The Rise
of U.S. Nuclear Primacy
By Keir A. Lieber and Daryl G. Press
From Foreign Affairs, March/April 2006 -
Council on Foreign Relations
[Editors Note: This article from early 2006 provides
insight as to the Bush administrations strategy
regarding U.S. hegemony and the use of nuclear weapons.
See also -
The National Security Strategy of
the United States of America
and
The president's real goal in Iraq]
04/15/06 "CFR" -- -- Summary: For four decades,
relations among the major nuclear powers have been
shaped by their common vulnerability, a condition known
as mutual assured destruction. But with the U.S. arsenal
growing rapidly while Russia's decays and China's stays
small, the era of MAD is ending -- and the era of U.S.
nuclear primacy has begun.
PRESENT AT THE DESTRUCTION
For almost half a century, the world's most powerful
nuclear states have been locked in a military stalemate
known as mutual assured destruction (MAD). By the early
1960s, the nuclear arsenals of the United States and the
Soviet Union had grown so large and sophisticated that
neither country could entirely destroy the other's
retaliatory force by launching first, even with a
surprise attack. Starting a nuclear war was therefore
tantamount to committing suicide.
During the Cold War, many scholars and policy analysts
believed that MAD made the world relatively stable and
peaceful because it induced great caution in
international politics, discouraged the use of nuclear
threats to resolve disputes, and generally restrained
the superpowers' behavior. (Revealingly, the last
intense nuclear standoff, the 1962 Cuban missile crisis,
occurred at the dawn of the era of MAD.) Because of the
nuclear stalemate, the optimists argued, the era of
intentional great-power wars had ended. Critics of MAD,
however, argued that it prevented not great-power war
but the rolling back of the power and influence of a
dangerously expansionist and totalitarian Soviet Union.
From that perspective, MAD prolonged the life of an evil
empire.
This debate may now seem like ancient history, but it is
actually more relevant than ever -- because the age of
MAD is nearing an end. Today, for the first time in
almost 50 years, the United States stands on the verge
of attaining nuclear primacy. It will probably soon be
possible for the United States to destroy the long-range
nuclear arsenals of Russia or China with a first strike.
This dramatic shift in the nuclear balance of power
stems from a series of improvements in the United
States' nuclear systems, the precipitous decline of
Russia's arsenal, and the glacial pace of modernization
of China's nuclear forces. Unless Washington's policies
change or Moscow and Beijing take steps to increase the
size and readiness of their forces, Russia and China --
and the rest of the world -- will live in the shadow of
U.S. nuclear primacy for many years to come.
One's views on the implications of this change will
depend on one's theoretical perspective. Hawks, who
believe that the United States is a benevolent force in
the world, will welcome the new nuclear era because they
trust that U.S. dominance in both conventional and
nuclear weapons will help deter aggression by other
countries. For example, as U.S. nuclear primacy grows,
China's leaders may act more cautiously on issues such
as Taiwan, realizing that their vulnerable nuclear
forces will not deter U.S. intervention -- and that
Chinese nuclear threats could invite a U.S. strike on
Beijing's arsenal. But doves, who oppose using nuclear
threats to coerce other states and fear an emboldened
and unconstrained United States, will worry. Nuclear
primacy might lure Washington into more aggressive
behavior, they argue, especially when combined with U.S.
dominance in so many other dimensions of national power.
Finally, a third group -- owls, who worry about the
possibility of inadvertent conflict -- will fret that
U.S. nuclear primacy could prompt other nuclear powers
to adopt strategic postures, such as by giving control
of nuclear weapons to lower-level commanders, that would
make an unauthorized nuclear strike more likely --
thereby creating what strategic theorists call "crisis
instability."
ARSENAL OF A DEMOCRACY
For 50 years, the Pentagon's war planners have
structured the U.S. nuclear arsenal according to the
goal of deterring a nuclear attack on the United States
and, if necessary, winning a nuclear war by launching a
preemptive strike that would destroy an enemy's nuclear
forces. For these purposes, the United States relies on
a nuclear triad comprising strategic bombers,
intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), and
ballistic-missile-launching submarines (known as SSBNs).
The triad reduces the odds that an enemy could destroy
all U.S. nuclear forces in a single strike, even in a
surprise attack, ensuring that the United States would
be able to launch a devastating response. Such
retaliation would only have to be able to destroy a
large enough portion of the attacker's cities and
industry to deter an attack in the first place. The same
nuclear triad, however, could be used in an offensive
attack against an adversary's nuclear forces. Stealth
bombers might slip past enemy radar, submarines could
fire their missiles from near the enemy's shore and so
give the enemy's leaders almost no time to respond, and
highly accurate land-based missiles could destroy even
hardened silos that have been reinforced against attack
and other targets that require a direct hit. The ability
to destroy all of an adversary's nuclear forces,
eliminating the possibility of a retaliatory strike, is
known as a first-strike capability, or nuclear primacy.
The United States derived immense strategic benefits
from its nuclear primacy during the early years of the
Cold War, in terms of both crisis-bargaining advantages
vis-à-vis the Soviet Union (for example, in the case of
Berlin in the late 1950s and early 1960s) and planning
for war against the Red Army in Europe. If the Soviets
had invaded Western Europe in the 1950s, the United
States intended to win World War III by immediately
launching a massive nuclear strike on the Soviet Union,
its Eastern European clients, and its Chinese ally.
These plans were not the concoctions of midlevel
Pentagon bureaucrats; they were approved by the highest
level of the U.S. government.
U.S. nuclear primacy waned in the early 1960s, as the
Soviets developed the capability to carry out a
retaliatory second strike. With this development came
the onset of MAD. Washington abandoned its strategy of a
preemptive nuclear strike, but for the remainder of the
Cold War, it struggled to escape MAD and reestablish its
nuclear dominance. It expanded its nuclear arsenal,
continuously improved the accuracy and the lethality of
its weapons aimed at Soviet nuclear arms, targeted
Soviet command-and-control systems, invested in
missile-defense shields, sent attack submarines to trail
Soviet SSBNs, and built increasingly accurate
multiwarhead land- and submarine-launched ballistic
missiles as well as stealth bombers and stealthy
nuclear-armed cruise missiles. Equally unhappy with MAD,
the Soviet Union also built a massive arsenal in the
hope of gaining nuclear superiority. Neither side came
close to gaining a first-strike capability, but it would
be a mistake to dismiss the arms race as entirely
irrational: both superpowers were well aware of the
benefits of nuclear primacy, and neither was willing to
risk falling behind.
Since the Cold War's end, the U.S. nuclear arsenal has
significantly improved. The United States has replaced
the ballistic missiles on its submarines with the
substantially more accurate Trident II D-5 missiles,
many of which carry new, larger-yield warheads. The U.S.
Navy has shifted a greater proportion of its SSBNs to
the Pacific so that they can patrol near the Chinese
coast or in the blind spot of Russia's early warning
radar network. The U.S. Air Force has finished equipping
its B-52 bombers with nuclear-armed cruise missiles,
which are probably invisible to Russian and Chinese
air-defense radar. And the air force has also enhanced
the avionics on its B-2 stealth bombers to permit them
to fly at extremely low altitudes in order to avoid even
the most sophisticated radar. Finally, although the air
force finished dismantling its highly lethal MX missiles
in 2005 to comply with arms control agreements, it is
significantly improving its remaining ICBMs by
installing the MX's high-yield warheads and advanced
reentry vehicles on Minuteman ICBMs, and it has upgraded
the Minuteman's guidance systems to match the MX's
accuracy.
IMBALANCE OF TERROR
Even as the United States' nuclear forces have grown
stronger since the end of the Cold War, Russia's
strategic nuclear arsenal has sharply deteriorated.
Russia has 39 percent fewer long-range bombers, 58
percent fewer ICBMs, and 80 percent fewer SSBNs than the
Soviet Union fielded during its last days. The true
extent of the Russian arsenal's decay, however, is much
greater than these cuts suggest. What nuclear forces
Russia retains are hardly ready for use. Russia's
strategic bombers, now located at only two bases and
thus vulnerable to a surprise attack, rarely conduct
training exercises, and their warheads are stored
off-base. Over 80 percent of Russia's silo-based ICBMs
have exceeded their original service lives, and plans to
replace them with new missiles have been stymied by
failed tests and low rates of production. Russia's
mobile ICBMs rarely patrol, and although they could fire
their missiles from inside their bases if given
sufficient warning of an attack, it appears unlikely
that they would have the time to do so.
The third leg of Russia's nuclear triad has weakened the
most. Since 2000, Russia's SSBNs have conducted
approximately two patrols per year, down from 60 in
1990. (By contrast, the U.S. SSBN patrol rate today is
about 40 per year.) Most of the time, all nine of
Russia's ballistic missile submarines are sitting in
port, where they make easy targets. Moreover, submarines
require well-trained crews to be effective. Operating a
ballistic missile submarine -- and silently coordinating
its operations with surface ships and attack submarines
to evade an enemy's forces -- is not simple. Without
frequent patrols, the skills of Russian submariners,
like the submarines themselves, are decaying.
Revealingly, a 2004 test (attended by President Vladimir
Putin) of several submarine-launched ballistic missiles
was a total fiasco: all either failed to launch or
veered off course. The fact that there were similar
failures in the summer and fall of 2005 completes this
unflattering picture of Russia's nuclear forces.
Compounding these problems, Russia's early warning
system is a mess. Neither Soviet nor Russian satellites
have ever been capable of reliably detecting missiles
launched from U.S. submarines. (In a recent public
statement, a top Russian general described his country's
early warning satellite constellation as "hopelessly
outdated.") Russian commanders instead rely on
ground-based radar systems to detect incoming warheads
from submarine-launched missiles. But the radar network
has a gaping hole in its coverage that lies to the east
of the country, toward the Pacific Ocean. If U.S.
submarines were to fire missiles from areas in the
Pacific, Russian leaders probably would not know of the
attack until the warheads detonated. Russia's radar
coverage of some areas in the North Atlantic is also
spotty, providing only a few minutes of warning before
the impact of submarine-launched warheads.
Moscow could try to reduce its vulnerability by finding
the money to keep its submarines and mobile missiles
dispersed. But that would be only a short-term fix.
Russia has already extended the service life of its
aging mobile ICBMs, something that it cannot do
indefinitely, and its efforts to deploy new strategic
weapons continue to flounder. The Russian navy's plan to
launch a new class of ballistic missile submarines has
fallen far behind schedule. It is now highly likely that
not a single new submarine will be operational before
2008, and it is likely that none will be deployed until
later.
Even as Russia's nuclear forces deteriorate, the United
States is improving its ability to track submarines and
mobile missiles, further eroding Russian military
leaders' confidence in Russia's nuclear deterrent. (As
early as 1998, these leaders publicly expressed doubts
about the ability of Russia's ballistic missile
submarines to evade U.S. detection.) Moreover, Moscow
has announced plans to reduce its land-based ICBM force
by another 35 percent by 2010; outside experts predict
that the actual cuts will slice 50 to 75 percent off the
current force, possibly leaving Russia with as few as
150 ICBMs by the end of the decade, down from its 1990
level of almost 1,300 missiles. The more Russia's
nuclear arsenal shrinks, the easier it will become for
the United States to carry out a first strike.
To determine how much the nuclear balance has changed
since the Cold War, we ran a computer model of a
hypothetical U.S. attack on Russia's nuclear arsenal
using the standard unclassified formulas that defense
analysts have used for decades. We assigned U.S. nuclear
warheads to Russian targets on the basis of two
criteria: the most accurate weapons were aimed at the
hardest targets, and the fastest-arriving weapons at the
Russian forces that can react most quickly. Because
Russia is essentially blind to a submarine attack from
the Pacific and would have great difficulty detecting
the approach of low-flying stealthy nuclear-armed cruise
missiles, we targeted each Russian weapon system with at
least one submarine-based warhead or cruise missile. An
attack organized in this manner would give Russian
leaders virtually no warning.
This simple plan is presumably less effective than
Washington's actual strategy, which the U.S. government
has spent decades perfecting. The real U.S. war plan may
call for first targeting Russia's command and control,
sabotaging Russia's radar stations, or taking other
preemptive measures -- all of which would make the
actual U.S. force far more lethal than our model
assumes.
According to our model, such a simplified surprise
attack would have a good chance of destroying every
Russian bomber base, submarine, and ICBM. [See Footnote
#1] This finding is not based on best-case assumptions
or an unrealistic scenario in which U.S. missiles
perform perfectly and the warheads hit their targets
without fail. Rather, we used standard assumptions to
estimate the likely inaccuracy and unreliability of U.S.
weapons systems. Moreover, our model indicates that all
of Russia's strategic nuclear arsenal would still be
destroyed even if U.S. weapons were 20 percent less
accurate than we assumed, or if U.S. weapons were only
70 percent reliable, or if Russian ICBM silos were 50
percent "harder" (more reinforced, and hence more
resistant to attack) than we expected. (Of course, the
unclassified estimates we used may understate the
capabilities of U.S. forces, making an attack even more
likely to succeed.)
To be clear, this does not mean that a first strike by
the United States would be guaranteed to work in
reality; such an attack would entail many uncertainties.
Nor, of course, does it mean that such a first strike is
likely. But what our analysis suggests is profound:
Russia's leaders can no longer count on a survivable
nuclear deterrent. And unless they reverse course
rapidly, Russia's vulnerability will only increase over
time.
China's nuclear arsenal is even more vulnerable to a
U.S. attack. A U.S. first strike could succeed whether
it was launched as a surprise or in the midst of a
crisis during a Chinese alert. China has a limited
strategic nuclear arsenal. The People's Liberation Army
currently possesses no modern SSBNs or long-range
bombers. Its naval arm used to have two ballistic
missile submarines, but one sank, and the other, which
had such poor capabilities that it never left Chinese
waters, is no longer operational. China's medium-range
bomber force is similarly unimpressive: the bombers are
obsolete and vulnerable to attack. According to
unclassified U.S. government assessments, China's entire
intercontinental nuclear arsenal consists of 18
stationary single-warhead ICBMs. These are not ready to
launch on warning: their warheads are kept in storage
and the missiles themselves are unfueled. (China's ICBMs
use liquid fuel, which corrodes the missiles after 24
hours. Fueling them is estimated to take two hours.) The
lack of an advanced early warning system adds to the
vulnerability of the ICBMs. It appears that China would
have no warning at all of a U.S. submarine-launched
missile attack or a strike using hundreds of stealthy
nuclear-armed cruise missiles.
Many sources claim that China is attempting to reduce
the vulnerability of its ICBMs by building decoy silos.
But decoys cannot provide a firm basis for deterrence.
It would take close to a thousand fake silos to make a
U.S. first strike on China as difficult as an attack on
Russia, and no available information on China's nuclear
forces suggests the existence of massive fields of
decoys. And even if China built them, its commanders
would always wonder whether U.S. sensors could
distinguish real silos from fake ones.
Despite much talk about China's military modernization,
the odds that Beijing will acquire a survivable nuclear
deterrent in the next decade are slim. China's
modernization efforts have focused on conventional
forces, and the country's progress on nuclear
modernization has accordingly been slow. Since the
mid-1980s, China has been trying to develop a new
missile for its future ballistic missile submarine as
well as mobile ICBMs (the DF-31 and longer-range DF-31A)
to replace its current ICBM force. The U.S. Defense
Department predicts that China may deploy DF-31s in a
few years, although the forecast should be treated
skeptically: U.S. intelligence has been announcing the
missile's imminent deployment for decades.
Even when they are eventually fielded, the DF-31s are
unlikely to significantly reduce China's vulnerability.
The missiles' limited range, estimated to be only 8,000
kilometers (4,970 miles), greatly restricts the area in
which they can be hidden, reducing the difficulty of
searching for them. The DF-31s could hit the contiguous
United States only if they were deployed in China's far
northeastern corner, principally in Heilongjiang
Province, near the Russian-North Korean border. But
Heilongjiang is mountainous, and so the missiles might
be deployable only along a few hundred kilometers of
good road or in a small plain in the center of the
province. Such restrictions increase the missiles'
vulnerability and raise questions about whether they are
even intended to target the U.S. homeland or whether
they will be aimed at targets in Russia and Asia.
Given the history of China's slow-motion nuclear
modernization, it is doubtful that a Chinese
second-strike force will materialize anytime soon. The
United States has a first-strike capability against
China today and should be able to maintain it for a
decade or more.
INTELLIGENT DESIGN?
Is the United States intentionally pursuing nuclear
primacy? Or is primacy an unintended byproduct of
intra-Pentagon competition for budget share or of
programs designed to counter new threats from terrorists
and so-called rogue states? Motivations are always hard
to pin down, but the weight of the evidence suggests
that Washington is, in fact, deliberately seeking
nuclear primacy. For one thing, U.S. leaders have always
aspired to this goal. And the nature of the changes to
the current arsenal and official rhetoric and policies
support this conclusion.
The improvements to the U.S. nuclear arsenal offer
evidence that the United States is actively seeking
primacy. The navy, for example, is upgrading the fuse on
the W-76 nuclear warhead, which sits atop most U.S.
submarine-launched missiles. Currently, the warheads can
be detonated only as air bursts well above ground, but
the new fuse will also permit ground bursts (detonations
at or very near ground level), which are ideal for
attacking very hard targets such as ICBM silos. Another
navy research program seeks to improve dramatically the
accuracy of its submarine-launched missiles (already
among the most accurate in the world). Even if these
efforts fall short of their goals, any refinement in
accuracy combined with the ground-burst fuses will
multiply the missiles' lethality. Such improvements only
make sense if the missiles are meant to destroy a large
number of hard targets. And given that B-2s are already
very stealthy aircraft, it is difficult to see how the
air force could justify the increased risk of crashing
them into the ground by having them fly at very low
altitudes in order to avoid radar detection -- unless
their mission is to penetrate a highly sophisticated air
defense network such as Russia's or, perhaps in the
future, China's.
During the Cold War, one explanation for the development
of the nuclear arms race was that the rival military
services' competition for budget share drove them to
build ever more nuclear weapons. But the United States
today is not achieving primacy by buying big-ticket
platforms such as new SSBNs, bombers, or ICBMs. Current
modernization programs involve incremental improvements
to existing systems. The recycling of warheads and
reentry vehicles from the air force's retired MX
missiles (there are even reports that extra MX warheads
may be put on navy submarine-launched missiles) is the
sort of efficient use of resources that does not fit a
theory based on parochial competition for increased
funding. Rather than reflect organizational resource
battles, these steps look like a coordinated set of
programs to enhance the United States' nuclear
first-strike capabilities.
Some may wonder whether U.S. nuclear modernization
efforts are actually designed with terrorists or rogue
states in mind. Given the United States' ongoing war on
terror, and the continuing U.S. interest in destroying
deeply buried bunkers (reflected in the Bush
administration's efforts to develop new nuclear weapons
to destroy underground targets), one might assume that
the W-76 upgrades are designed to be used against
targets such as rogue states' arsenals of weapons of
mass destruction or terrorists holed up in caves. But
this explanation does not add up. The United States
already has more than a thousand nuclear warheads
capable of attacking bunkers or caves. If the United
States' nuclear modernization were really aimed at rogue
states or terrorists, the country's nuclear force would
not need the additional thousand ground-burst warheads
it will gain from the W-76 modernization program. The
current and future U.S. nuclear force, in other words,
seems designed to carry out a preemptive disarming
strike against Russia or China.
The intentional pursuit of nuclear primacy is, moreover,
entirely consistent with the United States' declared
policy of expanding its global dominance. The Bush
administration's 2002 National Security Strategy
explicitly states that the United States aims to
establish military primacy: "Our forces will be strong
enough to dissuade potential adversaries from pursuing a
military build-up in hopes of surpassing, or equaling,
the power of the United States." To this end, the United
States is openly seeking primacy in every dimension of
modern military technology, both in its conventional
arsenal and in its nuclear forces.
Washington's pursuit of nuclear primacy helps explain
its missile-defense strategy, for example. Critics of
missile defense argue that a national missile shield,
such as the prototype the United States has deployed in
Alaska and California, would be easily overwhelmed by a
cloud of warheads and decoys launched by Russia or
China. They are right: even a multilayered system with
land-, air-, sea-, and space-based elements, is highly
unlikely to protect the United States from a major
nuclear attack. But they are wrong to conclude that such
a missile-defense system is therefore worthless -- as
are the supporters of missile defense who argue that,
for similar reasons, such a system could be of concern
only to rogue states and terrorists and not to other
major nuclear powers.
What both of these camps overlook is that the sort of
missile defenses that the United States might plausibly
deploy would be valuable primarily in an offensive
context, not a defensive one -- as an adjunct to a U.S.
first-strike capability, not as a standalone shield. If
the United States launched a nuclear attack against
Russia (or China), the targeted country would be left
with a tiny surviving arsenal -- if any at all. At that
point, even a relatively modest or inefficient
missile-defense system might well be enough to protect
against any retaliatory strikes, because the devastated
enemy would have so few warheads and decoys left.
During the Cold War, Washington relied on its nuclear
arsenal not only to deter nuclear strikes by its enemies
but also to deter the Warsaw Pact from exploiting its
conventional military superiority to attack Western
Europe. It was primarily this latter mission that made
Washington rule out promises of "no first use" of
nuclear weapons. Now that such a mission is obsolete and
the United States is beginning to regain nuclear
primacy, however, Washington's continued refusal to
eschew a first strike and the country's development of a
limited missile-defense capability take on a new, and
possibly more menacing, look. The most logical
conclusions to make are that a nuclear-war-fighting
capability remains a key component of the United States'
military doctrine and that nuclear primacy remains a
goal of the United States.
STOP WORRYING AND LOVE THE BOMB?
During the Cold War, MAD rendered the debate about the
wisdom of nuclear primacy little more than a theoretical
exercise. Now that MAD and the awkward equilibrium it
maintained are about to be upset, the argument has
become deadly serious. Hawks will undoubtedly see the
advent of U.S. nuclear primacy as a positive
development. For them, MAD was regrettable because it
left the United States vulnerable to nuclear attack.
With the passing of MAD, they argue, Washington will
have what strategists refer to as "escalation dominance"
-- the ability to win a war at any level of violence --
and will thus be better positioned to check the
ambitions of dangerous states such as China, North
Korea, and Iran. Doves, on the other hand, are fearful
of a world in which the United States feels free to
threaten -- and perhaps even use -- force in pursuit of
its foreign policy goals. In their view, nuclear weapons
can produce peace and stability only when all nuclear
powers are equally vulnerable. Owls worry that nuclear
primacy will cause destabilizing reactions on the part
of other governments regardless of the United States'
intentions. They assume that Russia and China will work
furiously to reduce their vulnerability by building more
missiles, submarines, and bombers; putting more warheads
on each weapon; keeping their nuclear forces on higher
peacetime levels of alert; and adopting hair-trigger
retaliatory policies. If Russia and China take these
steps, owls argue, the risk of accidental, unauthorized,
or even intentional nuclear war -- especially during
moments of crisis -- may climb to levels not seen for
decades.
Ultimately, the wisdom of pursuing nuclear primacy must
be evaluated in the context of the United States'
foreign policy goals. The United States is now seeking
to maintain its global preeminence, which the Bush
administration defines as the ability to stave off the
emergence of a peer competitor and prevent weaker
countries from being able to challenge the United States
in critical regions such as the Persian Gulf. If
Washington continues to believe such preeminence is
necessary for its security, then the benefits of nuclear
primacy might exceed the risks. But if the United States
adopts a more restrained foreign policy -- for example,
one premised on greater skepticism of the wisdom of
forcibly exporting democracy, launching military strikes
to prevent the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction, and aggressively checking rising
challengers -- then the benefits of nuclear primacy will
be trumped by the dangers.
Keir A. Lieber, the author of War and the Engineers: The
Primacy of Politics Over Technology, is Assistant
Professor of Political Science at the University of
Notre Dame. Daryl G. Press, the author of Calculating
Credibility: How Leaders Assess Military Threats, is
Associate Professor of Political Science at the
University of Pennsylvania.
Copyright 2002--2006 by the Council on Foreign
Relations. All rights reserved.
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