From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Fri Aug 16 2002 - 22:54:38 MDT
David C. Isby
The nuclear threat is back. Saddam Hussein is projected to have a 
nuclear capability by 2005; he may use it not for deterrence but 
rather detonations. This is driving current U.S. policy toward Iraq. 
But the nuclear threat to U.S. security is not limited to Saddam or 
even the "axis of evil" committed to developing nuclear weapons 
and missiles to deliver them. Elsewhere, the risks of an India-
Pakistan nuclear conflict go far beyond the damage it could do to 
the peoples of the subcontinent. The threat is not limited to those 
being targeted.
The United States has an interest in maintaining the de facto taboo 
on nuclear use that has emerged and endured since Nagasaki. 
While the weapons of modern states (and terrorists) can inflict 
painful losses, only nuclear weapons can today reliably threaten 
large-scale devastation. It is in the interest of the United States to 
see that nuclear weapons are as rare as possible and that they 
remain unused.
Conventional threats, however elusive or difficult, can be 
addressed conventionally. To maintain the nuclear firebreak, the 
United States has not currently pursued nuclear weapons options 
for war-fighting rather than deterrence. The United States has left 
designs for nuclear weapons designed to counteract difficult 
targets ” hardened and deeply buried installations or incoming 
ballistic missiles with countermeasures ” in research and 
development. To maintain the taboo, the United States does not 
have a declaratory strategy of using nuclear weapons against those 
that conduct a biological weapons attack against our forces. 
Unless deterrence appears assured, better to let aggressors deal 
with uncertainty.
However, Saddam may try and have his nuclear use in the end ” 
if not as aggressor, then as target. Testimony in the Senate Foreign 
Relations Committee hearing on July 31 projected that a desperate 
Saddam might launch his residual ballistic missile force at Israel 
with biological weapon payloads in an attempt to provoke an 
apocalyptic retaliation, leaving any democratic Iraqi successor 
with ashes, bitterness and radioactivity. Defeated dictators in their 
final bunker are not deterrable; they want to take their populations 
with them. American policy is aimed at preventing them from 
having the opportunity.
The United States ” not just professional strategists ” needs to 
think about how the world will change if ” or when ” the 
nuclear taboo is broken, whether by Iraqis, Israelis, terrorists or an 
India-Pakistan conflict. A return to business as usual is unlikely to 
be a viable policy option once the nuclear genie has been released. 
Will we be able to maintain nuclear non-proliferation as a viable 
policy goal? This may be especially difficult if nuclear use is seen 
to be "successful." The United States will need to help ensure that 
it is in position in the next few years to counter a post-nuclear 
rush toward proliferation. We are unlikely to have the luxury of 
time to put together a response after nuclear weapons are used.
Will nuclear use make nuclear war-fighting more thinkable and 
hence make U.S. nuclear weapons vital for more than deterring 
potential future rivalries from Russia and China? The United 
States, following the most recent round of strategic arms 
reduction with Russia, wants to keep considerable numbers of 
nuclear warheads in storage rather than destroying them. This may 
be a way of reconciling the goal of a reduced U.S.-Russian 
strategic nuclear balance while still retaining enough nuclear 
weapons to overawe potential competitors. The United States will 
likely need to develop a broad spectrum of new policies to 
maintain the viability of the current goal of limiting nuclear 
proliferation, if the utility of nuclear weapons has been 
demonstrated by combat use.
The United States today uses the spectrum of policy tools ” 
bilateral and multilateral ” to show potential nuclear 
proliferators that they will have less, rather than more, security if 
they build a nuclear capability. The 1994 agreement with North 
Korea was intended to apply this approach to that member of the 
"axis of evil." Saddam has seemingly rejected any approach short 
of the use of force to check his nuclear ambitions. It is certainly in 
the U.S. interest that nuclear weapons be limited, but also that 
they remain unused. For, if they are used, among the many things 
the United States will have to build afresh is a new approach to 
counter nuclear proliferation. That means we will have to have the 
tools ” conceptual as well as actual ” ready in advance.
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