24 December 2010By Greg Mello
What began as a business-as-usual replacement for a
Cold War arms treaty, and then became a major
legislative challenge for the Obama Administration,
was finally ratified by the U.S. Senate today after
unusually-involved negotiations with Senate
Republicans. New START is a force-affirmation treaty,
designed to clarify, but not change or disarm, U.S.
and Russian nuclear arms. There is no disarmament
required by the treaty. There is no indication that it
is a "first step" toward "further" "disarmament."
These negotiations resulted in extensive commitments
by the Administration to new spending and upgrades to
U.S. strategic armaments, including nuclear weapons
and nuclear weapons infrastructure, missile defense
research, development, and deployments, and continued
development of conventional global strike weapons --
much of which is applicable to nuclear delivery
systems as well, being currently barred only by
(mutable) law.
Ultra-accurate submarine-launched ballistic missile
delivery systems have already been developed (but not
deployed) under this last program.
The full cost of this treaty cannot yet be assessed,
as not all the details of understandings reached have
been made public, and the full import of some which
have depends on future decisions and events. Just this
week, and on top of announcements of two major
increases in nuclear weapons spending, President Obama
promised four senators (including two Democrats) that
nuclear weapons complex spending would be exempt from
any future fiscal austerity measures that might
otherwise apply to appropriations in the Energy and
Water subcommittees. The prior increases are posted
here and analyzed here and elsewhere at www.lasg.org.
The long struggle to ratify the treaty, and its huge
final cost in the very coin of arms control which the
treaty purports to advance, signals just how weak the
Cold War arms control consensus has become. Prospects
for ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty
(CTBT), for example, appear nil for the foreseeable
future. The U.S. will ratify this treaty, if it does,
only when its progressive ratification by other states
has reached a point of embarrassment wholly
incompatible with U.S. geostrategic ambitions.
The way forward for arms controllers is not clear.
Russia has made clear on numerous occasions that it
has no intention of pursuing further nuclear cuts and
has halted the financially-driven erosion of its
nuclear forces. With Russia now the world's largest
oil producer and the supplier of a controlling
fraction of natural gas to Europe -- a fraction that
is expected to grow considerably in the coming years
-- Russia is not the weak negotiating partner that it
was during, say, the START II negotiations. The
reality of Russian power -- and U.S. weakness
vis-a-vis military operations in the oil- and gas-rich
regions south of Russia -- was not lost on Republican
ratification opponents.
While on their face most of the Republican objections
to ratification appeared foolish and ill-informed,
these objections also conveyed a deep unease about the
future of American global power, which is hardly
misplaced.
The makeup of the incoming House and Senate (112th) is
likely to be much more hostile to arms control than
the (111th) Congress now concluding.
Looking ahead, prospects for conventional arms control
appear worse. There are 23 Democratic Senate seats up
for election in 2012, including 2 independents who
caucus with the Democrats, compared to only 10
Republican seats. In 2014 Democrats are currently
expected to have 20 seats up for election, and
Republicans 13, although obviously this could change.
For these and other reasons, prospects for
conventional arms control measures appear bleak for
the foreseeable future.
At the same time fresh and far more severe crises
are looming, which, in their earliest manifestations,
have already begun to capture Congress's (and voters')
attention.
The implications for the New Mexico laboratories
are complex. As noted here, they will suffer from an
unprecedented infusion of cash -- about six times the
total scale of the Manhattan Project in New Mexico,
measured in constant dollars. But will this bring
better morale, better science, better community
relations, a more wholesome community in Los Alamos --
or even better stockpile management? That is very far
from assured. The reverse, I think, is very likely
true. The best days of Los Alamos are in the past, and
if the day ever dawns when excavation begins on the
giant plutonium complex slated to cost a factor of ten
more any federal or state project ever conceived for
New Mexico, save the Interstate Highways, it will be a
dark day.
As Robert Oppenheimer put it on the 16th of October,
1945, "If atomic bombs are to be added as new weapons
to the arsenals of a warring world, or to the arsenals
of nations preparing for war, then the time will come
when mankind will curse the names of Los Alamos and
Hiroshima. The people must unite, or they will
perish."
Now we know that it may or not be atomic weaponry
which kills them, but rather the distraction they have
brought, and misprioritization of scarce resources
they incur. Today's treaty ratification is not an
occasion of joy for the world, but rather a somber
warning of the failure of our political system to
understand and defend against the true dangers we
face.
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