Apocalypse Soon
Excerpted from the May/June 2005 issue of Foreign Policy
by Robert S. McNamara
It is time well past time, in my view for the United States to cease its
Cold War-style reliance on nuclear weapons as a foreign-policy tool. At the
risk of appearing simplistic and provocative, I would characterize current
U.S. nuclear weapons policy as immoral, illegal, militarily unnecessary, and
dreadfully dangerous. The risk of an accidental or inadvertent nuclear
launch is unacceptably high. Far from reducing these risks, the Bush
administration has signaled that it is committed to keeping the U.S. nuclear
arsenal as a mainstay of its military power a commitment that is
simultaneously eroding the international norms that have limited the spread
of nuclear weapons and fissile materials for 50 years. Much of the current
U.S. nuclear policy has been in place since before I was secretary of
defense, and it has only grown more dangerous and diplomatically destructive
in the intervening years.
Today, the United States has deployed approximately 4,500 strategic,
offensive nuclear warheads. Russia has roughly 3,800. The strategic forces
of Britain, France, and China are considerably smaller, with 200400 nuclear
weapons in each state's arsenal. The new nuclear states of Pakistan and
India have fewer than 100 weapons each. North Korea now claims to have
developed nuclear weapons, and U.S. intelligence agencies estimate that
Pyongyang has enough fissile material for 28 bombs.
How destructive are these weapons? The average U.S. warhead has a
destructive power 20 times that of the Hiroshima bomb. Of the 8,000 active
or operational U.S. warheads, 2,000 are on hair-trigger alert, ready to be
launched on 15 minutes' warning. How are these weapons to be used? The
United States has never endorsed the policy of "no first use," not during my
seven years as secretary or since. We have been and remain prepared to
initiate the use of nuclear weapons by the decision of one person, the
president against either a nuclear or nonnuclear enemy whenever we believe
it is in our interest to do so. For decades, U.S. nuclear forces have been
sufficiently strong to absorb a first strike and then inflict "unacceptable"
damage on an opponent. This has been and (so long as we face a
nuclear-armed, potential adversary) must continue to be the foundation of
our nuclear deterrent.
In my time as secretary of defense, the commander of the U.S. Strategic Air
Command (SAC) carried with him a secure telephone, no matter where he went,
24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year. The telephone of the
commander, whose headquarters were in Omaha, Nebraska, was linked to the
underground command post of the North American Defense Command, deep inside
Cheyenne Mountain, in Colorado, and to the U.S. president, wherever he
happened to be. The president always had at hand nuclear release codes in
the so-called football, a briefcase carried for the president at all times
by a U.S. military officer.
The SAC commander's orders were to answer the telephone by no later than the
end of the third ring. If it rang, and he was informed that a nuclear attack
of enemy ballistic missiles appeared to be under way, he was allowed 2 to 3
minutes to decide whether the warning was valid (over the years, the United
States has received many false warnings), and if so, how the United States
should respond. He was then given approximately 10 minutes to determine what
to recommend, to locate and advise the president, permit the president to
discuss the situation with two or three close advisors (presumably the
secretary of defense and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff), and to
receive the president's decision and pass it immediately, along with the
codes, to the launch sites. The president essentially had two options: He
could decide to ride out the attack and defer until later any decision to
launch a retaliatory strike. Or, he could order an immediate retaliatory
strike, from a menu of options, thereby launching U.S. weapons that were
targeted on the opponent's military-industrial assets. Our opponents in
Moscow presumably had and have similar arrangements.
The whole situation seems so bizarre as to be beyond belief. On any given
day, as we go about our business, the president is prepared to make a
decision within 20 minutes that could launch one of the most devastating
weapons in the world. To declare war requires an act of congress, but to
launch a nuclear holocaust requires 20 minutes' deliberation by the
president and his advisors. But that is what we have lived with for 40
years. With very few changes, this system remains largely intact, including
the "football," the president's constant companion.
I was able to change some of these dangerous policies and procedures. My
colleagues and I started arms control talks; we installed safeguards to
reduce the risk of unauthorized launches; we added options to the nuclear
war plans so that the president did not have to choose between an
all-or-nothing response, and we eliminated the vulnerable and provocative
nuclear missiles in Turkey. I wish I had done more, but we were in the midst
of the Cold War, and our options were limited.
The United States and our NATO allies faced a strong Soviet and Warsaw Pact
conventional threat. Many of the allies (and some in Washington as well)
felt strongly that preserving the U.S. option of launching a first strike
was necessary for the sake of keeping the Soviets at bay. What is shocking
is that today, more than a decade after the end of the Cold War, the basic
U.S. nuclear policy is unchanged. It has not adapted to the collapse of the
Soviet Union. Plans and procedures have not been revised to make the United
States or other countries less likely to push the button. At a minimum, we
should remove all strategic nuclear weapons from "hair-trigger" alert, as
others have recommended, including Gen. George Lee Butler, the last
commander of SAC. That simple change would greatly reduce the risk of an
accidental nuclear launch. It would also signal to other states that the
United States is taking steps to end its reliance on nuclear weapons.
We pledged to work in good faith toward the eventual elimination of nuclear
arsenals when we negotiated the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) in
1968. In May, diplomats from more than 180 nations are meeting in New York
City to review the NPT and assess whether members are living up to the
agreement. The United States is focused, for understandable reasons, on
persuading North Korea to rejoin the treaty and on negotiating deeper
constraints on Iran's nuclear ambitions. Those states must be convinced to
keep the promises they made when they originally signed the NPT that they
would not build nuclear weapons in return for access to peaceful uses of
nuclear energy. But the attention of many nations, including some potential
new nuclear weapons states, is also on the United States. Keeping such large
numbers of weapons, and maintaining them on hair-trigger alert, are potent
signs that the United States is not seriously working toward the elimination
of its arsenal and raises troubling questions as to why any other state
should restrain its nuclear ambitions.
Robert S. McNamara was U.S. secretary of defense from 1961 to 1968 and
president of the World Bank from 1968 to 1981.
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Talk Index, Summer 2005