The INF treaty-back into the Morass?
Jones, David T.
For more than a quarter century-actually 27 years-the INF Treaty
has been regarded as a text book case of successful arms control
negotiation. The Treaty (technically Treaty between the United States of
America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics on the Elimination
of Their Intermediate-Range and Shorter-Range Missiles) is a pivotal
success in having addressed an existential challenge between initially
intractable opponents.
Some Background
In a thumbnail sketch, the U.S.-NATO Alliance responded to massive
Soviet deployments of intermediate range SS-20 ballistic missiles in the
late 1970s-early 1980s with counter-deployments of U.S. Pershing
ballistic missiles and ground-launched cruise missiles (GLCMS). When
agreeing to such U.S. deployments at a combined Defense and Foreign
Ministers meeting in December 1979, however, the Alliance also required
Washington to negotiate with Moscow under the hypothesis that the
Soviets withdraw their SS-20s and hence negate the need for U.S. missile
deployments. Thus the aphorism of the "dual track decision,"
postulating negotiations and deployments.
For Moscow, the proposal was risible, essentially a offer to trade
a bucket of diamonds for a bucket of ashes, and Soviet-U.S. negotiations
in Geneva were ritualized shadow boxing until the U.S. could demonstrate
(and the Alliance accept) on the ground missile deployments. Ultimately,
the U.S. based missiles in the UK, Germany, Italy, Belgium, and the
Netherlands, but only after each basing country fought an election at
least partly based on opposition (stoked by Moscow) to any deployments.
Failure to agree to U.S. deployments would have broken the NATO
Alliance, a key Soviet objective of the original SS-20 deployments.
Consequently, the period was characterized by intensive, persistent
consultation within NATO and with every NATO capital individually and
public and private reassurance from Washington to NATO capitals and
publics-a casebook classic of effective intra-Alliance negotiations and
public relations diplomacy which generated and cemented Alliance
solidarity.
Following our successful deployments and the advent of Mikhail
Gorbachev, who replaced the revolving door sequence of
on-their-deathbeds septuagenarian leaders, Moscow recalculated its
options. INF deployments did not fit the reset that Gorbachev was
projecting for Soviet foreign policy. It was the era of glasnost and
perestroika, and SS-20s didn't equate with propaganda touting a
common European homeland.
It is quietly recognized that without Gorbachev, there would have
been no INF Treaty--or certainly not one as comprehensive and as far
reaching as ultimately negotiated. Nevertheless, the West was
justifiably skeptical initially about Gorbachev's intentions, as we
had in fact never reached an agreement with the USSR that had endured.
And, unsurprisingly, there were significant elements of the Alliance and
USG politico-military spectrum that, having endured the political pain
of fighting for the deployments and cognizant of their military
capabilities, were loath to eliminate them. Still, after a variety of
back and forth Treaty proposals, hypothesizing inter alia a residual
force, Washington and Moscow agreed to eliminate all SS-20s, and
subsequently also agreed to eliminate all shorter range missiles. The
consequence was agreement to destroy all ground launched missiles in the
500 to 5,500 kilometer range band. The total elimination decision vastly
simplified the inspection/verification regime epitomized by President
Reagan's aphorism "Trust but verify."
The subsequent inspection/verification arrangement was
unprecedented in complexity and intrusiveness, including inspections to
eliminate possible cheating scenarios, e.g., producing SS-20s in the
guise of SS-25s.
Agreement was epitomized by the iconic photo of 8 December 1987
with Presidents Reagan and Gorbachev signing the Treaty in Washington.
The staged sequences of inspections and verification of destroyed
missiles worked smoothly with the last of the 2,692 missiles eliminated
in June 1991 and the conclusion in May, 2001 of inspection regimes in
the Soviet Union, the European basing countries, and the United States.
Some Foreground
So all's well that ends well? Unfortunately, not.
The INF Treaty was always potentially hostage to political and
technological evolution. It depended, at least somewhat, on continuation
of missile development and deployments that closely maintained 1987
levels. Or at least on the perception that these balances had not
changed significantly. It depended on maintaining substantial strategic
missile numbers (with the Soviets/Russians implicitly recognizing that
you can always "shoot short" if you want to cover targets in
the INF target bands). And it depended most of all on Russian leadership
with a continuing commitment to arms control generally and the INF
Treaty specifically.
All of these requirements have eroded during a quarter century.
Most obviously, a number of countries have developed INF range missiles;
specifically, they are part of the inventory of China, North Korea,
India, and Pakistan. Others, such as Israel and Iran, are arguably in
that category. Although China also has strategic range missiles, its INF
missiles remain a useful part of its defense/security array.
The substantial reductions in U.S. and Russian strategic missile
forces, through the START Treaties, while arms control virtuous in their
own right, may well have left Moscow less confident that its remaining
forces can cover all potential/prospective enemies on its borders. INF
systems, particularly cruise missiles, are cheaper than strategic
ballistic systems; it could be tempting for the Russians to investigate
the margins of INF ranges.
And Putin is no Gorbachev. Indeed, Putin seems to regard Gorbachev
as a cowardly weakling, who presided over the greatest Russian national
disaster of the 20th century by permitting the USSR to disintegrate into
shard states. Putin has many objectives, and restoring Soviet greatness
is certainly one of them. And he has, therefore, no special incentive to
preserve Gorbachev's benchmark agreement: the INF Treaty. For him,
it is a matter of convenience rather than conviction that the Treaty
should be retained.
The groundwork has been laid for INF Treaty violations.
Thus for well over a year, we have been seeing nonspecific but
ostensibly authoritative reports in the media that the Russians have
violated the INF Treaty. Some of the commentary has been from
conservative sources that have no love for Russians of any ilk and are
happy to embarrass the Obama administration with intimations that it is
weak on dealing with Moscow. Historically, we have complained regularly
about violations of our assorted arms control agreements with Moscow.
The current reports are carefully vague, but include information to the
effect that USG officials have brought the purported violations to
Russian attention-and the Russians have flatly denied such. We have also
briefed NATO allies on our concerns, but to no discernible Alliance
public reaction (certainly no "viewing with alarm").
In July 2014 the United States formally declared Russia to be in
violation of the INF Treaty by flight-testing a proscribed GLCM of INF
range and then included this charge in the annual arms control
compliance report. We called for consultations; the Russians have denied
the missile is a violation and claimed it to be a SLCM.
What is the real nature of the violations? Again, vague, but
presumably more technical than blatant. The Russians are not deploying
INF range, tested, ballistic or cruise missiles along their borders.
There is no equivalent, not even a scintilla of such, to the threat
Moscow mounted in the mid-1970s when the Soviets were deploying SS-20s
by the score (and retaining ostensibly antiquated SS-4 and SS-5 systems
that the SS-20s were supposedly replacing). These SS-20 deployments were
clearly designed to intimidate Alliance members and throw into question
USG commitment to European defense.
Another element of the current rumor stream implies that the
Russians have designed and constructed a ground based cruise missile
whose parameters indicate that it has INF range-but not tested it at INF
ranges. Or that what they are testing has been designated a SLCM.
Perhaps, one could view it as the equivalent of noting that a colleague
has mounted a Maserati engine in a Toyota. An observer knows/knows that
the vehicle is capable of 191 mph, but it has only been driven within
the speed limits. The owner professes respect for the legal speed limit
constraints but says that how he builds his cars is none of your
business.
So What to Do?
Do Nothing. Easy, simple, low key. It is a far cry from determining
there has been a violation of the Treaty (subject to explanation and
redress) to withdrawing from the Treaty. After all, the purported
violation(s) of the Treaty are not blatant. There has been no public
U.S. hue-and-cry over Russian action and no military or political
imperative to take action. Even though "reset" has palatably
failed, we have larger concerns in play with Moscow ranging from
thwarting further aggression in Ukraine to orchestrating withdrawal
Afghanistan to derailing the Iranian nuclear weapons program to riding
Russian rockets to the international space station. If not completely
looking the other way regarding their INF actions, direct confrontation
may be counterproductive. The Russians may still be amenable to
negotiation and revision; it would not be the first time that we've
struggled with differences of interpretation of elements of our
bilateral agreements. Although Moscow-Putin has only a nominal
commitment to the Treaty and could withdraw from its restrictions, it is
useful for them to maintain it and avoid roiling relations with
Europeans and Asians who welcomed the Treaty and still view it as a
useful limitation of Russian power.
Doing nothing plays soft ball when the Russians appear to be
playing hard ball. Announced 2010 Russian military strategy of early
nuclear use to compensate for perceived conventional force weakness
while the United States has raised its nuclear threshold for strategic
deterrence can appear to be weakness.
Withdraw from the Treaty. Although of "unlimited
duration," the INF Treaty, as is the case from all treaties,
permits parties to withdraw from it. Article XV in boilerplate language
permits either Party to exercise its "national sovereignty"
and claim that "extraordinary events.have jeopardized its supreme
interests." And then give six months notice announcing its
withdrawal.
One could argue that this would be the clean, clear way to end an
agreement that is no longer serving USG interests in constraining
Russian action on INF weapons. Of course, USG ability to convince anyone
that Russian violations are of such dimension as to justify terminating
the Treaty is questionable. To put it politely, Washington's
"street cred" on foreign affairs is not notably high. We would
appear as if we were looking for a fight to distract from more proximate
foreign policy failures.
And, such action, minus overwhelming proof of Russian violations,
would simply free Moscow to do openly what we believe it is now doing
covertly. Moreover, there is simply no sense of Russian threat in the
United States or in Europe. Russian ICBMs could still devastate the
United States, but we no longer believe such a threat is credible.
Europeans do not believe Russian action in Ukraine and other Putinesque
nibbles along the Russian borders are existentially threatening. The
Russian army in Ukraine is not the 1988 Soviet Red Army whose ominous
tank armies left a generation of European/Alliance armed forces
cognizant they might have to fight outnumbered and win or resort to
nuclear war. Parallel the Russian INF Activity. In other words, dust off
the Pershing II missile blueprints, redesign it as the
"Eisenhower" and provide the missile with engines that will
easily handle INF ranges without testing at those distances. The
evolution of inertial guidance/satellite directed targeting makes it
unnecessary to do testing into INF ranges. We already have air and sea
based cruise missiles that could rapidly be deployed on land should such
prove of interest to us.
This approach need not be publicly announced but rather privately
communicated to Moscow and to key NATO allies. U.S. media will certainly
note (acting on adroit leaks) what we are doing. Initially, at least
such design experiments need not be particularly costly, which is not a
trivial point given egregious defense budget constraints.
Separately, to deflect the ritualistic charges from the European
Left that once again the USG is warmongering, we should implement
persistent consultations within the Alliance. You simply cannot consult
too often with NATO, and members incorporated into the Alliance since
the USSR collapse need special attention and stroking. Indeed, with the
most vital and influential Alliance members (UK, Germany, France,
Poland), we should provide high level, highly classified briefings
detailing the precise nature of our INF violation concerns. If not
obtaining agreement, we would at least get some credit for the
consultations. Augment Theater Air Defense in Europe. Following
Obama's election, part of our "reset" with Russia was de
facto cancellation of prospective air defense plans for Poland and Czech
Republic. These efforts were relatively far advanced under the Bush
administration with proposals to Moscow that they could share in the
effort designed to counter projected Iranian missile threats. Moscow
went ballistic (so to speak) over the proposals, and they were shelved
as a sop to "reset." It is not impossible to recreate the
designs-or perhaps simply outsource them to Tel Aviv, encouraging the
Israelis to offer Iron Dome hardware and expertise to former Warsaw Pact
members, now NATO allies, on the Russian periphery.
Try to Convince Key Europeans of Russian Violations.
This will be a hard sell-and probably one not worth trying to make.
Europeans do not believe they are threatened by Moscow. If they were
thinking of history at all this past year, it was to contemplate the
origins of World War I on its centennial; they saw no military parallels
in 2014.
Europeans are at their outer limits of confrontation by acceding to
economic sanctions to counter Putin's aggression in Ukraine and
seizure of Crimea. We are pleading for renewed defense expenditures, but
skeptical observers are not holding their breath Our best approach would
be to emphasize that INF violations are part of a pattern of Russian
recidivism that hark to the Cold War era. We want to avoid a
"CWII" and the best way to do so is to push back in areas that
appear most effective (economic sanctions) while being aware that
Russian military development/rearmament may demand NATO ripostes in the
medium-range future.
Conclusion.
The young infantry 2nd lieutenant's Fort Benning maxim was
"Don't just stand there; do something. Even if it is wrong, do
something." But we are not infantry officers. There is no need to
"do something" regarding the INF Treaty. We are not terribly
happy about it; the Treaty is not the bright, sparkling debutante that
came out in 1987. Nonetheless, though it may well look a bit shopworn
today, a realist sees that its utility is greater than not.