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Russian Nuclear Weapons: Past, Present, and Future - Strategic ...

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the global <strong>and</strong> regional levels entails not an unreachable<br />

numerical parity, but rather a strategic stability<br />

or equilibrium where both sides remain mutually<br />

hostage to each other in a deterrent relationship <strong>and</strong><br />

where the United States cannot break free to pursue<br />

its global or regional interests unilaterally.<br />

Several practical strategic consequences flow from<br />

this posture. First, under all circumstances, Russia<br />

must retain the capability to intimidate Europe with<br />

nuclear weapons <strong>and</strong> hold it hostage to that threat.<br />

Therefore, the elite unanimously believes or professes<br />

to believe that any U.S. missile defense is a threat, because<br />

it presages a network covering Europe that will<br />

negate Russia’s ability to threaten Europe <strong>and</strong> counter<br />

its first-strike capability, even though Lavrov admitted<br />

that the present stage of missile defense developments<br />

do not threaten Russia. 67 This is particularly true<br />

as the Obama administration’s plans envisage extending<br />

the adapted phased construction of missile defenses<br />

throughout Europe until 2020. 68 The unanimity<br />

of the <strong>Russian</strong> elite puts the new treaty into jeopardy<br />

even before it is ratified, because <strong>Russian</strong> statements<br />

about missile defenses mean that if Russia should decide<br />

that U.S. missile defense programs exceed Russia’s<br />

definition of strategic stability within the treaty’s<br />

limits, <strong>and</strong> therefore threaten Russia’s strategic deterrence<br />

forces, then Russia can withdraw unilaterally<br />

from the treaty. 69 Thus key members of the Duma, like<br />

Speaker Boris Gryzlov, threatened to block ratification<br />

if this legally binding linkage is omitted. 70<br />

<strong>Russian</strong> dem<strong>and</strong>s also relate to the fact that according<br />

to former Secretary of State George Shultz<br />

<strong>and</strong> former Secretary of Defense William Perry, the<br />

<strong>Russian</strong>s that they have talked with still believe their<br />

country is encircled (their word) by hostile or poten-<br />

314

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