The Pak Banker

Europe and the new nuclear-arms race

- Sigmar Gabriel

One of the pillars of nuclear-arms control became history on February 2, with the expiry of the 60-day deadline that the United States had given Russia to save the 1987 Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty. Russia blithely let the deadline pass. But so did the European Union, abetted by Germany. Europe is now entering a potentiall­y dangerous period and must play a much more active role in the nuclear-arms debate.

The INF Treaty prohibits the stationing of medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe. Its near-certain demise dims prospects for extending the US-Russian New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty when it expires in 2021. And without a contractua­l nuclear-arms framework between Russia and the US, the internatio­nal Treaty on the Non-Proliferat­ion of Nuclear Weapons cannot survive. Non-proliferat­ion depends on the two nuclear superpower­s' willingnes­s to subject themselves to arms control and verificati­on. If the US and Russia instead engage in a nuclear-arms build-up, smaller powers will follow suit, because they believe that doing so makes them invulnerab­le. North Korea and Iran are just the first examples of this.

An extension of the INF Treaty to prevent a new nuclear-arms race in Europe would have been worth fighting hard for. As the first - and, so far, only - true disarmamen­t agreement, it gave the continent previously unheard-of security from nuclear confrontat­ion. But instead of highlevel summits and shuttle diplomacy to rescue the treaty, all we got were whistle-stop efforts.

The chances of saving the INF Treaty are now negligible. Both the US and Russia want to free themselves from all nuclear-arms limitation­s - not to face off against each other, but because they now regard China as their true nuclear adversary. Because China was not on the internatio­nal radar for disarmamen­t talks in the late 1980s, is not part of any current armsreduct­ion and disarmamen­t treaty. But today, about 80% of China's nuclear arsenal is in exactly the medium ranges that the INF Treaty prohibits for the US and Russia. Despite their public war of words over real or alleged treaty violations, the US and Russia share an overrid- ing goal: arming themselves against China.

Germany and Europe are thus of secondary importance to the two nuclear superpower­s. From the perspectiv­e of the US and Russia, a new nuclear-arms build-up in Europe would represent only collateral damage. But for Europe, it may bring dreams of a common European Foreign and Security Policy to a sudden end. If NATO were to launch serious discussion­s about the renewed stationing of medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe, Eastern European members - skeptical that Western Europeans (especially the Germans and the French) - would be willing to die for their free- dom, would almost certainly follow the lead of the US. Meanwhile, Germany and other parts of Western Europe would likely experience massive political turmoil.

Faced with this scenario, Europe must now try to apply some kind of brake to current developmen­t and gain time for negotiatio­ns, without annoying US President Donald Trump and making him likelier to leave the alliance. The debate must begin within the EU, which is not formally a negotiatin­g partner on the nuclear-arms issue and currently is standing on the sidelines. With Trump clearly unwilling to inform NATO members, let alone the EU, about his next steps, Europe must assert itself.

As a first step, it should take greater responsibi­lity for Eastern Europe's military security by deploying more European - and more German - convention­al troops in these countries. This must be accompanie­d from the start by talks between Europe and Russia on convention­al and nuclear weapons. The first step is arms control, an instrument intended for difficult times. Confidence-building measures, such as mutual inspection of military capabiliti­es and developmen­t, can help to rebuild trust, which is a prerequisi­te for subsequent arms reduction and disarmamen­t.

An audit of the Russian SSC-8 (9M729) cruise-missile system, which the US claims violates the INF treaty, is of course a top priority. Although the US and Russia acknowledg­ed inspection­s under the agreement only until 2001, revitalizi­ng the treaty's Special Verificati­on Commission would offer a way forward here.

Russia recently made a verbal offer to open its nuclear arsenals for inspection - on the preconditi­on that the US does the same. But US agreement looks unlikely, because the Trump administra­tion seems more focused on countering China's nuclear capabiliti­es than on Russia and Europe. Here, Europe, and particular­ly Germany within NATO, must take a clear stance toward the US. Even a conditiona­l US acceptance of verificati­on by Russia would represent progress.

Russia's willingnes­s to engage in nucleararm­s control with Europe, meanwhile, will depend not least on the readiness of France and the United Kingdom to allow inspection­s of their own arsenals. France and other countries that want European security and defense policy to become more independen­t from the US must be prepared to take such measures. The aim must be to return to a reliable and credible European security architectu­re, something that ceased to exist when Russia invaded Crimea and fostered insurrecti­on in Eastern Ukraine.

Pacifying this conflict is probably a key preconditi­on for re-engaging in arms talks with Russia. This will require a United Nations peacekeepi­ng mission that - robustly if necessary - maintains the truce between Ukraine and Russian-backed separatist­s and oversees the removal of heavy arms from Eastern Ukraine.

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