Abstract: Force numbers and diversity matter because flexibility and resilience are key to the credibility of U.S. forces for deterrence and assurance. This was true in the past and is even more so now. New START’s limits, including on some U.S. conventional options, will require U.S. force reductions and constrain U.S. strategic force flexibility and diversity. The most important question in this regard is whether U.S. forces in the future will retain sufficient flexibility and resilience to be credible in conditions that are less optimistic than those assumed by the Administration in its New START analyses. An important consideration in this regard is that the treaty’s common ceilings require unilateral nuclear force reductions by the United States; Russia’s aging nuclear launchers already are below the treaty’s limits. Nevertheless, New START’s loopholes and extreme permissiveness will not prevent the renewal of Russian strategic forces over time; the Russian nuclear modernization programs for such a renewal already are apparent. A treaty that will reduce U.S. flexibility and resilience while requiring no real Russian cuts now nor preclude a future Russian strategic renewal merits close Senate scrutiny.
I would like to begin by observing that reductions in the number and diversity of U.S. forces can matter greatly because the credibility of our forces is dependent on their flexibility to provide a spectrum of deterrent options and their resilience to adjust in a timely way to changes in the threat environment. This flexibility and resilience, in turn, is determined to a great extent by the number and diversity of our strategic forces.
A finite and narrow “assured destruction”–type deterrent, such as that popularized by Secretary of Defense McNamara during the 1960s, lacks this flexibility and resilience and is likely to be incredible against many of the limited, yet severe threats we and our allies may face. U.S. officials knew this full well during the Cold War; virtually all major nuclear policy documents declassified since the 1960s emphasized the deterrence requirement for flexibility and multiple strategic force options.[1] That need is particularly important today because the contemporary threat environment can shift rapidly and surprisingly. In one crisis we may need one set of strategic capabilities to deter credibly; in a different crisis, a different set of strategic capabilities may be necessary. Assuring allies credibly may necessitate still different types of strategic forces. And when an attack cannot be deterred, an altogether different set of forces may be necessary to defend.
A finite, narrow definition of adequacy for our forces is very convenient for those who see reducing the number of nuclear weapons as the priority goal: It mandates minimalist U.S. nuclear force requirements and provides superficial justification for a claim that U.S. deterrence missions can be met with much-reduced force levels and minimal verification measures. If the requirements for deterrence and assurance missions are cast in finite, minimalist terms, it is indeed a challenge to identify reductions that are too low or a verification standard that is too lax; almost nothing in this regard will be found to be “militarily significant.” Yet, dumbing down U.S. force requirements for deterrence and assurance so as to be compatible with some politically preferred number of weapons is a risky game. Numbers should follow security requirements, which may be different from political expediency or negotiability. If we want a credible U.S. deterrent across a spectrum of severe threats, including, for example nuclear and biological threats to allies, U.S. forces must have the quantity and diversity necessary to be flexible and resilient. The 2009 report by the bipartisan Strategic Posture Commission, America’s Strategic Posture, emphasizes this contemporary U.S. requirement given the fluid threat environment.[2]
Understanding this requirement is the necessary starting point for any review of New START. The material question regarding New START in general is whether the treaty is compatible with the flexibility and resilience essential to the credibility of U.S. forces over the long term—not simply whether we could retain “assured second-strike capabilities” as is emphasized by the Administration. Under New START, would the U.S. force reductions threaten the necessary flexibility and resilience of our forces in the context of future plausible challenges, including Russian force deployments (with or without Russian cheating)? We must not allow enthusiasm for quantitative nuclear reductions to degrade the flexibility and resilience of our forces and return us to old discarded finite and narrow deterrence standards. Our ability to deter and assure credibly would be undermined. Instead, if our force numbers are to move lower, we must be careful to modernize our forces with the goal of advancing the flexibility and resilience that helps make them credible. As the late great deterrence theorist, Herman Kahn, often noted, “The objective of nuclear-weapons policy should not be solely to decrease the number of weapons in the world, but to make the world safer—which is not necessarily the same thing.”[3]
My conclusion is that New START raises some concerns in this regard.
For example, a recent Administration report on verification apparently emphasizes that “any” Russian cheating “would have little effect on the assured second-strike capabilities of U.S. strategic forces....”[4] This claim suggests that an “assured devastating second-strike capability” is adequate for U.S. strategic forces, and therefore that no plausible level of Russian cheating could have a serious effect on our ability to deter or assure.[5] Yet, as noted, every Republican and Democratic Administration since the 1960s has concluded that an “assured devastating second-strike” standard alone is inadequate for U.S. deterrence purposes because it requires little or none of the flexibility and resilience so important for credible deterrence and assurance.
Limits on U.S. Forces
The treaty would limit U.S. strategic force flexibility and resilience because it requires sizeable reductions in the number of U.S. strategic nuclear launchers, and would limit some types of strategic conventional forces for prompt global strike (PGS). Administration officials have said, “The treaty does not constrain our ability to develop and deploy non-nuclear prompt global strike capabilities.”[6]
In fact, New START would restrict deployment of U.S. conventional PGS options based on existing ICBMs or sea-based ballistic missiles. These would be limited under New START’s ceiling of 700 deployed launchers.[7] And, we would have to reduce our strategic nuclear force launchers below 700 on a 1:1 basis for each of these conventional PGS systems deployed. The treaty would thus limit our flexibility and resilience in this area. In general, a 1:1 replacement of nuclear forces by conventional forces has understandably and specifically been rejected for deterrence purposes by senior U.S. military leaders.[8]
Administration officials have said, nevertheless, that so limiting these conventional PGS options is acceptable assuming there is a need for only a small number of such systems.[9] Unfortunately, there can be no certainty behind that assumption given the many different and now-unknown threats that will arise in New START’s 10-15–year timeframe. Perhaps the option of deploying many such conventional PGS systems will be critical for deterrence, assurance, or defense. Under New START we would be mightily constrained from doing so because of the treaty’s limits and its required 1:1 trade-off with our nuclear forces
This particular limit on U.S. flexibility might at least be bounded with Senate guidance that there be no further negotiated restrictions on advanced U.S. non-nuclear PGS systems and a requirement for a firm commitment to the development and deployment, as soon as technically and operationally sound, of conventional PGS capabilities that are not limited by treaty.
In addition, New START’s force limits do not allow “more [capability] than is needed” for deterrence under current planning.[10] Leaving little or no such margin may be risky when force flexibility and diversity is necessary to deter and assure across a range of threats.
Senior U.S. military leaders have noted in open testimony that New START would indeed allow sufficient U.S. strategic force flexibility.[11] The analysis behind this important conclusion reportedly was predicated on three key assumptions: 1) U.S. planning guidance for strategic forces would remain the same; 2) there would be no requests for an increase in forces; and 3) Russia would be compliant with New START.[12]
Would the treaty allow sufficient U.S. flexibility and resilience to adjust as necessary for credible deterrence and assurance if one or all of those starting optimistic assumptions do not hold, as is plausible?
For example, what if Russia again decides to violate its treaty commitments? What if relations with China and Russia return to a crisis pitch, and they express more severe nuclear threats to our allies or to us? What if Iranian deployment of nuclear weapons and missiles throws the entire Middle East into an unprecedented security crisis? What if the apparent nuclear nexus of Burma, Iran, North Korea, and Syria poses unprecedented threats to our allies or our forces abroad?[13] U.S. planning and force requirements might have to change with any and all of these unwanted developments that could arise during New START’s tenure. What new quantitative or qualitative strategic force requirements might arise as a result for credible deterrence, assurance, or defense, and would New START preserve the necessary U.S. force flexibility and resilience to meet those requirements? These fundamental questions regarding the treaty and international security appear to remain unanswered.
Valuable Strategic Triad
More simply, will the U.S. at least develop and deploy the diverse strategic force structure that remains possible under the treaty and could help preserve U.S. force flexibility and resilience? The traditional U.S. triad of bombers, ICBMs, and sea-based missiles—now buttressed by missile defenses and the potential for new non-nuclear PGS capabilities—can be extremely valuable in this regard because the diversity of offensive and defensive options helps provide the flexibility and resilience to adjust to a multitude of different threats and circumstances.
Fortunately, the Obama Administration has expressed its intention to support the triad, missile defense deployment, and conventional PGS. At this point, however, there is no apparent, concrete Administration commitment to advanced conventional PGS deployment or to replacing the aging ICBM and bomber legs of the triad, including the aged air-launched cruise missile. This fosters concern that enthusiasm for force reductions could come at the expense of the long-standing requirements for force diversity, flexibility, and resilience, and take refuge in finite and narrow standards of adequacy that more easily justify reductions than support credible U.S. strategies for deterrence and assurance. If our numbers are to decline further, we must take care to ensure continued flexibility and resilience—whether through traditional means or innovations.
Bombers have great inherent flexibility and resilience, and the weapons counting rules for bombers under New START are extremely permissive. But these counting rules will be advantageous for us only if we modernize our bomber force. While, according to open sources, Russia has decided to build a new strategic bomber and apparently has a new long-range air-launched nuclear cruise missile near deployment,[14] the Obama Administration plans to cut U.S. nuclear-capable bombers by more than one-third under New START and has made no apparent commitment to replace the venerable B-52 or to deploy a new air-launched cruise missile.[15] Similarly, the Administration has announced that it will reduce the number of U.S. ICBM launchers by at least 30 under New START,[16] while Russia is deploying new MIRVed mobile ICBMs (mobile intercontinental ballistic missiles with multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles), and has decided for a new heavy MIRVed ICBM as is permitted under New START.
Over time, this New START–inspired combination of U.S. launcher reductions and permitted Russian MIRVed heavy ICBMs could again challenge the survivability of the U.S. ICBM and bomber legs of the triad—a situation long recognized as highly “destabilizing.” If their survivability is again put at risk, so too will be much of the triad’s flexibility and the credibility of U.S. forces to deter, assure, and defend.
Hard decisions will need to be made during the life of this treaty if we are to advance flexible offensive and defensive capabilities and a resilient force structure. How much confidence can we have that the Administration will take the necessary strategic modernization steps given its highest nuclear priority of non-proliferation and movement toward a nuclear-free world, its commitment to further negotiated reductions, and its presumption against any new nuclear warheads?[17] Credible assurances and the necessary strategic modernization budgets tied to New START would be helpful in this regard. A solid U.S. commitment to bomber and cruise missile modernization, Minuteman III life extension with enhanced survivability measures, and missile defenses of all ranges could help provide this confidence.
No Real Limits on Russia
Concern about New START’s reduction of U.S. force flexibility and resilience—however modest or significant—also might be eased if the treaty’s ceilings on Russian forces actually would reduce the threats we might face. But, according to numerous Russian open sources, New START’s ceilings are of little real consequence for Russia because Russia’s aged Cold War strategic launchers already have been reduced below New START’s ceilings, and will decline further with or without the treaty—and Russia’s comprehensive post–Cold War nuclear modernization programs are moving forward, albeit slowly at this point. Aleksey Arbatov, the former Deputy Chairman of the Duma Defense Committee, notes, “The new treaty is an agreement on reducing the American and not the Russian [strategic nuclear forces]. In fact, the latter will be reduced in any case because of the mass removal from the order of battle of obsolete arms and the one-at-a-time introduction of new systems.”[18] Prior to the New START negotiations, Russian open sources already projected that by 2012 Russian strategic nuclear forces could have as few as 406 launchers and fewer than 1,500 warheads—well below New START ceilings using its counting rules.[19] The point was made most succinctly by Dr. Sergei Rogov, Director of the USA and Canada Institute in Moscow: “We will not have to reduce anything prematurely. In effect, the ceilings established by the new START Treaty do not force us to reduce currently available strategic offensive forces… Only the United States will have to conduct reductions….”[20] Russian defense expert Mikhail Barabonov bluntly makes the same point: “The truth is, Russia’s nuclear arsenal is already at or even below the new ceilings. At the time of the signing of the treaty, Russia had a total of just 640 strategic delivery vehicles—only 571 of them deployed... It therefore becomes evident that Russia needs no actual reductions to comply. If anything, it may need to bring some of its numbers up to the new limits, not down.”[21]
New START’s common ceilings essentially appear to require unilateral reductions by the United States. Russian officials and analysts have long celebrated this situation, while some U.S. officials and treaty proponents have acknowledged it only recently.[22] In this context, it is difficult to take seriously the notion that the treaty’s supposed reductions for Russia justify its prospective limitations on U.S. flexibility and resilience.
Even though Russia’s forces are declining dramatically with or without New START, does not the treaty provide solid barriers against the re-emergence of Russian strategic forces? Unfortunately, no. New START neither requires real Russian reductions nor does it provide hard limits on a renewed buildup of Russian strategic nuclear forces; nor does it create a verification regime sure to detect a buildup early on. These are troubling points.
How can it be so? New START contains sufficient loopholes and permissive counting rules to allow Russia to deploy far beyond the treaty’s 1,550 strategic nuclear warheads ceiling within the terms of the treaty if Russia finds the financial resources to do so. In fact, according to a report by the official news agency of the Russian Federation, RIA Novosti, Russia could deploy 2,100 strategic nuclear weapons under the treaty—well above the putative 1,550 warhead ceiling.[23] There are avenues that would allow Russia to deploy many more than 2,100 warheads under the treaty.
This may be significant over time because Russia’s highest defense procurement priority is the modernization of its strategic nuclear forces.[24] According to Russian open sources, Russia has a new strategic nuclear air-launched cruise missile near deployment, is MIRVing its new mobile ICBMs (the RS-24), and has committed to deploy at least one new strategic bomber, a new 5,000 km-range submarine-launched cruise missile, and a new heavy ICBM. There also has been interest expressed in the Russian press for a new rail-mobile ICBM and a new air-launched ICBM—neither of which, according to some open Russian commentary, would necessarily have to be counted under the treaty’s force ceilings.
The bottom line is that aging forces and Russia’s production and financial problems are causing reductions in Russia’s force numbers precipitously—with or without New START. But, if and when Russia has the necessary financial and production capacity, New START will not prevent Russia from deploying new forces well beyond New START’s specified ceilings.
In sum, enthusiasm for further reductions in force numbers should not drive a retreat to finite and narrow standards of U.S. strategic force adequacy. Force numbers and diversity do matter because flexibility and resilience are key to the credibility of our forces for deterrence and assurance. This was true in the past and is even more so today. New START’s limits, including on some U.S. conventional PGS options, will require U.S. force reductions and constrain U.S. strategic force flexibility and diversity. Yet, the treaty’s ceilings appear not to require real Russian nuclear force reductions in the near term, and its loopholes and extreme permissiveness would not prevent the resurgence of Russian strategic capabilities over time—the beginning of which already is visible. Unfortunately, the Obama Administration has not committed to the modernization of U.S. strategic forces necessary to ensure their continued viability, flexibility, and resilience at lower force levels. Such a commitment is critical with or without New START, but in its absence moving forward with New START could further undermine U.S. and allied security.
New START and Missile Defense
Many others have commented on New START’s connections to missile defense, so I will only summarize my own conclusions here. Senior Administration officials initially said about missile defense that, “There are no constraints of any kind in the New START Treaty,”[25] and, “The treaty does nothing to constrain missile defenses...there is no limit or constraint on what the United States can do with its missile defense systems.”[26] Such Administration statements simply are false. New START includes limitations on U.S. missile defense options. Judgments may differ regarding the significance of these limitations, but there should be no further denials that New START includes them.
For example, Article 5, paragraph 3 of the treaty prohibits the United States from converting ICBM or sea-based missile launchers for missile defense purposes. The Administration has said that this is not a significant limit on U.S. defenses because the United States has no plans for such conversions.[27] Yet, U.S. civilian and military leaders examined such options in the past and have said publicly they found them technically credible and of interest. New START—a treaty that is supposed to have no restrictions on missile defense—would now preclude this option from the possible plans of future administrations.
U.S. missile defense options need to be protected, particularly given Russia’s long-standing goal to veto U.S. missile defense and the Administration’s apparent commitment to further negotiations. Toward this end, the Senate could direct the President to make more clear to Russia than now is reflected in the pertinent U.S. Unilateral Statement that the United States recognizes no treaty limits on missile defense beyond those in Article 5, paragraph 3, and that the U.S. will not agree to any further negotiated limits of any kind on U.S. missile defense options.
In addition, New START establishes the Bilateral Consultative Commission (BCC) and gives it broad authority to “agree upon such additional measures as may be necessary to improve the viability and effectiveness of the Treaty.”[28] Missile defense is part of the subject matter of the treaty and its protocol, and the BCC is authorized specifically to discuss the unique distinguishing features of missile defense launchers and interceptors and make “viability and effectiveness” changes in the treaty. These could be done in secret and without Senate advice and consent.[29] Such institutions are not supposed to make substantive changes in the terms of treaties. But START I’s Joint Compliance and Inspection Commission (JCIC) served with a more limited scope, and appears to have made significant changes in START’s terms without Senate advice and consent. This past precedent is not comforting in this regard.
The Senate might find it particularly valuable to insist on continuous and complete visibility into the ongoing workings of the BCC. This could be particularly helpful to ensure that no new limits on missile defense emerge, without Senate advice and consent, from the BCC’s potentially secret proceedings.
—Keith B. Payne, Ph.D., is Professor and Head, Graduate Department of Defense and Strategic Studies at Missouri State University. These remarks are based on his testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee on July 27, 2010.