Nelson Mail

Idiots on both sides of nuclear treaty squabble

- Gwynne Dyer Gwynne Dyer’s new book is Growing Pains: The Future of Democracy (and Work).

The last time I wrote about the treaty banning ‘‘intermedia­te-range’’ nuclear missiles was 31 years ago, and I really thought I’d never have to visit that tedious subject again. More fool me.

John Bolton, the ideologica­lly rigid and bad-tempered man you send when you don’t want a negotiatio­n to succeed, has just been in Moscow to tell the Russians personally that United States President Donald Trump is going to tear up the Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty.

That’s what you would expect from the new US national security adviser and his impulsive and illinforme­d boss, but the Russians in this case are just as much to blame for creating the provocatio­n in the first place. It’s one of those distressin­gly frequent occasions when the idiots are in charge on both sides.

The treaty, signed by US President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in 1987, bans land-based ballistic or cruise missiles with a range of between 500 and 5500 kilometres. What the Russians have done, it seems, is to take a perfectly legal sea-launched cruise missile, the Kalibr, which has a range of up to 2500km, and put it on a mobile landbased launcher.

Why would the Russians want to put these missiles on land-based launchers, which violates the treaty’s rules? The only plausible explanatio­n is that there are Chinese targets Russia cannot hit with its sea-based cruise missiles. There are no US-Nato targets that cannot already be reached by the sea-launched variety.

This is plausible, but it is not rational. Russia is perfectly capable of reaching those Chinese targets with ballistic missiles, both landand submarine-launched, which would get to their targets far faster than the new land-based version of the Kalibr cruise missile, called SSC-8 by Nato.

Being able to do the same thing a third, slower way hardly justifies the potential political cost of violating the treaty for Russia as a whole. It may neverthele­ss appeal to the branch of the Russian armed forces that would control that third way, for inter-service rivalries are as sharp and stupid in Russia as they are in the US.

From a Western point of view, the SSC-8, while illegal, does not pose any new threat. The real reason the treaty was needed three decades ago was that the Russians were then introducin­g intermedia­te-range ballistic missiles, the once-famous SS-20s, which could reach their targets in Western Europe within a few minutes of launch.

The border between Nato and Soviet forces was then about 500km closer to Western capitals than it is now, and there were huge tankheavy armies stacked up on either side of the so-called Iron Curtain. An ultra-fast Russian strike by nuclear-tipped SS-20s on Nato army bases and airfields, followed immediatel­y by an all-out ground invasion, could theoretica­lly have succeeded – although only a fool would have chanced it.

In any case, the Russians and Americans negotiated instead, and ultimately agreed to scrap all the Soviet SS-20s and their American equivalent­s, the Pershing missiles. Since the US had also deployed some land-based cruise missiles in Europe, while the Russians did not, the treaty also banned those.

Almost 2700 missiles were destroyed, and the whole issue went away for three decades. It isn’t really back now.

The Russians have broken the rules by developing and testing the land-based SSC-8 cruise missiles, but they haven’t actually deployed them in meaningful numbers. They may never do so, because it would not give them any significan­t strategic advantage.

This was the logic that led former US president Barack Obama to protest to the Russians about the new weapon in 2014, but not to abrogate the treaty. What would that gain, except to legalise what the idiots in the Russian military were doing? Obama probably assumed that the adults were still in charge in the Kremlin, and were engaged in the same struggle to contain the random enthusiasm­s of Russian military planners that US presidents must wage against their Pentagon equivalent­s. But the White House has a different tenant now.

The Russians in this case are just as much to blame.

 ?? AP ?? Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and US President Ronald Reagan exchange pens during the Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty signing ceremony at the White House in December 1987.
AP Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and US President Ronald Reagan exchange pens during the Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty signing ceremony at the White House in December 1987.
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