State Department Director for Policy Planning Richard Haass describes the Bush
Administration rejection of key international treaties as "a la carte multilateralism."
New York Times reporter Thom Shanker says administration
officials reject pacts that limit U.S. actions but favor those that restrain
others, such as missile technology restraints, the Chemical Weapons Convention
and the Non-Proliferation Treaty. But can the whole survive with just some of
its parts? Can global security be maintained piece-meal? Project Director Joseph
Cirincione warned of the dangers of precisely this approach in Foreign Policy
magazine last year.
In "The Asian Nuclear reaction Chain" in the Spring 2000 issue of
the publication, Cirincione wrote:
A broad, if rough-hewn, cold war consensus on the importance of negotiated
threat reduction has dissolved into a free-for-all tangle over differing assessments
of American vulnerabilities, defense spending, and the nature of U.S. global
engagement. The U.S. Senate stunned the world when it rejected the test ban
treaty in 1999. Now it seems probable that the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM)
Treaty is the next pact headed for the chopping block.
The Clinton administration, through inattention and indecision, squandered
priceless opportunities to lock in its initial successes and move quickly beyond
them. The door was left open for die-hard opponents of arms control in Congress
to step in and dominate the debate over how best to respond to the challenges
posed by today’s would-be weapons states. Treaties lull the country into a false
sense of security, they say, as America keeps to them while other nations cheat.
Worse still, multilateral arrangements weaken America like "Gulliver in the
land of Lilliputians, stretched out, unable to move, because he has been tied
down by a whole host of threads," as Senator Jeff Sessions warned his colleagues
during the debate over the test ban treaty. The Senate defeat of the CTBT crystallized
the arms control mantra now popular among conservatives: Distrust treaties,
increase defenses, and assert American authority.
Henry Kissinger-the strategist behind the ABM Treaty and the first Strategic
Arms Limitation Treaty, or SALT I-epitomizes the new centrist-conservative thinking.
He says that he is not against arms control, just bad arms control, such as
the test ban and the ABM Treaty today. He believes we can pick and choose the
arms control agreements we like, such as the Non-Proliferation Treaty (by which
182 nations have agreed not to develop nuclear weapons), the Missile Technology
Control Regime (which restricts exports of missile technology), and the Australia
Group (which restricts chemical and biological exports).
Many arms control critics reject the very idea of negotiated arms reductions
as a cold war relic, unsuited for the current era. Now that superpower conflict
is over, the logic holds, our strategy needs to change to accommodate "a world
of terror and missiles and madmen," to borrow a phrase from President George
W. Bush.
Those who claim to be reinventing arms control for the future are, in fact,
turning their backs on history. Nuclear proliferation among so-called rogue
states is not the primary problem. As far back as the early 1960s, policy makers
recognized the greatest threat to U.S. security was not that Third World despots
might acquire the bomb, but that advanced industrial countries might do so.
Few people recall that President John F. Kennedy’s oft-quoted warning that "fifteen
or twenty or twenty-five nations may have [nuclear] weapons" in the next decade
was directed at Japan, Italy, Germany, Sweden, and other European nations that
were developing weapons programs. Nuclear weapons in "the hands of countries
large and small, stable and unstable," Kennedy worried, would create "the increased
chance of accidental war, and an increased necessity for the great powers to
involve themselves in what otherwise would be local conflicts."
Kennedy’s arms control vision, negotiated by President Lyndon Johnson and implemented
by President Richard Nixon, has proved to be a global success story. Since the
signing of the NPT in 1968, the treaty regime has greatly restricted the spread
of weapons of mass destruction. But Kennedy’s legacy is now under siege, and
the nonproliferation clock may be set back to the 1960s. If the United States
disassembles diplomatic restraints, shatters carefully crafted threat reduction
arrangements, and moves from builder to destroyer of the nonproliferation regime,
then there will be little to prevent new nations from concluding that their
national security requires nuclear arms. Taking elements we don’t like out of
the regime structure starts a dangerous round of Jenga, the tabletop game where
blocks are sequentially removed from a wooden tower until the whole structure
collapses.
The blocks would fall quickest and hardest in Asia, where proliferation pressures
are already building more quickly than anywhere else in the world. If a nuclear
breakout takes place in Asia, then the international arms control agreements
that have been painstakingly negotiated over the past 40 years will crumble.
Moreover, the United States could find itself embroiled in its fourth war on
the Asian continent in six decades-a costly rebuke to those who seek the safety
of Fortress America by hiding behind national missile defenses.
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