[<<The decision by the Trump administration to withdraw from the
Intermediate Nuclear Force Agreement (INF) appears to be part of a broader
strategy aimed at unwinding over 50 years of agreements to control and
limit nuclear weapons, returning to an era characterized by the unbridled
development weapons of mass destruction.

Terminating the INF treaty — which bans land-based cruise and ballistic
missiles with a range of between 300 and 3,400 miles — is not, in and of
itself, a fatal blow to the network of treaties and agreements dating back
to the 1963 treaty that ended atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons.

But coupled with other actions — George W. Bush’s decision to withdraw from
the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty (ABM) in 2002 and the Obama
administration’s program to upgrade the nuclear weapons infrastructure —
the tapestry of agreements that has, at least in part, limited these
terrifying creations, is looking increasingly frayed.>>]

https://fpif.org/unwrapping-armageddon-the-erosion-of-nuclear-arms-control/?fbclid=IwAR2-pQYH0yaWi6gbTK_Cdc9006zkSn02nTOA1N6XJBlpKdaCHEwfCq4lan8

Unwrapping Armageddon: The Erosion of Nuclear Arms Control
The White House appears to have a broader strategy to unwind over 50 years
of agreements to control and limit nuclear weapons.

By Conn Hallinan,

November 9, 2018.

Photo: Clay Gilliland / Flickr

The decision by the Trump administration to withdraw from the Intermediate
Nuclear Force Agreement (INF) appears to be part of a broader strategy
aimed at unwinding over 50 years of agreements to control and limit nuclear
weapons, returning to an era characterized by the unbridled development
weapons of mass destruction.

Terminating the INF treaty — which bans land-based cruise and ballistic
missiles with a range of between 300 and 3,400 miles — is not, in and of
itself, a fatal blow to the network of treaties and agreements dating back
to the 1963 treaty that ended atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons.

But coupled with other actions — George W. Bush’s decision to withdraw from
the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty (ABM) in 2002 and the Obama
administration’s program to upgrade the nuclear weapons infrastructure —
the tapestry of agreements that has, at least in part, limited these
terrifying creations, is looking increasingly frayed.

“Leaving the INF,” says Sergey Rogov of the Institute of U.S. and Canadian
Studies, “could bring the whole structure of arms control crashing down.”

Lynn Rusten, the former senior director for arms control in the National
Security Agency Council warns, “This is opening the door to an all-out arms
race.”

Throwing Off Constraints

Washington’s rationale for exiting the INF Treaty is that the Russians
deployed the 9M729 cruise missile, which the U.S. claims violates the
agreement, although Moscow denies it and the evidence hasn’t been made
public. Russia countercharges that the U.S. ABM system — Aegis Ashore —
deployed in Romania and planned for Poland could be used to launch similar
medium range missiles.

If this were a disagreement over weapon capability, inspections would
settle the matter. But the White House—in particular National Security
Adviser John Bolton — is less concerned with inspections than extracting
the U.S. from agreements that in any way restrain the use of American
power, be it military or economic.

Thus, Trump dumped the Iran nuclear agreement, not because Iran is building
nuclear weapons or violating the agreement in any way, but because the
administration wants to use economic sanctions to pursue regime change in
Tehran.

In some ways, the INF agreement is low hanging fruit. The 1987 treaty
banned only land-based medium range missiles, not those launched by sea or
air — where the Americans hold a strong edge — and it only covered the U.S.
and Russia. Other nuclear-armed countries — particularly China, India,
North Korea, Israel, and Pakistan — have deployed a number of medium range
nuclear-armed missiles. One of the arguments Bolton makes for exiting the
INF is that it would allow the U.S. to counter China’s medium range
missiles.

But if the concern were controlling intermediate range missiles, the
obvious path would be to expand the treaty to other nations and include air
and sea launched weapons. Not that that would be easy. China has lots of
intermediate range missiles, because most its potential antagonists, like
Japan or U.S. bases in Asia, are within the range of such missiles. The
same goes for Pakistan, India, and Israel.

Intermediate range weapons — sometimes called “theater” missiles — don’t
threaten the U.S. mainland the way that similar U.S. missiles threaten
China and Russia. Beijing and Moscow can be destroyed by long-range
intercontinental missiles, but also by theater missiles launched from ships
or aircraft. One of the reasons that Europeans are so opposed to
withdrawing from the INF is that, in the advent of nuclear war,
medium-range missiles on their soil will make them a target.

But supposed violations of the treaty aren’t why Bolton and the people
around him oppose the agreement. Bolton called for withdrawing from the INF
Treaty three years before the Obama administration charged the Russians
with cheating.

Indeed, Bolton has opposed every effort to constrain nuclear weapons and
has already announced that the Trump administration won’t extend the
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) when it expires in 2021. START caps
the number of U.S. and Russian deployed nuclear weapons at 1550, no small
number.

A Quivering Framework

The Bush administration’s withdrawal from the 1972 ABM treaty in 2002 was
the first major blow to the treaty framework.

Anti-ballistic missiles are inherently destabilizing, because the easiest
way to defeat such systems is to overwhelm them by expanding the number of
launchers and warheads. Bolton — a longtime foe of the ABM agreement —
recently bragged that dumping the treaty had no effect on arms control.

But the treaty’s demise has shelved START talks, and it was the ABM’s
deployment in Eastern Europe — along with NATO’s expansion up to the
Russian borders — that led to Moscow deploying the cruise missile now in
dispute.

While Bolton and Trump are more aggressive about terminating agreements, it
was the Obama administration’s decision to spend $1.6 trillion to upgrade
and modernize U.S. nuclear weapons that now endangers one of the central
pillars of the nuclear treaty framework, the 1996 Comprehensive Test Ban
Treaty (CTBT).

That agreement ended the testing of nuclear weapons, slowing the
development of new weapons, particularly miniaturization and warheads with
minimal yields. The former would allow more warheads on each missile; the
latter could increase the possibility of using nuclear weapons without
setting off a full-scale nuclear exchange.

Nukes are tricky to design, so you don’t want to deploy one without testing
it. The Americans have bypassed some of the obstacles created by the CTBT
by using computers like the National Ignition Facility. The B-61 Mod 11
warhead, soon to be deployed in Europe, was originally a city killer, but
labs at Livermore, California and Los Alamos and Sandia, New Mexico turned
it into a bunker buster, capable of taking out command and control centers
buried deep in the ground.

Nevertheless, the military and the nuclear establishment — ranging from
companies such as Lockheed Martin and Honeywell International to university
research centers — have long felt hindered by the CTBT. Add the Trump
administration’s hostility to anything that constrains U.S. power and the
CTBT may be next on the list.

Restarting nuclear testing will end any controls on weapons of mass
destruction. And since Article VI of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
(NPT) requires nuclear-armed powers to eventually disarm their weapons of
mass destruction, that agreement may go as well. In a very short time,
countries like South Korea, Japan, and Saudi Arabia will join the nuclear
club, with South Africa and Brazil in the wings. The latter two countries
researched producing nuclear weapons in the 1980s, and South Africa
actually tested one.

The Antidote? Popular Pressure

The demise of the INF agreement will edge the world closer to nuclear war.
Since medium range missiles shorten the warning time for a nuclear attack
from 30 minutes to 10 minutes or less, countries will keep their weapons on
a hair trigger. “Use them or lose them” is the philosophy that impels the
tactics of nuclear war.

In the past year, Russia and NATO held very large military exercises on one
another’s borders. Russian, U.S., and Chinese fighter planes routinely play
games of chicken. What happens when one of those “games” goes wrong?

The U.S. and the Soviet Union came within minutes of an accidental war on
at least two occasions. And, with so many actors and so many weapons, it
will be only a matter of time before some country interprets a radar image
incorrectly and goes to DEFCON 1 — imminent nuclear war.

The INF Treaty came about because of strong opposition and huge
demonstrations in Europe and the United States. That kind of pressure,
coupled with a pledge by countries not to deploy such weapons, will be
required again, lest the entire tapestry of agreements that kept the horror
of nuclear war at bay vanish.

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Peace Is Doable

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