President Bush’s May 1 speech outlined his vision of a new
strategic framework to replace the increasingly inadequate, if not
outmoded, concepts borne of Cold War bilateral confrontation
between the United States and the Soviet Union. Although this new
framework still has deterrence at its core, it includes several
additional features, most notably, ballistic missile defenses (BMD).
The speech confirmed what already was a virtual certainty: the
United States is determined to proceed with missile defenses. With
the previous Clinton administration and the majority of both
houses of Congress already on record in support of BMD, for all
practical purposes, the domestic political debate on that
fundamental question is – or at least ought to be – over. The
muted response to the Bush speech in Europe and Asia, from our
allies, Russia, and China, can be traced to an acknowledgement of
this political reality.
At the same time, it is worth emphasizing that the Bush speech
is a broad outline, not a detailed plan or finished proposal. It
articulates several premises, principles, and objectives, but also
leaves a great number of blanks to be filled in. As such, it can
be viewed as an initial set of parameters within which to conduct
the “real consultations” that have been promised, not only
internationally, but also with the Congress and the American
people.
In that spirit, what follows are some of the implications and
conclusions that can be derived from the current debate and added
to the set of parameters to guide future consultations.
The ballistic missile threat is real and missile defenses
are part of the response to that threat. Even Russian
President Putin conceded these points in his recent exchange
with NATO Secretary General George Robertson. That said, as
President Bush’s May 1 speech noted, defenses are only one
part of a larger, yet-to-be articulated strategy to respond to
the proliferation of ballistic missiles. Moreover, ballistic
missiles are not the only threat we face. Indeed, the deployment
of effective missile defenses could well steer would-be
proliferators away from ballistic missiles and toward other
delivery means (e.g., covertly deployed cruise missiles) for
which we also lack effective defenses. What remains to be
determined is what priority BMD should be given in the
competition for scarce defense dollars, and how other elements
of the strategy can ease the demand placed on missile defenses.
Missile defenses would not change the existential
strategic nuclear deterrence that continues to exist between the
United States and Russia and, to a lesser extent, the United
States and China. What is changing is (a) the growing
proliferation of ballistic missile capabilities to other
countries, and (b) the emerging technical capability to defend
against the relatively small number of relatively
unsophisticated missiles these countries are likely to possess.
What missile defenses would add is the prospect that any such
attack would be futile as well as suicidal.
It follows that the objective of missile defenses should
be to defend against attacks by rogue states. Politically
and strategically, these are the emerging threats that not only
we face, but also our allies and former adversaries confront. As
such, they provide a basis for cooperation that transcends the
habits of thought and action left over from the Cold War.
Moreover, as a practical matter, this is all we will likely to
be able to do technically, because countries like Russia and
China will have the economic and technological wherewithal to
overwhelm any defenses we might deploy.
For strategic, conceptual, and political reasons, the line
between “national missile defenses” (NMD) and “theater
missile defenses” (TMD) should be erased. First, we would
not be appreciably better off if we could defend ourselves
against nuclear blackmail by rogue states, but our friends and
allies – to say nothing of our own forward-deployed forces –
could not. Second, the ballistic missile threat faced by our
allies and our forward-deployed forces is both larger and more
urgent than that confronting the U.S. homeland. It would make no
sense to rush to defend against more distant threats while
neglecting the clear and present missile dangers we face. Third,
there is likely, in any case, to be substantial technical and
operational overlap between “theater” and “national”
defenses, and drawing distinctions between them introduces both
needless confusion and inefficiencies.
Russian and Chinese cooperation or opposition could make
the missile defense job vastly easier or considerably more
difficult. On the one hand, Moscow and Beijing could use
their influence and take other actions to reduce proliferation,
making the missile defense job easier. (For example, the size
and character of the ballistic missile threat posed by a North
Korea or an Iran presumably would have a bearing on how we
proceed with our missile defense deployments.) On the other
hand, they could proliferate technologies and capabilities that
rogue states could use to defeat our missile defenses. Indeed,
they could play a major role in the proliferation of rogue
states that threaten our interests. Put simply, one key to the
success of our missile defense efforts will be how Russia and
China respond. For this reason and others, we have a major stake
in not simply settling for Moscow and Beijing’s sullen
acquiescence in the inevitable, but instead trying to find ways
to engage their concerns and elicit their active support.
If at all possible, the ABM Treaty should be revised or
replaced, rather than simply abandoned. Effective defenses
against rogue state attacks probably cannot be developed, and
surely cannot be deployed under the terms of the current Treaty.
But there is no intrinsic reason why limited missile defenses
cannot be deployed in the context of an updated agreement or new
set of arrangements that preserve the Treaty’s core objective
of stable deterrence among the major nuclear powers. The ABM
Treaty should not be regarded as some sort of sacred arms
control totem that must remain inviolate. At the same time, it
does have a significance in US relations not only with Russia,
but also with our allies and other countries that goes beyond
its specific legal obligations and strategic effects. It
therefore should not be abrogated unless and until it is
necessary to do so.
Taken together, these observations suggest an approach to
ballistic missile defenses that might be thought of as making a
virtue of three necessities:
- Recognizing the technical possibilities and limitations, the
stated purpose of missile defenses should be to help deal with
the proliferation threat posed by rogue state ballistic
missiles. In what would be little more than a statement of the
technically obvious, the goal of defending against Chinese, to
say nothing of Russian, ballistic missiles, should be
explicitly eschewed. Similarly, the capability to defend
against unauthorized or accidental launches of Chinese and
Russian missiles should be treated as the added, if somewhat
limited, benefit of a capability against rogue states rather
than as a separate requirement that will drive the technical
complexity and cost of the system.
- Recognizing that active allied cooperation will be a
practical necessity as well as a strategic requirement, there
should be an integrated approach – in funding, time-phasing,
doctrine, and diplomacy to – “national” missile defenses
and “theater” missile defenses. Put differently, a
“unilateral” U.S. approach to missile defenses would be at
least unwise, and might well prove to be infeasible.
- Recognizing that Russia and China will be a major part of
the problem if they are not a real part of the solution, a key
component of a missile defense strategy should be a serious
and sustained effort to engage both countries on fashioning a
common vision of the future, building a sense of a shared
fate, and cooperating on practical, tangible measures to deal
with future security threats we and they face together. A
beneficial by-product of engaging Russia and China in this way
might be a new set of arrangements to replace the ABM Treaty.
Even if a consensus were achieved on an approach along these
lines, the missile defense debate would be far from settled. A
number of questions would remain to be addressed, starting with
the relationship between missile defenses and strategic offensive
nuclear forces, and the implications of substantial reductions in
nuclear forces for a strategy in which defenses play an important
role. Then there are matters of technology, development programs,
and reconciling other defense priorities that will compete with
missile defense programs for defense dollars. Taking an
“integrated” approach to missile defenses requires engaging
questions about burden and technology sharing with our allies and
others. Finally, there are questions about how missile defenses
fit into the larger strategy to counter the rogue state threat,
and how that strategy will adapt to the countermoves that rogue
states can be expected to make in response to missile defenses.
But to the extent that common ground can be found, the ensuing
debate will be characterized by more light than just heat, and the
outcome more likely to advance U.S. national security interests.