Print Print this article Email Email this article Link Trackback

If you read one thing on New START and verification in the coming weeks and months...

Kingston Reif | Feb 23, 2010 | there are 2 comments 2

...read Arms Control Association Senior Fellow Greg Thielmann's most recent threat assessment brief.  It's a comprehensive and outstanding take on the purpose of verification and how to think about it in the context of the (hopefully) soon to be signed New START agreement, especially the hand wringing over Votkinsk and telemetry.  I've been trying to make many of the same points here at NoH, but Greg seamlessly ties it all together in less than 8 pages.

The bottom line, as Greg notes, is that while New START will draw upon much of what was in START I, the new treaty will contain new rules and limits.  New rules and limits in turn require verification provisions that are actually pegged to those new rules and limits, not rules and limits from a treaty that was negotiated during the 1980s and early 1990s...  

These new rules and limits will be rooted in the fact(s) that:

(1) U.S. defense planning is no longer guided by many of the (oftentimes crazy) scenarios vis-à-vis Russia (e.g. think protracted nuclear war) that dominated our thinking during the Cold War,
(2) the U.S. is starting with a lot more information about Russia’s strategic forces now than it did in the late 1980s and early 1990s when START I was negotiated and signed, and
(3) our own national technical means of monitoring and verification have vastly improved.
Consequently, what we're likely to get in New START is an updated and streamlined system of verification procedures that will allow the U.S. to effectively verify Russia's compliance with the new treaty. Elaine Grossman wrote a good story last week on what New START's provisions on telemetry might look like. Hint: they're going to be simpler!  

Senator Lugar, who unlike some of his Republican colleagues has always taken verification seriously, recently expressed legitimate concerns that over time our information about Russia's nuclear forces could diminish without the kind of intelligence we got from START I’s verification provisions.  

Of course, our intelligence community would probably prefer to retain all of START I’s provisions (e.g. on continuous monitoring at Russia’s mobile missile production facility at Votkinsk and telemetry). Yet as Greg points out, while cooperative verification measures supplement and confirm information gleaned from national technical means, "enhancing collection per se is not a legitimate rationale for including them [verification provisions] in a treaty."

If the purposes for which the Votkinsk and telemetry provisions were crafted in START I are no longer going to exist in New START, then it's tough to make the case, particularly to the Russians, that these same provisions (at least in their current form) are necessary to build confidence and verify compliance this time around.

tags Nukes on a Blog, New START, verification (all tags)


Display:

Legalized espionage

I liked how Thielmann addressed the idea that verification is valuable mainly as a way to gather intelligence about an enemy. This Cold War-era proposition has been put forward in the New START debate. For example, some congressional aide said in January that “not having access to Russia's data would add burden to the U.S. defense community that it didn't have before. ‘Why should we spend our resources on this when telemetry data gives us that capability for free?,’ he asked.”

Yet, as Thielmann wrote, while legalized espionage “may indeed be desirable in providing for the nation’s defense…this benefit of arms control verification must be recognized as a collateral one. Mutually agreed provisions must be negotiated and legitimized on the basis of their contribution to verification of treaty limits, not to enhancing a party’s intelligence database.”

Collateral benefits are great, and they should be pursued vigorously. However, they are not worth sinking a treaty that, on the whole, vastly enhances U.S. security.

Right On!

[ Parent ]

You are not logged in.

In order to post a comment, you must be logged in. If you have a member account, please log in to comment.

If not, you can make an account by clicking right here. It's quick and free.

About This Blog

Search This Blog

Center Analysis

US weapons for future include key relics of the past
The Associated Press' Robert Burns wrote an article entitled "US weapons for future include key relics of the past" that features the Center for Arms Control and Non Proliferation's Laicie Olson discussing the 2013 Defense Budget....

Pentagon Budget: Forced To Diet On Only $613 Billion
The Associated Press' Robert Burns wrote an article entitled "US weapons for future include key relics of the past" that features the Center for Arms Control and Non Proliferation's Laicie Olson discussing the 2013 Defense Budget....

Are ambitious Life Extension Programs on Hold?
The B61 life extension program has come under increasing scrutiny. And for good reason writes Nickolas Roth in this new analysis....

Missile Defense Intercepts in Space: A problem not solved
A recent report by the Defense Science Board concludes that U.S. missile defenses are still unable to discriminate between an incoming missile and decoys or countermeasures designed to confound the system, writes Lt. Gen. Robert Gard (USA, ret.) in this n...

UNSCR 1540 & the 2012 Nuclear Security Summit: A View From Seoul
The Republic of Korea (ROK) has been and remains a staunch supporter of the global nonproliferation regime as it borders a grave security threat and proliferator of weapons of mass destruction (WMD). With the 2012 Nuclear Security Summit just months away,...