, October 9, 2002.
11. United
States Department of Defense News Transcript, "DOD News Briefing—Sec.
Rumsfeld and Gen. Myers," September 3, 2002.
12. Dana Milbank,
"For Bush, Facts Are Malleable; Presidential Tradition of Embroidering
Key Assertions Continues," Washington Post, October
22, 2002.
13. William
J. Broad, "UN Arms Team Taking Up Its Task, a Mixture of ‘Hide
and Seek’ and ‘20 Questions,’" New York Times, November
19, 2002; Michael R. Gordon, "Agency Challenges Evidence Against
Iraq Cited by Bush," New York Times, January 10, 2002.
14. "President
Outlines Iraqi Threat," p. 3; and Milbank, "For Bush,
Facts are Malleable."
15. Page, "Showdown
with Saddam."
16. Frida Berrigan,
"Stumbling Blindly Into War," Foreign Policy In Focus
(www.fpif.org), November 15, 2002.
17. Baker and
Cutler, Report Card, p. ii.
18. "Nunn-Lugar
Scorecard," Russian-American Nuclear Security Advisory Council
(RANSAC), available at www.ransac.org.
19. William
Hoehn, "Analysis of the Bush Administration’s Fiscal Year 2003
Requests for U.S.-Former Soviet Union Nonproliferation Programs,"
RANSAC, April 2002. For a good overview of the range of potential
costs involved in a war in Iraq, see William D. Nordhaus, "Iraq:
The Economic Consequences of War," New York Review of Books,
December 5, 2002.
20. On the
G8 initiative, see "Perspectives on the G8 Global Partnership
Against the Spread of Weapons of Mass Destruction," testimony
of Kenneth N. Luongo, executive director, Russian-American Nuclear
Security Advisory Council, before the Committee on Foreign Relations,
U.S. Senate, October 9, 2002; and Jon Wolfstahl, "It Takes
More Than Money" (Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, June 28, 2002), available at www.ceip.org.
21. For an
example of Rumsfeld’s arguments along these lines, see Jim Garamone,
"Rumsfeld Asks Senate to Support Nuke Reduction Treaty,"
Armed Forces Press Service, July 17, 2002, which summarizes part
of the secretary of defense’s testimony on the Bush-Putin accord
as follows: "[Rumsfeld] said both the United States and Russia
are working toward the day when no arms control treaties will be
necessary between the United States and Russia. ‘That’s how normal
countries deal with each other,’ he said. ‘The United States and
Great Britain—both nuclear powers—do not require massive arms control
protocols to govern relations,’ Rumsfeld said. ‘We would like the
relationship with Russia to move in that direction, and indeed,
it is.’"
22. Cirincione,
et al., Deadly Arsenals, pp. 17–18.
23. See Cirincione,
et al., Deadly Arsenals, p. 43, for documentation on states
that have abstained from or denounced the development of nuclear
weapons in line with their commitments to the NPT.
24. "Final
Document of the 2000 NPT Review Conference: A Program of Action
on Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament," reprinted in
Cirincione, et al., Deadly Arsenals, pp. 379–81.
25. "Statement
to the 2000 NPT Review Conference by H. E. Hubert de la Fortelle
on Behalf of the Permanent Five Nuclear-Weapon States, Introducing
Their Collective Statement," reprinted in Cirincione, et al.,
Deadly Arsenals, pp. 381–85.
26. For more
details on the Bush administration’s plans for developing new nuclear
weapons and upgrading the U.S. nuclear weapons complex, see William
D. Hartung, with Jonathan Reingold, About Face: The Role of the
Arms Lobby in the Bush Administration’s Radical Reversal of Two
Decades of U.S. Nuclear Policy (New York: World Policy Institute,
May 2002); and Natural Resources Defense Council, "Faking Restraint:
The Bush Administration’s Secret Plan for Strengthening U.S. Nuclear
Forces" (Washington, D.C.: NDRC, February 13, 2002).
27. For details
on proposals for a concerted global nonproliferation program, see
Sen. Richard Lugar, "Next Steps in U.S. Nonproliferation Policy,"
Arms Control Today, December 2002; and Sam Nunn, remarks,
Non-Proliferation Conference, Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, Washington, D.C., November 14, 2002, available at www.ceip.org.
28. For a detailed
proposal along these lines, see David A. Cortright, George A. Lopez,
and Alistair Millar, Winning Without War: Sensible Security Options
for Dealing with Iraq, policy brief F5, Sanctions and Security
Project, Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies,
University of Notre Dame and the Fourth Freedom Forum, October 2002.
29. Ibid.,
pp. 7–11.
30. Leon V.
Sigal, "North Korea Is No Iraq: Pyongyang’s Negotiating Strategy,"
Arms Control Today, December 2002.
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