By Ivan Oelrich and Hans M. Kristensen
Only one week before Barack Obama is expected to win the presidential election, Defense Secretary Robert Gates made one last pitch for the Bush administration’s nuclear policy during a speech Tuesday at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
What is the opposite of visionary? Whatever, that’s the word that best describes Mr. Gates’s speech. Had it been delivered in the mid-1990s it would not have sounded out of place. The theme was that the world is the way the world is and, not only is there little to be done about changing the world, our response pretty much has to be more of the same.
Granted, Gates’s job is to implement nuclear policy not change it but, at a time when Russia is rattling its nuclear sabers, China is modernizing its forces, some regional states either have already acquired or are pursuing nuclear weapons, and yet inspired visions of a world free of nuclear weapons are entering the political mainstream, we had hoped for some new ideas. Rather than articulating ways to turn things around, Gates’ core message seemed to be to “hedge” and hunker down for the long haul. And, while his arguments are clearer than most, this speech is yet another example of faulty logic and sloppy definitions justifying unjustifiable nuclear weapons.
They Do It So We Must Do It Too
Reductions cannot go on forever, Secretary Gates argues because there is still a mission for nuclear weapons. Using language from the Clinton Administration, he says we can reduce our arsenal but we must also “hedge” against unexpected threats. He said, “Rising and resurgent powers, rogue nations pursuing nuclear weapons, proliferation of international terrorism, all demand that we preserve this hedge. There is no way to ignore efforts by rogue states such as North Korea and Iran to develop and deploy nuclear weapons or Russian or Chinese strategic modernization programs.”
While the potential threats he lists are real and must be addressed, how do nuclear weapons address these threats? And even if there were some nuclear component to our responses, the nature of those responses would be so varied that lumping these threats together muddles the issue. A nuclear response to international terrorism? Even if, for example, al Qaeda used a nuclear weapon to attack an American city, what target would we strike back at with a nuclear weapon? The implicit argument of symmetry is unsustainable. Just as we don’t respond to roadside bombs with our own roadside bombs, nor would we respond to chemical attack with chemical weapons or biological attack with biological weapons. We might respond to nuclear attack with nuclear weapons but we should not allow this to be an unstated assumption. The reason rogue nations, let’s say Iran and North Korea, are developing nuclear weapons is not to counter our nuclear weapons but as a counter to our overwhelming conventional capability. They certainly are not making the mistake of implicitly assuming symmetry.
The near universal logical sleight of hand is to make some argument for nuclear weapons, let’s say we need them because North Korea has them, and then, when people nod in agreement that we need nuclear weapons, let slip in the assumption that this implies we need the nuclear arsenal the administration wants. Not so fast. If North Korea has one, perhaps we need two, but that does not mean we need two thousand.
It helps to clarify the typically foggy nuke-think if we remove Russia and China from the picture and ask whether the United States could justify anything near its currently planned nuclear arsenal only to deter and defeat rogue states and terrorists. Of course not. And perhaps we don’t need nuclear weapons for regional scenarios at all, given our overwhelming conventional capabilities. So those odds and ends are thrown into the pot just to scare, not to explain, and not because there is any well thought out strategy for how nuclear weapons are going to stop a terrorist attack on an American city, or why it be an appropriate response to a regional state that doesn’t have the capability to threaten the survival of the United States.
Russia is a very different case: Russian long-range nuclear forces are the only things in the world today that could destroy us as a nation and society, just as we could destroy them. While relations with Russia are not friendly, no conceivable difference between the United States and Russia justifies this mutual hostage relationship. This pointless threat to our very existence persists because of a failure of imagination typified by this speech. In this case, it is the nuclear weapons that are creating the threat, not protecting us from it.
That Ole Warhead Production Fever
Whatever the supposed justification of nuclear weapons, the primary purpose of the Secretary’s speech seemed to be to promote the Reliable Replacement Warhead or RRW but again, his argument rests on hidden (and unjustified) assumptions and, at times, misstatements of fact. The basic premise is that, without testing, we are slowly but certainly losing confidence in the reliability of our nuclear arsenal. He said, “With every adjustment, we move farther away from the original design that was successfully tested when the weapons was first fielded.”
We do? The implication is that we have no other choice, what we could do in 1990 we simply can’t reproduce today, like handing a modern-day native American a hunk of flint and asking him to chip out an arrowhead. Why should this be? With a budget of billions of dollars, we can’t duplicate parts that we could make twenty years ago? We can spend billions on the National Ignition Facility to create the world’s most powerful laser but we can’t reproduce a 1980s O-ring? The problem the Secretary describes is certainly possible and something we have to be alert to but it isn’t inevitable; we can maintain weapons within design margins as long as we want and in the past—pre-RRW—that was precisely the plan. And parts of the weapon that are not the nuclear core of the bomb can be improved and modernized and tested as much as we want.
But Mr. Gates claims that we are slowly and helplessly drifting, “So the information on which we base our annual certification of the stockpile grows increasing dated and incomplete.” This implies the Stockpile Stewardship Program (SSP) has failed. We believe the Secretary is wrong. Everyone we have talked to who is familiar with the enormous effort that has gone into the SSP says that our understanding of nuclear weapons today is substantially greater than it was the day after our last nuclear test. Our knowledge of the aging of nuclear warheads is increasing faster than the warheads are aging. Early uncertainties and concerns about stability, for example, of the plutonium parts of the weapon have been resolved and the parts have been shown to be stable for many decades, if not a century or more. Our computer models are dramatically and significantly more detailed and sophisticated. In fact, one weapon designer has told us that, given a fixed budget, the best investment of your next dollar would never be in a nuclear test but in more inspections, more computer simulations, more replacement of non-nuclear components, more material tests, more frequent tritium replenishment, and so forth.
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How Many Times Does Congress Have to Say No? |
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| Every time the Pentagon has proposed a new nuclear warhead since the end of the Cold War, Congress has refused to fund it. Now that the RRW appears to have been whacked, what will the next proposal for a new warhead look like? |
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Aside from the question of the reliability of current warheads, Mr. Gates argues that we still need an RRW because we need to modernize. The British, French, Russians, and Chinese are modernizing so we must too, obviously. Why? Nuclear weapons are a mature technology. There is no new science in nuclear weapons. They are powerful, efficient explosives. They are intended to blow up things and they have specific missions, which typically involve blowing up specific things. If they can accomplish these missions, what is the problem? If the technology, even the weapons, is decades, even centuries old, if they work then they work. Nuclear weapons are not fighter planes or tanks or submarines, duking it out on a battlefield with the enemy’s opposite number, so our nuclear weapons should be evaluated with regard to the targets they are expected to destroy, not anyone else’s nuclear weapons. They can destroy the targets. We’re done.
The important factor is not the warhead but the delivery vehicle that is intended to bring the warhead to the target. And the reason the United States is not producing new nuclear weapons while Russia and China do is not because they can and we can’t, or they’re ahead and we’re behind, as the Secretary indicated. Rather, the United States has not been producing new nuclear weapons because it didn’t have to – the existing ones are more than adequate – and because not producing has been seen as much more important to U.S. foreign policy objectives. And if Russian and Chinese warhead production is a problem, why not propose how to influence them to change rather than advocating that we repeat their mistake?
The final argument for the RRW is that the US must maintain a nuclear production industry and the RRW is grist for that mill. But many of the RRW technologies and capabilities were developed by the very SSP that Gates now implies is failing. Six years ago – before they came up with RRW after having failed to get permission to build the Precision Low-Yield Weapon Design (PLYWD) and the Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator (RNEP) – the National Nuclear Security Administration assured Congress: “We believe the life extension programs authorized by the Nuclear Weapons Council for the B61, W80, and the W76 will sufficiently exercise the design, production and certification capabilities of the weapons complex” (emphasis added). That assurance was given after the Foster Panel recommended, “developing new designs of robust, alternative warheads.” Now the claim suddenly is that the life extension programs do not sufficiently exercise the weapons complex. At least get the argument straight.
What’s Around the Corner?
We would be more sympathetic to the production argument if the fundamental minimal needs of the nuclear production industry were better thought out and justified, but what we see is an effort to maintain a slimmed down version of what we have without thinking through what we need. In fact, if maintaining the production industry is the core objective, we would have expected the administration to ask for an RRW design that doesn’t need a complex production industry, one that is extremely simple, perhaps using uranium rather than plutonium, perhaps a clunky design but one sure to work that does not require any sophisticated skills that must be maintained in standby in perpetuity.
We’re concerned that in the end Congress will accept a beefed-up life extension program – they seem to have already found a name for it: Advanced Certification Program – that will relax the restrictions for what modifications can be made to existing warheads in order to incorporate as much as the RRW concept as possible and add new capabilities if necessary. Unless the next president significantly changes the nuclear guidance for what the Pentagon is required to plan for, RRW-like proposals will likely continue to make it harder to create a national consensus on the future role of nuclear weapons. And Barack Obama has not explicitly rejected the RRW, but said he does “not support a premature decision to produce the RRW” and “will not authorize the development of new nuclear weapons and related capabilities.” Enhanced life-extended warheads could fit within such a policy.
In the end, justifying the nuclear weapons production industry is shaky because the justification for the weapons themselves is shaky, resting on assertion and Cold War momentum – as Gates’ speech illustrated – more than on rigorous assessments of missions and the security of the nation.
The Secretary’s speech was a disappointing missed opportunity. We are a bit perplexed about why he gave it and gave it now. Perhaps he is putting down a marker for a debate he expects in the next administration and Congress. We welcome that debate because we believe that, with careful attention to definition and no hidden assumptions, the arguments for nuclear weapons fade away.

October 31st, 2008 at 1:56 pm
[Edited] On p. 7 of the transcript he says “To be blunt, there is absolutely no way we can maintain a credible deterrent and reduce the number of weapons in our stockpile without either resorting to testing our stockpile or pursuing a modernization program.”
Besides being false, this amounts to nuclear blackmail: he’s saying that we can only get CTBT if we buy RRW! Wrong — the more sensible path is to ratify the CTBT and forget about RRW. I think we need to be wary of this false linkage.
In any case, before they start talking of the reliability of the warheads, perhaps the USG ought to get more reliable duct tape for the stockpile: story.
November 3rd, 2008 at 5:13 am
I agree completely. Senator Obama is poised to win the election. So who does Gates think he is? Doesn’t he know that he and his outdated and dangerous ideas about nuclear weapons are about to be swept away by the Coming Change, along with the rest of the Bush administration? The arrogance and audacity that he displays in the face of the inevitable is absolutely appalling. The fact that he is the sitting Secretary of Defense and has a lifetime of experience in these issues is irrelevant, because he knows full well that Change is Coming. And when it does, he and his cynical realism will be irrelevant. The world will no longer be filled with nuclear weapons and fear, but with Hope. In such a world, there will be no place for nuclear weapons. If Secretary Gates had any decency, he would stop giving these foolish speeches and simply wait in his office until President Obama’s replacement arrives.
Reply: I normally delete comments that are more ideology than debate, but decided to respond to your comment because I think it represents an approach to debating nuclear policy that is both wrong and counterproductive. It’s not about who’s the good guy and who’s the bad guy but what the policy is.
It is precisely because of Mr. Gates’s experience in these issues that his speech was disappointing, but also why it was not irrelevant. His “realism” – or parts of it – is shared by many insiders (although fewer than before) who will weigh in heavily on the nuclear policy Barack Obama – if elected – will attempt to implement.
That policy may seem very different from that of the Bush administration, but it is also similar to that of the Clinton administration: “keep our commitment under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty;” try to persuade the Senate to ratify the CTBT (not that Clinton tried to do that); try to get Russian agreement to “take U.S. and Russian ballistic missiles off hair-trigger alert” and “extend essential monitoring and verification provisions of START I;” and “lead a global effort to negotiate a verifiable treaty ending the production of fissile materials for weapons purposes….” Barack Obama’s pledge to “immediately stand down all nuclear forces to be reduced under the Moscow Treaty” sounds good but rings hollow because that is scheduled to happen in 2010 anyway.
Obama has pledged to reinstate nuclear disarmament as a long-term goal for U.S. policy, something most administrations before George W. Bush have shared. But Obama has also clearly stated that his administration “will not pursue unilateral disarmament. As long as nuclear weapons exist, we’ll retain a strong nuclear deterrent.” Although there are many cuts and changes that could and should be made unilaterally to jump-start the process, the second part of the pledge tends to mean a nuclear posture second to none that perpetuates the importance of nuclear weapons and endless modernization. How to break that cycle?
On nuclear warhead production, Obama has stated that he does “not support a premature decision to produce the RRW,” a vague pledge that leaves the door open to RRW-like production. He has also stated that he “will not authorize the development of new nuclear weapons and related capabilities,” a better formulation, but one that would continue the wrangling over what constitutes “new.” Under this policy, the United States could resume industrial-scale production of RRW-like warheads as long as they are not entirely “new” warheads with entirely “new” capabilities and provided the production does not increase the size of the arsenal.
On the question of the role of nuclear weapons, Obama has not said anything about how he sees the role of nuclear weapons toward Russia or China even thought those two countries are likely the two most important drivers for U.S. nuclear policy. The Bush administration said Russia was not an enemy and removed the country as an immediate contingency for nuclear planning. How does Obama plan to move that ball forward, especially considering Russia’s recent nuclear chest-beating? On China, the Clinton administration ordered the military to broaden the list of facilities to be targeted with nuclear weapons, and the Bush administration followed up by deploying the Trident II SLBM in the Pacific, shifting the focus of the SSBN fleet to the Pacific, and forward-deploying B-2 and B-52 bombers to Guam. Does Obama plan to continue that trend or what is his vision for nuclear relations with China?
On Iran, Obama has wisely said that diplomacy and sanctions should be the primary means to prevent that country from building nuclear weapons, but also repeated that “we should take no option, including military action, off the table….” The formulation “no option” also leaves the option open to use nuclear weapons against Iran, an option that is politically impossible and militarily unnecessary, and which he therefore should and could take off the table with no loss to U.S. national security or ability to act. Whether it is indeed necessary to maintain nuclear strike options against regional states that cannot threaten the existence of the United States is an important question that Obama will have to tackle if he wishes to reduce the role of nuclear weapons and move the world toward disarmament.
Granted, we’re in an election campaign, and what candidates promise and end up doing as presidents are not necessarily the same. Many people are focused on how low Obama might reduce the number of nuclear weapons; I’m more interested in what the role of the remaining weapons will be. HK
November 5th, 2008 at 9:26 pm
I found Mr. Gates following reply in a Newsweek interview very amusing. I wonder which are those 30 countries which will be ready to develop nuclear weapons if US reduces its arsenal !!
“Newsweek: How do you respond to those who say the United States should take the lead against nuclear proliferation by drastically reducing its own arsenal?
Gates: The reality is that there are probably two dozen, perhaps 30, countries out there that would seriously consider their own nuclear deterrent if they couldn’t rely on ours. And this is something that I think a lot of people overlook in terms of the importance of keeping our own nuclear deterrent modern, keeping it reliable, keeping it safe.”
Reply: Gates is setting up a strawman. The “extended deterrence” he refers to is often used intermittently by opponents of nuclear disarmament as either the big “boogieman” or the big “nonproliferator,” depending on the circumstances. The “perhaps 30″ countries he’s referring to are:
NATO (24): Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Czech Republic, Canada, Denmark, Estonia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Turkey.
ANZUS (2): Australia, New Zealand.
Northeast Asia (2): Japan, South Korea, Taiwan (?).
Gates’s mistake is that he leaves out that many of these countries actually have policies that favor total nuclear disarmament. They have been waiting for decades for the United States, Russia, France, China, and the United Kingdom to live up to their pledge under the Non-Proliferation Treaty to disarm.
His suggestion that all of these countries would “seriously consider their own nuclear deterrent” if we didn’t provide one is a stretch even under the most extreme realistic circumstances. Denmark? Iceland? Lithuania? Luxembourg? Portugal? New Zealand? Seriously! Only a few of the 30 are normally considered potential nuclear weapon proliferators: Germany, Japan, and perhaps South Korea. Gates should at least have mentioned that. And even in those countries there would be strong political and cultural constraints working against going nuclear.
Besides, the theory that those countries might go nuclear assumes they’re threatened by nuclear weapons. But no one is seriously advocating the United States disarms alone but in tandem with the other nuclear weapon states as part of an effort to remove nuclear threats.
Oh, and Gates could probably also have mentioned that two NATO countries – France and the United Kingdom – actually decided years ago to go nuclear even though the United States had thousands of nuclear weapons deployed to defend NATO. The virtues of extended deterrence are a little more nuanced than Gates and others suggest. HK
December 6th, 2008 at 12:36 am
It’s easy to say “take China and Russia out of the equation,” but the fact is that neither country is going anywhere soon; China’s run by an oligarchy while Russia is run by Vladimir Putin (Medvedev is simply his version of Charlie McCarthy).
The militaries of both countries have made bald, public threats to strike the US homeland and our allies with nuclear weapons and not been admonished for it by their civilian leadership. This is a very clear indication that our present nuclear arsenal is not over-large for the deterrence mission we confront through no fault of our own.
In fact, our own nuclear stockpile’s reliability is questionable at best in some cases owing to possible neutron damage to weapon components and build-up of activation products in their primaries. This is not a secret from either Russia or China – they rely on Congress to do much of their work for them, causing our deterrent posture to gradually fade away just as both Russia and China are buidling their own nuclear arsenals up.
January 22nd, 2009 at 4:43 am
[Edited] China’s latest defence white paper just reconfirmed a no-first-use policy. And Loupgarous (the French word takes no “s” at the end, by the way), it is generally accepted that China only started its nuclear bomb project after the”bald, public threats” of generals Douglas MacArthur and Curtis E. Lemay, with the latter adding he didn’t see any military targets for them but would “drop a few.”
Moving on, I understand that somewhere in 2002, Pres. Putin promised Pres. Jiang his Pacific Fleet would help deny USN access to Taiwan in the event of conflict there. From this, I infer that any military initiative against China almost necessarily implies preemptive action against Russia — something Russia must realize.
May 17th, 2009 at 12:18 am
Mr. Borges indulges in the arrogance of lecturing a native speaker of Cajun French on the correct spelling of a word of whose etymology in our dialect of French Borges is obviously ignorant – but let that pass.
Oligarchies like China say a lot of things. What they do (such as massing several hundred nuclear-capable missiles across the Formosa Straits from Taiwan, adding significantly to the total every year) is more significant. My point was that the strategic deterrence mission of the United States requires nuclear weapons to be maintained in an objectively usable and potent state. This is something which the actions advocated by Messrs. Oelrich and Kristensen won’t allow to happen.
Nuclear weapons can’t be un-invented. We have to plan for a world in which the number of nuclear-armed states is increasing, not decreasing, and in which the aggregate nuclear threat to the citizens of the United States is not diminishing. Soon enough, non-state actors will have nuclear weapons, and Al-Qaeda or one of their allies could be one of them.