Real Disarmament Can't Start Without China

COMMENTARY Arms Control

Real Disarmament Can't Start Without China

Sep 23, 2010 2 min read
COMMENTARY BY

Former Senior Research Fellow, Center for National Defense

Peter researched and developed Heritage’s policy on weapons of mass destruction and counter proliferation.

Discussion of the U.S.-Russia Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty - aka New START - has so far pretty much skipped one very important consideration: China.

In the run-up to last week’s committee vote to send the treaty to the floor for ratification this fall, senators quite rightly debated whether New START overly restrains U.S. missile-defense options, has weak verification procedures, cuts too many U.S. missiles or warheads (relative to Russian reductions) or might affect nuclear North Korea and near-nuclear Iran.

But lawmakers haven’t yet fully faced the problem that, as we build down our strategic nuclear forces (by some 20 percent under New START) in the White House’s hopes that others will disarm, China is involved in a strategic buildup.

So, before there’s any final vote on an arms-control pact that would endure for the next 10 years, it’d be wise to give some thought to Beijing’s burgeoning bevy of bombs.

Basically, Beijing could become a nuclear peer competitor of Washington and Moscow in the not too distant future, in light of the expected arms cuts under New START.

It doesn’t end there.

China’s 2nd Artillery (nuclear forces) is reportedly building 3,000-plus miles of tunnels in central China, known as “the Underground Great Wall” - likely providing Beijing with an enhanced, land-based, second-strike capability. Naturally, China’s ICBMs are thought to be targeted at us.

But Beijing is also diversifying its nuclear capabilities by broadening its force structure into the traditional triad - missiles based not just on land but also on bombers and submarines.

China’s new class of strategic submarine may already carry its first sea-based ICBMs. And Beijing’s building another “boomer” sub class, too, significantly raising its nuclear-strike mobility and survivability while lowering detectability.

It’s also adding advanced strategic bombers to the mix. Analysts believe China is developing long-range cruise missiles for these aircraft, which may have both conventional and nuclear warheads.

Making matters more complex is China’s highly secretive, indeed opaque, stance on its nuclear forces. The People’s Liberation Army has a penchant for strategic denial and deception - and an unwillingness to talk about the issue officially.

That’s a real challenge to our intelligence and policy community, leaving lots of unanswered questions about China’s strategic doctrine, capabilities and intent as Beijing bolsters its armed forces while avoiding arms-control agreements.

As such, in considering New START, senators need to take time not only to consider the other salient questions about the deal - but also to figure China into their deliberations on a new strategic treaty with Russia.

 
Heritage Foundation senior fellow Peter Brookes is a former deputy assistant secretary of Defense.

First appeared in The Boston Herald

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