Interest in nuclear disarmament has grown rapidly in recent
years. Starting with the 2007 Wall Street Journal article by four former U.S. statesmen-George Shultz, Henry Kissinger,
William Perry, and Sam Nunn-and followed by endorsements from similar sets of
former leaders from the United Kingdom, Germany, Poland, Australia, and Italy,
the support for global nuclear disarmament has spread. The Japanese and
Australian governments announced the creation of the International Commission
on Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament in June 2008. Both Senators John
McCain and Barack Obama explicitly supported the vision of a world free of
nuclear weapons during the 2008 election campaign. In April 2009, at the London
Summit, President Barack Obama and President Dmitri Medvedev called for
pragmatic U.S. and Russian steps toward nuclear disarmament, and President
Obama then dramatically reaffirmed "clearly and with conviction America's
commitment to seek the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons"
in his speech in Prague.
There is a simple explanation for these statements
supporting nuclear disarmament: all states that have joined the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) are committed "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." In the United States, moreover,
under Clause 2 of Article 6 of the Constitution, a treaty commitment is "the
supreme Law of the Land." To af1/2rm the U.S. commitment to seek a world
without nuclear weapons is therefore simply promising that the U.S. government
will follow U.S. law.
A closer reading of these various declarations, however,
reveals both the complexity of motives and the multiplicity of fears behind the
current surge in support of nuclear disarmament. Some declarations emphasize
concerns that the current behavior of nuclear-weapons states (NWS) signals to
non-nuclear-weapons states (NNWS) that they, too, will need nuclear weapons in
the future to meet their national security requirements. Other disarmament
advocates stress the growth of global terrorism and the need to reduce the
number of weapons and the amount of fissile material that could be stolen or
sold to terrorist groups. Some argue that the risk of nuclear weapons accidents
or launching nuclear missiles on false warning cannot be entirely eliminated,
despite sustained efforts to do so, and thus believe that nuclear deterrence
will inevitably fail over time, especially if large arsenals are maintained and
new nuclear states, with weak command-and- control systems, emerge.
Perhaps the most widespread motivation for disarmament is
the belief that future progress by the NWS to disarm will strongly influence
the future willingness of the NNWS to stay within the NPT. If this is true,
then the choice we face for the future is not between the current nuclear order of eight or nine NWS and a
nuclear-weapons- free world. Rather, the choice we face is between moving
toward a nuclear- weapons-free world or, to borrow Henry Rowen's phrase,
"moving toward life in a nuclear armed crowd."
There are, of course, many critics of the nuclear
disarmament vision. Some critics focus on the problems of how to prevent
nuclear weapons "breakout" scenarios in a future world in which many more
countries are "latent" NWS because of the spread of uranium enrichment and
plutonium reprocessing capabilities to meet the global demand for fuel for
nuclear power reactors. Others have expressed fears that deep nuclear arms
reductions will inadvertently lead to nuclear proliferation by encouraging U.S.
allies currently living under "the U.S. nuclear umbrella" of extended
deterrence to pursue their own nuclear weapons for national security reasons.
Other critics worry about the "instability of small numbers" problem, fearing
that conventional wars would break out in a nuclear disarmed world, and that
this risks a rapid nuclear rearmament race by former NWS that would lead to
nuclear first use and victory by the more prepared government.
Some critics of disarmament falsely complain about
nonexistent proposals for U.S. unilateral disarmament. Frank Gaffney, for example, asserts that there has been "a 17 year-long
unilateral U.S. nuclear freeze" and claims that President Obama "stands to
transform the ‘world's only superpower' into a nuclear impotent." More serious
critics focus on those problems-the growth and potential breakout of latent NWS,
the future of extended deterrence, the enforcement of disarmament, and the potential
instability of small numbers-that concern mutual nuclear disarmament. These legitimate concerns must be
addressed in a credible manner if significant progress is to be made toward the
goal of a nuclear-weapons-free world.
To address these problems adequately, the current nuclear
disarmament effort must be transformed from a debate among leaders in the NWS
to a coordinated global effort of shared responsibilities between NWS and NNWS.
This essay outlines a new conceptual framework that is needed to encourage NWS and
NNWS to share responsibilities for designing a future nuclear-fuel-cycle
regime, rethinking extended deterrence, and addressing nuclear breakout dangers
while simultaneously contributing to the eventual elimination of nuclear
weapons.