Ukraine Negotiations: No Fly Zone, Nukes, Neutrality, and Disarmament

From END Info 31 DOWNLOAD

Joseph Gerson, USA

Regardless of whether we agree with him or not, President Biden's statements that Vladimir Putin cannot remain in power and that Putin is a war criminal have compounded already complex negotiations to end Moscow's devastating and nationally self-defeating war of aggression.

Humanity will be sleepwalking to its doom unless the great powers negotiate nuclear disarmament, and to collaborate to stanch the climate chaos that haunts humanity's future.

With Russia's military advances in Ukraine stymied, and with the mounting death tolls, we are receiving contradictory reports about the state of Russian-Ukrainian diplomacy. Ukraine's lead negotiator Mykailo Podolyak reports that the negotiations with Moscow are "absolutely real", but that the Kremlin hasn't pulled back from its most ambitious war aims. Negotiations, he has said, could continue for months. Ukraine's Defense Intelligence, Brig. General Kyrylo Budanov is less optimistic, reporting that the negotiations are "vague and unpredictable". Turkey's President Erdogan, who has met with both the Russian and Ukrainian presidents in his efforts to mediate an end to the war, reports that negotiators have reached "understandings" about Ukraine and NATO, partial Ukrainian disarmament, collective security, and the use of the Russian language, but there have been no agreements on the future status of Crimea or the Donbas. And, contrary to Podolyak, the New York Times claims that Russia is signaling a change in its war goals, announcing that the "first stage of the operation" has been "mainly accomplished." While it "does not exclude continuing attacks on major Ukrainian cities, the Times reports that they are not Moscow's "primary objective". It contends that Russian forces will be concentrated on the "liberation of the Donbas."

Ukrainian and Russian lives will continue to be shattered until either a ceasefire or completion of successful negotiations are announced.

In recent months, I have been privileged to be a set of ears in a confidential series of track II discussions, initially designed to prevent the war and now to help frame diplomatic compromises that could end the bloodletting. Participants include former U.S., Russian and European officials—including military officers, advisors to their respective governments and scholars. A number of the participants communicate with their country's policy makers. A number of these people, despite their differences, have negotiated and otherwise worked together over many years. And even as emotions run high, the discourse is civil and "professional." While there could be unhappy professional consequences for some of the Western participants, one of the senior Russians has commented that "No new initiative comes without the risk of punishment."

This past week, as Ukrainian and Russian negotiators were meeting and other governments weighed in, one of these track II sessions was held to discuss the advocacy and dangers of a possible Western no-fly declaration, as well as what Ukrainian neutrality and disarmament would entail. With the exception of near unanimous opposition to the exceedingly dangerous possibility of a no-fly zone declaration, as described below, a range of possibilities were identified which hopefully will inform the diplomacy needed to end the war.

A No-Fly Zone and NATO "Peacekeepers"

While Russian forces grind away at Ukrainian resistance, there is glee in Washington that Moscow may have trapped itself in an Afghanistan-like quagmire. But one thing that thoughtful U.S. and Russian elites agree upon is that despite the ongoing negotiations, the situation may be as dangerous as during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Then the Kennedy Administration believed the odds were between a third and a half that the crisis would result in a thermonuclear exchange between the world's two most heavily armed nuclear powers.

Just as the United States has done at least thirty times during international crises and wars, Vladimir Putin has threatened the possible use of nuclear weapons and increased the alert status of his nuclear arsenal. In the words of former U.S. Strategic Command Chief, Admiral Charles Richard, the U.S. has used its strategic nuclear forces to "create the 'manoeuvre space' for us to project conventional military power strategically." This strategy works both ways. It has prevented the U.S. and NATO from establishing a no-fly zone over Ukraine to eliminate aerial support for Russian ground forces. As was the case during the Cuban missile crisis, nuclear alerts increase the danger of accidents, insubordinations, or miscalculations triggering the unimaginable. There are also fears that if the Russian military and President Putin find themselves on the defensive, in desperation Putin might fall back on attacking with chemical or low-yield nuclear weapons, risking escalation up the nuclear ladder.

Zelensky has repeatedly appealed for NATO to impose a no-fly zone, an appeal that has found resonance in Congress. Fortunately, thus far NATO leaders have bowed to the reality that enforcing a no-fly zone against Russia would inevitably trigger World War III, in the form of genocidal or omnicidal nuclear exchanges. Enforcing a no-fly zone would require attacking Russian anti-aircraft installations and shooting down Russian planes, to which Russia would respond in kind. Yet, in the track II discussion, a senior American warned that the longer the war continues, and as the Russian military is degraded, the temptation to impose a no-fly zone will grow.

A second reckless proposal, which was fortunately disregarded in Brussels, was made by Jaroslaw Kaczynski, Poland's president in the run up to the NATO summit. Standing beside Volodymyr Zelensky, he floated the idea of dispatching NATO "peacekeeping" forces, capable of defending themselves, to operate in Ukraine. His spokesman later elaborated that the operation would involve deploying NATO and other forces in regions of Ukraine that have yet to be occupied by Russia and protecting them "against further Russian activities" .

In the track II session, a senior Russian advisor commented that "If Poland moves to impose a no-fly zone or otherwise intervenes in Ukraine, it will be considered an attack by a NATO member state." Similarly, immediately following the NATO summit, NATO leaders warned that if weapons of mass destruction were used within Ukraine, but their fallout drifted into NATO's territory, it could be interpreted an attack on NATO, necessitating military responses.

Neutrality & Demilitarization

Every war, for better or worse, ends with negotiations. While the details of Russian-Ukrainian negotiations remain tightly held secrets, track II participants assume that Russia's invasion will end with assurances that Ukraine will never join NATO and that it will become a neutral and significantly demilitarized state. Less certain is whether Moscow will insist on regime change in Kyiv in the guise of "denazification" or if Russia's territorial conquests will remain in place.

Russian ambitions in Ukraine, undefined as they continue to be, indicate that negotiating Ukrainian neutrality is at best a complex affair. As one Russian advisor commented, Moscow will insist that there be no possible military threats emanating from Ukraine for many decades to come. Recognizing the fragility of Swedish and Finnish neutrality, with both nations currently debating the possibility of applying for NATO membership, Russian leaders believe that neutrality cannot be rooted in what they perceive to be a hostile political environment. Thus, it is argued that meaningful agreements on Ukrainian neutrality will require progress in U.S-Russian and Russian-NATO negotiations, and they will need to be confirmed by an international treaty or United Nations Security Council resolution.

As if these obstacles are not sufficiently daunting, while Moscow states that regime change is not its goal, believing that neutrality must be rooted in a nation's political system and culture, it will demand some restructuring of the Ukrainian state, perhaps in the guise of its denazification demands. Not as difficult, but no slam dunk, are indications that Russia will demand intrusive inspections to verify Ukrainian neutrality and placing Kyiv's nuclear power plants under a special verification regime or in the future to be run by international operators.

Nonetheless, first steps in the direction of Ukrainian neutrality are being made. Under the pressure of Russia's invasion, President Zelensky has stated that, despite Ukraine's 2019 constitutional commitment to seeking NATO membership, he will not press the issue. He has stated that he is prepared to discuss neutrality as part of a peace deal with Russia but it needs to be guaranteed by third parties and approved in a referendum. It is possible that Zelensky may have wanted to opt for neutrality to prevent Russia's invasion, but political pressure from right-wing Ukrainian nationalist forces—including assassination threats—raised the political (and personal) costs of pursuing that option.

Regardless of how it is designed, Kyiv agreeing to becoming a neutral state will face significant Ukrainian political opposition necessitating strong support, and likely considerable input, from the United States and other NATO states.

There are, in fact, many forms of nation-state neutrality. Swedish, Austrian, Moldavan, Irish, and Swiss neutrality differ from one another. International law would require that Ukrainian neutrality, which prevailed between its 1990 independence until 2015, would require renunciation of Kyiv's ambitions to join NATO, a ban on the presence of foreign military troops and bases, the commitment to treat warring parties equally, and guarantees from a number of countries. Militarily, Ukraine would need the ability to defend its neutrality and territorial integrity. Whether this would include Donetsk, Luhansk, and other regions now controlled by the Russian military appears to be the most divisive issue. Ukraine would also be prohibited from taking part in any international miliary conflict, making its territory available to nations at war (as Cambodia did during the Vietnam War), and providing troops or mercenaries to forces at war.

Determining how Ukraine would defend its neutrality will require intense negotiations. Sweden maintains a professional military, reinforced by conscripts, and its military-industrial complex produces weapons for export as well as for national defense. Switzerland has universal male military service. And at the end of the neutrality spectrum is Ireland which spends little on its military and is widely believed to be unable to defend itself against possible aggression, theoretical though it may be. That said, a neutral Ukraine would require some form of police for domestic security, a border/customs patrol, and a minimal military. Determining where weapons and related training for these forces would come from implies further questions about orientation and influence, and would be another highly contested issue.

Guaranteeing Ukrainian neutrality raises other questions. President Zelensky has said that it would require guarantees from the United States and other NATO nations. Russians respond by asking how this would differ in substance from Ukraine formally joining NATO. There is also the reality that nothing, even constitutions and international treaties that guarantees they will endure. With the people of and governments of Sweden and Finland debating whether to end decades of neutrality and apply for membership in NATO Russian analysts are wondering how Ukrainian neutrality could be guaranteed.

What Then?

Ukrainian civilians and soldiers and Russian soldiers are being killed and maimed every day. Many of Ukraine's cities are being reduced to rubble. And indiscriminate sanctions are wreaking havoc and delivering despair to innocent Russians across that continental empire. These must all end.

International civil society has almost universally condemned Russia's invasion of Ukraine. With our demands for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire, a negotiated settlement to the war, and the withdrawal of all foreign military troops, we have helped to frame and apply international pressure to end this unjustified and tragic war. No one should be sacrificed or displaced while political leaders and diplomats debate the fine points of the negotiated settlement of the war. Negotiations can take place amidst a ceasefire. This must be our immediate demand.

Looking to the future, after the guns are silenced we will face the shattered remains of the post-Cold War order, especially the continuing existential nuclear and climate existential threats. Recalling that NATO's expansion to Russia's borders was a contributing cause of the Ukrainian disaster and the long record of devastating U.S. imperial wars, Americans would do well to approach the new era with humility.

Putin has given us new lessons about the catastrophic perils of the arrogance of power. Slow though the restoration of trust and normal diplomatic relations will be, we will face the urgent necessity of Common Security negotiations. The imperatives will be to replace the new ice age of a Cold War with a new Euro-Atlantic order in which no nation seeks to ensure its security at the expense of other nations. This was the promise of initial post-Cold War diplomacy, including the 1997 NATO-Russia Founding Act. And humanity will be sleepwalking to its doom unless the great powers negotiate nuclear disarmament, and to collaborate to stanch the climate chaos that haunts humanity's future.

First published at Common Dreams, 28/03/22

www.commondreams.org

Joseph Gerson is President of the Campaign for Peace, Disarmament and Common Security, Co-founder of the Committee for a SANE U.S. China Policy and Vice President of the International Peace Bureau. His books include Empire and the Bomb, and With Hiroshima Eyes.

Europe is militarising at lightening speed

From END Info 31 DOWNLOAD

Ludo De Brabander, Belgium

What came before

NATO’s relations with Ukraine date back to immediately after independence in 1991. The North Atlantic Alliance included the country in the North Atlantic Cooperation Council (1991) and the Partnership for Peace program (1994). From 1997, cooperation was deepened with the establishment of the NATO-Ukraine Commission (NUC). In 2008, the NATO summit in Bucharest decided that Ukraine could eventually become a member of the military alliance, without, however, opening the procedure for this (Membership Action Plan, MAP). Russia responded by labeling Ukraine’s membership as a “red line.” In 2009 the Euro-Atlantic military integration of Ukraine was started through an ‘Annual National Programme’.

Ukraine has been actively contributing to NATO military operations ever since. From then on, NATO also conducts annual multinational manoeuvres in Ukraine (under the name ‘Rapid Trident’) and in the Black Sea. The latter regularly take place off the coast of Crimea, which led to a serious incident last year between a British frigate and the Russian army, during which warning shots were fired. Moscow considers such military exercises ‘provocations’. Secret British documents that were unintentionally made public show that scenarios of possible Russian reactions were calculated in advance .

Since the Warsaw summit (2016), NATO support to Ukraine has been provided through a ‘Comprehensive Assistance Package’. In 2019, Ukraine’s pursuit of NATO membership was constitutionally enshrined by Kiev. In 2020, Ukrainian President Zelensky approved the New National Security Strategy to further develop ties and integration with NATO into full membership.

Following the Russian annexation of Crimea and the outbreak of war in the Donbass region (2014), NATO responded with troop deployments, rising military budgets and arms supplies to Ukraine. That same year, at the summit in Wales, NATO heads of government agreed that member states’ military budgets must be at least 2% of their Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by 2024. At that time, only Greece, the United Kingdom and the US reached that standard. Between 2015 and 2021, NATO’s combined budgets grew by $155 billion.

The developments in Ukraine also have major repercussions for the Belgian military-budgetary trajectory. In 2017, the Swedish coalition decided to commit 9.2 billion euros in a program law for investments in weapons systems. The government is thus making an important concession to that other NATO standard of Wales, to set aside 20% of the military budget for military investment. In addition, the Michel government approved a defense growth path that should bring the military budget to 1.3% of GDP by 2030.

Belgium also responded to NATO by supplying around 300 soldiers to be stationed in Estonia and subsequently in Lithuania. They are part of the 4 multinational ‘battlegroups’ that the military alliance in Poland and the Baltic States developed in the context of the ‘Enhanced Forward Presence’, a decision of the NATO summit in Warsaw (2016).

In response to Russian military action in and around Ukraine, which eventually culminated in open war, NATO decided to increase its military presence in Eastern Europe. There are now 40,000 troops under NATO command with another four new multinational battlegroups in Slovakia, Hungary, Bulgaria and Romania. Belgium pledged 300 troops to reinforce NATO’s flank in Romania.

Military budgets are rising sharply

From the beginning of this year, European armaments and militarization gained momentum. Immense budget increases - until recently seen as unfeasible - are now becoming reality without significant debate.

In Belgium, at the end of January 2022, the government gave the green light to the STAR plan – ‘Security, Technology, Ambition and Resilience’ – which foresees that defense resources should increase to 1.54% of GDP by 2030. This includes a new investment plan worth more than 10 billion euros. The government approved a preliminary draft law for this at the end of February “for updating the military program law and the defense budget up to and including 2030”. Additional costs have to be added to this for increasing the number of personnel from 26,000 to 29,000 and for the implementation of the POP plan (People-Our-Priority plan), which is intended to improve working conditions and the pay of the troops. Additional expenditure is also made for investments in infrastructure and in research and development of new technologies in collaboration with Belgian industry. The STAR plan reserves 1.8 billion euros for the latter.

Ultimately, the military budget is expected to amount to 6.9 billion euros in 2030, compared to 4.4 billion today. In reality, that could be even higher. In the run-up to the NATO meeting in Brussels at the end of March, the De Croo government has decided to allocate an additional 1 billion over the next three years for arms and ammunition stocks, protective equipment, anti-tank weapons, the vehicle fleet and IT and communication systems. This means that over a five-year period, a total of more than EUR 20 billion in military investments in weapon systems has been committed.

The same pattern can be seen in almost all NATO member states.

Immediately after the invasion, the German government announced that it would invest another 100 billion euros in the army this year. A growth path had already been mapped out for the German defense budget that was budgeted at 53 billion euros in 2022, an increase of 3.2% compared to the previous year. The war in Ukraine means that not since the defeat of the ‘Third Reich’, will so much money be invested in the military apparatus in such a short time. Chancellor Scholtz said his country would immediately increase its military budget to above 2% of GDP, up from 1.53% now.

In the Dutch coalition agreement of December 2021, it was already agreed that a structural additional 3 billion euros would be added for defense, to reach 1.85% of GDP in 2024. According to recent reports, the Rutte government is working on a plan to go to 2% of GDP in order to respond to a parliamentary motion that was passed with a large majority.

On March 16, the Italian parliament voted by a large majority to increase the military budget from 1.41% to 2% of GDP, or from 29.8 billion euros to 41 billion euros.

Although the US already spends astronomically high amounts on the military apparatus - almost 40% of global military expenditure - Washington is also planning another billion-dollar injection. US President Biden proposes increasing the military budget for the next fiscal year (starting this fall) to $813 billion, which would be an increase of $31 billion in one year.

French President Macron, who is in full electoral battle, has announced that the already planned increase in the military budget should be increased, without however giving details. According to the French military programming law (2019-2025), a strong budget increase is already foreseen. In 2025, military resources must be increased to 50 billion euros, compared to 41 billion euros this year. So probably a few billion more.

Spain, Denmark, Poland and Romania are also announcing major budget increases. Poland even wants to go to 3% of GDP next year (compared to 2.2% this year).

NATO member states together accounted for $1,049 billion in military expenditure in 2021. With the announced budget increases, many tens of billions will be added.

Russia’s military budget is about $62 billion, which is 17 times less than NATO’s military resources. Russia is unlikely to follow in the new arms race, as Moscow already spent 4.3% of GDP on military spending last year. With the sanctions on top, it looks like there’s little margin left for further increases. This suggests that the military imbalance of power with NATO will become much greater. The question therefore arises as to why all these extra military resources are needed in the NATO member states? It seems that NATO is preparing for a possible new superpower confrontation. NATO defines not only Russia, but also China as a ‘systemic rival’.

European ‘Peace Facility’ for Ukraine

A few days after the Russian invasion, the Council of the European Union decided to allow EUR 450 million worth of arms supplies to the Ukrainian army through the so-called ‘peace facility’ that came into effect at the end of March 2021. On March 23, 2022, the Council doubled the amount, so that eventually 900 million euros in arms can be supplied.

The Peace Facility was created to finance military missions and support to third countries under the EU’s Common Security and Defense Policy (CSDP). The EUR 5 billion planned for the period 2021-2027 will be realized outside the EU budget. After all, according to the EU Treaty, expenditure in support of military operations must be financed with separate contributions from the Member States.

EU Member States have the right to supply weapons under the ‘right of self-defence’ provided for in Article 51 of the UN Charter. The ‘Common Position’, which regulates arms exports from the EU, also allows this in the context of self-defence. In contrast, both the Peace Facility and the Common Position impose restrictions. For example, arms transfers must not prolong or aggravate the conflict (Common Position criterion 3), which is difficult to assess in this existing war. Arms deliveries could greatly enhance the Ukrainian army’s strike capability to bring a swift end to the war. Conversely, arms deliveries can effectively prolong and aggravate the conflict.

Criterion 7 states that the weapons must not fall into the hands of ‘undesirable’ end users. That could be Russian troops in the event that they overpower Ukrainian troops, weapons that are distributed to civilians, or weapons that end up with ‘undesirable’ militias when the fighting becomes ‘unconventional’. In the event of Russian forces being expelled, such militias could target the Russian minority in the country or could be used to further fight the conflict with the insurgent republics (Luhansk and Donetsk).

Finally, criterion 2 states that the weapons may not be delivered if there is a risk that they will be used to commit serious violations of international humanitarian law. In addition to the reporting of Russian war crimes, there have already been reports of members of the Ukrainian army committing war crimes.

Similar provisions are also included in the Q&A of the European External Action Service which regulates arms transfers under the peace facility. However, the Council has not taken a public position on all these possible consequences of arms transfers. A concept note has been leaked that lists the above-mentioned risks, including restrictive measures, such as the provision that the weapons may not end up with entities other than the Ukrainian army. However, President Zelensky has stated at the start of the Russian aggression that Kiev will provide weapons to any civilian willing to fight.

Billions of arms deliveries to Ukraine

A large flow of weapons has been making its way to Ukraine since 2014, with the US as the main supplier. Between 2014 and 2021, the US provided at least $2.5 billion in weapons and military aid. More than $1 billion has been added since the Russian war. The Czech Republic, Poland, France, Turkey and the United Kingdom have also been supplying arms to the Ukrainian armed forces for several years, and it cannot be ruled out that they have been deployed against the insurgent rebel republics in the Donbass region.

Since the Russian invasion, arms deliveries have increased in intensity and volume. Most NATO member states (and some EU member states) have announced the delivery of defensive as well as offensive weapon systems. Belgium has stated that it will deliver 5,000 machine guns and 200 anti-tank weapons to the Ukrainian army.

The United Kingdom is one of the most active arms suppliers in this war, ranging from anti-tank and other missile systems, armored vehicles and artillery to associated ammunition. London is also committed to the delivery of eight naval vessels and a £1.7 billion frigate.

If you go over the list, you will arrive at hundreds of millions of euros in weapons and other military support.

Arms industry

Rising military budgets and massive military aid to Ukraine provide billions in revenue for the military industry. In January, a month before the outbreak of hostilities across Ukraine, US arms giants Raytheon and Lockheed Martin openly stated to their investors that the tensions “will make more business” for the arms companies. Raytheon supplies Stinger anti-aircraft missiles and together with Lockheed Martin the Javelin anti-tank missiles. Both companies are among the top five arms giants to have pumped $60 million into influencing US politics by 2020. In Washington, the arms industry employs 700 lobbyists, which is more than the number of Congressmen. At least 19 of those Congressmen have bought shares of both arms giants, some of them after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Even before the outbreak of large-scale hostilities, the global military industry was predicted to grow by 7% in 2022 (from $453 billion to $483 billion). Western Europe would become the fastest growing market according to these forecasts. The military bidding with rising budgets means that the predicted increase in turnover will turn out to be a serious underestimate. Two weeks after the invasion, arms companies’ shares rose sharply. Shares of Raytheon rose by 8%, General Dynamics by 12%, Lockheed Martin by 18% and Northrop Grumman even by 22%. British BAE Systems saw its shares rise by 14% in the first week after the Russian invasion.

Rising military budgets and arms supplies are a boon to the arms industry, but are having negative repercussions on negotiations and diplomacy. If one side believes in military victory thanks to these deliveries, it could lead to a very bloody prolongation of the war in eastern Ukraine.

End this war

From END Info 31 DOWNLOAD

Tom Unterrainer

It is not possible to fully capture the appalling dimensions of a war by listing grim statistics. If such statistics made a difference to those who control the armies and institutions that wage war, then millions slaughtered in wars, large and small, over past decades would not have perished. The disturbing truth is that human life means little to war-makers. A different class of mathematical object matters much more to such people: the calculus of power.

We are the opposite of war-makers. We aim for peace and strive to remove all roadblocks to it. So in reckoning with the calamities produced by President Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, we absorb the grim statistics. The UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights reports that between 4am on the morning of 24 February 2022 and midnight on 12 April 2022, civilian casualties totalled: “485 men, 313 women, 31 girls, and 54 boys, as well as 72 children and 977 adults whose sex is yet unknown”. 1,932 corpses. In addition, many thousands of men, women, boys, girls and children have suffered injuries of which many will be life-changing. The report comments:

Most of the civilian casualties recorded were caused by the use of explosive weapons with a wide impact area, including shelling from heavy artillery and multiple launch rocket systems, and missile and air strikes.

Added to the civilian deaths are those of the ‘combatants’. According to Ukrainian, Russian and NATO estimates, thousands on each side have died in the fighting. Both Russian and Ukrainian forces include conscript fighters.

To these numbers should be added all those who have died in the eight years of fighting in Eastern Ukraine/Donbass between 2014-2022 and all those yet to be slaughtered. As in all wars, the death toll only ever increases. This war must end.

In a 1964 letter to German social psychologist and humanist philosopher Erich Fromm, Bertrand Russell argued that: “War should be treated as murder is treated. It should be regarded with equal horror and with equal aversion.” War is organised murder. The organisers of murder together with the individual murderers richly deserve our collective horror and aversion.

In the case of the war in Ukraine, international legal procedures have been initiated to catalogue the crimes already committed and to document those that will come if the war continues. Tribunals and hearings are under preparation. The leaders of NATO member states have been very clear in describing the horrors of the war in Ukraine and in identifying a culprit. Yet Mr Biden, Mr Johnson and allies are less forthcoming in their denunciations of the wars, some of them ‘illegal’, waged by US, British and NATO forces. Mr Johnson is vocal on crimes in Ukraine but silent on crimes in Yemen, a horror-show of human suffering imposed on that country by Britain’s ally, Saudi Arabia, and fuelled by arms sales from the UK. Mr Biden sees horror in Ukraine but sees nothing wrong with the wars he supported over decades of ‘public service’.

As bad as this rank hypocrisy is, the stark fact is that the US, UK and allies in the nuclear-armed NATO alliance are already preparing for the next war. Peace, justice and human rights are not actually on their agenda.

The next war

Without doubt, ultimate responsibility for the war in Ukraine rests with Mr Putin. It would, however, be untrue to say that each and every opportunity to de-escalate was taken. END Info and other publications traced the facts of these failures and documented the troubling developments that went with them. We argued for alternative measures: real security and cooperation, denuclearisation and a nuclear-free-zone in Europe. We advocated for diplomacy rather than brinkmanship. In so doing, we echoed the calls of the peace movements throughout the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s, when opportunities for a comprehensive change of course seemed credible afterer the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact. Rather than taking steps to achieve real security, NATO expanded both geographically and in terms of posture. NATO is now a ‘global’ force with an ever-expanding area of operation.

Despite the growing risks, 2021 seemed like a year of real possibilities compared to today. In 2021 we witnessed widespread discussion in Germany on the future of US nuclear bombs stationed in that country under NATO agreements. We witnessed some NATO member states agreeing to send observers to the First State Parties meeting of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. Think-tanks and trade unions were actively engaged in developing a new approach to common security. Everything has shifted in a deadly direction.

It is common knowledge and common sense that all wars and military conflicts end in diplomacy and negotiation. Even where ‘military victory’ at the expense of murder, death and destruction is ‘achieved’ by one side or another, diplomacy and negotiation conclude the matter. It will likely be the case that the horrors in Ukraine will end in a similar fashion. Everyone knows this, yet those in power do not have the good sense to act on this basis. Rather, they are preparing for the next war.

For example, just three days after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a referendum in neighbouring Belarus approved a new constitution that ditched the country’s non-nuclear-weapon status (27 February 2022). According to reports, 65.2% of those who voted agreed to this change, which makes it possible, for example, for Russia to deploy nuclear weapons in Belarus. No doubt, Mr Lukashenko will tell the people of Belarus that such a move ‘enhances our security’. Such a turn of phrase will be familiar to the peoples of Finland and Sweden, two countries which look set to join the NATO nuclear-armed alliance to ‘enhance security’. If it’s true that the Belarus decision has made the world a more dangerous place, then it is also true that Finland and Sweden joining NATO makes the world a more dangerous place.

Military ‘solutions’ are nothing of the sort, they just bring greater risks and a greater possibility of death and destruction. ‘Security’ is not enhanced with nuclear weapons or by joining a nuclear-armed alliance. Rather than achieveing ‘security’, risks are multiplied and the foundations for the next war are established.

Militarisation

Preparations for the next war can be detected not only in the serial failures to pursue peace, the geographic expansion of NATO, the development of new nuclear weapons and the rest. Europe is now entering a period of rapid re-militarisation. If we wind the clock back a year or two, we will recall President Trump’s repeated complaints about the lack of military spending by European states. Trump has departed the political scene and we should hope that he never returns. However, Trumpian levels of military spending are now on the agenda.

As social conditions in Europe spiral ever downwards, as the prospect of widespread poverty intensifies, as living costs skyrocket and as the impacts of Covid and the deficiencies of the economy endure, European countries are pledging billions in increased military spending. Trump would be proud. These things cannot be isolated from the growth of right-wing political forces across the continent: from the Johnson government in Britain, through the streets and voting booths of France, to the government of Hungary. The situation is dangerous. Billions of Euros for machines of murder and destruction whilst the poor get poorer will not ‘guarantee security’. Quite the opposite.

The dimensions of this crisis are not limited to developments in Europe. Note the already-shifting remit of the ‘AUKUS’ alliance between Australia, the UK and US. Within the past month, it has been announced that this alliance will now cover the development and deployment of hypersonic missiles. For what purpose? Who will be the target? Additionally, further efforts have been initiated to include Japan in the alliance. Such a move would massively escalate existing tensions in the region and would mark a significant change in military posture for Japan.

The arc of militarisation extends across the Atlantic, over Europe and far into the southern hemisphere. Existential risks follow this same arc.

End this war ... stop the next one

The peace movements face a monumental challenge as a result of Putin’s war and the militarism of NATO and Europe. There are visible tensions and sharp disagreements. We are, however, united by an understanding that the immediate tasks are to end the war in Ukraine, end the death and destruction that come with it and to resist the drives to escalation. We are also united by the aim of stopping anything like this happening again. To achieve our aims, we must be clear-sighted about the longstanding dynamics and the more recent, dramatic, shifts. We must understand the potential consequences and prepare to resist them.

Nuclear Ukraine

From END Info 30 download

Up until the dissolution of the USSR, Ukraine hosted about a third of all Soviet nuclear weapons. Following a 1991 referendum, where an overwhelming proportion voted for independence, the fate of these Soviet weapons was in the hands of the Commonwealth of Independent States. Ukraine was a ‘founder’ of the CIS but did not actually join after declining to sign the CIS Charter in 1993.

It was not until 1994 that Ukraine formally agreed to dismantle the ‘left behind’ nuclear weapons system. That same year it signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty and renounced nuclear weapons possession for good.

Nuclear weapons possession was firmly and quite rightly renounced in 1994 but nuclear power has been an enduring feature of Ukraine’s infrastructure. The risks and hazards of nuclear power have been well documented, not least in the recent Spokesman Dossier titled Nuclear Power? But the people of Ukraine have no need for book-length summaries of the potentially deadly consequences of nuclear power for in the north of the country, on the Belarus border, sits Chernobyl. Such peace-time risks have now been joined by the acute risks of nuclear power in times of war.

As Jan Vande Putte, co-author of a recent Greenpeace study, points out: “For the first time in history a major war is being waged in a country with multiple nuclear reactors and thousands of tons of highly radioactive spent fuel”.

The Greenpeace study (02/03/22) focuses on severe nuclear hazards at just one of Ukraine’s nuclear power sites: the Zaporizhzhia plant, which with six nuclear reactors is the largest such plant in the whole of Europe. The study sets out the risks:

“In a worst-case scenario, where explosions destroy the reactor containment and cooling systems, the potential release of radioactivity from both the reactor core and spent fuel pool into the atmosphere could create a disaster far worse than [at Fukushima] ... with areas of land hundreds of kilometres from the reactor site potentially becoming inhospitable for decades. Even without direct damage to the plant, the reactors rely on the electric grid for operating cooling systems, on the availability of nuclear technicians and personnel and access to heavy equipment and logistics.”

If Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and his subsequent nuclear threats weren’t bad enough - and they are very bad indeed - then the prospect of nuclear disaster, either deliberate or accidental, compounds an already awful situation.

If those who attempt to maintain some form of safety at the Chernobyl site are prevented from doing so, if supplies are cut off, if shifts cannot change or similar then Putin will have yet more death and destruction to account for. If a single shell or missile ‘accidentally’ hits just one reactor at one of the active plants then the consequences could be immense. If electricity supplies are disrupted and cooling systems fail, then nuclear-meltdown and all that means could unfold. These are risks of waging ‘conventional war’ in places with nuclear power plants. The world knows all of the risks of nuclear power but has failed to act. Will it take another ‘unthinkable’ disaster like Chernobyl to force the issue? We must hope that it doesn’t.

Meanwhile, as energy supplies are impacted as a consequence of Putin’s actions, there will be many who rush towards nuclear power as a means of ‘energy independence’. Such a rush is misjudged on many levels - not least the questions of timescale and interdependence of nuclear fuel supply - but it will be fundamentally misjudged because nuclear power is dirty, dangerous and - as can be seen from events in Ukraine - potentially deadly.

"Remember your humanity"

From END Info 30 download

Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation

The following statements were published by the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation immediately following President Putin’s nuclear threats. In issuing such threats, the Russian leader has put the existential risks associated with nuclear confrontation firmly on the agenda. The Russian leader now not only threatens the people of Ukraine with his illegal invasion and occupation. His nuclear threats put humanity itself in peril.

The writer Arundhati Roy said this of nuclear weapons: “It is such a supreme folly to believe that nuclear weapons are deadly only if they're used. The fact that they exist at all, their presence in our lives, will wreak more havoc than we can begin to fathom. Nuclear weapons pervade our thinking. Control our behaviour. Administer our societies. Inform our dreams. They bury themselves like meat hooks deep in the base of our brains. They are purveyors of madness...” Bertrand Russell grappled with these issues many decades ago. He asked us all to “remember your humanity”.

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Remember your humanity

Humanity is confronted by increasing danger of nuclear war. Even before Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, worsening relations between the world’s nuclear-armed states and alliances made our planet a tinderbox where one false move – or misunderstanding – could result in nuclear war. President Putin’s order to invade Ukraine makes this perilous situation much worse. He publicly warns others not to interfere otherwise they will suffer ‘consequences greater than any you have faced in history’. Such nuclear blackmail must be exposed and resisted. For the sake of humanity, Russia should cease its aggression and withdraw from Ukraine without delay.

In recent years, Russia, the United States and the United Kingdom have steadily lowered the ‘threshold’ to be crossed when ordering the use of nuclear weapons. They openly state that nuclear devices could be used in response to threatened non-nuclear attacks such as ‘conventional’, biological, chemical or cyber. Nuclear capabilities are closely integrated with ‘conventional’ force in current military doctrine. ‘Useable’ nuclear weapons, hypersonic missiles, artificial intelligence, armed drones and cyberwarfare are all part of the contemporary battlefield. Europe is at evident risk of becoming such a battlefield – even a nuclear one.

Millions of people in Russia, Ukraine and the wider world know that war is not the answer to Europe’s common and enduring need for security. Since NATO waged war on Yugoslavia in 1999, the political failure to address our common need for security has brought Europe to its current tragedy -- Russia’s onslaught on Ukraine, which had embraced neutrality prior to 2014. The work to build peace and security begins again. In doing so, it is timely to recall that, long ago, Bertrand Russell confronted humankind’s peril from nuclear weapons and appealed ‘as a human being to human beings: remember your humanity, and forget the rest’.

Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation

25/02/2022

Threatening megadeath

Putin publicly puts Russia’s ‘deterrence’ forces on special alert, apparently shocking his defence minister and military chief of staff in the process. He didn’t use the word ‘nuclear’, but those are the weapons he’s told them to prepare. This is the latest clinch in Putin’s long embrace of Russia’s nuclear arsenal. In breaking the nuclear taboo, Putin exposes the duplicity of nuclear ‘deterrence’, which really means threatening megadeath. In 1945, the United States twice visited megadeath on Japan, and has refined its nuclear weapons practice ever since. When the French Foreign Minister recently reminded Putin that NATO is a nuclear-armed alliance, the threat of megadeath was implicit in his few words.

Nor does the pretence that NATO is purely defensive and no threat to Russia help us to perceive clearly the acute danger we are currently in. Long ago, Putin absorbed the lessons of NATO’s attack on Yugoslavia in 1999 and he is hyper sensitive to any perceived aggression, even while he orders Russia’s military to mount an illegal and faltering assault on Ukraine. He publicly told President Macron that ‘there would be no winners’. He publicly threatened anyone who interfered in Russia’s war on Ukraine that they would suffer unprecedented consequences. Now he orders Russia’s high command to actively participate in nuclear blackmail. NATO’s Secretary-General decries such nuclear ‘rhetoric’, but who can be certain that Putin is bluffing? The fearful possibility is that Putin may be approaching the point where he decides he has nothing to lose by breaking the taboo and using some of Russia’s many nuclear weapons. ‘Deterrence’ will have flipped.

Who will provide a ladder for Putin to climb down?

Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation

28/02/2022

Where does that end?

Putin’s nuclear threats elicit changes in US military operations. Scheduled testing of an intercontinental ballistic missile is postponed in case it disturbs the delicate balance of mutual threats of mass death. Heavy US nuclear capable bombers fly west from southern England instead of eastwards towards Central Europe where one of them recently refuelled. Such caution is prudent when taboos on nuclear threats and possible use are broken. As a nuclear-armed alliance, NATO is similarly constrained in militarily assisting Ukraine in its hour of need. Stalled columns of Russian fighting vehicles present easy targets from the air, but NATO cannot dispatch its substantial air power against them for fear of engaging Russia directly and triggering Putin’s nuclear arsenal, which includes many so-called tactical warheads. His ‘deterrence’ flips to ‘escalate to de-escalate’. Where does that end?

Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation

03/03/2022

No Nuclear War

From END Info 30 download

By Tom Unterrainer

Editorial Comments

Yelena Osipova survived the Siege of Leningrad. The Siege, enforced by Nazi invaders, imposed gruesome cruelty on the inhabitants of what is now Saint Petersburg for two years, four months, two weeks and five days. Between September 1941 and January 1944 the people of that city were subjected to systematic starvation and deliberate destruction. It is estimated that 1.5 million Russians died in the city over this time and that of 1.4 million evacuees, a significant number perished due to starvation and bombardment. Yelena Osipova knows more than one thing about the barbarity of war.

That is why she joined thousands of other Russians who have taken to the streets in opposition to President Putin’s illegal war against Ukraine and his repeated nuclear threats. A video of Mrs Osipova, and her placards which say “No to Nuclear Weapons in the All the World”, was distributed on social media. The video shows the reaction of the Saint Petersburg police, who were on the scene in force to confiscate such banners and arrest those who oppose Putin’s war.

Those protesting across Russia, and the anti-war movement they are building, are part of an international movement for peace and against war. This movement exists in every corner of our planet: in every country, in every city and in every community. We are united at this moment with a clear message to President Putin: Stop your war on Ukraine, No to Nuclear War.

President Putin has not only broken international law to wage his war against Ukraine but he has shattered the ‘nuclear taboo’. In threatening “consequences greater than any you have faced in history” to those who might come to the aid of the Ukrainian people and putting Russia’s ‘deterrence’ [sic] on ‘special alert’, he has placed the question of possible nuclear war front-and-centre. He has exposed the central role that nuclear weapons play in world affairs and the relations between states - nuclear-armed or not - and he has reminded us all that when two nuclear-armed blocs confront one another, for whatever reason, the future of humanity is put in peril.

School history books and some misguided teachers tell us that nuclear weapons have only been ‘used’ twice: at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Daniel Ellsberg, former nuclear planner turned anti-nuclear and peace campaigner, begs to disagree:

“a gun is used when you point it at someone’s head in a direct confrontation, whether or not the trigger is pulled”.

When there are two sides who have been pointing guns at each other for decades, when the guns get progressively bigger, when one side distributes smaller guns to their friends and then edges towards their foe we have the makings of a deadly situation. We are in such a deadly situation.

There can be no excuse for Putin’s illegal war or for his nuclear threats. He has chosen a course of action and he has chosen to make the threats all by himself. Yet the peace and anti-war movements have been warning of such risks for decades. We have been campaigning against nuclear weapons, against militarism, against NATO and the expansion of this nuclear-armed alliance. We have been arguing that security is for everyone or it is for none of us, for a nuclear-free Europe, for common security and the strengthening of international and transnational organisations to ensure such security.

We were ignored. Instead, the nuclear stockpiles have been maintained. The nuclear-armed alliance spread. All sides have indulged in breaches of international law, with horrendous consequences. Arms sales soar. An arms-race is underway. Security has not been ensured. Brinkmanship replaced diplomacy. Treaties and agreements were disregarded, sabotaged and put on the bonfire. Even more money was committed to war and destruction, whilst ordinary citizens suffered.

So our work starts again and it starts in the most dangerous of moments: when the prospect of nuclear war is on the agenda. It starts again when the people of Ukraine are under attack and when the nuclear-armed world has revealed itself. Our work is urgent and we now have hundreds of thousands of Russian citizens in our ranks. We will doubtless be joined by those in Ukraine who are witnessing the horrors of war first-hand and who, like Yelena Osipova, will oppose anything like it happening again.

Dialogue, discussion, debate and understanding are essential components of what comes next. Just as security cannot be for one side only, ‘guaranteed’ - or not - by nuclear weapons, security cannot be imposed. Neither can real and lasting peace be imposed. These things need to be built, through cooperation and democratic means, between peoples and across borders. This is why recognising the heroic efforts of anti-war opinion in Russia is vital. This is why links must be established and nurtured.

While starting this work, however, we must dedicate ourselves to the urgent tasks of opposing Putin’s war, preventing the spread of war and of alerting the world to the acute dangers presented by nuclear threats. If the dull hum of a nuclear warhead ever mutates to a deafening and life-ending roar of a nuclear explosion, humanity will be extinguished. We cannot and will not let this happen.

‘On the Brink: Understanding the Ukraine Crisis...’

From END Info 29 | Feb 2022 | DOWNLOAD

Professor Richard Sakwa

The following text is a transcript of Professor Sakwa’s presentation to a Massachusetts Peace Action/Campaign for Peace, Disarmament and Common Security webinar titled ‘On the Brink: Understanding the Ukraine Crisis and Paths Towards a Just Peace’.

I want to make four basic points. My first point will try to provide some sort of overview, explaining how we got to where we are today. And in a few minutes, I won’t be able to do too much. But simply, I will argue, as follows: between 1989 and 2019, effectively, though, some will take [as an end point] 2014, we had a ‘Cold Peace’ that sort of reprises some of the issues associated with a Cold War. But it’s accompanied by attempts – genuine attempts – to try to resolve the conflictual potential. It’s [like] a new version of what E H Carr called, in interwar years, the 20 years crisis. And you could call this a 30 years crisis. And in the last few years, this has tilted over into what I would argue is now Cold War 2. This is a full-scale confrontation, with all of the mechanisms. I won’t go into the detail of how you would define a Cold War, but it’s clearly ideological contestation, demonization of the enemy, or the protagonist, and a whole stack of other features, which are extremely reminiscent of that first Cold War, all of which take place under the umbrella of nuclear deterrence.

We could also characterize these years as a slow-motion Cuban Missile Crisis … certainly, in these last few months, it’s accompanied by what some people would say, would be a rash move. In October 1962 [the rash move] was putting the missiles on Cuba, today the mobilization and the saber rattling and militarization. [It’s] an attempt to force a some sort of a solution, if not a diplomatic one, to what was perceived to be a fundamental problem. In [1962 it was] Berlin, Jupiter missiles in Turkey, and so on. Today [it’s] the failure to establish what the Russians would call an indivisible security order. So [we have a] slow motion Cuban Missile Crisis, and we’ll have to see in my final section, how it could possibly being resolved.

My bottom line is when answering how did we get to where we are today is that at the end of the first Cold War, in the Gorbachev years – let’s use the date 1989 as the symbolic end of the first Cold War. So we had two peace orders on offer. These were two peace orders, not dissimilar, quite reasonably compatible, but not the same. And the first one was the vision put forward most eloquently by Gorbachev, and indeed, which had long matured within the Soviet Union, which under the moniker of the ‘new political thinking’. This was a view that international politics in the nuclear age, facing environmental issues – which became very prominent in Gorbachev’s thinking at a later point – could be transcended. That with the end of the Cold War, which wasn’t just the end of the [decades] since 1945, it was also the end – perhaps in a different way from Fukuyama – but a sense that that long term internal civil war in advanced capitalist democracies between … socialism and capitalism was transcended. In other words, a whole stack of things were coming together to create the possibility of a genuinely transformed new type of international politics, a new peace order, which really would be indivisible security, and that within that framework, all countries could develop.

In a specific European context it was focused on a common European home … This was a really fundamental vision which culminated in the formulation, based on the Helsinki principles, of two key principles in the Paris Charter of November 1990: free choice of states to join in whatever alliances they wished to, many commentators in Russia today lament the fact that they agreed to that. But the second point, and if you look at that Paris charter of November 1990, it also picks up some of those issues in Helsinki, repeated in the Istanbul Declaration of 1999, the Standard Commemorative Declaration of 2010: that it is balanced by a commitment to indivisible security. Lavrov, in some of his speeches lately, has forgotten that that … formulation is in the November 1990 document. So that’s the first model, a transformative model: that Russia would join the historic West, the political West, as established in the Cold War, to create a greater West, and then the European continent would join to create a greater Europe.

The second view, very specifically, is a challenge to that. And this was announced in George H W Bush’s speech in Mainz [1989] and a slogan just put it just symbolically: ‘A Europe Whole and Free’, which was deliberately designed to challenge the first model, that transformative model. Again, I simply can’t go into detail now, but simply will say it was quite clearly … makes it explicit to seize the intellectual, and indeed the political initiative and stop that upstart. Gorbachev seizing the … Global Intellectual agenda, in other words, every imposition of US hegemony, and dominance. And of course, this then formed and moved into more specific political challenges to a unipolar world. So basically, two models, one based on transformation – an agenda, which, by the way, continues to this day – versus simple enlargement. On enlargement: we could say all sorts of things about that, because it homogenizes political space, it reduces political pluralism, and so on. And it’s only within this logic of competitive visions of post-Cold War peace orders that a NATO enlargement took place … NATO enlargement, in other words, is a symptom of that larger failure, after 1989. It exacerbated [the failure]. Even Zbigniew Brzezinski in1995 said NATO enlargement should go forwards – he was a passionate advocate for it – but he said: ‘well, maybe at the same time, we should establish some larger framework, diplomatic and political, a military security framework with Russia’. Okay, that’s the first point.

My second point would simply say that it’s hardly surprising that Ukraine then becomes the cockpit of these two visions of world order. Both of these earlier visions, by the way, support what I call the ‘charter international system’ established in 1945. So the confrontation takes place over Ukraine, because there was no resolution of the status of post-Soviet space, different types of models of nation building, and state building, and so on. So the Ukrainian crisis is of course a reflection of deep internal divisions and debates about the appropriate model of state development. I’ve argued in my book, Frontline Ukraine, that two models were on offer: the monist model, which can be tolerant, can be quite inclusive, but it’s got a specific vision of how the Ukrainian state should develop monolingually, and … obviously, you can keep the Russian language and any other language ‘in the kitchen’, as they would kindly say, but [it would] not be given civic public status. And the other version is this more pluralistic vision, which would be the one that most Western commentators have been supporting: the sort of way that the multi-plural society has developed in post-authoritarian societies like Spain, and you could argue, Canada, and many, many other federal states.

These were the two models, that’s why these tensions have exploded, because of two models of international politics, two models of Ukrainian state-building and the whole thing blows up.

My third very brief section: ‘why now?’ … The feeling that the trendlines were moving against Russia, that today Russia is at a peak of its power, in the sense that those hypersonic missiles and all the other stuff announced in 2018 gives you a shot in the arms control, arms race business. [Russia] is probably at the peak of its power before the United States, with its massive intellectual and financial resources will quickly catch up and outpace it. Again, a type of 1950s alleged ‘missile gap’ and catching up. In 2018, Putin’s ‘State of the Nation’ speech is quite clear. He says: ‘you didn’t listen to us then, listen to us now’ – referring to the Munich Security Conference speech of 2007. And of course, there are specific issues: the Nagorno Karabakh war, the second war where Azerbaijan seized territory. Plus, the development of two drone technologies and a whole stack of things: the failure, the blockage, in the development or implementation of Minsk II, the strengthening alignment with China. … In other words, it was time to grasp that ‘Ukrainian nettle’, and with it, that whole failure of the last 30 years.

My fourth and final section is simply to say: what are the options today? And there are three possible ways forward, where we could really go now. The first model of where we could possibly go is ‘pathways to peace’. I will say that the US response to Russia’s draft security treaties of the 17th of December [2021], was relatively positive – surprisingly so, talking about diplomatic engagement … But clearly, we’re talking about possibly a moratorium on NATO enlargement, it’s not excluded … Ukraine was not going to be joining NATO anyway in the short term. Some sort of neutrality for Ukraine is not really going to be negotiable. Implementation of Minsk II, yes, the Normandy Format has been meeting … and is due to meet again. Obviously, there’s not going to be a new Helsinki … Helsinki II … or a change of regime in Kiev or Moscow anytime soon.

I actually think that the NATO response was outrageous, but the US response was opening the door to diplomacy. That’s the first part. So there’s paths to peace, which will learn those lessons of how the first Cold War ended.

The second approach is managed competition. Okay, we accept we’re in a Cold War … then how do we go and manage it? Russia will develop its alliance and relations with China, perhaps establish bases in Venezuela, Cuba, Nicaragua … I think, possibly creates permanent deployment of strategic weapons and submarines off the coast of the US, NATO continues. And so we keep on that march of folly, as before 1914.

And the third option is war, quite simply. And just as in the Cuban missile crisis of October 1962, [when] we came closest to war … until today. And I actually don’t think that Russia is planning to invade Ukraine. All of this was to try to kickstart a diplomatic process. Russia believes that it simply hasn’t been listened to for the last 30 years and so it’s all about trying to kick the door open to diplomacy. [It’s] a rather crude way of doing it but nevertheless, if the door is opened one way or another, then there is a possibility to avoid war. But clearly, the stakes could not be higher. I do believe that it’s quite clear that NATO and its members, egged on by some, you know, better embittered Eastern European countries and London, of course – it really isn’t in a mood for diplomacy. If Reagan and George HW Bush and Gorbachev had use this [type of] language back in the late 1980s, we would never have ended the first Cold War. And so today, I think we need to learn from how the first Cold War ended to maybe mitigate the second.

The whole webinar can be viewed at: https://tinyurl.com/4fwzy4cn

‘Indivisible, equal and undiminished security’

From END Info 29 | Feb 2022 | DOWNLOAD

Editorial Comments, Tom Unterrainer

The Russell Foundation has issued this extra edition of END Info in response to the growing tensions in and around Ukraine. In issue 28 we warned that we “should all be alert to the sharpening of tensions and to any developments connected to them. But we should also pay close attention to the causes as well as the dynamics of the fault lines in Europe. The insistence of the nuclear-armed states and their allies that the capacity to exterminate life on this planet is ‘essential for security’ has been examined again and again.” Tensions have certainly sharpened and developments accumulate by the hour.

Nuclear weapons, the possession and stationing of such weapons and the risks associated with them cannot be ignored in the context of Ukraine in the same way that the expansion of NATO – the nuclear-armed alliance – cannot be ignored. The argument that ‘security in Europe’ is maintained by the possession and stationing of nuclear weapons – be they British, French or American – is in tatters. Rather than providing ‘security’, such weapons embed insecurity. One need only look at Article 7 of the proposed draft treaty between Russia and the United States (released on 17 December 2021 and available to read in full at https://mid.ru/ru/foreign_policy/rso/nato/1790818/?lang-en) to see how large the issue of nuclear weapons loom. Article 7 reads:

The Parties shall refrain from deploying nuclear weapons outside their national territories and return such weapons already deployed outside their national territories at the time of entry into force of the Treaty to their national territories. The Parties shall eliminate all existing infrastructure for deployment of nuclear weapons outside their national territories.

The Parties shall not train military and civilian personnel from non-nuclear countries to use nuclear weapons. The Parties shall not conduct exercises or training for general-purpose forces, that include scenarios involving the use of nuclear weapons.

Article 5 of the draft treaty includes the following:

The Parties shall refrain from flying heaving bombers equipped for nuclear or non-nuclear armaments or deploying warships of any type, including in the framework of international organizations, military alliances or coalitions, in the areas outside national airspace and national territorial waters respectively, from where they can attack targets in the territory of the other Party.

The preamble of the draft treaty asserts:

that a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought ... [we recognize] the need to make every effort to prevent the risk of outbreak of such a war among States that possess nuclear weapons.

Article 1 opens with:

The Parties shall cooperate on the basis of principles of indivisible, equal and undiminished security and to these ends:

shall not undertake actions nor participate in or support activities that affect the security of the other party;

shall not implement security measures adopted by each Party individually or in the framework of an international organization, military alliance or coalition that could undermine core security interests of the other party.

These all seem like very sensible and acceptable commitments to ensure peace and security between the US and Russia and – importantly – within Europe. The remarkable thing about the draft treaty is that, in fact, such commitments have already been made: in 1971, 1972, 1987 and 1989. They must surely be reaffirmed by both sides and implemented in full in very short order.

To understand why these commitments need reaffirmation and implementation now, in 2022, and why they have not been affirmed or consistently implemented to date is to understand that NATO has expanded, all sides are re-arming and that the situation is very dangerous indeed. However, there is a further thing to understand: for as long as NATO and the nuclear-armed states within it insist on turning Europe into a potential nuclear battleground, for as long as the US insists on deploying its nuclear and other weapons systems in Europe and for as long as politicians in the ‘Anglosphere’ indulge themselves in crass hypocrisy then the idea of ‘indivisible security’ will be completely undermined. As Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov pointed out in his letter to Heads of Foreign/External Affairs Ministers/Secretaries of the US, Canada and several European countries: 

The principle of indivisible security is selectively interpreted as a justification for the ongoing course toward irresponsible expansion of NATO.

It is revealing that Western representatives, while expressing their readiness to engage in dialogue on the European security architecture avoid making reference to the Charter for European Security ...

It will not work that way. The very essence of the agreements on indivisible security is that either there is security for all or there is no security for anyone.

Russian sources have been quoted here not because every action or opinion expressed within or by them are defensible or agreeable. They have been quoted in this way because as compared to the statements from US and British government representatives, they are a breath of fresh and clear air.

Security is for everyone or it is for none of us. Nuclear weapons in Europe – whatever their origin and wherever they are based – must be removed if any meaningful form of security is to be established. This means creating a European nuclear-weapons-free zone as part of an infrastructure of ‘indivisible, equal and undiminished security’ – a system of common security.

To achieve peace, we must identify and then remove the roadblocks to peace. NATO and nuclear weapons must be removed.

The Non-Proliferation Treaty

From END Info 28 - Jan/Feb 2022 - DOWNLOAD

By Peggy Duff

Peggy Duff (1910-1981) served as the first Organising Secretary and later the first General Secretary of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. She was a firm and active supporter of the END campaign in the 1980s. This article forms Part I of her chapter in Eleventh Hour for Europe, Edited by Ken Coates and published by Spokesman in 1981.

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Introduction

The Non-Proliferation Treaty which was finally agreed in 1968 and came into operation in 1970 was described by Alva Myrdal in her book The Game of Disarmament (Spokesman, 1980) as “a grossly discriminatory treaty”. “Obligations”, she wrote, “were laid on the non-nuclear weapon countries, and only on them, to accept international control over nuclear installations. In the end they were able to extract only a promise (Article VI) from the superpowers to negotiate in good faith the cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date.”

“There was no balance, no mutuality of obligations and benefits. I said then that it was necessary to emphasise the reluctance of the non-nuclear powers to shoulder a particular and, as matter of fact, a solitary obligation to make renunciatory decisions in regard to proliferation of nuclear weapons. To place the major responsibility on their shoulders amounted to a clever design to get the NPT to function as a seal on the superpowers’ hegemonic world policy.”

The First Review Conference of the Non-Proliferation Treaty in 1975 did nothing to remedy these deficiencies. The Second Review Conference will take place in Geneva in August 1980, however, at a time when pressure for disarmament from many of the Non-Aligned Countries and from movements have increased and many of the processes for negotiating disarmament have improved, as a result of the UN General Assembly Special Session on Disarmament in 1978.

It is, therefore, very important that movements concerned with disarmament should join with states genuinely committed to it in seeking to change this imbalance between the obligations of the Non-Nuclear-Weapon States (NNWS) and the Nuclear-Weapon States (NWS). To do this effectively, we have to understand what are the essential issues to which priority should be given.

We will examine the security aspects, that is, the limitation and disarmament measures required not just to prevent a dangerous increase in the number of nuclear-armed countries, but to control the nuclear arms race between the superpowers: an obligation which is only minimal in the Treaty and which has only too clearly been avoided. We have to pinpoint not only the sort of security guarantees that should be given by the nuclear superpowers to countries that renounce nuclear weapons, but also the most important disarmament measures that ought to be rapidly agreed, if the threat of nuclear weapon proliferation is to be countered.

We shall also examine the additional threat of proliferation of nuclear weapons through the spread of nuclear power technology which means that, by the end of this century, about 40 countries will have the capacity to produce nuclear arms.

The Beginnings of Proliferation, the Incentives and the Dangers

It was inevitable that the American monopoly of nuclear weapons at the end of World War II would not last very long. When the Soviet Union caught up, this intensified the Cold War. Yet, in spite of the rivalry between the two superpowers, there has existed, since the death of Stalin and the beginnings of detente, a common desire to act jointly as the world’s policemen and to control negotiations on disarmament. This was reflected in their joint chairmanship of the Geneva Disarmament Committee. Though there are obvious conflicts of interest in many regions of the world; on disarmament, they speak the same language. They see themselves as the custodians of world order; and the cohesion of their alliances remains more important than progress towards disarmament. This is why they have tried, and succeeded, to keep negotiations on a bi-lateral or tri-lateral, rather than on a multilateral basis. (The negotiations in the early 60s on the partial Test Ban Treaty and current negotiations for a Comprehensive Ban are restricted to the US, the USSR and Britain). It is significant that in all the talks that have gone on they have never been ready to accept anything more than minimum control of rearmament. During the negotiations on the Non-Proliferation Treaty they both rejected pressure for a reduction of nuclear weapons which they demanded from the others. They have never been willing to accept what is called now “A Low Posture” and which was initiated in the 60s by Professor Pat Blackett as a “Minimum Deterrent” policy. This called for a reduction of their nuclear weapon stockpiles to 100 missiles, capable of inflicting ‘’unacceptable damage”; as a step towards the elimination of all nuclear weapons. The NNWS, during the negotiations on the Non-Proliferation Treaty, pressed for a similar limitation through a moratorium on both quantitative and qualitative development of nuclear arms - but with no success.

Proliferation began in Britain and then in France. The main incentive for both countries was prestige. Both believed that by acquiring even, a small nuclear arsenal they established themselves as major powers. Both of them Alva Myrdal suggested “are in a sense compensating for the loss of status as colonial empires”. The Americans were no;t too happy. McNamara, then Secretary for Defense, said that small independent deterrents were dangerous, expensive, incredible and prone to obsolescence. Nevertheless, the United States helped Britain to acquire their four Polaris submarines - and Mrs Thatcher is now asking them for Trident submarines to replace them.

But, for de Gaulle, there was another incentive. He did not trust the American “nuclear umbrella”. He did not believe that the United States would use its nuclear weapons in defence of Europe at the cost of the destruction of its own cities and the death of millions of Americans. This lack of faith in the US “nuclear umbrella” has even, recently, been encouraged by Kissinger. Current moves to establish medium range nuclear missiles in Europe must also be seen as an intention to limit, if possible, any nuclear war to Europe, but including Russia.

China’s motives were, partly, the same, but here there was also another incentive, regional confrontations, between China and the USSR and between China and India. This applies also, now, to two countries which are believed to have produced some sort of nuclear device - Israel and South Africa (and there is little doubt that South Africa recently tested a nuclear weapon in the South Atlantic).

It is hardly necessary to stress the dangers of spread. They are listed in the book produced by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), Postures for Non-Proliferation: Arms Limitation and Security Policies to Minimize Nuclear Proliferation. Any increase in the number of NWS can have a domino effect. It increases the risk of an accidental nuclear war, and the risk that local wars can escalate into a nuclear war, involving the superpowers. It encourages the nuclear arms race between the superpowers. It makes disarmament negotiations more difficult. The use of a nuclear weapon by a small nuclear power would break the present ‘taboo’ on their use. There is the risk that they may be acquired by a ‘crazy’ state, or by a state where a new ‘crazy’ government takes over. It complicates international politics and fuels regional rivalries. The more nuclear weapons there are and the more countries which have them, the greater the danger that they will eventually be used. But here we must stress that it is not only the number of states armed with nuclear weapons that matters but also the steady increase in the size and quality of the stockpiles of the superpowers. That is also a form of proliferation.

The 1965-1968 Negotiations

If we are to decide correctly on which issues we should concentrate during the Second Review Conference of the NPT, it is important to study and analyse the negotiations which took place between 1965 and 1968 and during the First Review Conference.

During the negotiations on the Treaty there were major disagreements between the NWS and the NNWS on three points:

1. What measures for the limitation of nuclear arms and for disarmament should be included in the Treaty as a counterpart to the renunciation of nuclear weapons by the NNWS?

2. What types of security guarantees should be given to the NNWS by the NWS?

3. The duration of the Treaty, and the provisions for review and withdrawal.

The procedure was as follows: at the opening of the conference, the two superpowers tabled two draft treaties, as a basis for discussion. On August 8, 1967, after two years of discussion, two more draft treaties were tabled, with minor changes. In January, 1968, two more identical treaties were tabled. Two more identical treaties followed in March 1968. These were linked to the text of a Security Council resolution on guarantees. Revised versions of both were tabled in May 1968. The Treaty then was approved by the UN on June 12, 1968 and, a few days later, the Security Council passed the resolution. The Treaty came into operation in 1970.

Neither of the two first draft treaties contained any reference to collateral measures. They both argued that these were unimportant compared with the urgent need to stop spread. This was stressed by Lord Chalfont, speaking for Britain:

“I would ask the non-aligned delegations to ponder on this point in case it turned out to be impossible to get agreement among the nuclear powers to some measures of reduction ... I should like to ask the non-nuclear Powers most seriously whether, if this position is reached - a treaty within our grasp, but the choice of collateral measures still in dispute - it would not still be in the interest of every non-nuclear State to call a halt to the spread of nuclear weapons even if the nuclear weapon Powers themselves had not actually begun to disarm.”

Ambassador Foster of the US referred to the demand that the Treaty contain obligations on the nuclear weapon States to cease all nuclear weapon tests, to halt production of fissionable material for weapons, to stop making nuclear delivery vehicles, or “even to begin nuclear disarmament”, as a hurdle which was getting in the way.

The argument, on all three points at issue, went on for two years. Counter-proposals were tabled by India, Sweden, Brazil, Burma, Egypt, Morocco and Nigeria. India, for instance, put forward five points.

1. An undertaking by the nuclear powers not to transfer nuclear weapons or nuclear weapons technology to others;

2. An undertaking not to use nuclear weapons against any countries which do not possess them;

3. An undertaking through the United Nations to safeguard the security of countries which may be threatened by Powers having a nuclear weapons capability or about to have a nuclear weapons capability;

4. Tangible progress towards disarmament, including a comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, a complete freeze on production of nuclear weapons and means of delivery as well as substantial reduction in the existing stocks; and

5. An undertaking by non-nuclear Powers not to acquire or manufacture nuclear weapons.

India also suggested a two stage Treaty, in which the collateral measures came first. Sweden proposed, as essential collateral measures, a comprehensive test ban treaty and a cut off in the production of fissile material for weapons, together with an agreement on non-dissemination.

By early 1967, it was clear that neither of the two superpowers would accept any related disarmament measures in the Treaty. Article VI contained some vague references which the NNWS saw as binding, legally, but which the nuclear powers did not. It contained only a vague statement of intention. There is “no balance” Indian Ambassador Trevede said, “between a platitude on the one hand and a prohibition on the other.”

On security guarantees, in their first, 1965 drafts, the US favoured positive guarantees, that is, they offered the states agreeing not to acquire nuclear weapons the ‘protection’ of their ‘nuclear’ umbrella; while the USSR offered negative guarantees, a promise not to attack with nuclear weapons States that were signatories to the Treaty. There were also arguments on the question of de-nuclearised zones. The 1967 draft treaties contained a paragraph in the Preamble “noting that nothing in this Treaty affects the right of any group of States to conclude regional treaties in order to assure the total absence of nuclear weapons in their respective territories”. The 1968 identical draft treaties contained a new Article VII: “Nothing in this Treaty affects the right of any group of States to conclude regional treaties in order to assure the total absence of nuclear weapons in their respective territories.” But there were no references to broader security guarantees.

On duration, review and withdrawal, in their 1965 treaties, both the US and the USSR wanted an unlimited, indefinite duration to the Treaty, subject to withdrawals, but no further conferences unless demanded by two-thirds of the parties to the Treaty. In the years that followed the NNWS continued to press for regular reviews in order to monitor the extent to which the NWS had fulfilled their obligations under Article VI. It was only in the last stages of the negotiations that the US and the USSR agreed to periodic review conferences, at intervals of 5 years. This was put into Article VIII.

Here we give four paragraphs from the Preamble, Articles VI and VII and Paragraph 3 of Article VII which represent the very meagre victories achieved by the NNWS:

From the Preamble

“Declaring their intention to achieve at the earliest possible date the cessation of the nuclear arms race and to undertake effective measures in the direction of nuclear disarmament,

“Urging the cooperation of all States in the attainment of this objective,

“Recalling the determination expressed by the Parties to the Partial Test Ban Treaty of 1963 in its preamble to seek to achieve the discontinuance of all test explosions of nuclear weapons for all time and to continue negotiations to this end,

“Desiring to further the easing of international tension and the strengthening of trust between States in order to facilitate the cessation of the manufacture of nuclear weapons, the liquidation of all their existing stockpiles, and the elimination from national arsenals of nuclear weapons and the means of their delivery pursuant to a Treaty on general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international control.”

Article VI: “Each of the Parties to this Treaty undertakes to pursue negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a Treaty on general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international control.”

Article VII: “Nothing in this Treaty affects the right of any group of States to conclude regional treaties in order to assure the total absence of nuclear weapons in their respective territories.”

Article VIII, Para 3: “Five years after the entry into force of this Treaty, a conference of the Parties to the Treaty shall be held in Geneva, Switzerland, in order to review the operation of this Treaty with a view to assuring that the purpose of the Preamble and the provisions of the Treaty are being realised. At intervals of five years thereafter, a majority of the Parties to the Treaty may obtain, by submitting a proposal to this effect to the Depositary Governments, the convening of further conferences with the same objective of reviewing the operation of the Treaty.”

It could be said that the only part of these pious assurances which has been put into practice is that concerning strict international inspection. This is now assured by the satellites of the superpowers sweeping around through space. The Security Council Resolution had three points:

“l. Recognises that aggression with nuclear weapons or the threat of such aggression against a non-nuclear State would create a situation inwhich the Security Council, and above all its nuclear-weapons State permanent members, would have to act immediately in accordance with their obligations under the United Nations’ Charter;

2. Welcomes the intention expressed by certain States that they will provide or support immediate assistance, in accordance with the Charter, to any non-nuclear-weapon State Party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons that is a victim of an act or an object of a threat of aggression in which nuclear weapons are used;

3. Reaffirms in particular the inherent right, recognised under Article 51 of the Charter, of individual and collective self-defense if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the United Nations, until the Security Council has taken measures to maintain international peace and security.”

After it was passed, three of the nuclear-weapon States, the US, the USSR and Britain, made identical unilateral statements to the same effect. All this, of course, was utterly meaningless. Four of the five nuclear-weapon States in the security Council had vetoes, and the fifth, People’s China, now also has a veto.

One immediate result of the deficiencies of the Treaty, as Alva Myrdal points out, was that, between 1968 and 1970 when the Treaty came into force, only four Powers that had the capacity to produce nuclear weapons had ratified: Canada, Sweden, East Germany and Australia. West Germany, Italy, Belgium and the Netherlands ratified only a few days before the First Review Conference, and Japan in May 1976. Among those refusing were Argentina, Brazil, Egypt, Israel, Spain, South Africa and Pakistan.

She cites five crucial points which illustrate the lack of balance between obligations and benefits: l. The pledge in Article VI to cease the nuclear arms race is still unfulfilled and is unlikely to be honoured in the foreseeable future; 2. The obligation in Article III for the NNWS to accept safeguards, as set forth in an agreement to be negotiated and concluded with the International Atomic Energy Agency ... for the exclusive purpose of verification, etc. is one-sided. It has been implemented by most of the States that have ratified, but not by the US and Britain; 3. There is an undertaking in Article IV, combined with Article I that Parties to the NPT would be favoured with regard to the supply of nuclear technology. This has not happened; 4. Article V promised that the benefits from peaceful nuclear explosions would be made available to signatories to the Treaty at low cost, through a special international agreement and an international body. No such agreement has been reached. No such body has been set up; 5. The security guarantees in the Security Council Resolution restricts rather than adds to their obligations to render assistance. As we have already pointed out, at that time four of the five nuclear armed Powers had a veto. All five now have the veto.

The First Review Conference: 1975

This was seen by most of the NNWS as an opportunity to attack the NWS for their failure to implement Article VI, and to strengthen their obligations on limitation and disarmament measures. In this, they failed miserably. The scales were weighed against them in every way. The Conference was financed by the major superpowers. They conferred in London before it took place. The United States showed its contempt by conducting a big nuclear weapon test during the conference.

The NNWS wanted three types of documents agreed: a General Declaration; a Resolution covering substantive items on the agenda; some additional Protocols to the Treaty.

After 26 days of argument, there was no agreement on any of these. Only a compromise was agreed, a draft Final Declaration to be adopted by consensus, amplified by interpretative statements. There was no agreement on two resolutions and the Protocols which the NNWS tried to add to the Treaty were only put into an annex to the Declaration.

The NWS refused to consider any proposals imposing additional obligations on them. They insisted that they were fulfilling Article VI, that there had been progress, both bilateral and multilateral - and they cited the Sea Bed Treaty, the Treaty banning Biological Weapons, the Anti-Ballistic-Missile Treaty, and the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT).

The Soviet Union pushed its own policies: the demand for a World Disarmament Conference; that Resolution 2936 of the Security Council on the renunciation of the use or threat of force in international relations and the permanent prohibition of the use of nuclear weapons be made legally binding. Both the US and the USSR stressed their commitment to the SALT negotiations. US Ambassador Ikle claimed that:

“In the five years that had elapsed since the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons had come into effect, far more had been accomplished in the control of nuclear arms than in the preceding twenty five years. The Treaty had proved to be both a prerequisite and a catalyst for progress towards nuclear disarmament. The disarmament process was under way and it was up to all States to encourage and sustain it.”

These protestations were rejected by the NNWS. They said that SALT had only ratified pre-existing trends and had permitted substantial quantitative and qualitative improvements, institutionalising the nuclear arms race. Ambassador Roberts of New Zealand said:

“It is small wonder that the countries outside the Treaty remained unconvinced that the nuclear-weapon parties were serious in their intention to give effect to their undertakings. The most valid test of progress was surely to ask whether or not there were fewer nuclear weapons in existence today than there had been in 1970; whether or not there had been any abatement in nuclear weapons testing during that period; and whether or not there had been any halt in the further refinement and sophistication of nuclear weapons. The answer to all three questions was patently no. The limited and peripheral agreements negotiated so far gave little ground for reassurance.”

The NNWS emphasised that they were obliged to fulfill their obligations when they signed the Treaty, while the NWS were not bound by any specific date. If horizontal non-proliferation was to be achieved, they insisted that the NWS had not only to pursue but to agree on some collateral measures and they quoted, in particular: a Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty; a cut off of the production of fissile material for weapons; and a limit on missile test flights.

Three important draft protocols to the Treaty were put forward. The first was sponsored by 20 NNWS (Bolivia, Ecuador, Ghana, Honduras, Jamaica, Lebanon, Liberia, Mexico, Morocco, Nepal, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Peru, the Philippines, Romania, Senegal, the Sudan, Syria, Yugoslavia and Zaire). It was designed to lead to the complete cessation of all nuclear testing.

“to decree the suspension of all nuclear tests for a period of ten years, as soon as the number of parties to the Treaty reaches one hundred; ... to extend by three years the moratorium ... each time that five additional States become party to the Treaty, ... (and) to transform the moratorium into a permanent cessation of all nuclear weapon tests, through the conclusion of a multilateral treaty for that purpose, as soon as the other nuclear weapon States indicate their willingness to become parties to the said treaty.”

Protocol II sponsored by the same States, except for the Philippines, called for substantial reductions in the nuclear weapon capabilities of the United States and the Soviet Union:

“To undertake, as soon as the number of Parties to the Treaty has reached one hundred (a) to reduce by fifty per cent the ceiling of 2,400 nuclear strategic vehicles contemplated for each side under the Vladivostok accords; (b) to refrain from first use of nuclear weapons against any other non-nuclear-weapon States Parties to the Treaty.

They undertake to encourage negotiations initiated by any group of States parties to the Treaty or others to establish nuclear weapon free zones in their respective territories or regions, and to respect the statute of nuclear weapon free zones established.

In the event a non-nuclear-weapon State Party to the Treaty becomes a victim of an attack with nuclear weapons or of a threat with the use of such weapons, the States Parties to this Protocol, at the request of the victim of such threat or attack, undertake to provide to it immediate assistance without prejudice to their obligations under the United Nations Charter.”

There were also a number of resolutions.

Since the major superpowers refused to accept any of these Protocols or draft resolutions, or to give any additional guarantees, the Conference ended with a useless final declaration, drafted by Sweden’s Ambassador, Inge Thorsson. This only outlined their concerns and avoided specific criticisms of the major nuclear powers. It outlined the concerns of the NNWS, welcomed the various agreements on arms limitation and disarmament that have been reached, and urged greater efforts by all, but especially the NWS, “to achieve an early and effective implementation of Article VI of the Treaty. It urged limitations on the number of underground tests pending a halt to all of them.” It also appealed to the United States and the Soviet Union to try to conclude the SALT agreement outlined in Vladivostok, which at the end of 1979, had still not gone through the US Congress.

The Second Review Conference: 1980, Prospects and Priorities

Since the First Review Conference in 1975, there have been some important changes in the disarmament process. The Conference of Non-Aligned Countries has become more active and radical. They sponsored and initiated the Special Session on Disarmament of the UN General Assembly in 1978. Their Co-ordinating Bureau produced a Working Paper for the Preparatory Committee which fiercely condemned the lack of progress:

“Since disarmament negotiations within the framework, or under the auspices of the United Nations, as well as the regional and bilateral negotiations, have not produced the expected results in most cases, it is necessary to exert fresh efforts to overcome this situation. The contradiction between the urgent necessity to curb the arms race and the stand-still in disarmament efforts is becoming increasingly intolerable. Expenditure, particularly on the development of new and more sophisticated weapons systems, is spiralling. The continuation of the arms race poses a direct threat to international peace and security and slackens economic social development. Disarmament has thus become one of the most urgent international problems, requiring the greatest attention.”

It included a wide range of concrete proposals, rejecting “partial measures” and calling for rapid progress to total nuclear disarmament and to general and complete disarmament.

While the Final Declaration was a compromise document accepted by consensus containing far too many platitudes, there were some important changes in the disarmament process. The two major superpowers, the US and the USSR, ceased to be Joint Chairmen of the Geneva Disarmament Committee. The Committee was enlarged and its plenary sessions were opened to the public.

The Special Session also encouraged a considerable upsurge in activity on disarmament by non-governmental organisations, and in international co-operation between them on a much wider scale - and this has continued.

But it is important not to be too optimistic about these changes. SALT negotiations are still bilateral, between the US and the USSR, though if we ever get as far as talking about SALT III, the NATO and Warsaw Pact powers may be included. Nevertheless, there are greater opportunities for action now both by the NNWS and by movements, and the Second Review Conference is one of these.

But there is also a [negative] side to the picture. Developments in the Middle East - on energy, and in Iran, with the hostages still held - have led to a massive increase in the belligerency not only of the hawks but of the American public in general. SALT II has failed to get through Congress this year, may fail again in 1980 and we cannot be sure that it will even be accepted after the next Presidential election. Direct intervention by US forces, banned since Vietnam, is now once again acceptable, especially in defence of American supplies of energy in the Middle East. Military budgets are being increased, in the United States, in Britain, by both NATO and the Warsaw Pact, including the Soviet Union. The Conservative Government in Britain is aiming to replace its ageing Polaris submarines with the much more powerful Tridents. Defence Minister Pym has stated on television that, if necessary, they would be used independently of the US, though he was followed by a retired General who insisted that that would be tantamount to suicide.

In addition there is the new threat of the deployment in Europe of medium rang: nuclear missiles, which has, in fact, already begun. This involves the basing of 108 Pershing II missiles in West Germany and 464 land based Cruise missiles, which are sub-sonic, pilotless and very accurate flying bombs - 160 in Britain, 112 in Italy, 96 in West Germany and, in the original US proposal, 48 in both Belgium and Holland. The United States would meet the cost of production and they would remain under US control. Only one finger on the button.

These proposals have alarmed the Soviets though they themselves have started to deploy SS-20 missiles which can reach any European cities or installations. On October 4, Brezhnev announced the unilateral withdrawal of 20,000 Soviet forces and 1,000 tanks from Central Europe. This has begun and was highly publicised. But they have not yet made any proposals for the withdrawal of their SS-20s. But they have made it clear that if the proposal was accepted by NATO which, more or less, it has, they would still be ready to talk.

The NATO countries are not united on the proposals. While Britain, West Germany and Italy accepted (Schimdt got it through his party conference by putting it forward as a means to obtain talks, the Italian Parliament agreed, with few signs of opposition from the Italian Communist Party, the British parliament was not even allowed to discuss it); the Dutch parliament rejected it and their Prime Minister, Andreas Van Agt, faced a situation that, if he ignored their decision, his government might fall, since several members of his Christian Democrat Party voted against it, and there is strong opposition from the Dutch public and from the Churches. In Belgium, the coalition government also had problems since two socialist parties in it were opposed. There was also disquiet in Norway and Denmark though neither country was directly involved as it was not proposed to base any of the new missiles on their territory.

Finally, at a meeting of NATO Foreign and Defence Ministers on December 12 and 13, NATO agreed to press ahead, though the Dutch, the Belgians and the Danes had proposed a delay. Their reservations were submerged by a compromise decision that accepted the deployment of the missiles in West Germany, Italy and Britain. The Dutch Defence Minister, pressed his doubts, hoping, no doubt, to satisfy his opposition at home:

“The Netherlands agrees that there is a need for a political and military answer to the threatening developments in relation to Soviet long-range theatre nuclear forces, particularly the SS 20 missile and the Backfire bomber. In view of the importance we attach to arms control and to the zero option as the ultimate objective in this field, the Netherlands cannot yet commit herself to the stationing of ground-launched Cruise missiles on her territory. The Netherlands will take a decision in December, 1981, in consultation with the Allies, on the basis of the criterion whether or not arms control negotiations have by then achieved success in the form of concrete results. The Netherlands believes that any stationtioning of new weapons systems on Dutch territory should result in a reduction of the Netherlands existing nuclear tasks. The Netherlands Government proceeds on the assumption that SALT II will have been ratified by December, 1981.”

But, since they agreed to contribute £250 million to the cost of the infrastructure required, this enabled the decision to be publicised as ‘unanimous’.

The Belgian Government agreed both to production and deployment, but their decision was to be reviewed in 6 months time - which allowed them to try and pacify the opposition at home.

As a counterpart to this, the NATO meeting agreed to withdraw 1,000 of their present nuclear warheads in Europe, many of which are obsolescent and, of course, have a much smaller range; and the new missile will be counted within that reduced level, that is, 6,000. They have also agreed to undertake negotiations, as soon as possible, for mutual reduction of nuclear weapons in Europe. Secretary of State Vance said that he hoped they would start within a few months, and that they will be held as part of the next round of SALT Talks - a somewhat pious proposal, since SALT II is still not ratified. The NATO meeting set up a group to participate in any such talks.

At their meeting on December 13, the NATO Ministers also agreed on new proposals to be tabled at the Vienna Talks on troop reductions in Europe. They proposed, as a first phase, a withdrawal of 13,000 US troops and 30,000 Soviet troops - based on a West German proposal. These are lower than the original NATO proposals for the first stage. The problem that has stymied progress in Vienna is that the US and the USSR have not been able to agree on the number of Soviet troops in Central Europe. NATO says there are 987,000, the Warsaw Pact insists that the figure is 837,000.

We can be sure that the United States and its allies will cite these proposals as signs of progress during the Second Review Conference - though what the NNWS are demanding is not proposals, but agreements.

Priorities

In the light of all this past history, the most important priorities for pressure on governments, and especially on the NWS, are as follows:

1. A Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty

Another Session of the Tripartite Talks (the US, USSR and Britain) has just ended with no significant progress. There has been a year of virtual stagnation. The Partial Test Ban Treaty was signed in 1963. Since then, these three have conducted only underground tests. France, since 1975, has also tested underground, though there is grave doubt that there may be leaks from their sites in Polynesia into the ocean. In 1974 the United States and the Soviet Union signed the Threshhold Test Ban Treaty, prohibiting underground tests of more than 150 kilotons. They also promised to restrict them.

According to the 1979 SIPRI Year Book, there have been 1,165 test explosions between 1945 and 1978, and 667 since the Partial Test Ban Treat (PTBT) was signed - most of them designed to improve the efficiency of nuclear weapons. More than 90 per cent of them were carried out by the original three signatories to the PTBT - 60 by the Soviets, 37 by the Americans, and 3 by the British. In 1979, the Soviet union conducted more tests than in any year since 1963. The Chinese figure is 8.

But the Russians have made some concessions. They agreed to include peaceful nuclear explosions in the Treaty and accepted the principle of on-site inspection, to accept 10 seismic installations in the Soviet Union. The US also agreed to 10. The Soviet Union also proposed 10 for Britain, which was refused, because they test in the United States. So the USSR proposed 1 in Britain and 9 in various British dependencies, such as Hong Kong and the Falkland Islands. Britain insists on offering only 1 site at Eskdalemuir, where one already exists. There are also disputes over the question of renewal after a first 3 year moratorium.

But the most serious obstacle is in the United States where the military believe that a comprehensive ban would undermine their technological superiority - and that the Russians would cheat. It is certainly doubtful whether SALT II and a Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty could get through Congress during 1980.

2. The Establishment of De-nuclearised Zones with Guarantees from the NWS not to Deploy or Use Nuclear Weapons in such areas

This proposal is prejudiced by the increasing militarisation of both the Pacific and Indian Oceans, where there is considerable pressure for them, both from public opinion and from some of the littoral States.

3. Negative Guarantees From NWS Not to Attack NNWS With Nuclear Weapons

So far, the superpowers have produced only the Security Council Resolution of 1975, which is nullified by their vetoes.

4. A Moratorium on Research, Development, Manufacture and Deployment of New Nuclear Weapons and Their Delivery Systems

The Mobilisation for Survival in United States has been collecting signatures for such a moratorium, including a moratorium on nuclear power. It will be presented to Congress in April, 1980.

5. Cuts in Military Budgets and the Diversion of the Funds to Aid for Developing Countries

This has been proposed by the Soviet Union. At present, they are all increasing.

6. A Moratorium on the Production and Deployment of Medium Range Nuclear Missiles in Europe, Pending Negotiations

Here we must emphasise that the increase in the range of theatre nuclear missiles in Europe, which has been in the pipe line for some time, produces a new situation. Previously, the comparative small range of tactical nuclear weapons in Central Europe made it possible, as de Gaulle believed and Kissinger has recently confirmed, that a limited nuclear war could occur in Central Europe, leaving the territory of the US and USSR untouched.

Even such a ‘limited’ war would wipe out Europe. Schmidt, in 1971, realised this. In his book, The Balance of Power: Germany’s Peace Policy and the Super Powers, (William Kimber, London, 1971, p.196) he recognised that such a war would lead rapidly to the destruction of Europe. Even a brief and locally limited war could mean 10 million deaths and cause total destruction of Germany as an industrial society, according to Carl-Friedrich v. Weizsacker. Yet as Alva Myrdal points out in her book, The Game of Disarmament, p.43/44:

“What are the political and public reactions to these obvious dangers. The peoples of Europe - West, East and neutral - have not been kept much aware of what is in store for them if the superpowers rivalry leads to a military confrontation in Europe. There has been a carefully kept official silence as to the consequences. Only once, in 1955, when a NATO military field exercise, ‘Carte Blanche’, resulted in 1. 7 million Germans ‘killed’ and 3.5 million ‘incapacitated’, was a short-lived furore caused ...

Since 1967 there has been little public discussion about any fundamental change in the policies of nuclear defence for Europe, little of the early clairvoyant anxiety of Helmut Schmidt. West European official postures have become frozen in a kind of frozen approval of the status quo.”

The new proposals, and the increase in the range of the nuclear missiles do not mean that Europe would be spared. But they do mean that the Soviet Union would not. The United States would be out of range, but not the USSR. This, no doubt, explains their current anxieties. (Though, in our opinion, it is doubtful whether a nuclear war which began in Europe could be restricted to a medium range missile exchange).

Some Final Points

We haven’t dealt here with the question of ‘vertical’ proliferation which, to put it in simple English, means increase in the quantity and quality of the nuclear arsenals of the superpowers. The main contention of the NNWS in all these negotiations is that such ‘vertical’ proliferation cannot be separated from the question of ‘horizontal’ proliferation the spread of nuclear weapons to more and more States.

As we have already stressed, prospects can hardly be called good. Relations between superpowers and States are increasingly unstable. More arms, nuclear and conventional are being produced, deployed and sold. But there is one argument which we ought to use in trying to educate public opinion and in promoting support for disarmament. It is still argued by States that possess nuclear weapons, that they are a deterrent and they quote as proof of this that no nuclear weapons have been used since 1945. But this does not mean that wars have been eliminated. 25 million people have died in conventional wars since World War II. Millions more have died for lack of food and medical care the money spent on arms could have provided.

But we must also stress that all this money has been spent to no purpose. The possession of nuclear weapons by the United States did not prevent a stalemate in Korea, they did not save France or the United States from defeat in Vietnam. The Soviet arsenals did not prevent them being thrown out of Egypt. And all their nuclear arms cannot help the United States to rescue 50 hostages in Iran. One can also ask the new nuclear powers, Israel and South Africa, where or how they could use them? We have to convince the people in the nuclear armed states, and those in states with nuclear ambitions, that they are useless and very expensive playthings, that they do not bring security, that more of them mean less security, that they and their children can only be safe if they are totally abolished.

Nuclear Power?

From END Info 28 - Jan/Feb 2022 - DOWNLOAD

By Tom Unterrainer

The following text is from the introduction to the new Spokesman Dossier titled Nuclear Power?

The papers and articles collected in this Spokesman Dossier span five decades. As such, you might expect many of the arguments to be dated or even irrelevant in the third decade of the twenty-first century. Sadly – and a little surprisingly – this is not generally the case.

Take, for example, Tony Benn’s evidence to the Sizewell Inquiry (1984). Benn argued that coal and other fossil fuels present a preferable means of securing energy supplies than would nuclear. Given what we now know, such an argument alone would be unviable, to say the least. However, this is not his central argument. In fact, Benn’s evidence to the Sizewell Inquiry opens an invaluable window on the mechanisms by which sections of government and industry work together to further a complex of financial and military interests. Benn is clear on the link between nuclear power generation and the needs of British and associated nuclear weapons systems: a link still ‘submerged’ in general understanding of the issues, as Phil Johnstone and Andy Stirling explain in their more recent article.

The first item re-published here is by Malcolm Caldwell. It is part of a longer article on ‘The Energy Crisis’, published in 1972 in a remarkable collection titled Socialism and the Environment. Edited by Ken Coates, this volume brings together a series of papers presented to a conference organised by the German Metal-workers’ Union, I.G. Metall on ‘The Quality of Life’. Caldwell dissects the claims made for nuclear energy and finds that the hopes behind the claims are “sagging, if not receding”. Why this conclusion? The costs, delays, dangers and damaging environmental impact of nuclear energy production was as evident in 1972 as it is in 2022. So why do certain governments persist in this wasteful and dangerous enterprise? Why do some entertain the idea that nuclear energy has ‘green credentials’?

Alan Roberts, who went on to become a campaigning Labour MP, points out in ‘The Politics of Nuclear Power’ (1977), that the drive towards nuclear energy generation is intimately linked with the overall dynamics of capitalism; an argument addressed again by Dave Cullen in the final essay in this Dossier (2021).

The stirring words of Petra Kelly in her 1986 article, ‘Neither Safe Nor Essential’, should have removed all uncertainty about the dangers of nuclear energy. Written shortly after the disaster at Chernobyl and delivered as an address to the Oxford Union, Kelly starkly outlines the perils presented by nuclear reactors. The world did not listen. Nearly two decades later, we have Rosalie Bertell writing that ‘Chernobyl Still Matters’ (2003). Still, the world ignored the warnings. By the 2010s, we have the deadly lessons of Fukushima. Still, the world ignores the warnings.

By the 2020s, not only are billions of pounds to be ploughed into new nuclear reactors, but so also is the fantasy of ‘nuclear fusion’ (always ‘25 years away’) still tickling the synapses of all-too-many. We are now supposed to believe that nuclear energy generation will be the saviour of a world on the brink of climate catastrophe! The grotesque proportions of this transformation are the main motivation for producing this Dossier at a time when the world faces very many other dangers and acute crises.

We are supposed to forget the political-economic-military nexus driving nuclear power. We are supposed to forget Chernobyl, forget Fukushima, and forget all the other deadly nuclear incidents. We are supposed to forget about the toxic nuclear waste that will be created by a new generation of nuclear reactors. The public is supposed to believe that the billions to be spent on new nuclear reactors would not be better spent on clean, renewable, truly ‘green’ energy sources.

The writers collected here devoted their talents and energies to exposing the dangers posed by nuclear power. We should follow their example.

December 2021

“Its pulse is weak and it will only survive if we keep our promises”

From END Info 28 - Jan/Feb 2022 - DOWNLOAD

By Tom Unterrainer

“We can now say with credibility that we have kept 1.5 degress alive. But, its pulse is weak and it will only survive if we keep our promises and translate commitments into rapid action.”

Alok Sharma MP, COP26 President

The claim that the world is on the brink of catastrophic climate change is accepted by all but a handful of people. This consenses among and between scientists, politicians, campaigners and the public at large is of fundamental importance if we are to avoid the worst. But consensus on the facts is not a sufficient condition for saving humanity.

Take, for example, the general consensus amongst politicians - even those from nuclear-armed states - with regards to nuclear weapons. Recently, Presidents Biden and Putin issued a joint statement along these lines: ‘nuclear war can never be won and should never be fought.’ Both know that a nuclear exchange of any type could destroy all life on this planet. Yet each and every nuclear-armed state is modernising its arsenals of mass death. There is a new nuclear arms race and an increase in nuclear tensions not seen since the height of the Cold War. Recognising reality and acting rationally based on this recognition seem to be divorced from one another in the context of certain global issues.

The leaders of the world assembled in Glasgow, Scotland, in November 2022 with the promise of securing the future of life on this planet. Central to this promise is limiting global temperature rises to 1.5oC: any rise above this figure will likely see climate disaster turn into climate catastrophe. In his final statement of the conference, COP26 President Alok Sharma assured us that this aim is “alive” but that “its pulse is weak”. Not terribly reassuring given the potential consequences.

The Glasgow Climate Pact issued at the close of COP26 lists four “achievements”:

1. Mitigation: secured near-global net zero. [Emissions targets] from 153 countries and future strengthening of mitigation measures ...

2. Adaptation & Loss and Damage: boosted efforts to deal with climate impacts ...

3. Finance: mobilised billions and trillions ... to realign trillions towards global net zero ...

4. Collaboration: worked together to deliver

[Glasgow Climate Pact, Page 5]

Contrast these with the demands raised by the COP26 Coalition of NGOs, trade unions, community and youth groups, which organised a series of lively protests and workshops alongside official proceedings:

No More Cooking The Books: No To Fossil Fuels, Net-zero And False Solutions

• Fight For 1.5

• We Need Real Zero, Not Net Zero

• Keep It In The Ground: No New Fossil Fuel Investments Or Infrastructure

• Reject False Solutions: No To Carbon Markets And Risky And Unproven Technologies

Rewire The System: Start The Justice Transition Now

• Start The Justice Transition

Global Climate Justice: Reparations And Redistribution To Indigenous Communities and The Gobal South

• Fair share of effort from all rich countries

• Cancel the debts of Global South by all creditors

• Grant-based climate finance for the Global South

• Reparations for the loss and damage already happening in the Global South

[https://cop26coalition.org/demands/]

If the contrast between the demands of civil society and the world’s most powerful nations was not obvious enough, here is the COP26 Coalition’s press response to The Glasgow Climate Pact:

“This agreement is an utter betrayal of the people. It is hollow words on the climate emergency from the richest countries, with an utter disregard of science and justice. The UK Government greenwash and PR have spun us off course.

The rich refused to do their fair share, with more empty words on climate finance and turning their back on the poorest who are facing a crisis of covid coupled with economic and climate apartheid – all caused by the actions of the richest.

It’s immoral for the rich to sit there talking about their future children and grandchildren, when the children of the South are suffering now.

This COP has failed to keep 1.5c alive, and set us on a pathway to 2.5c. All while claiming to act as they set the planet on fire.

At COP26, the richest got what they came here for, and the poorest leave with nothing.

The people are rising up across the globe to hold our governments and corporations to account – and make them act.”

[https://cop26coalition.org/cop26-coalition-final-press-statement/]

Even if those gathered in Glasgow ‘keep their promises’, the COP26 Coalition and expert comentators are not convinced that sufficient commitments have been made to avert climate catastrophe.

How can it be that everyone knows of the global catastrophic risks posed by climate change and nuclear weapons but that our society and its major institutions seem incapable of seriously addressing the risks? Writing in the mid-1980s, Noam Chomsky addressed himself to the ‘Rational Basis’ of the Race to Destruction*. He wrote:

Surveying the historical record, we can find examples of socities so organised that they drifted towards catastrophe with a certain inevitability, systematically avoiding steps that could have changed this course. Our own society is an example, except that in this case the catastrophe that lies ahead involves national and perhaps global suicide. It is hardly unrealistic to surmise that we are entering the terminal phase of history.

Chomsky was, of course, writing specifically in the context of the nuclear arms race of the time, but the force of his argument applies to the risk of climate catastrophe. He continues:

The course that we pursue is deeply rooted in our social institutions and relatively independent of the choice of individuals who happen to fill institutional roles in the political or economic system. Furthermore, the steps taken towards destruction have a certain short-term rationality within the framework of existing institutions and the kind of planning they engender. Such planning is largely a matter of short-term calculation of gain.

Short-term ‘rationality’ will have determined the decision to opt for ‘net zero’ rather than ‘real zero’ carbon emissions: to do otherwise would have demanded an international transformation of economic and political systems, not least with respect to those nations which have pressing energy needs that will otherwise not be met. Such an approach will have informed the decision to construct an enormous financial system - “billions and trillions” of dollars - to allow for ‘adaptation & loss and damage’ rather than planning for a just transition away from damaging economic and industrial methods.

Such approaches are ‘wired-in’ to the global system and, for the sake of humanity, we should hope that they have some effect. We know, however, that they are incapable of solving or removing the problems that face us. Arms control systems and non-proliferation treaties make the world a safer place than it would be in their absence, but they are not the same as a decisive move to nuclear abolition.

Chomsky concludes:

The important point to bear in mind is that as long as the public is passive, desiciplined and obedient, public opinion is of no more concern to elite groups that control the state apparatus than security, survival, “human rights, the raising of the living standards, and democratization.”

This seems like an appeal to ‘resist much, obey little’ and to continue our campaigning as energetically as we can.

* The Race to Destruction - its Rational Basis, Spokesman Pamphlet No. 85, available from www.spokesmanbooks.org

Disarmament dominoes

From END Info 28 - Jan/Feb 2022 - DOWNLOAD

By Joachim Wernicke, Berlin

In December 2021, the Russell Foundation received two documents from Joachim Wernicke. The first is titled The End of Nuclear Weapons with Germany as the Catalyst. The second is titled The New NATO Deployments in 2023. Here we publish an English translation of the ‘abstract’ from the first of these. Both documents were prepared as a contribution to ongoing discussions with politicians, unions and peace groups in Germany on the deployment of new US weapons systems in that country and on the implications of Germany joining the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. Further translations will be made throughout 2022. Contact END Info for pdf copies of either document.

The first human-made threat to civilization came from nuclear weapons. This threat first emerged in 1945, through their destructive effects and a general overgrowth of militarism. Economic growth through armaments consumption had become a target of the industrialized countries. In the meantime, advancing climate change has clearly emerged as the second major human-made threat to civilization. Measured against this new challenge, the abolition of nuclear weapons appears to be an easier exercise. But for Germany, more than for other countries, this task is urgent.

Immediately after the end of World War II, the United Nations adopted an international approach to outlawing nuclear weapons as well as chemical and biological weapons. The approach failed in 1947. Nuclear weapons offered the US the opportunity to become a European power through the Marshall Plan economic aid and the NATO military alliance.

The Soviet Union, with which the US had recently been allied in war, became a new enemy. Militarily, Germany played a central role in the conflict as a potential future battlefield. By about 1980, the nuclear arms race had reached a militarily unjustifiable scale, with around 50,000 nuclear warheads worldwide. This endangered civilization on Earth. But after that 'high point', numbers of nuclear weapons decreased. The Cold War, which drove this increase in warheads, ended with the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

Conventional precision weapons - "every shot a direct hit"- deprived nuclear weapons of most of their military roles, except for one: the destruction of deep underground bunkers. But the explosive strengths of small nuclear warheads are sufficient for this use, such as those dropped by US Air Force in 1945 on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Today, these are considered as "small" explosive forces, 'usable' in future wars. The world is tired of being existentially threatened by nine states, including the U.S. and Russia, each with 20 times more warheads than any of the seven other Nuclear weapon states.

To countermeasure these threats, the UN and the International Red Cross undertook the consideration of humanitarian international law. The most important result, in 2021, was the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of NuclearWeapons. NATO, a "nuclear alliance" involved in wars of aggression - contrary to international law - had, with the end of the Soviet Union, lost its 'enemy'. It increasingly came under internal tensions and into competition with the EU for funding.

In 2014, violent conflicts broke out in Ukraine. The US and NATO used this to re-establish the 'enemy': Russia. From the field of tension emerges the danger of war. In 2019, the US government terminated the Treaty on the Prohibition of Land-Based Intermediate-Range Weapons (INF Treaty), under which Europe had been protected since 1987. Unnoticed by the German public, the US began stationing new such medium-range Missiles, Dark Eagle and Cruise Missile Tomahawk, in the country in 2021. From 2023, the first of them should be ready for fire. Russia followed suit and stationed missiles in the enclave of Kaliningrad, formerly Königsberg/East Prussia. From this point there is a short flight time to the European US command posts, all of which are in Germany (Stuttgart, Wiesbaden/Mainz, Ramstein).

Dark Eagles give the US the possibility of a minute-by-minute beheading strike against the Russian leadership in Moscow. At the same time, however, this opens up the unexpected perspective for Russia to end this threat with a pre-emptive attack against the US command bunkers in West Germany and the plausible justification of a "regrettable computer error in the warning system against Dark Eagle".

However, this scenario requires "small" nuclear explosions over the US command bunker. The US could protest loudly, but in this situation would have compelling reasons not to strike back against Russia, but to keep quiet. Thus, Germany is in two-fold danger of becoming the battlefield of a war between the US and Russia. To avert the danger, four constructive measures are proposed:

(1) Raising awareness: Germany is no longer capable of war,

(2) Residential areas as Red Cross protection zones

(3) NATO agreement: Friends do not bomb each other

(4) German accession to the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.

If Germany joined this UN Treaty it would have a domino effect: to defuse the nuclear conflict between the USA and Russia. This would lead predictably to an all-North Atlantic peace order within the framework of the OSCE, three decades late, after all. This would remove a crucial obstacle to global nuclear disarmament.

US Nuclear Posture Review: "what's in it for NATO?"

From END Info 28 - Jan/Feb 2022 - DOWNLOAD

By Tom Unterrainer

“What’s in it for NATO?”, asks Adrea Chiampan in a recent NATO Defense College Policy Brief on the upcoming US Nuclear Posture Review*. The way in which this question is formulated may seem a bit odd, given the central role played by the US nuclear arsenal in NATOs ‘Strategic Concept’. However, the contents of Trump’s 2018 review and the attitude of his administration towards NATO raise a number of questions about how the Biden presidency might ‘undo’ some of Trump’s damage, fulfill campaign promises and “maintain a credible [sic] nuclear deterrence [sic]”. During the Trump era, it may have been reasonable for NATO to worry over the damage his next announcement or policy update would do to the alliance. It seems unlikely that Biden will create major ripples, but there’s always a chance.

Chiampan’s brief serves as a useful insight into NATO thinking and suggests a number of issues that anti-nuclear campaigners should be alert to.

What is a Posture Review?

The NDC Policy Brief provides a useful outline:

“The [Nuclear Posture Review] is a public policy document that each US administration has published since 1994 during the first months in office and that is scheduled to be released in 2022. NPRs are important public statements: they set out the administration’s views on the role of nuclear weapons in US grand strategy. NPRs are also crucial signalling documents. They provide insight into an administration’s understanding of the prevailing geopolitical environment ... and convey US intentions to allies and adversaries alike. Given NATO’s significant reliance on US extended deterrence, the elements of continuity and change that the new NPR will propose will inevitably have direct effects on NATO’s defence posture.”

Trump’s 2018 NPR contained much alarming rhetoric that sparked concerned reaction from the anti-nuclear movement. Beyond the rhetoric, there were a series of announcements that provided concrete evidence of sharply increased nuclear risks. The worst amongst these was the plan to develop and deploy new ‘low-yield’, often termed ‘useable’, nuclear warheads. These warheads were to be placed on “existing Trident D-5 submarine launched ballistic missiles (SLBM) known as the W76-2 and [a] re-introduced sea-launched cruise missile (SLCM)” that Obama had taken out of service.

Will Biden scrap this “bad idea”?

Biden has personally called the W76-2 a “bad idea” and said that the US “did not need new nuclear weapons”. Despite thinking they’re a “bad idea” his administration has confirmed funding for both in the 2022 defence budget. Will the NPR announce a change of direction?

Chiampan argues that “adding new capabilities signals an unjustified lack of confidence in the existing ability”. If Biden’s NPR includes a commitment to see through on the development and deployment of these ‘useable’ nuclear weapons, then it suggests that NATO’s existing capabilities (ie. the nuclear capabilities that the US deploys to allegedly maintain ‘alliance security’) are not ‘up to the job’. This brings into question the often-repeated claim that US nuclear weapons in Europe are the ultimate guarantor and that NATO’s strategy is central to overall security. Such an admission would bring NATO back to the situation it found itself in under Trump: a big question mark hung around its neck. Will Biden want this?

Further, the deployment of ‘useable’ nuclear warheads, whether on submarines or on warships, will have the following impact:

Most importantly, both weapons carry risks of lowering the nuclear threshold; blurring the distinction between conventional and nuclear missions and increasing the chances for miscalculation. In a crisis, an adversary would be hard-pressed to distinguish a Trident missile carrying a single W76-2 from one carrying multiple higher yield warheads, or a SLCM mounting a conventional or nuclear warhead.

Given Biden’s oft-repeated commitment to reviewing the US’s ‘declatory policy’ on nuclear weapons, such a lowering of the threshold seems contradictory.

Sole Purpose

Whereas some nuclear-armed states maintain a clear public stance on the circumstances under which nuclear weapons would be used (China, for example, maintains a ‘No First Use’ policy), NATO’s policy “rested on one key characteristic: ambiguity...”:

Allies did not resolve to predetermine in what circumstances they would use nuclear weapons. Allies could, for instance, use nuclear weapons first in a conventional conflict to achieve specific military goals ... This ambiguity would leave an adversary deterred for fear of triggering nuclear escalation. Despite significant reduction in the number of weapons deployed in Europe after the end of the Cold War, this ambiguity continues to underpin NATO’s deterrent posture.

This ambiguity, combined with the development of ‘useable’ nuclear warheads, has significantly lowered the threshold for nuclear use. Other factors, such as the diminution of the overall capabilities in the Royal Navy (UK), lower the threshold further. Biden and his administration are on record as registering this situation, which is why the issues of ‘No First Use’ and ‘Sole Purpose’ have been discussed in mainstream disarmament and arms-control discourse.

A ‘No First Use’ policy benefits from a high degree of clarity over the circumstances under which a nuclear-armed state would use nuclear weapons: only in response to a nuclear strike from another party. This is how Chiampan describes a ‘Sole Purpose’ posture:

In its most basic formulation, sole purpose states that the US nuclear arsenal exists exclusively to deter a nuclear attack, whether against US or Allies’ territory. Sole purpose dramatically reduces ambiguity regarding the scenario for nuclear use ... While [No First Use] restricts nuclear employment scenarios dramatically, sole purpose would allow, in theory, for first use if this was essential to deter, for instance, an imminent nuclear strike ... In other words, NFU offers a clear restriction on nuclear employment, while employment restrictions from sole purpose largely depend on its qualifications and implementation.

Obama’s administration examined the possibilities of adopting a ‘Sole Purpose’ posture but rejected the idea “largely on account of European and Asian allies’ anxieties that this would undermine extended deterrence.” As previously reported in END Info, the individual though most likely to introduce ‘fresh thinking’ of this type into Biden’s NPR has been dismissed from post. The prospects of a significant shift in nuclear posture look slim.

Enduring Risks

Given the agreement to fund new nuclear weaponry and the lack of clarity with regards to prospects for NFU/Sole Purpose, will Biden’s NPR herald a decisive break with the past? The signals are not promising. These signals include an ongoing ratcheting of tensions with Russia and China, recent declarations from NATO and individual NATO member states (including the UK, which announced an increased ‘ambiguity’ in posture). How will Biden’s NPR relate to the recently announced AUKUS agreement between Australia, the UK and US?

One thing we can be sure of is that Biden’s NPR will not remove the stark, existential risks posed by a nuclear-armed world. Our work for nuclear abolition must continue.

* Andrea Chiampan, ‘Biden’s nuclear posture review: what’s in it for NATO’, NDC Policy Brief, No. 21, December 2021. All quotes taken from this document. Accessed at: www.ndc.nato.int/news/news.php?icode=1640

On the 'responsibility to uphold the NPT'

From END Info 28 - Jan/Feb 2022 - DOWNLOAD

By Tom Unterrainer

After some delay, the tenth Review Conference (RevCon) of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons was due to be held from the 4 to 28 January 2022. it has now been postponed once more. Speaking on the Fiftieth Anniversary of the NPT’s opening for signature, 24 May 2018, UN Secretary-General António Guterres stated that:

The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty is an essential pillar of international peace and security, and the heart of the nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation regime. Its unique status is based on its near universal membership, legally-binding obligations on disarmament, verifiable non-proliferation safeguards regime, and commitment to the peaceful use of nuclear energy.

The Secretary-General is not alone in offering praise for the NPT. In a written statement to Parliament on the UK’s national report to the NPT, defence minister James Cleverly reports that:

The UK’s commitment to the Treaty and to fulfilling our NPT obligations remains undiminished. As an original signatory of the NPT, and a Nuclear Weapon State that takes its responsibilities seriously, the UK remains committed to the long-term goal of a world without nuclear weapons where all states share in the peaceful uses of nuclear technologies.

The NPT has been an unmitigated success for over 50 years. It is the centre of international efforts to stop the spread of nuclear weapons, to create a nuclear weapon-free world, and to enable access to the peaceful use of nuclear technology.

The report itself (National Report of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, pusuant to Actions 5, 20 and 21 of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) Review Conference 2010 for the 10th NPT Review Conference) opens with a ‘Ministerial Introduction’ from Mr Cleverley, Baroness Goldie and Greg Hands, Minister of State at the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy. The Ministers claim:

We are strongly committed to full implementation of the NPT in all its aspects. We believe there is no credible alternative route to effective and verifiable disarmament ...

[W]e cannot take the NPT for granted. Our recent Integrated Review ... recognises that nuclear risks have not gone away - indeed, they are getting worse ...

Every NPT State Party, not least the Nuclear Weapon States, has a responsibility to uphold the NPT ...

Every action the UK takes in this effort, as set out in the pages that follow, is underpinned by a firm belief in the importance of transparency.

Warheads

Compare and contrast these sentiments to the following passages from the Integrated Review:

In 2010 the Government stated an intent to reduce our overall nuclear warhead stockpile ceiling from not more than 225 to not more than 180 by the mid-2020s. However, in recognition of the evolving security environment, including the developing range of technological and doctrinal threats, this is no longer possible, and the UK will move to an overall nuclear weapon stockpile of no more than 260 warheads. (IR page 76)

An increase in the warhead stockpile from 180 to 260 warheads represents a 44.4% increase. If the British government is “strongly committed to full implementation of the NPT in all its aspects” then why is it increasing the number of nuclear warheads? Isn’t this the opposite of “implementation”? Doesn’t the internal proliferation of nuclear weapons increase, rather than decrease the “nuclear risks” that Cleverley et al warn us of? What to make of this section of the Integrated Review?

While our resolve and capability to do so if necessary is beyond doubt, we will remain deliberately ambiguous about precisely when, how and at what scale we would contemplate the use of nuclear weapons. Given the changing security and technological environment, we will extend this long-standing policy of deliberate ambiguity and no longer give public figures for our operational stockpile, deployed warhead or deployed missile numbers. This ambiguity complicates the calculations of potential aggressors, reduces the risk of deliberate nuclear use by those seeking a first-strike advantage, and contributes to strategic stability.

(IR page 77)

Transparency

In its report to the NPT, the British government claims that its actions are “underpinned by a firm belief in the importance of transparency”, yet in the Integrated Review they announced a policy of ‘deliberate ambiguity’ extended to cover numbers of warheads and other capabilities in addition to the ambiguity around overall posture. How is this transparent? Then there is this announcement:

The UK will not use, or threaten to use, nuclear weapons against any non-nuclear weapon state party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 1968 (NPT). This assurance does not apply to any state in material breach of those non-proliferation obligations. However, we reserve the right to review this assurance if the future threat of weapons of mass destruction, such as chemical and biological capabilities, or emerging technologies that could have a comparable impact, makes it necessary.

So the British government is publicly committed to both upholding and - if it chooses - breaching the NPT! Which is it? Basic logic suggests that you cannot be “strongly committed to full implementation of the NPT” at the same time as ‘reserving the right’ to break such commitments. Perhaps ‘basic logic’ does not operate in the field of nuclear weapons. History suggests as much. Fortunately, some practitioners and experts on international law do operate in the realm of basic logic.

For instance, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament in the UK commissioned a legal opinion on the Integrated Review announcements from Professor Christine Chinkin & Dr Louise Arimatsu of the London School of Economics and Political Science (April 2021, available at cnduk.org). Professor Chinkin and Dr Arimatsu conclude their opinion with the following statements:

In our opinion, for the reasons set out above:

(i) The announcement by the UK government of the increase in nuclear warheads and its modernisation of its weapons system constitutes a breach of the NPT article VI;

(ii) The UK would be in breach of international law were it to use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against a state party to the NPT solely on the basis of a material breach of the latter’s non-proliferation obligations;

(iii) The UK would be in breach of international law were it to use or threaten to use nuclear weapons in self-defence solely on the grounds that the future threat of weapons of mass destruction, such as chemical and biological capabilities or emerging technologies, could have comparable impact to nuclear weapons.

This legal opinion and thousands of signatures from British citizens and residents critical of the breach of international law were handed in to President-designate of the NPT RevCon, Ambassador Gustavo Flauvinen, in the first week of December 2021. Will any of the NPT State Parties be prepared to formally raise the UK’s non-compliance over the course of January 2022? The breach of international law already established and the glaring contradiction between the contents of the Integrated Review and National Report give plenty of material to work with.

Section I of the National Report on ‘national measures relating to disarmament’ doubles-down on the contradictions with specific reference to Action 5(c) of the 2010 NPT Action Plan. Action 5(c) commits state parties to:

To further diminish the role and significance of nuclear weapons in all military and security concepts, doctrines and policies.

The National Report claims that the:

Integrated Review maintains our commitment to ensure that nuclear weapons play the smallest possible role in our national security strategy, in keeping with Action 5(c) ... and supports our continued commitment to transparency of doctrine and capability.

Section II of the National Report focuses on “national measures relating to non-proliferation”. Under the sub-heading ‘AUKUS’ we are told that:

Under the UK, Australian and US enhanced trilateral security partnership (AUKUS), we have committed to an 18-month programme to work to identify the optimum way to deliver nuclear-powered submarines to the Royal Australian Navy. These will not carry nuclear weapons. Any progress will be consistent with our international obligations and our respective safeguards obligations. [p 20)

The NPT explicitly rules out the transfer or sharing of nuclear weapons technology. It also explicitly promotes the sharing of nuclear power technology. The British government seems to think that nuclear-powered submarines constitute a “peaceful” use. So far, so illogical.

Nuclear Weapon-Free Zones

Further on in Section II, attitudes towards Nuclear weapon-free zones are recorded. It is claimed that:

The UK continues to support the principle of Nuclear Weapon-Free Zones (NWFZ). Accordingly. the UK can provide legally-binding negative security assurances that they will not use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against members of a NWFZ by signing and ratifying a protocol to the NWFZ treaties. [p23]

There are currently five NWFZ treaties, four of which have been signed and ratified by the UK. Why has it not signed and ratified the fifth, the Treaty of Bangkok, which has been in place since 1995? We are told on page 24 that “difficulties over proposed reservations and declarations have delayed signing by the” nuclear weapon states. The Treaty of Bangkok covers Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philipines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. This is a strategically ‘sensitive’ region where the nuclear weapons states maintain active interests. Any NPT state serious about upholding the treaty or acting in good faith on the 2010 RevCon Actions Points would surely support the Treaty of Bangkok. Action Point 9 from 2010 states:

The establishment of further nuclear-weapon-free zones, where appropriate, on the basis of arrangements freely arrived at among States of the region concerned, and in accordance with the 1999 Guidelines of the United Nations Disarmament Commission, is encouraged. All concerned States are encouraged to ratify the nuclear-weapon-free zone treaties and their relevant protocols, and to constructively consult and cooperate to bring about the entry into force of the relevant legally binding protocols of all such nuclear-weapon-free zones treaties, which include negative security assurances. The concerned States are encouraged to review any related reservations.

Why are no such efforts made in Europe, where the concept of NWFZs originated? Why the multiple delays and disruptions with respect to the much-promised and much-needed ‘Middle East Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone’? What might link the refusal of the Treaty of Bangkok, lack of effort in Europe and the fate of the MEWMDFZ? South East Asia, Europe and the Middle East are a vipers nest of ‘interests’, ‘influence’ and competition. On page 25 of the National Report the UK attempts to explain delays to the Middle East Zone:

We remain fully committed to the 1995 Resolution on the Middle East, and to the establishment of a zone in the Middle East free of nuclear and all other weapons of mass destruction and their delivery systems. It is our long-held view, consistent with the principles and guidelines for MWFZs adopted by the UN Disarmament Commission in 1999, that all processes related to such a zone should be based on consensus and on arrangements freely arrived at by all states in the region.

As a co-sponsor, we fully recognise our responsibilities under the 1995 Resolution. We remain prepared actively to support and facilitate renewed regional dialogue aimed at bridging the differing views in the region on arrangements for a Conference that is set out in the NPT 2010 Action Plan.

The UK attended the Conference convened by the UN in 2019, demonstrating our commitment to the establishment of the zone, whilst also voicing our reservations about the credibility of a process that does not have the support of all states of the --region.

Which states might be reluctant to join the ‘consensus’ in the Middle East and ‘freely agree’ to arrangements? Which states might not support the creation of a zone free from nuclear weapons in the Middle East? Why doesn’t the National Report name these states? Happily - or perhaps not - we do not have to guess at the identity of one such state. Israel is the only nuclear-armed state in the entire Middle East. For a nuclear-free zone to be established in the region, Israel would have to renounce its nuclear weapons. In order for this to happen, Israel’s allies would have to apply significant diplomatic pressure and perhaps risk losing a consistent ally in this oil and resource rich - and geopolitically important - region.

Quite why the British government doesn’t get straight to the point should be obvious: Britain and allies want us to focus on the alleged but as yet unproven Iranian nuclear weapons programme. In November 2021, Britain and Israel signed a major trade and defence deal. A joint statement between the British and Israeli foreign ministers Liz Truss and Yair Lapid, declared:

“We will also work night and day to prevent the Iranian regime from ever becoming a nuclear power. The clock is ticking, which heightens the need for close cooperation with our partners and friends to thwart Tehran’s ambitions.”

No word on the actually-existing nuclear weapons systems in Israel, no reference to the NPT and the commitments laid out in the National Report. It is almost as if the British Foreign Office isn’t being wholly transparent with other NPT member-states. It is worth noting in this context that there is one country in the Middle East which has never been a member of the NPT: Israel.

Conclusion

The UK’s National Report is little more than a work of fiction. As with much else that emanates from the Johnson government, it’s as if they’re taking us for fools. Will the non-nuclear weapon states tolerate such a situation? Will those NPT member states that have also signed and ratified the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons allow the UK to present such a blatantly false account to the RevCon?

If the NPT is to live up to the claims made for it, then each and every instance of non-compliance should be vigorously accounted for. If the NPT is to avoid the perception that it is little more than a convenient rock for the nuclear weapon states to hide behind when the question of nuclear abolition is raised, then the non-nuclear weapon states must draw a line.

The prospects for such accountability are hindered in a number of ways. First, the ‘business’ of the NPT RevCon is in the hands of the state parties. This means that civil society, which can see through the lies and bluster, cannot get its issues onto the agenda. Not only that, but as with all international settings the states with the most power have the biggest say in what and what does not get discussed. It would take courageous and insistent action on the part of a number of states to change this situation. They are being encouraged to do so and the growing numbers of states ratifying the TPNW gives some encouragement.

A further block on decisive moves at the NPT arises from the fact that the United States is in the process of finalising its Nuclear Posture Review. Mr Biden and his representatives will know the basic outline of the NPR and will want to avoid anything that contradicts it from emerging at the NPT RevCon. Relatedly, the NPR looks likely to re-emphasize the overall strategic direction of the United States - and allies - with respect to what the UK’s Integrated Review termed “systemic competitor” states. The increasing global tensions and increased rhetoric against Russia and China cannot be separated from the question of nuclear arms and the international systems and treaties that are supposed to protect us from the ultimate danger.

Whether or not the NPT RevCon and its outcomes make the world a more or less dangerous place is something we must all keep in mind.

Cracks in consensus on NATO's nuclear doctrine

From END Info 28 - Jan/Feb 2022 - DOWNLOAD

By Ludo De Brabander, Brussels

Norway and Germany, two NATO member states, have announced that they will participate in the first 'Meeting of State Parties' of the Nuclear Prohibition Treaty in Vienna next year. In doing so, they deviate from the attitude of NATO, which strongly opposes a nuclear weapons ban. What will Belgium do?

At the Lisbon Summit (2010), NATO adopted a Strategic Concept in which the military organization defines itself as a nuclear alliance: “As long as nuclear weapons exist, NATO will remain a nuclear alliance.” This attitude has not changed, quite the contrary. At the latest summit in Brussels (June 2021), NATO heads of state and government presented the report 'NATO 2030: United for a new era'. It is assumed that a new strategic concept will be cast at the next summit in Madrid (June 2022). The report states that NATO "must continue and revitalize nuclear weapons-sharing arrangements, which are a critical part of NATO's deterrence policy." The United States (US) has an estimated 100 to 150 'advanced' nuclear weapons in five European countries (Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Turkey) that will be replaced by new B61-12 nuclear bombs from next year. Apart from Turkey, it is the combat aircraft of the countries concerned that are responsible for their deployment. (Communication of the Brussels Summit, 2021)

The TPNW debate in Europe

However, NATO's common position as a 'nuclear alliance' appears to be under pressure. Last year (2020), Rolf Mützenich, the Social Democrat (SPD) group leader in the Bundestag, said that Germany "must rule out the deployment of US nuclear weapons in the future". Germany – like Belgium – has never confirmed or denied the presence of US nuclear weapons on its territory (at Büchel air base). Mützenich brought their existence back into political memory. The SPD became the largest party after the September 26 elections and formed a government last month with the Greens and the liberal FDP. In the coalition agreement, the new government stated that Germany will participate as an observer in the first 'Meeting of State Parties' of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) to be held from 22 to 24 March next year. At the beginning of October, the government of NATO member state Norway decided to attend as an observer.

The debate is also raging in other NATO member states. The Belgian coalition agreement (September 30, 2020) states that it wants to examine – “together with the European NATO allies” – “how the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons can give new impetus to multilateral nuclear disarmament.” Despite the fact that the Belgian Minister of Foreign Affairs recently said that the Nuclear Ban Treaty is not the right instrument for nuclear disarmament, the German example can ensure that Belgium will also go to Vienna. In the Netherlands – another nuclear host state – Jasper van Dijk, a Member of Parliament from the Socialist Party, tabled a motion asking that his country be present at the first meeting of the TPNW. Although the motion was rejected (68 out of 150), two parties (D66 & ChristenUnie) involved in the ongoing coalition negotiations voted for. A total of nine parties supported the proposal.

Undermining NATO's Nuclear Consensus

This development could undermine the consensus on NATO's nuclear policy. Since its signing in July 2017, NATO has been campaigning aggressively against the nuclear ban treaty. The final statement from the NATO summit in Brussels (June 2021) reads: “We reiterate our opposition to the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), which is contrary to the Alliance's nuclear deterrence policy, existing non-proliferation and disarmament architecture, threatens to undermine the NPT (Non-Proliferation Treaty) and fails to take into account the current security context.” In addition, NATO claims that the NPT "remains the cornerstone of the global architecture for non-proliferation and disarmament".

The NPT came into effect more than half a century ago (in 1970), but it has not prevented massive investment programs in nuclear arsenals. In the NPT, each state (including the nuclear-weapon states) pledges to work towards a treaty on general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international control. Despite its stated commitment to the NPT, NATO's nuclear member states (US, UK, France) spent $49.3 billion last year on the modernization and maintenance of nuclear weapons.

While NATO and its member states have claimed for decades that they are “committed to arms control, disarmament and non-proliferation”, in practice the opposite is happening. This spring, Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced his intention to increase the number of British nuclear warheads by more than 40% (from 180 to 260), in violation of the obligations under the NPT. The US delivery of nuclear-powered submersibles to Australia, announced in September, under a new US, UK-Australia Defense Pact (AUKUS) is another potential breach of the NPT. It sets a precedent where other countries can equally purchase nuclear-powered submarines, while no verification mechanisms have yet been developed to prevent the nuclear fuel from being used for a nuclear weapons program. After all, it is about enriched uranium that can be used in weapons. Countries such as Canada, South Korea and Brazil have already expressed their desire to have nuclear submarines. In short: a gray zone, but one that undermines the non-proliferation regime.

The European Peace Movement

Several important international meetings will take place in 2022. The 10th NPT Review Conference will be held in New York from January 4 to 28. Two months later there is the 'Meeting of the State Parties' in Vienna. NATO will hold its next NATO summit in June and is expected to reaffirm its policy of nuclear deterrence. It is therefore a crucial year for the peace movement with the aim of increasing pressure on other NATO member states to follow the Norwegian and German example and further break through the nuclear 'solidarity' within NATO. Within the Belgian government, various parties (Greens and Vooruit) are in favor of Belgium participating as an observer at the meeting in Vienna, which would be perfectly in line with the statement in the coalition agreement. NATO's fierce stance shows that the alliance has understood that the TPNW is endangering NATO's nuclear doctrine. For example, NATO Secretary General Stoltenberg warned "that US nuclear weapons could be moved further east (and closer to Russia) if Germany were to withdraw from the scheme." That cannot of course be the intention. There have been polls all over Europe showing that at least three quarters of the population want nuclear weapons to be banned. The European peace movement is working – as last September with joint actions –six NATO countries – working hard to get nuclear weapons higher on the political agenda, so that the will of the people is finally translated into policy. A first step is to make Europe free of nuclear weapons, for which negotiations and an agreement with Russia are desirable.

First published at vrede.be on 06/12/21

New German Coalition: One Step Forward and Three Steps Back

From END Info 28 - Jan/Feb 2022 - DOWNLOAD

By Reiner Braun, Berlin

On the possible participation of the German government in the State Conference on the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) in Vienna, March 2022.

In the coalition agreement between the SPD (Social Democrats), Bündnis 90/die Grünen and the FDP (Free Democrats), the clause regarding the TPNW is written in somewhat convoluted German:

“In light of the results of the NPT Review Conference and in close consultation with our allies, we will constructively support the intent of the Treaty as an observer (not as a member) at the Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.”

The possibility of participation in the State Parties conference could not have been formulated more restrictively. It is not the treaty and its follow-up conference that are being observed, but the ‘intention’. Despite all relativization, this promise of participation can be counted as a success for the diverse actions and activities of the peace movements (especially the protests at the nuclear weapons site in Büchel), which pressed and campaigned for participation. It shows – as does the participation of the government of the NATO member Norway – that the policy of the NATO countries can no longer be to simply defame the treaty, but rather they must react to it; it can no longer ignore it politically, but must acknowledge its increasing relevance for international security policy. This is an important success for the work of the international peace movement.

But reality remains hard and brutal: Germany’s participation in the first Meeting of States Parties to the TPNW is not accompanied in the coalition agreement by further arms control measures or even disarmament steps. On the contrary: Nuclear deterrence and consistent support for NATO’s aggressive policy are enshrined as the foundation of German foreign and security policy. The game of vabanque being played with the survival of humankind remains the foundation of German policy. This is more than dangerous and certainly not conducive to peace.

There are currently about 20 US nuclear weapons stored in Germany. Germany remains a stationing country for US nuclear bombs even under the new federal government, and the weapons continue their process of “modernization”. The word “modernization” is a trivializing euphemism for new U.S. nuclear weapons (B61-12) on German soil, which are faster, more accurate, guided, and can be classified as strategic weapons. These weapons can reach Russia. Their production will begin in 2022, and their deployment in Europe from 2024 will inevitably lead to Russian counteraction. Germany’s consent on this matter not only exposes it to nuclear destruction, but it fuels the nuclear arms race. The deployment of new nuclear weapons is explicitly foreseen in the coalition agreement; Germany’s sharing of nuclear weapons will continue.

This new generation of nuclear weapons also requires new nuclear fighter bombers, 15 F-18 U.S. fighter jets on the one hand and 93 Eurofighters on the other. The procurement alone costs 8 billion euros and is expressly provided for in the coalition agreement.

New nuclear weapons and new fighter-bombers will be operated by German soldiers and officers who, in violation of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, will be trained on these aircraft carrying nuclear weapons and are to transport them to their targets in times of crisis and war. These acts in violation of international law are expressly provided for in the coalition agreement; in other words, nuclear sharing, in violation of international law, remains government policy. This is a clear violation of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT).

What conclusions can we draw about the new coalition’s stance on nuclear weapons? Apart from a verbal emphasis that the new German government is striving for “a world without nuclear weapons” and half-hearted observer participation in the TPNW conference in Vienna, the government’s political signs point to rearmament, new nuclear weapons, and an intensification of the nuclear arms race.

Disarmament looks different. The German peace movement continues to face great challenges.

Reiner Braun, Executive Director of the International Peace Bureau (IPB) and active in many ways in the German peace movement.

Europe's nuclear fault lines

From END Info 28 - Jan/Feb 2022 - DOWNLOAD

Editorial Comments

By Tom Unterrainer

The 2022 Review Conference (RevCon) of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) was scheduled to open on 4 January 2022. The RevCon was initially scheduled to take place in April-May of 2020 to coincide with the fiftieth anniversary of the Treaty. It has been delayed again “in light of the latest developments regarding the COVID-19 pandemic” and will not take place until August 2022 at the earliest. The NPT is portrayed as the cornerstone of institutional efforts to regulate the spread of nuclear weapons and as such, it plays an important part in the maintenence of a ‘global nuclear order’. Despite the wrecking operation on a series of nuclear agreements and treaties carried out by the Trump administration, the NPT emerged ‘unscathed’.

There are, however, major issues confronting those who will eventually assemble online or in-person to deliberate the implementation of the Treaty. Some of these ‘major issues’ derive from the fact that the NPT emerged in 1970 as “a grossly discriminatory treaty” (see Peggy Duff, ‘The Non-Proliferation Treaty’, in this issue) in that it asked a lot more of non-nuclear states than it did of those who already possessed such weapons. Another source of these ‘major issues’ is embodied in the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) which came about on the initiative of a majority-non-nuclear-armed world which had simply had enough of the lack of progress towards nuclear abolition.

A third potential source of these ‘major issues’ is contained in the United Kingdom’s ‘National Report’ to the NPT (see ‘On the ‘responsibility to uphold the NPT’’ in this issue). This document, riddled with fictions, clearly demonstrates the actual intentions and strategic preoccupations of the nuclear-armed states, which point in the polar opposite direction to Article VI of the NPT, which concerns nuclear disarmament.

For all the limitations of the NPT itself, the RevCon presents an important opportunity for the nuclear-armed states to be held to account. Will the UK be held to account for breaching the NPT? Will the others in ‘non-compliance’ be similarly challenged? Will US plans to continue with the development of ‘useable’ nuclear weapons be a topic of discussion? Will those nuclear states not party to the NPT, like Israel, be issued with new requests to join? What of progress on the development of a WMD-Free Zone in the Middle East? Can we expect more progress this time?

Questions of accountability and the ability to hold the nuclear-armed world to account are of vital importance, especially when nuclear tensions are so high and look likely to increase.

Nuclear sharing

How might existing tensions increase further? It may or may not come as a surprise that the will of the German electorate has left a bad taste in the mouth of the NATO Secretary General. A significant proportion of German opinion wants an end to nuclear sharing arrangements whereby US nuclear arms are stationed in the country. That opinion was reflected in the political platforms and sentiments of those parties that now form the new German coalition government.

NATO has always insisted that nuclear weapons in Germany (along with similar arrangements in Italy, Belgium, The Netherlands and Turkey) are indispensable components of ‘Alliance Security’ and that any change whatsoever would undermine this ‘security’. Jens Stoltenberg has now changed his tune. Rather than repeat the standard insistence, he has indicated that if Germany was to disengage from nuclear sharing, then the US bombs would simply find a ‘new home’. Who would want these machines of genocide? It seems that either Poland or Romania, or perhaps both, would accommodate them.

We have warned of this prospect in previous issues of END Info and in the pages of The Spokesman. Moving nuclear weapons even closer to Russia would not maintain security: it would make Europe an even more dangerous place. This is why we must continue to examine and promote prospects for a nuclear-weapons-free zone in Europe and also pay close attention to other developments.

Dark Eagle

Related to the issue of nuclear sharing are ongoing preparations to deploy new medium-range, conventionally-armed, missile systems in Germany together with the hypersonic ‘Dark Eagle’ system. Joachim Wernicke has developed a detailed analysis of these deployments in his work, Die neue „NATO-Nachrüstung” ab 2023 (trans. The New NATO Deployments of 2023). The following text is a translation from the Abstract of this text:

... a new US Army command unit ‘MDTF-2’ [has] been set up for Dark Eagle and Tomahawk missiles in Wiesbaden, together with the reactivated former command unit for the Pershing II missiles, and an Army combat unit was moved from the USA to Grafenwöhr, as an operating team for the new media-range weapons. In principle, both missiles can also be equipped with nuclear weapons, but according to official announcements, they carry only conventional warheads. The European missile duel of the new ‘NATO Retrofit’ will therefore be rebuilt according to the pattern of the 1980s in the 2020s. This time, however, only in Germany and so far completely unnoticed by the German public which looks at Coronavirus and climate change.

Wernicke argues that the precision, speed and explosive capabilities of these ‘conventionally armed’ missiles are designed with one purpose in mind: a ‘decapitation’ strike against Russian political and military installations. How might one nuclear armed state respond to such a ‘conventional’ attack by another nuclear armed state? The answers are terrifyingly obvious.

The development and deployment of new, technologically sophisticated weapons systems contributes to a significant blurring of the lines and a significant increase in tensions. Such deployments also complicate the calculus of achieving stable non-proliferation and arms control regimes. For instance, given the plans to station these weapons in Germany what is the basis for demands that Russia removes missile systems deployed in Kaliningrad which were placed there following Trump’s sabotage of the INF Treaty?

If this situation wasn’t concerning enough, it should be remembered that these deployments are only one part of a troubling dynamic playing out on our continent.

Red lines

Our newspapers, magazines and social media news feeds have been full of articles talking up the prospect of a ‘war with Russia’. True, Russia has deployed a significant number of troops along the (extensive) Ukrainian border. Yes, this seems like a worrying signal. However, other troubling things have recently appeared at the Russia-Ukraine border including nuclear-capable US bombers which have carried out a number of ‘training missions’ along this stretch.

It is worth noting that whilst the alarm of the troop build-up could be heard across Europe, America and beyond, news that Russia had begun the withdrawal of troops was not announced with such flourish. Here’s how Ray McGovern described events on antiwar.com:

I hope you know this by now, but on Christmas morning the Russian military announced a sizable troop withdrawal from Russian territory near Ukraine. The New York Post’s Eileen AJ Connelly jumped on the story. At noon Saturday her piece, “Over 10,000 Russian troops leaving Ukraine border region after month of drills”, was posted.

While the drawdown was announced without fanfare, it might represent the first quid for the quo’s that President Vladimir Putin expects from U.S. negotiators next month in talks originally proposed by President Joe Biden.

How to explain the silence of the corporate media on the troop pullout? ...

The obvious explanation for the muted reporting is that Russian troops were withdrawn on Christmas Day, but at the time of writing (29/12/2021) only France 24, DW.com, Reuters and The Telegraph (UK) seem to be carrying the story as headline news.

Russia recently issued a series of ‘Red Lines’ in response to increased tensions along its borders. These ‘Red Lines’ look very similar to the policy and proposals outlined in the ‘2020 Nuclear Directive’ [see END Info 21, Dec 2020/Jan 2021]. ‘The central concern of the directive is to address the “risks and threats to be neutralized by implementation of nuclear deterrence”, such as: the “build-up by a potential adversary of the general purpose force groupings that possess nuclear weapons delivery means in the territories of the states contiguous with the Russian Federation and its allies, as well as in adjacent waters.” One example of this: NATO troops and equipment including nuclear weapon carriers concentrated in countries bordering Russia or Belarus. Not surprisingly, these adversary countries are seen as nuclear targets by Russia’, writes Joachim Wernicke in that issue of this publication.

‘It is you who must give guarantees’

Will Russian concerns and the ‘Red Lines’ now reiterated in the more recent statement be considered by the US and allies, or will tensions continue to increase? Scheduled talks between Russia and the US opens the prospect for a new round of diplomacy. This is all for the good. Yet the steady expansion of NATO influence, US and allied foreign policy and the prospect of increased US spending on new nuclear weapons suggests that there will be more to discuss at these talks than simply the conduct of the Russian government. It is worth reading President Putin’s comments from his annual news conference in this context:

Diana Magnay [Sky News]: ...You have talked a lot about security guarantees, and now we have seen your proposals. You also say you have no intention of invading Ukraine.

So, will you guarantee unconditionally that you will not invade Ukraine or any other sovereign country? Or does that depend on how negotiations go?

And another question: what is it, do you think, that the West does not understand about Russia or about your intentions?

Vladimir Putin: Regarding your question about guarantees or whether things depend on the negotiations, our actions will not depend on the negotiation process, but rather on unconditional guarantees for Russia’s security today and in the historical perspective.

In this connection, we have made it clear that any further movement of NATO to the East is unacceptable. Is there anything unclear about this? Are we deploying missiles near the US border? No, we are not. It is the United States that has come to our home with its missiles and is already standing at our doorstep. Is it going too far to demand that no strike systems be placed near our home? What is so unusual about this?

What would the Americans say if we stationed our missiles on the border between Canada and the United States, or between Mexico and the United States? Haven’t Mexico and the US had territorial disputes in the past? Which country owned California? And Texas? Have you forgotten? All right, nobody is talking about this now the way they are talking about Crimea …

But the matter at hand concerns security, not history, but security guarantees. This is why it is not the negotiations themselves but the results that matter to us.

We remember, as I have mentioned many times before and as you know very well, how you promised us in the 1990s that [NATO] would not move an inch to the East. You cheated us shamelessly: there have been five waves of NATO expansion, and now the weapons systems I mentioned have been deployed in Romania and deployment has recently begun in Poland. This is what we are talking about, can you not see?

We are not threatening anyone. Have we approached US borders? Or the borders of Britain or any other country? It is you who have come to our border, and now you say that Ukraine will become a member of NATO as well. Or, even if it does not join NATO, that military bases and strike systems will be placed on its territory under bilateral agreements. This is the point.

And you are demanding guarantees from me. It is you who must give us guarantees, and you must do it immediately, right now, instead of talking about it for decades and doing what you want, while talking quietly about the need for security guarantees to everyone. This is the point. Are we threatening anyone?

The dynamics of the present tensions now extend well beyond Russia’s deployment of troops, the development of new Russian weaponry or the precise accounting of the post-Soviet expansion of NATO. There have been more fundamental shifts in the situation, demonstrated not least by the strategic alignment between Russia and China, both labelled ‘systemic competitors’ to the US and allies. Given the history of relations between the Soviet Union and China over much of the past seventy years, such an alignment – more the consequence of US policy than a driver of it – is a remarkable development.

$777,770,000,000

The US military-industrial complex – not to mention proponents of a new nuclear arms race – will have welcomed President Biden’s authorisation of a record $777.77 billion of armed forces spending on 27 December 2021. The rest of the world is asking itself: “Why does Biden feel the need to approve this spending? Why would he feel the need to spend $37.77 billion more than the previous record total, approved by President Trump?”

This grotesque amount includes spending on a new generation of ‘useable’ nuclear warheads, something Biden previously described as a “bad idea”. Prospects for the upcoming Nuclear Posture Review are considered elsewhere in this edition of END Info but it seems abundantly clear that a new nuclear-arms race is under way. How will the other nuclear-armed states react? What will be the response to the deployment of new ‘useable’ nuclear warheads?

With the authorisation of this spending, the world has become an even more dangerous place.

Fault lines

We should all be alert to the sharpening of tensions and to any developments connected to them. But we should also pay close attention to the causes as well as the dynamics of the fault lines in Europe. The insistence of the nuclear-armed states and their allies that the capacity to exterminate life on this planet is ‘essential for security’ has been examined again and again.

The central role of nuclear weapons in foreign policy strategy and the consequential risks cannot be overlooked. Efforts to extend NATO membership and influence further towards Russia’s border will only exacerbate the situation.

The nuclear-armed states and those who advise them will not realise the errors of their ways without a determined effort on the part of the peace, disarmament and anti-nuclear movements. This means not only pointing out the risks, describing the hypocrisy and raising the alarm. It means building our movements into a powerful, connected force across Europe and beyond. It means equiping ourselves with alternative solutions and ideas.

It means creating a climate of peace against the drive towards a dangerous and potentially deadly nuclear confrontation.

Bertrand Russell and the problem of ‘deterrence’

From END Info 27 - Download

By Ken Coates

‘Bertrand Russell and the problem of deterrence’ is an abridged version of the first chapter of Ken Coates’ collection of essays and working papers titled The Most Dangerous Decade. Published by Spokesman in 1984, the collection is subtitled: World Militarism and the New Non-aligned Peace Movement. The book is available to buy from spokesmanbooks.org.

* * * 

The new movement for nuclear disarmament in Europe, which has swept across the continent in the first years of the present decade, offers many similarities to the earlier peace movement, remembered now by people entering middle age.

In the late 50s and early 60s, however, life was rather simpler than it is today. The differences between the peace movements of then and now are perhaps as important as their similarities. So, too, are the differences in the contexts in which they seek to act. In 1955, Bertrand Russell and Albert Einstein published the famous manifesto which launched the Pugwash movement, so named because the first international meeting of scientists which it called into being met at Cyrus Eaton’s estate in Pugwash, Nova Scotia.

This document … sets out the classic statement of the perils of nuclear war, which, its authors established, might quite possibly put an end to the human race. Their judgement has lost none of its validity. But the political disputes which divide the world have changed significantly since Russell and Einstein agreed their text. “The world is full of conflicts”, they wrote, “and, overshadowing all minor conflicts, the titanic struggle between communism and anti-communism”. Two-and-a-half decades on, this “titanic struggle” has radically changed its form.

Even in 1955, anti-communism had many exponents, from quasi-feudal despots, to the directors of great capitalist corporations, to social democrats or libertarian socialists. Those opposing communism in 1980 represent a no less incompatible spectrum than before, although the shades of opinion included in it are now perhaps more finely delineated. On the other side, those supporting communism have fragmented into a dizzying variety of schools … Doctrinal disagreements follow these national and regional cleavages, and also, to some degree, overlay them …

Not a whit less divided is the capitalist world. Whilst multinational companies establish a new globalism, serious divisions of economic interest separate the United States from the most potent European nations, and there are widening breaches between both of these power centres and their dynamic competitors in Japan. If conventional socialist doctrines on imperialism are true, then the real world conflict is as likely to follow intercapitalist fractures as it is to remain contained in the ideological rupture of the cold war. At the same time realistic “western” analysis can show that ideological quarrels have relatively easily become exchanges of shot and shell between “communist” states, whilst the basic East-West divide has remained frozen in an uneasy peace …

All this has made the maintenance of peace immeasurably more difficult, since the complex of shifting affinities involves risk that where one dispute between two contenders might be negotiated to a settlement, the actions of a third party may serve to reopen old divisions on a new plane, or create new conflicts immediately after the resolution of existing ones. That more than one of the potential contenders phrase their communiques in the language of Marxism, with quotations from the same scriptures, by no means ameliorates this difficulty.

The fragmentation of interests within the blocs makes the old concept of detente infinitely more difficult to pursue. Even if all the statesmen in all the powers were firmly bent on avoiding war at all costs, they would require consummate expertise and skill to do so. However, it seems rather plain that peace is not exactly the first priority for all of them, so that the avoidance of war requires other advocates, with firmer commitments, if it is to be adequately promoted.

All this would have been a warning to heed even if each of the worlds of Russell and Einstein had simply subdivided: but in fact both parts of their world have also entered other profound crises. Fission has followed crisis, and aggravated it in the process. Apparent economic stability in the West has given way to deep slump, mass unemployment, and aggravated civil disorder in many countries. The once monolithic political conformity of the East has also broken into serial problems, promoting apathy, withdrawal and even non-co-operation on a wide scale. Strident dissidence has become evident among certain minorities. In both halves of this cold peace, troubles now come, not in single spies, but in whole battalions.

However complex the evolution of affairs since they wrote their manifesto, Russell and Einstein were right to pinpoint what has remained the unresolved problem of our time, to which we may find no simple solution in any scriptures, secular or other. In a prophetic moment more than a hundred years earlier, the authors of the Communist Manifesto had spoken of the class struggle (which they clearly saw as a democratic process in the fullest sense of the words), as ending “either in a revolutionary reconstitution of society at large or in the common ruin of the contending classes”.

That “common ruin” now looms over us. It is no longer a question of socialism or barbarism, but of survival or the end of our species. Although this dilemma has confronted us since the Hiroshima explosion in August 1945, we have neither adequately understood it, nor have we yet resolved it. It will be more extensively discussed below.

Yet the existence of this dilemma does not at all annul the other lesser social tensions which demand real change in the structures of our societies, East and West alike. The inhibition of such change itself intensifies the threat of war, while the threat of war is used to reinforce that inhibition.

In his attempt to focus these prospects more than [60] years ago, Bertrand Russell drew three rather evident conclusions: first, that any future large-scale war would bring disaster “not only to belligerents, but to mankind”; second, that little wars would always henceforward contain the risk of becoming great, and that the more of them there were, the more likely it would be that one or another of them might grow to encompass our general destruction; and third, that even were existing nuclear weapons all by agreement to be destroyed, the outbreak of any future major war would ensure that replacements would be used as soon as they could be manufactured.1 So far more than a hundred “little” wars have raged since 1945, and two of them, those in Korea and lndo-China, involved the use of a firepower more horrendously devastating than the totality of that available during the Second World War. To this matter, too, we shall return below. In one sense, this fact does not contradict what Russell said: war in Afghanistan, or in Iran, or in Eritrea, or in Namibia, or in the Lebanon, or who knows where next, does indeed carry the most fearful prospect of escalation, drawing in both active external sponsors and passive bystanders. In another sense, those who have preached the conventional doctrine of deterrence can be yielded (for what it is worth), their claim that ever-enlarging nuclear arsenals in both superpowers have up to now kept them apart from direct engagement one with another, and schooled them in exploring the delicate risks of proxy conflicts. The proxies will take no comfort from this.

This doctrine of deterrence has not stood still, however. Until recently, one of its most loyal British proponents has been Mr Denis Healey, who informed us in the early 1950s that the best guide to the true state of the world was Thomas Hobbes, who understood power politics. For Hobbes, fear was an indispensable component of the impulse to statehood, upon which depended the public peace and the containment of the “war of each against all”, which otherwise raged in the society of natural man. But if this doctrine had been true, Hiroshima would surely have generated sufficient fear to force us all to accept the need for a genuinely international polity. It did not. Instead, it became an obstacle to such a polity. Deterrence theory, founded in one kind of technology, and within a given geo-political balance, has reiterated various rather primitively Hobbesian prescriptions to all who would listen, while both technologies and political realities have been borne along beneath it in a heaving flux of change. Hobbes himself would have been infinitely wiser than his modern epigones. He would never have ignored corporeal being because of a web of words. Order may once have been based on fear, but today fear has reached a point at which it imminently threatens to destroy what it has left of “order”.

When Bertrand Russell sought to explain the confrontation of the nuclear superpowers, back in 1959, he offered a famous analogy:

“Since the nuclear stalemate became apparent, the Governments of East and West have adopted the policy which Mr Dulles calls ‘brinkmanship’. This is a policy adapted from a sport which, I am told, is practised by the sons of very rich Americans. This sport is called ‘Chicken!’ It is played by choosing a long straight road with a white line down the middle and starting two very fast cars towards each other from opposite ends. Each car is expected to keep the wheels of one side on the white line. As they approach each other, mutual destruction becomes more and more imminent. If one of them swerves from the white line before the other, the other, as he passes, shouts ‘Chicken!’, and the one who has swerved becomes an object of contempt. As played by youthful plutocrats, this game is considered decadent and immoral, although only the lives of the players are risked. But when the game is played by eminent statesmen, who risk not only ‘their own lives but those of many hundreds of millions of human beings, it is thought on both sides that the statesmen on the other side are reprehensible. This, of course, is absurd. Both are to blame for playing such an incredibly dangerous game. The game may be played without misfortune a few times, but sooner or later it will come to be felt that loss of face is more dreadful than nuclear annihilation. The moment will come when neither side can face the derisive cry of ‘Chicken!’ from the other side. When that moment is come, the statesmen of both sides will plunge the world into destruction.”2

I do not cite this passage out of piety. Russell’s parable is no longer adequate. As we have seen, various things have changed since 1959. Some were beginning to change, at any rate in minds like Mr Henry Kissinger’s, even before that time.

Some changes were rather evident to ordinary people, more or less instantly. Others were not. Within the game of “chicken” itself, we had the Cuba crisis of 1962. We shall discuss this later, but for our present purposes it is enough to note that Mr Krushchev swerved. This persuaded certain shallow advocates of the game that deterrence actually worked. But rather more significantly, it also persuaded the more faithful Hobbesians among Mr Krushchev’s colleagues that considerably greater effort should be lavished on the perfection of a swerve-proof war machine. Consequently, the nuclear armament balance shifted, if not in the dramatic manner announced by Washington alarmists, at any rate in the direction of something closer to effective parity.

In addition to this, proliferation of nuclear weaponry continued. This is discussed below, and all that we need to say about it here is that it has complicated the rules of the game rather considerably. The French allowed if they did not actually encourage public speculation about the thought that their deterrent was more than unidirectional, if their putative defenders ever showed undue reluctance to perform, in time of need, the allotted role. The arrival of the Chinese as a potential nuclear force produced a new prospect of a three-way “chicken” game, with both main camps holding out at least a possibility that, in appropriate circumstances, they might “play the China card”. But here the metaphor is mixing itself. Staying within the rules Russell advanced, we would have to express it like this: the Chinese “deterrent” could, at least in theory, be set to intervene against either of the other participants in the joust, unpredictably, from any one of a bewildering number of side-entries to the main collision course.

As if this were not problem enough, the war-technology has itself evolved, so that:

a. military costs have escalated to the point where nuclear powers are quite apparently increasingly impotent if they are barred from using what has now become by far their most expensive weaponry; and

b. nuclear weapons technique aspires to (although it may very well fail to meet) infinitely greater precision in attack. This brings nearer the possibility of pre-emptive war, which is a perfectly possible abrupt reversal of standard deterrence presumptions.

To these facts we must add another, of powerful moment:

c. the stability of the world political economy, which seemed effectively unchallengeable in 1959, has been fatally undermined by the collapse of the Keynesian world order, deep slump in the advanced capitalist countries, and growing social tension within the nations of the Soviet sphere of influence, who have not for the most part been able to evolve those democratic and consensual forms of administration which could resolve their political tensions in an orderly and rational manner.

In the interaction of these developments, we have seen the consolidation, amongst other delinquencies, of the doctrine of “limited” nuclear war. We can only reduce this veritable mutation in strategy to Russell’s exemplary folk-tale if we imagine that each participant car in the game enfolds smaller subordinate vehicles, which can be launched down the white line at even greater speed than the velocity of approach of the main challengers. These lesser combatants can, it is apparently believed, be set loose on one another in order that their anticipated crashes may permit time for the principals to decide whether it might _be wise themselves to swerve or not. Any desire of the small fry to change course is already taken care of, because they are already steered by remote control. Of course, the assumption is that those involved in the “lesser” combat will necessarily be destroyed. Maybe their destruction can save their mother vehicles from perishing, although careful analysts think it very much more likely not.

Stated in this way, the game has become even more whimsical than it was in Russell’s original model. But stiffened up with precise and actual designations, it loses all traces of whimsy. The lesser vehicles in the developing game of “limited” war are all of Europe’s nations. Whether or not their sacrifice makes free enterprise safer in New York, or allows Mr Brezhnev’s successors time to build full communism (and we may well be agnostic on both scores) what is securely certain is that after it Europe will be entirely and poisonously dead, and that the civilisations of Leonardo and Galileo, Bacon and Hobbes, Spinoza and Descartes and, yes, Karl Marx, will have evaporated without trace.

Before we consider the project for limited nuclear war in a little more detail, it is necessary to unravel the conventional doctrine of deterrence somewhat further . Advocates of this schema will often repudiate the fable of the chicken game. “It is a malicious travesty”, they will tell us. The vogue question which is then very commonly posed by such people is this: “you complain about the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki: but would these events have taken place, if Japan then had the benefit of a possible nuclear response?” Let us worry this problem a little. First, some obvious points. Did the Japanese in this speculative argument possess an equivalence of weaponry or not? If they were nuclear-armed, but with a smaller number of war-heads, or inadequate delivery systems, it is possible that their retaliatory capacity could be evaluated and discounted, in which case the American attack would presumably have gone ahead. If, on the other hand, the American Government perceived that it might not avoid parity of destruction or worse, it would in all likelihood have drawn back. It might even have hesitated for fear of less than equal devastation. “Aha!” say the deterrent philosophers: “you have conceded our case”. Well, hardly. We must first pursue it for a few steps, but not before pointing out that it has already become completely hypothetical, and already travesties many other known facts about the real Japanese war prospects in August 1945, quite apart from the then existing, real disposition of nuclear weapons. (There are some strong grounds for the assumption that the Japanese would actually have been brought to a very quick surrender if the nuclear bombardment had never taken place, or indeed, even had it not been possible). But for the sake of argument, we are temporarily conceding this special case of the deterrent argument.

Let us then see what happens when we apply it further. In 1967, the Indian Government exploded a “peaceful” nuclear device. Subsequently Pakistan set in train the necessary work of preparation for an answering technology. Since partition, India and Pakistan have more than once been at war. There remain serious territorial claims at issue between them. The secession of Bangladesh inflicted serious humiliation on the Pakistan Government. What possible argument can be advanced against a Pakistan deterrent? We shall instantly be told that the present military rulers of that country are unsavoury to a remarkable degree, that they butchered their last constitutionally elected Prime Minister, and that they maintain a repressive and decidedly unpleasant administration. It is difficult, if not unfortunately impossible, to disagree with these complaints, all of which are founded in reason and justice. But as co-opted theorists of deterrence, we must dismiss them. Our adopted argument is, that if India and Pakistan are to be held apart from their next war, the deterrent is necessary to both sides. Their respective moral shortcomings, if any, or indeed, if all that have ever been alleged, have nothing to do with the case.

Late in April 1981, Mr F.W. De Klerk, the mineral and energy affairs minister of South Africa, publicly admitted that his country was producing a quantity of 45 per cent enriched uranium, which announcement signified that South Africa had the capacity to manufacture its own nuclear armament. This news was scarcely electrifying, since a nuclear device had already apparently been detonated in the South Atlantic during the previous year, arid it had therefore been assumed, almost universally, that the South African bomb already existed. What should the black African “front-line States” then do? Deterrence positively requires that Angola, Zimbabwe and Mozambique should instantly start work on procuring their opposing bombs. After all, South African troops have regularly been in action outside their own frontiers, and the very vulnerability of the Apartheid State makes it perfectly possible that serious military ·contests could break out over the whole contiguous zone. To prevent such war, the Angolan or Zimbabwean bomb represents a prudent and uncontentious investment.

We can say the same thing about the States of the Middle East. To them we might add those of Central America. Would Cuba have been invaded during the Bay of Pigs episode, if she had deployed nuclear weapons? To cap it all, what about Japan? Her experience, surely, would seem to be the most convincing argument for developing an extensive arsenal of thermo-nuclear war-heads. Strangely, these arguments are not heard in Japan. President Mugabe has not voiced them either. Japan’s people have not escaped the customary scissions which are part of advanced industrial society, but if one thing binds them together, it is a virtually unanimous revulsion against nuclear weapons. African States repeatedly insist that they seek protection, not by deterrence, but by the creation of a nuclear-free zone. Clearly they have not yet learnt the lessons which are so monotonously preached in the Establishment newspapers of the allegedly advanced nations.

If we were to admit that all nation States had an intrinsic right to defend their institutions and interests by all the means available to any, then nuclear proliferation would not merely be unavoidable, but unimpeachable within the deterrent model. And it is this incontrovertible fact which reduces it to absurdity; and argues that Russell was in fact right to pose the question as he did. Very soon the chicken game will not only have a cluster of three nuclear States at one end of the white line, and a single super-State at the other, with the Chinese already able to intervene from a random number of side routes: but it will shortly have from 12 to 20 other possible contenders liable to dash, quite possibly unannounced, across the previously single axis of collision.

For those who still believe that this dreadful evolution will be prevented by the treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, we must offer three warning notes. First, the treaty’s Review Conference of August 1980, held in Geneva, failed to agree any “certificate of good health” for its operation, because the nuclear powers had flouted all their solemn promises to scale down their own nuclear stocks. Critics of the treaty said from the beginning that its weakness derived from the fact that under it the nuclear weapons-holding States were assuming the right to police the rest. This could only acquire moral validity if they began themselves to behave according to the same rules which they sought to impose on others. At Geneva, the Review Conference demonstrated that no such behaviour had materialised. Secondly, visible evidence of the collapse of the treaty’s framework has come from the military relationship between the USA and Pakistan since the invasion of Afghanistan by the USSR. Vast conventional weapons shipments to Pakistan have already taken place, and vaster ones are contemplated, in spite of the previous US policy which had withheld arms supplies of all kinds from any State suspected of breaching the non-proliferation treaty. If breaches are now condoned by superpowers wherever their own perceived interests at stake, then the treaty is not merely dead, but rotting away. Thirdly, as an augury, we have the Israeli bombardment of Iraq, which shows what we must expect now that proliferation is effectively uncontrolled. It was, coincidentally, Mr Ismat Kitani of Iraq who presided over the Geneva Review Conference, and who warned that “the failure of the talks would damage world peace”.

Deterrence, in short, was in the beginning, a bi-polar game, and it cannot be played in a multi-polar world. It is therefore collapsing, but the danger is that this collapse will result in universal destruction if alternative approaches are not speedily accepted. This danger arises because deterrence is a doctrine, a hitherto partially shared mythology, a mental scarecrow which may well lose all credibility before the material war potential which gave rise to it has even begun to be dismantled.

There was always, of course, a much simpler rebuttal of the doctrine. It is, was, and has always been, utterly immoral. Unfortunately, this argument, which is unanswerable, is not usually given even the slightest consideration in the world’s war rooms, although there is a fair deal of evidence that the people who staff these sometimes find it difficult to avoid traumatic neuroses about the effects of all their devilish labours.

However, the “lateral” proliferation of nuclear weapons to ever larger numbers of States, is by no means the most drastic process by which such weapons are multiplied. Lateral proliferation will provide more and more problems for the peace of the world, but the “vertical” proliferation of superpower arsenals is fearsome on an infinitely more dreadful scale. And it is the evolution of nuclear war-fighting doctrine and the preparation for limited nuclear war which provides unquestionably the most serious threat we face in the 1980s, disturbed though rational men and women are bound to be by the prospects of the spawning of autonomously controlled atomic war-heads from one troubled region to the next. The ‘’limited’’ nuclear exchange in Europe is likely to take place before one can be prepared on the Indian subcontinent, or yet in Africa. It is also scheduled to deploy as large a proportion of the firepower of the two great arsenals as may be needed.

How did we arrive at this mutation in strategic policy, which has begun to generate weapons designed to fight war rather than to “deter” it?

At the time when Bertrand Russell was campaigning for nuclear disarmament in Britain, there was an imbalance in the nuclear explosive stockpiles, although thermo-nuclear weapons already amply guaranteed the destruction of both superpowers, if they were to venture into war. According to Herbert York, the United States then had between 20 and 40 million kilotons of explosives, “or the energy equivalent of some 10,000 World War II’s”.

“We had reached” wrote York, “a level of supersaturation that some writer characterised by the word ‘overkill’, an understatement in my opinion. Moreover, we possessed two different but reinforcing types of overkill. First, by 1960 we had many more bombs than they had urban targets, and second, with a very few exceptions such as Greater Moscow and Greater New York, the area of destruction and intense lethality that a single bomb could produce was very much larger than the area of the targets. Since all, or practically all, strategic weapons were by then thermo-nuclear, it is safe to assume that those Soviet or Chinese cities which were equivalent in size and importance to Hiroshima and Nagasaki were, by that time, targets for weapons from 100 to 1,000 times as big as the bombs used in history’s only two real demonstrations of what actually happens when large numbers of human beings and their works are hit by nuclear weapons.”3

However, overkill has its limitations: bombs in the megaton class, York tells us, do not become proportionately more lethal as they get bigger. The size of the bombs “outruns the size of the target”. This inevitably wastes much explosive power on “sparsely populated areas”. Nonetheless, if the murderous effect of fallout is considered even in the early ‘60s both superpowers could easily render the entirety of each other’s territories intensely radioactive, and still have many unexpended bombs to spare.

The military doctrine which accompanied the perfection of this technology was one of the “massive retaliation”, in words of Secretary Dulles, or later, “Mutual Assured Destruction” as Defence Secretary McNamara styled it. Although its advocates always insisted that this was a deterrent doctrine designed to prevent war, it did nonetheless, bear an undeniable relationship to Russell’s game of “chicken”, whenever conflict between the two powers entered the stage of open confrontation. But during McNamara’s own period, the seeds of the new doctrine of “flexible response” were already maturing. The assumption out of which this notion was to codify itself was that different levels of nuclear escalation could be defined, permitting an American President a power to move through a spectrum of lesser types of nuclear strike before all-out mutual destruction became unavoidable. In 1964, Mr McNamara specifically mentioned the need for “flexible capability” in nuclear forces. In 1969, Defence Secretary Clark Clifford called for weapons which could be “used effectively in a limited and controlled retaliation as well as for ‘Assured Destruction’.”4

To be fair, this transition was accompanied by much lobbying from European statesmen. Henry Kissinger records some of it in his memoirs; and seeks to place much of the responsibility at the door of his European allies:

“A similar problem existed with respect to tactical nuclear weapons. One might have thought that if our strategic forces tended toward parity with the USSR and if at the same time we were inferior in conventional military strength, greater emphasis would be placed on tactical nuclear forces. This indeed was NATO’s proclaimed strategy of ‘flexible response’. But there was little enthusiasm for this concept within our government. Civilian officials in the State Department and the Pentagon, especially systems analysis experts, were eager to create a clear ‘firebreak’ between conventional and nuclear weapons and to delay the decision to resort to any nuclear weapons as long as possible. They were reluctant, therefore, to rely on tactical nuclear weapons, which they thought would tend to erode all distinctions between nuclear and conventional strategy.

A passage from a study on NATO’s military options reflected this state of mind. This particular study was unable to find any use for nuclear weapons in NATO even though our stockpile there numbered in the thousands: The primary role of our nuclear forces in Europe, the study argued, is to raise the Soviet estimate of the expected costs of aggression and add great uncertainty to their calculations. Nuclear forces do not necessarily have a decisive impact on the likelihood or form of aggression, the study concluded. This was an astonishing statement from a country that had preserved the peace in Europe for over twenty years by relying on its nuclear preponderance. Nor was it clear how forces thought not to have a decisive impact could affect the calculations of a potential aggressor. It was a counsel of defeat to abjure both strategic and tactical nuclear forces, for no NA TO country – including ours – was prepared to undertake the massive buildup in conventional forces that was the sole alternative.

To confuse matters further, while American civilian analysts deprecated the use of nuclear weapons as ineffective and involving a dangerous risk of escalation, our allies pressed a course contradicting the prevailing theory in Washington. They urged both a guaranteed early resort to tactical nuclear weapons and immunity of their territories from their use. Inevitably, discussions that had been going on since 1968 in the NATO Nuclear Planning Group began to produce serious differences of opinion.

This group had been set up by Secretary McNamara as a device by which our allies could participate in nuclear decisions without acquiring nuclear weapons themselves. Denis Healey, then British Minister of Defence, had explained his government’s view when Nixon visited London in February 1969. In Healey’s judgment NATO’s conventional forces would be able to resist for only a matter of days; hence early use of nuclear weapons was essential. Healey stressed the crucial importance of making the Soviets understand that the West would prefer to escalate to a strategic exchange rather than surrender. On the other hand, NA TO should seek to reduce devastation to a minimum. The Nuclear Planning Group was working on solving this riddle; its ‘solution’ was the use of a very small number of tactical weapons as a warning that matters were getting out of hand.

What Britain, supported by West Germany, was urging came to be called the ‘demonstrative use’ of nuclear weapons. This meant setting off a nuclear weapon in some remote location, which did not involve many casualties – in the air over the Mediterranean, for example – as a signal of more drastic use if the warning failed. I never had much use for this concept. I believed that the Soviet Union would not attack Western Europe without anticipating a nuclear response. A reaction that was designed to be of no military relevance would show more hesitation than determination; it would thus be more likely to spur the attack than deter it. If nuclear weapons were to be used, we needed a concept by which they could stop an attack on the ground. A hesitant or ineffective response ran the risk of leaving us with no choices other than surrender or holocaust.

But what was an ‘effective’ response? Given the political impossibility of raising adequate conventional forces, the Europeans saw nuclear weapons as the most effective deterrent. But they feared the use of them on their territories; what seemed ‘limited’ to us could be catastrophic for them. The real goal of our allies - underlining the dilemma of tactical nuclear weapons - has been to commit the United States to the early use of strategic nuclear weapons, which meant a US-Soviet nuclear war fought over their heads. This was precisely what was unacceptable to American planners. Our strategy - then and now - must envisage the ultimate use of strategic nuclear weapons if Europe can be defended in no other way. But it must also seek to develop other options, both to increase the credibility of the deterrent and to permit a flexible application of our power should deterrence fail.”5

It was in March 1974 that the new Defence Secretary, James Schlesinger, announced a comprehensive justification for limited nuclear war. Since then, although United States spokesmen, including President Carter himself, have havered backwards and forwards on this question, “flexible targetting” has apparently gone remorselessly ahead, and the concomitant doctrines of limited war have become military orthodoxy. It is this fact which rendered the revelation, in August 1980, of the contents of Presidential Directive 59 so unsurprising to the specialists. It is also this fact which had previously provoked British military leaders and scientific planners, like Lord Mountbatten and Lord Zuckerman, to unrestrained protest.6

Of course, military doctrine is an arcane science, and while specialists debated these issues they were accorded a respectful if distant, albeit widespread, apathy. But, as the practical conclusions of their debates became plain, public moods began to change. First, the project for an enhanced radiation (or “neutron”) bomb brought home to a wide audience the apparent truth that warfighting, as opposed to “deterrent” weapons were far advanced in preparation. Then, the Soviet installation of SS-20 missiles, which could strike European or Chinese targets, but not American ones, aroused concern not only among Governments. And finally, the NATO decision to “modernise” theatre nuclear forces in Western Europe, by installing Pershing II missiles and land-based cruise missiles throughout Europe, brought forth a storm of objections, and the beginning of a new approach to European disarmament.

Neither the Soviet, nor the American “modernisations” were uniquely responsible for this profound movement of opinion. Europeans had begun to perceive their intended role as victims: limited war in Europe meant that schedules were being evolved which made them prime targets. If any of them, on either side, were over-run, they could anticipate a double jeopardy: nuclear bombardment from the “enemy” while they were themselves a nuclear threat, followed by nuclear bombardment by their “allies” if anyone was left to hit. In this growing realisation, Europe began to generate a continental Resistance, from Scandinavia to Sicily, from Poland to Portugal. This epic movement is still in its infancy, but already it demands attention.

Already there have been two major gatherings of its supporters, at the Brussels Convention for Nuclear Disarmament held in July 1982, and at a second, larger, meeting which was held in Berlin from 9 May-15 1983. In 1984, a third Convention has been scheduled for Perugia, in July. There can be little doubt that Russell’s ghost will draw encouragement from this widening response to the dangers against which he warned so cogently, and with such prescience.

Footnotes

Parts of this text appear in Heresies (Spokesman, 1982). Other parts were included in the Introduction to Alva Myrdal: The Dynamics of European Nuclear Disarmament, (Spokesman, 1981).

1. Bertrand Russell: Commonsense and Nuclear Warfare, London, Allen and Unwin, 1959, p.29.

2. Ibid., p.39.

3. Herbert York: Race to Oblivion -A Participant’s View of the Arms Race, New York, Simon and Schuster, p,42.

4. See Jerry Elmer: Presidential Directive 59 - America’s Counterforce Strategy, Philadelphia, American Friends Service Committee, 1981.

5. The White House Years, Weidenfeld and Nicholson & Michael Joseph, pp.218-9.

6. Apocalypse Now? Spokesman, 1980.

Common security for a New World Order

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By Alexey Gromyko

Alexey Gromyko is the Director of the Moscow-based Institute of Europe of the Russian Academy of Sciences. He delivered the following talk at the second plenary of the International Peace Bureau’s Second World Peace Congress, (Re)Imagine our World: Action for Peace and Justice, held in Barcelona from 15 to 17 October, 2021.

Earlier this year I was honoured to be invited and become a member of the High-Level Advisory Commission for Common Security 2022. The Commission is a part of a project launched by the Olof Palme International Centre, the International Trade Union Confederation, and the International Peace Bureau with the support of SIPRI [Stockholm International Peace Research Institute]. I am grateful to Reiner Brown and Anna Sundstrom for involving me in this cooperation.

Next year we mark the 40th anniversary of the Report of the Independent Commission on Disarmament and Security Issues under the Chairmanship of Olof Palme. The Report introduced the concept of Common Security and contributed to the end of the Cold War. However, these days the ideas behind Common Security are almost forgotten in spite of the fact that we again live in extremely perilous times.

The pandemic has affected each and every significant aspect of life – global health, global economics and politics, humanitarian and social issues. The pandemic, with all its human drama and tragedy, could and should have brought the world together. Instead political divisions have become only deeper.

The relative levels of poverty and social inequalities across the planet were going up before the pandemic. Covid has enhanced these negative trends. 1% of the world population owns more than 80% of global wealth. The global debt today is about 250 trillion USD (322% of the world GDP). The Euro-Atlantic area has a debt to GDP ratio of 380%; China’s ratio is 310%. Russia is luckier – its national debt is less than 21% of the GDP.

The neoliberal model, originating from Reaganomics and Thatcherism, still dominates the world. Today there are few countries, which can boast of welfare states and social contracts, of a system where the social rights of a human being are protected from cradle to grave. In ‘better days’ the concepts of the Third Way, a stakeholder society, communitarianism and others were put forward. Amitai Etzioni and John Galbraith, Robert Putnam and David Marquand, Will Hutton and John Plender and many others made important contributions to these efforts. Politicians like Jeremy Corbyn made efforts to defend the Welfare State from attack and continue to work for social justice, peace and disarmament.

Despite the Great Recession, neoliberalism continues to dominate the international economy. The global financial oligarchy continues to rule the world. Even the middle class has suffered a lot, which resulted in the rise of a New Populism. To offer just one telling example: while in the 1960s the CEO of a major US company would be paid, on the average, 20 times the wages of a regular employee, today the ratio is roughly 300:1.

Competition between the leading centres of power in the world accelerates and intensifies. The states involved resort to political, economic, ideological, military and information instruments of domination and coercion. Even the work on COVID vaccines has exacerbated tensions between states.

Differences between the United States and China are becoming one of the fundamental elements in this competition. Some experts believe that confrontation between the US and China will result in a new edition of bipolarity. Others maintain that the rivalry between the world’s two leading economies is a bilateral conflict and cannot evolve into a bipolar world order similar to that of the Cold War. In any case, US-China military tensions are a major risk. These tensions are a time bomb. There is a real risk of a dangerous escalation over Taiwan.

International mechanisms are working less and less effectively. Instead, nations tend to rely on regional projects, regional cooperation, localisation. We observe not only strategic decoupling between the United States and its European allies. In addition, Washington now wants to decouple itself economically and technologically from China. Multilateral institutions are stagnant or in crisis. Having just marked 75 years since its creation, the United Nations, this universally recognised organisation, is struggling with all the negative effects of confrontation among its members.

The entire architecture of international security is almost destroyed. Environmental issues and climate change deserve massive attention and action. But the threats of militarisation, a new arms race, risks of an unintentional military conflict between nuclear powers are disproportionately neglected. Many expectations, connected to the end of the Cold War, were dashed. The bitter fact is that the world since then has not become a safer place. Some people say that now it is a more dangerous place than in the 70s and 80s. Russia experienced the first external shock in the 90s, when NATO took a decision to expand. The second shock came with the bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999. The third shock was the invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Still there is hope. The United Nations has survived. The climate change and green agenda are reverberating across the planet. There are more and more people realising that arms control and disarmament are not less important. Let me say that perhaps it is more important because it deals with immediate existential threats.

Today, in 2021, it is so important to look around and to think about what big ideas can help. One of them is the concept of Common Security. Initially it was elaborated in the Olof Palme Commission Report back in 1982. Nowadays the task is to preserve the essence of the Palme commission Report on Common Security and to build upon it. The core of its philosophy should be kept intact while a range of recommendations should be modernised to carry forward the Commission’s mission.

Common Security is a comprehensive phenomenon which embraces in equal manner the spheres of economy, social life and security as such. Security should be treated as equal and indivisible common good. Security at the expanse of others is not achievable. Common security is one of the most important strategies, responsible for the well-being of humankind. The basis of Common Security rests on the fundamental right to life. Therefore it should be treated as a responsibility not a privilege of governments to act in the interests of Common Security.

International and interstate relations will never be free from competition and even rivalry. Therefore, Common Security should be underpinned by strong and viable international mechanisms, in the centre of which should stay the United Nations. Any enforcement in international relations, including military enforcement, should be strictly guided by Chapter VII of the UN Charter. Goodwill and confidence-building measures are indispensable elements of Common Security.

Arms control and disarmament policy are crucial components of Common Security. Robust support should be given to the Gorbachev-Reagan statement of 1985 and the Putin-Biden statement of 2021 that a nuclear war cannot be won and should never be fought [see box 1]. To fight a nuclear war is suicidal and just crazy. One day nuclear deterrence should be replaced by the concept of Common Security.

The politics of nuclear deterrence will last for quite a while. Nevertheless, Common Security to a large extent can be achieved already in the age of nuclear deterrence. The concept and practice of Common Security will play a substantial role in phasing out the policy of nuclear deterrence. Meanwhile the extension of New Start Treaty for 5 years, as well as negotiations of all P5 states on the future of strategic stability, should be fully supported. A multilateral and verifiable moratorium on the deployment of Intermediate Nuclear Forces in Europe should also be supported.

Common Security means enhancing stability by increasing transparency, avoiding dangerous military activities, and providing dedicated political and military-to-military communication channels that would avoid escalation of incidents that might occur.

All nations should exert their efforts to achieve ratification of Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty and to make it judicially enforceable. The development and deployment of weapons in outer space or weapons directed against objects in outer space should be prohibited. The Non-Proliferation Treaty is further jeopardised by the intention of the US and the UK to transfer nuclear technologies to Australia for military purposes.

My grandfather, Andrey Gromyko, told us – children and youngsters – 40 years ago: “When I was negotiating, my brothers – killed in the WWII – whispered in my ears, ‘Andrey, don’t give away what we died for’.” And millions of other Russians who survived the war, could tell the same.

I do not know, how many people these days know that Andrey Gromyko was a sincere supporter of the abolition of nuclear weapons. He was a true supporter of the United Nations, which he helped so much to design and launch. His father fought in two wars, the Russia-Japanese War and then in WWI. The grandmother of my wife, as a girl, saw how her mother was killed by fascists. And millions of other people in Russia experienced similar horrors.

My father was an active member of the famous Pugwash movement and of the Dartmouth meetings. For many years he stood as a scientist for the abolition of apartheid in South Africa. And there were hundreds and thousands in the Soviet Union like him.

Russia was destroyed in 1917, it barely survived in 1941, and then again it collapsed in 1991. Why I am recalling all this? Because I want to say that Russia has suffered a lot in the 20th century. And we have exceeded all quotas for wars, revolutions and counter-revolutions.

In new times Russia is routinely accused of all possible and impossible sins. Russia is a complicated country. But it was Russia which urged the US not to abandon the ABM Treaty in 2002, it urged NATO to ratify the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty, again it urged the US not to leave the Intermediate Nuclear Forces in Europe Treaty in 2018 and recently it urged them not to abandon the Open Skies Treaty.

Russian scientists continue to exert efforts to re-establish arms control agenda and to stop brinkmanship in Europe. For more than a year now the Institute of Europe and the Institute for the US and Canadian Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences have been working with the European Leadership Network and many other colleagues from Europe and the United States on de-escalation of relations between Russia and NATO [see box 2]. Last December we published a report on Military Risk Reduction in Europe. It was signed even by two former secretary-generals of NATO.

Common Security remains an indispensable condition for the salvation of humanity from extinction.

Box 1

U.S.-Russia Presidential Joint Statement on Strategic Stability

JUNE 16, 2021

We, President of the United States of America Joseph R. Biden and President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin, note the United States and Russia have demonstrated that, even in periods of tension, they are able to make progress on our shared goals of ensuring predictability in the strategic sphere, reducing the risk of armed conflicts and the threat of nuclear war.

The recent extension of the New START Treaty exemplifies our commitment to nuclear arms control. Today, we reaffirm the principle that a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought.

Consistent with these goals, the United States and Russia will embark together on an integrated bilateral Strategic Stability Dialogue in the near future that will be deliberate and robust. Through this Dialogue, we seek to lay the groundwork for future arms control and risk reduction measures.

Box 2

Recommendations of the Participants of the Expert Dialogue on NATO-Russia Military Risk Reduction in Europe

DECEMBER 2020

NATO Nuclear Weapons Exercise Over Southern Europe

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By Hans Kristensen

The following article first appeared on the Federation of American Scientists website, October 20 2021. The original publication was made possible by generous support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the New Land Foundation, the Ploughshares Fund, and the Prospect Hill Foundation. The statements made and views expressed are solely the responsibility of the author.

NATO announced on Monday, 18 October 2021, that it had started its annual nuclear exercise code-named Steadfast Noon. The week-long exercise is taking place over Southern Europe and involves aircraft and personnel from 14 NATO countries.

According to the NATO statement, “Steadfast Noon involves training flights with dual-capable fighter jets, as well as conventional jets, backed by surveillance and refuelling aircraft. No live weapons are used. This exercise helps to ensure that NATO’s nuclear deterrent remains safe, secure and effective.”

The nuclear bases in southern Europe have received several upgrades during the past few years. This includes adding additional security perimeters to strengthen protection of the nuclear weapons stored at the bases. Two of these bases – Aviano in northeast Italy and Incirlik in southern Turkey, were upgraded over the past five years.

The second nuclear base in Italy – Ghedi near Brescia – that might be part of Italy’s hosting of this year’s Steadfast Noon exercise, is currently undergoing several important nuclear weapons related modernizations that are intended to serve the NATO nuclear strike mission for years.

Of the 14 nations involved, Dutch F-16s and German Tornadoes are operating out of Ghedi AB alongside Italian Tornados, while U.S. and Belgian F-16s and possibly Czech Gripen are operating out of Aviano AB.

The timing of the Steadfast Noon exercise coincides with the meeting of the NATO ministers of defense later this week, although it is unclear if the timing is coincidental. NATO has greatly reduced (as has Russia) the number of non-strategic nuclear weapons in Europe since the Cold War. The remaining weapons were probably headed for withdrawal had it not been for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2014. And with claims that Russia is increasing its non-strategic nuclear arsenal, NATO has since reemphasized the importance of the U.S. tactical nuclear weapons in Europe. During the Steadfast Noon exercise at Volkel Air Base in 2020, for example, the NATO Secretary General showed up at the base for a photo-op.

Ghedi: Nuclear Base Profile

NATO announced the Steadfast Noon is taking place over southern Europe but did not identify the main operating base. Steadfast Noon exercises are hosted by a different country each year. Last year it was hosted by the Netherlands and centered at Volkel AB. The reference to southern Europe implies this year’s Steadfast Noon is hosted by Italy and probably centered at Ghedi AB and Aviano AB is northern Italy (Aviano hosted in 2010 and 2013).

Ghedi AB is home to the Italian Air Force’s 6th Stormo wing, which is tasked to employ U.S. B61 bombs with PA-200 Tornado of the 102nd and 154th fighter-bomber squadrons. There are an estimated 15 B61 bombs stored in underground vaults at the base. The bombs are in the custody of the USAF’s 704th Munition Support Squadron (MUNSS), a 130-personnel strong security and maintenance unit embedded at the base.

Ghedi AB is currently undergoing significant upgrades to receive the new F-35A fighter-bomber next year, installing double-fence security perimeters, and having recently completed modernizing the Weapon Storage and Security System (WS3) and Alarm Communication and Display (AC&D) system. The contract for the WS3/AC&D work, which was awarded in September 2016, provided for sustainment upgrades to the WS3 cryptographic system used to encrypt WS3 alarm data, and will perform an AC&D system upgrade by replacing obsolete components and the buried cable. These upgrades are clearly visible on satellite images, as are a new “bunker building” under construction in the 704th MUNSS area along with the new Secure Transportation and Maintenance System (STMS) trucks (see images below).

The new double-fence security perimeters around eight protective aircraft shelters (left side of image) as well as the former nuclear alert area (lower right side) are similar to the security upgrades previously completed at two other bases in southern Europe: Aviano and Incirlik air bases. The area inside the perimeters is commonly referred to as the NATO area, a reference to the NATO nuclear strike mission they support. In the 1990s, NATO installed a total of 11 underground vaults inside 11 protective aircraft shelters at Ghedi AB. Each vault can store up to four B61 bombs (normally only one or two bombs are present).

But there’s a mystery: The new security perimeters only surround 10 of the 11 shelters. One possibility is that the remaining vault in the 11th shelter is a training vault, or that the number of active vaults has been reduced. But a satellite image from April 2018 might provide a hint. The image appears to show the markings from the burying of the new AC&D cables that connect the vaults in the shelters with the monitoring and communications facilities at the base. By retracing the cables markings, a pattern emerges: the cables appear to connect exactly 11 shelters, including seven inside the new security perimeter. Moreover, the cables appear to form two loops, possibly so that damage to a cable in one spot won’t cut off communication with the vaults on the other side (see image below).

There is another mystery: Several shelters connected to the apparent AC&D cable grid are located outside the new security perimeters (right side of image), and several shelter that do not appear to be connect to the grid are inside the perimeter (left side of image). Since survivability was one of the justifications for building vaults instead of a central weapons storage area, it would make sense that vaults would be scattered across the base. But the 11 vaults were completed at a time when there were many more nuclear bombs stored at Ghedi AB than today: over 40 bombs in 2000 compared with about 15 bombs today.

Perhaps the four vaults outside the perimeters are backup vaults that do not contain bombs under normal circumstances. All remaining weapons would be stored in the seven vaults inside the perimeters under normal circumstances. With a capability to store up to four B61 bombs each, even the five vaults inside the main security perimeter have more than enough capacity to store the 15 bombs currently estimated to be located at Ghedi AB.

Weapons And Capabilities

These upgrades at Ghedi AB are intended to support the NATO nuclear strike mission at the base for decades into the future. The F-35A, which will begin arriving at the base probably as early as in 2022, is significantly more capable than the Tornado aircraft it replaces.

Moreover, the B61-12 gravity bomb is about three times as accurate as the B61-3/-4 bombs current stored at the base. The increased accuracy is achieved with a new guided tail kit that will enable strike planners to hold at risk targets more effectively with the B61-12 than with the current B61 versions. Like the B61s currently at the base, the B61-12 is thought to have four selectable yield settings ranging from less than 1 kilotons to about 50 kilotons. But with the increased accuracy, a strike planner would be able to select a lower yield option for the attack and therefore create less radioactive fallout, or attack targets that currently require a higher-yield strategic bomb from a B-2 bomber.

The combination of the F-35A and B61-12 represent a significant improvement of the military capability of the NATO dual-capable aircraft posture in Europe. Following the final drop test from an F-35A in a few weeks ago, for example, the chief of the U.S. Air Force Air Combat Command’s strategic deterrence and nuclear integration division, Lt. Col Daniel Jackson, said that “Having a 5th Generation DCA fighter aircraft with this capability brings an entirely new strategic-level capability.” He explained further: “The B-2 bomber was the prominent nuclear capable stealth aircraft, but “Adding ‘nuclear capable’ to a 5th-Gen fighter that already brings several conventional-level capabilities to the table adds strategic-level implication to this jet.”

Re-published by permission of the author. See https://fas.org/blogs/security/2021/10/steadfastnoon2021/ for original post.