*The Case for a 21st Century Deterrent*

*by Peter Huessy
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/author/Peter+Huessy>March 22, 2016 at
4:00 am*

*http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent>*

Deterrence is not about guaranteeing to one's adversaries that one will
only spend what the adversary deems acceptable to enable a "fair fight."

   - If one is to believe the advocates of minimum deterrence, Russia has
   plans to attack 400 U.S. nuclear missile silos and nearly 50 associated
   launch control centers, using two warheads for each target to assure
   success. But a Russia that had at least 900 nuclear warheads would not be
   "balanced" by the United States that had only 250 warheads.
   - Many nations have not been deterred from aggression, even by the
   prospect of losing millions of their own people.
   - The U.S. requires a survivable deterrent force; not one subject to
   being eliminated by an enemy's first strike because the U.S. deterrent was
   so small that it was no deterrent at all.

In discussing the nuclear deterrent required by the U.S., former commander
of U.S. strategic nuclear forces General C. Robert Kehler said, "The whole
purpose of deterrence is to bind the other guy's behavior," requiring
robust military and vigorous statecraft.

The breakdown in international order recently described by retired General
James Clapper, the Director of National Intelligence, (DNI), however, calls
into question the very effectiveness of America's deterrent capability.[1]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftn1>

In light of recent geostrategic developments, some former U.S. defense
experts are calling for the United States dramatically to curtail its
nuclear deterrent.

These experts assume that the deterrent value of nuclear weapons is waning
and that since the it spends far more on overall defense than do other
nations, the U.S. can afford to cut back in this area.[2]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftn2>

But are such recommendations unwise? Absolutely.

A former U.S. Chief of Naval Operations produced a chart some years ago
showing annual deaths per capita prior to the nuclear age, in an era when
only conventional deterrence existed. Surprisingly, after the atomic bombs
were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the worldwide per capita death toll
from armed conflict during the next half-century dropped 80%, and during
the next seventy years, by more than 90%.[3]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftn3>

In the half-century before 1945, two conventional world wars were fought,
which included the use of chemical weapons and the fire-bombing of cities.
Add to that devastation the deaths from the Nazi Holocaust and the mass
murders committed in the USSR by Stalin and his successors, and it is clear
that hostile behavior by states was the norm even before the nuclear age.

Retired General Brent Scowcroft, National Security Advisor to two U.S.
Presidents, once remarked that the two world wars were a testament to the
fragility of traditional conventional deterrence.[4]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftn4>

Since 1945, however, large-scale war between nuclear-armed powers has been
avoided. That is not to say that there have been no conflicts between
states. The fight between totalitarianism and freedom took the form of a
cross-border war in Korea, subversion and guerilla warfare in Vietnam, and
state-sponsored terrorism in Africa, Central America and the Middle East,
to name just a few. The fight continues today, in the post-Cold War era,
despite the "end of history" narrative that promised armed conflict would
pretty much end.[5]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftn5>

Potential major conflicts, however, still are prevented by the U.S. nuclear
deterrent: on the Korean peninsula; between China and Taiwan; in the Middle
East and in Eastern Europe.

Conflict continues, of course, in the form of Iranian and North Korean
terrorist activity, Chinese aggression in the South China Sea, continued
Russian subversion in Ukraine and elsewhere, and in various terrorist
activities in Africa and the Middle East. Those conflicts have not been
prevented even by conventional capabilities, let alone U.S. nuclear
deterrent forces. Nevertheless, is the prudent response to jettison a
significant portion of U.S. nuclear capability?

The new post-Cold War era still requires the prevention of any number of
possible crises from escalating into armed conflict between any of the nine
nuclear-armed nations. The era also requires stopping existing conflicts
from becoming wholesale nuclear wars.

It is always important to avoid what Israeli missile defense expert Uzi
Rubin calls "fortune cookie analysis" -- the claim that the need for
nuclear deterrence is over because "it didn't stop 9-11" or today's
conflicts.[6]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftn6>

Terrorist attacks, such as 9-11, were also not prevented by non-nuclear
capabilities such as the FBI, Coast Guard, Border Patrol, the military, or
intelligence agencies. But the U.S. nuclear deterrent is not there just for
today. Any future deterrent needs to be robust and flexible enough to
anticipate technological surprise. There can also be sudden changes in
regimes and regimes' intentions; these must also be taken into account.

In addition, emerging technological threats such as cyber-attacks, the
advanced capabilities of long-range conventional strikes, and the
threat of electromagnetic
pulse (EMP) attacks
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7214/electro-magnetic-pulse-emp> are
changing the pattern of deterrence among various countries, according to
Andrew Krepinevich, president of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary
Assessments (CSBA).[7]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftn7>
Even so, as he underscores the need for new deterrent capabilities, he does
not minimize the need for a continued powerful nuclear deterrent.

It is not enough to claim that a much smaller, even minimalist, nuclear
deterrent, will suffice for today. "Less" does not automatically mean
"better." Nor is it enough simply to add up what other countries spend on
defense, compare it to what the United States spends, and declare that the
two sides need only be relatively equal in defense expenditure for
deterrence to be effective.

Deterrence is not about guaranteeing to your adversaries that you will only
spend what the adversary deems acceptable to enable a "fair fight." It is
important to spend whatever is needed to ensure a credible, capable force.
It would be reckless to adopt some arbitrary figure based on what others
might spend, or unilaterally to accept sentimental notions about what is
"fair."

Unfortunately, there have been a number of recent calls
<http://csbaonline.org/2016/03/01/rethinking-the-apocalypse-time-for-bold-thinking-about-the-second-nuclear-age/>
for the U.S. to reduce its nuclear arsenal unilaterally by 85% and to keep
no more than 250 nuclear warheads. This low number would roughly equal the
warheads fielded by Pakistan and India combined.

What is the basis for such a proposal? Apparently such advocates start with
the assumption that a U.S. president will be deterred from taking military
action if, in a conflict, upward of 250 enemy warheads were targeted in
retaliation on American cities. This logic assumes that one's enemies think
the same way as oneself, and consequently, that a small American arsenal of
250 nuclear warheads would suffice to deter would-be adversaries.

But do adversaries really think this way? Ironically, even the advocates of
such a minimal nuclear deterrent do not appear to believe their own
rhetorical assumptions. Most of the advocates of a minimal nuclear
deterrent claim that 400 Minuteman silo-based missiles, spread out over
tens of thousands of square miles in five U.S. western states, would be
vulnerable to attack by the same enemies who are supposedly interested in
attacking only cities. Why would Russia or China target U.S. missile silos
and other military assets when presumably all they would need to do to
maintain deterrence against the U.S. is hold a few dozen American cities
for ransom?

If one is to believe the advocates of minimum deterrence, Russia has plans
to attack 400 U.S. missile silos and nearly 50 associated launch control
centers. This assault would require Russia to maintain at least 900
warheads, attacking each American ICBM with at least two warheads to ensure
a high chance of destroying all of those targets.

But a Russia that had at least 900 warheads would not be balanced by the
United States that had only 250.

Deterrence simply does not work the way advocates of minimum deterrent
assert.

When a U.S. president orders military commanders to provide deterrence
against the country's enemies, this strategy must be measured against what
it takes to implement deterrence, and not against a nice round number of
nuclear warheads that appears "reasonable."

Further, is a U.S. president comfortable with only the option of striking
back at an adversary's cities? Would threatening to incinerate millions
even be a moral or workable deterrent strategy? With 250 warheads in total,
and perhaps just half of them available for retaliation, the only targets a
U.S. president could sufficiently threaten would be an adversary's cities,
but not an adversary's military assets -- not to mention if other countries
were to pile on, such as Russia, China, North Korea and Iran.

The minimalists argue that destroying a nation's cities would certainly
deter any sane national leader. Yet, as Keith Payne, president of the
National Institute of Public Policy, explains, many nations have not been
deterred from aggression, even by the prospect of losing millions of their
own citizens.[8]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftn8> In
efforts to achieve their political objectives, the Soviet Union, Iran,
Cambodia, China and North Korea, to mention the most obvious, have
slaughtered tens of millions of their own people. In communist nations
alone, the number exceeds 95 million.[9]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftn9>
Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan killed and maimed millions of their own
people by going to war and continuing the conflict even when their defeat
was clearly imminent.

Would the U.S. seek to deter ISIS and Hezbollah this way? Or Iran or North
Korea, for that matter?

The weapons or military assets of one's adversaries -- the weapons one
would need to hold at risk or target -- are precisely the instruments of
state power on which these enemies rely for their status as global or
regional powers and prestige. Holding such assets at risk gives the U.S.
president the ultimate "stick" with which to threaten to take away the
adversary's power: his military assets.

Today, non-state terrorist organizations also have such assets, as seen
from fighting ISIS, Al Qaeda, Hamas Hezbollah, the FMLN and FARC.

Thus, holding at risk, or being able to destroy a significant number of,
say, Russian submarines, missile silos, bomber bases, and other instruments
of military power, thereby leaving Russia unable to act as a major power,
is not an attempt to "go first" in a crisis or "get the jump" on one's
enemies. Instead, it merely places at risk all the instruments of state
power -- consisting of hundreds of militarily critical targets -- upon
which, for instance, a Russian or Chinese head of state relies for world
power status.

This plan requires a nuclear deterrent capable of striking back at an enemy
with sufficient surviving nuclear warheads, even after absorbing an enemy's
initial strike against one's own military assets.

A deterrent strategy such as the U.S. has today leaves nuclear-armed
adversaries with only one sound choice in a crisis. Either they risk
"Armageddon" and use all their nuclear weapons early in a crisis, to avoid
seeing any of their military assets destroyed by the U.S. in a subsequent
retaliatory strike; or they stand down, not launching their nuclear
weaponry, and instead seek to end any crisis through diplomatically. This
is the essence of deterrence. It is one that the late American diplomat
Paul Nitze described as the "Not Today, Comrade" option.[10]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftn10>
Today it would be, "Not Today, Jihadi."

Such a deterrent strategy, as advocated here and reflected in America's
current nuclear modernization plans, stands the test of logic. If an
adversary used all its nuclear forces against the U.S. in a first strike,
such an attack would invite a massive retaliatory strike from the U.S. that
would leave an attacker completely destroyed.

But that, of course, requires a survivable U.S. deterrent force to begin
with; not one subject to being eliminated by an enemy's first strike
because the U.S. deterrent was so small that it was no deterrent at all.

According to the Obama administration, to guarantee maximum flexibility in
a crisis so that a president can be confident he has a survivable
deterrent, a robust deployment of 1550 warheads is required, on a mixture
of 12 submarines, 400 ICBMs and 40-60 bombers. Fortunately, this is the
number the U.S. can field under the 2010 New Start Treaty with Russia.

Having a nuclear deterrent strategically dispersed among over 500 nuclear
assets -- submarines, land-based missiles, and bombers -- means that any
enemy attempt to destroy the U.S. nuclear arsenal before the U.S. could use
it, would require an unambiguous attack. If an adversary, such as Russia,
were to deploy its entire arsenal against the United States, the attack
would involve over fifteen hundred warheads.

The U.S. would know from where most of the warheads would be coming: ICBMs
flying over the North Pole could easily be seen by U.S. early-warning
satellites.

U.S. allies also would see preparations, such as weapons platforms moved,
for such a strike. Enemy forces would have to be moved from a day-to-day
alert status to heightened alert if there were plans to destroy U.S.
nuclear forces in their entirety. That is why the U.S. has, and is planning
to keep, more than 500 nuclear assets, including submarines, bombers, and
silo-based missiles capable of surviving even the most massive strike.

Deploying only 250 warheads, however -- all of them on submarines, as many
minimal deterrent advocates have proposed -- would make such a secure
retaliatory force impossible to maintain. It would also so minimize the
size of the U.S. deterrent forces -- to fewer than 10 targets -- as
possibly to invite an attack.

By contrast, a flexible U.S. nuclear deterrent policy, based on keeping a
large deployment of day-to-day survivable forces -- numbering over 500
missiles, submarines and bombers -- leaves the president options. There is
no need to act rashly. An enemy could then be informed that any attack, no
matter how large, would invite such a massive retaliation that no benefit
whatsoever would accrue to the attacker. Such a force also would allow the
president, during a crisis, to make the U.S. deterrent even more survivable
over time, by putting more U.S. submarines to sea and placing U.S. bombers
on alert or in the air.

Such a new nuclear force of submarines, bombers and ICBMs, which the U.S.
is now beginning to produce (albeit after much delay), would allow the U.S.
to threaten the entire range of an adversary's military assets, and not be
limited only to striking back at an enemy's cities. These twin capabilities
-- having a survivable force day-to-day and an even more highly survivable
force over time -- would avoid putting all one's nuclear eggs in one
minimalist leaky basket.

[image: Description: http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/pics/794.jpg]

The U.S. nuclear "Triad" consists of nuclear warheads mounted on platforms
based at sea, in the air and on land.

The strategy is called "crisis stability": giving no nuclear power the
incentive to strike first, and providing the world with the stability it
needs to avoid Armageddon.

For 70 years, this strategy has kept the nuclear peace. This strategy even
allowed the U.S. and the USSR, (subsequently Russia) carefully and
logically to reduce the number of strategic, long-range nuclear weapons by
nearly 90%, while maintaining strategic stability.

In short, nuclear deterrence still matters. If the U.S. deterrent is even
more survivable, flexible, and robust, while maintained at lower levels
than during the Cold War, such modernization as the U.S. is now planning
provides America's leaders with the leverage in a crisis to keep a major
armed conflict from breaking out. And it keeps the United States and its
allies safe.

Certainly, other elements of deterrence matter as well, such as a strong
conventional deterrent, space-based assets for top-notch situational
awareness, prompt conventional precision-strike weaponry, missile defenses
-- both national and regional and those deployed with U.S. allies -- and a
strong diplomatic will to use such instruments of state power in the
defense of liberty.

In particular, missile defense can avoid limited strikes from small nuclear
powers, as well as significantly complicating the strike options of larger
nuclear powers, thus making such potential attacks less likely. In
addition, a surreptitious missile strike from a freighter or submarine in
the off-shore maritime regions adjacent to the United States could be
intercepted, but a retaliatory strike would be pure guesswork, as the
identity of the state or terror group responsible would in all probability
remain a mystery.

Unfortunately, what critics miss is that, for nearly a quarter of a
century, the U.S. paid little attention to its nuclear deterrent and
avoided addressing the topic. Apparently, the U.S. was simply relying on
past policy. However, such a lack of original thought and analysis does not
mean nuclear deterrent requirements must come to an end or be changed
dramatically. Far from it. Congress, the Administration and U.S. citizens
have looked at the nuclear deterrent and decided, wisely, that the current
nuclear deterrent modernization plan of building 12 new submarines, 400
Minuteman ICBMs and 100 new bombers -- some of which will be nuclear
capable -- is the right one, even as the U.S. adopts a new post-Cold War
policy and framework for keeping the United States and the free world safe.

*Peter Huessy is President of Geostrategic Analysis, Senior Defense
Consultant to the Mitchell Institute of the Air Force Association, and
teaches nuclear deterrent policy at the US Naval Academy.*
------------------------------

[1]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftnref1>
Remarks as delivered by The Honorable James R. Clapper, Director of
National Intelligence, Opening Statement to the Worldwide Threat Assessment
Hearing, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Thursday, Feb 9, 2016

[2]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftnref2>
"Former
Pentagon Chief, Other Experts: Get Rid of ICBMs
<http://duluthreader.com/articles/2016/01/22/6597_former_pentagon_chief_other_experts_get_rid_of>"
by John LaForge, Duluth Reader, January 21, 2016.

[3]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftnref3>
Admiral Richard Mies, "The Strategic Deterrent Mission: Ensuring a Strong
Foundation for America's Security" in Journal of Undersea Warfare, Summer
2012. See also for a version of the Admiral's chart Max Roser (2015)—"War
and Peace after 1945," *Published online at OurWorldInData.org
<http://ourworldindata.org/data/war-peace/war-and-peace-after-1945>.*

[4]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftnref4>
Retired General Scowcroft is reported to have said this at a dinner event
at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in 2009.

[5]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftnref5>
Summer, 1989, The National Interest, "The End of History" by Francis
Fukuyama, who declared the 20th century ended with "An unabashed victory of
economic and political liberalism."

[6]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftnref6>
Uzi Rubin, personal communication to the author.

[7]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftnref7>
The Myth of Nuclear Deterrence, by Ward Wilson in Nonproliferation Review,
Vol. 15, No. 3, November 2008.

[8]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftnref8>
March 19, 2013, Subcommittee on Strategic Forces, Committee on Armed
Services, statement of General (ret) Eugene Habiger, in "The U.S. Nuclear
Deterrent: What Are the Requirements for a Strong Deterrent in an Era of
Defense Sequester?"

[9]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftnref9>
Keith Payne, Georgetown University, "Deterrence in the Second Nuclear Age,"
University Press of Kentucky, 1996.

[10]
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7628/modern-nuclear-deterrent#_ftnref10>
"The Black Book of Communism," Harvard University Press, October 1999.




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