12.07.2015 Views

global_zero_commission_on_nuclear_risk_reduction_report

global_zero_commission_on_nuclear_risk_reduction_report

global_zero_commission_on_nuclear_risk_reduction_report

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

GLOBAL ZERO COMMISSION ON NUCLEAR RISK REDUCTION REPORTDE-ALERTING AND STABILIZING THE WORLD’S NUCLEAR FORCE POSTURESThe U.S. <strong>nuclear</strong> posture must provide under all circumstances,especially during an intense and threatening crisisor imminent <strong>nuclear</strong> strike against North America, the timeand latitude for the President to c<strong>on</strong>sult, deliberate, and thendirect <strong>nuclear</strong> forces to coherent nati<strong>on</strong>al purposes throughrobust command and communicati<strong>on</strong>s networks. It must notbe geared for hair-trigger operati<strong>on</strong>s that relegate presidentialleadership and the acti<strong>on</strong>s of hundreds of subordinatesthroughout the chain of command to short checklists andsplit-sec<strong>on</strong>d choices. Instead of pressing the President to makefateful decisi<strong>on</strong>s in minutes and sec<strong>on</strong>ds, the posture shouldafford the President and senior advisors days to c<strong>on</strong>sider thebest course of acti<strong>on</strong>.Nor should the U.S. posture exert such excessive time pressure<strong>on</strong> a <strong>nuclear</strong>-armed potential adversary such as Russia that itsdecisi<strong>on</strong>-making apparatus is compelled to react at lightingspeed. Thus the U.S. <strong>nuclear</strong> forces should not be c<strong>on</strong>stantlyprimed for launching a sudden strike <strong>on</strong> a scale that so threatensthe opposing side’s capacity for retaliati<strong>on</strong> that it mustalways be prepared to launch its strategic missiles <strong>on</strong> warningduring the 15- to 30-minute flight time of incoming U.S.<strong>nuclear</strong> warheads. Projecting a c<strong>on</strong>stant drac<strong>on</strong>ian first-strikethreat is counter-productive inasmuch as it increases the <strong>risk</strong>that the United States will be <strong>on</strong> the receiving end of an attacktriggered by false warning, misjudgment, panic or unauthorizedacts.The opti<strong>on</strong> to execute an immediate large-scale launch of U.S.strategic <strong>nuclear</strong> forces (launch-<strong>on</strong>-warning/launch-under-attack)during day-to-day operati<strong>on</strong>s will be eliminated in favorof time-sequenced procedures. The Defense Department willdevelop and recommend appropriate measures – such as “unsafing”missiles to restore launch circuits, loading target datainto missile computers, and mating warheads to missiles – thatdelay the generati<strong>on</strong> and use of U.S. <strong>nuclear</strong> weap<strong>on</strong>s by a matterof days. The U.S. (and Russian) posture should be modifiedto allow 24-72 hours in which to assess threats, deliberate, andexercise nati<strong>on</strong>al directi<strong>on</strong> over any possible employment of<strong>nuclear</strong> forces.Under such a “modified alert” posture, U.S. SSBNs at sea willno l<strong>on</strong>ger patrol at their Cold War launch stati<strong>on</strong>s ready to firewithin 15 minutes of receiving the order. The current strictrequirements of speed, depth, navigati<strong>on</strong> and communicati<strong>on</strong>swill be relaxed. Thus the current requirement for alertsubmarines to maintain c<strong>on</strong>tinuous receive communicati<strong>on</strong>sand readiness to fire almost instantly will be relaxed to 24-72hours – providing greater freedom to train and exercise at seaas an additi<strong>on</strong>al benefit. Other measures, such as the removalof “inverters” <strong>on</strong> submarine missile tubes will be c<strong>on</strong>sidered toreinforce the new requirement for SSBNs to be able to achievelaunch readiness within but not before this timeline.Similarly, land-based ICBMs will no l<strong>on</strong>ger be poised for fullscalelaunches <strong>on</strong> a moment’s notice. Instead, they will be“safed” in their silos, an existing safety measure (the reversalof which requires maintenance crews to re-enter the silos andflip a switch restoring the launch circuitry), thus precludingtheir launch during normal peacetime c<strong>on</strong>diti<strong>on</strong>s and requiringmany hours to reverse.Additi<strong>on</strong>al de-alerting steps will be taken. We will c<strong>on</strong>sider removingall of the existing wartime targets from the SSBN databasesand ICBM computers. Fully restoring this data wouldtake a number of days, thus building in a larger firebreak –24-72 hours – between the <strong>on</strong>set of a crisis or c<strong>on</strong>flict and thecapacity to initiate <strong>nuclear</strong> strike operati<strong>on</strong>s.Regarding U.S. tactical <strong>nuclear</strong> weap<strong>on</strong>s, the forward-basedbombs in Europe assigned to U.S. and NATO allied dual-capableaircraft will remain in their storage vaults and bunkers inpeacetime with force generati<strong>on</strong> capabilities ranging from daysto many m<strong>on</strong>ths for different porti<strong>on</strong>s of the force. The UnitedStates seeks to withdraw these weap<strong>on</strong>s back to U.S. centralstorage locati<strong>on</strong>s <strong>on</strong> the c<strong>on</strong>diti<strong>on</strong> that Russia takes reciprocalsteps. Forward-deployed Russian tactical <strong>nuclear</strong> weap<strong>on</strong>s(~ 800) located at their dozen or so bases <strong>on</strong> the Europeanc<strong>on</strong>tinent (with warheads/bombs stored separately from themissiles and warplanes) would be re-located to Russia’s centralstorage sites (so-called “S” sites). Also, Russia would agree notto introduce <strong>nuclear</strong> weap<strong>on</strong>s into new locati<strong>on</strong>s in Europe includingCrimea. 132 If Russia introduces them into new regi<strong>on</strong>s,NATO reserves the right to determine that the security situa-132 See Global Zero NATO-Russia Commissi<strong>on</strong> Report, February 2012,op.cit.76

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!