Los Angeles Times

Trump wants to build smaller atomic weapons

Revisions to the U.S. nuclear strategy are the most significan­t since the Cold War.

- By David S. Cloud david.cloud@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion outlined sweeping changes in U.S. nuclear strategy Friday, calling for two new types of nuclear weapons and warning for the first time that in “extreme circumstan­ces” the U.S. could use nuclear weapons in response to nonnuclear attacks on infrastruc­ture and civilians.

The strategy, described in a 75-page review released by the Pentagon, constitute­s one of the most significan­t revisions of U.S. nuclear strategy since the Cold War, one aimed at aggressive­ly countering nuclear-armed Russia and North Korea as well as terrorist groups seeking to acquire nuclear arms.

By clarifying potential scenarios when the president might authorize a nuclear attack, officials said, the U.S. was seeking to deter adversarie­s from conducting large-scale cyberwarfa­re and other nonnuclear but potentiall­y devastatin­g attacks on the U.S. and its allies, a controvers­ial idea that critics said could make nuclear war more likely.

“We must look reality in the eye and see the world as it is, not as we wish it to be,” Defense Secretary James N. Mattis said in a statement accompanyi­ng the report. “Given the range of potential adversarie­s, their capabiliti­es and strategic objectives, this review calls for a flexible, tailored nuclear deterrent strategy.

“In no way does this approach lower the nuclear threshold,” Mattis wrote. “Rather, by convincing adversarie­s that even limited use of nuclear weapons will be more costly than they can tolerate, it in fact raises that threshold.”

But Joseph Cirincione, a nonprolife­ration expert at the Ploughshar­es Fund, a Washington-based advocacy group that seeks reductions in the nuclear arsenal, said the new strategy — combined with President Trump’s volatile approach to internatio­nal threats — could lower the threshold for employing nuclear weapons.

“This strategy gives him a massive rebuild of the current Cold War arsenal, complete with new missions and new weapons, to include responding to a cyberattac­k with a nuclear bomb,” Cirincione said. “This plan, coupled with this president, greatly increases the risk of nuclear war.”

The Obama administra­tion sought to shrink the role of nuclear weapons in U.S. defense strategy. It declared in 2010 that it would consider using nuclear weapons only in extreme circumstan­ces, such as a massive convention­al attack by a nucleararm­ed state or in the event of a mass-casualty chemical or biological attack.

Trump’s strategy likewise calls for using nuclear weapons only “in extreme circumstan­ces to defend the vital interests of the United States, its allies and partners.” But it specifies that extreme circumstan­ces also could include “non-nuclear strategic attacks” and those on the “U.S., allied or partner civilian population or infrastruc­ture,” as well as “on U.S. or allied nuclear forces, their command and control, or warning and attack assessment capabiliti­es.”

Jon B. Wolfsthal, director of the Nuclear Crisis Group and a National Security Council official in the Obama administra­tion, said the new strategy opened the door to first use of nuclear weapons by the U.S. in more scenarios than before.

“The U.S. is expanding the circumstan­ces under which it might use nuclear weapons first, even against nonnuclear states,” he said.

The review recommends modifying “a small number” of existing nuclear warheads on Trident missiles carried on U.S. submarines to reduce the weapons’ explosive power. In addition, a new nuclear-armed cruise missile launched from naval vessels would be developed, a process likely to take years.

Both steps, the report says, are aimed at deterring “regional aggression,” including any decision by Russia, North Korea or other adversarie­s to carry out a limited nuclear strike in the belief that the U.S. would not respond because it did not want to risk large-scale nuclear war.

Current and former Pentagon officials said that Russian military doctrine increasing­ly envisions using a limited nuclear strike to win a conflict in Europe, believing the U.S. and its allies might not want to risk largescale nuclear war under those circumstan­ces.

“We need to figure out how to deter a Russia military, which evidently believes it can use nuclear weapons to end and win a convention­al conflict,” said Franklin Miller, a National Security Council official during President George W. Bush’s administra­tion.

The lower-yield warhead for Trident missiles would “ensure a prompt response option” and would help counter any “mistaken perception” by Russia, North Korea or other adversarie­s that the U.S. might hesitate to respond with nuclear weapons to a limited nuclear strike by one of them, the report said.

Critics say the U.S. arsenal, which includes hundreds of lower-yield nuclear warheads, is adequate to deter any adversary.

“It lowers the threshold for using nuclear weapons, a particular­ly frightenin­g propositio­n given this president’s support for a nuclear arms race,” said Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.). “Previous administra­tions, both Republican and Democrat, have worked to reduce the threat of nuclear weapons, and this review breaks sharply from that bipartisan tradition.”

During the Cold War, the Pentagon had sea-launched cruise missiles, which are more difficult for an adversary to detect because they fly at low altitudes. That weapon was retired by the Obama administra­tion in 2011.

“Some will say any additional capacity, no matter how measured, increases the chances of using one of these weapons,” Deputy Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan said Friday at a Pentagon news conference. “On the contrary, it is the exact opposite.”

The plan, the first review of the U.S. nuclear strategy since 2010, reaffirms many long-standing tenets of U.S. nuclear weapons strategy. That includes a promise made by the Obama administra­tion to overhaul the nuclear arsenal by spending more than $1 trillion over the next two decades on new or modernized interconti­nental ballistic missiles, bombers, submarines and warheads.

It also maintains the option for the U.S. to use nuclear weapons in a first strike, while not clarifying the exact conditions under which the president might do so. The Cold War-era policy was aimed at deterring Moscow and other adversarie­s and reassuring allies in Europe and Asia that the U.S. will come to their defense.

 ?? Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press ?? DEPUTY DEFENSE SECRETARY Patrick Shanahan, left, at a Pentagon news conference. The White House is calling for changes that would allow the U.S. to use nuclear arms in response to nonnuclear attacks.
Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press DEPUTY DEFENSE SECRETARY Patrick Shanahan, left, at a Pentagon news conference. The White House is calling for changes that would allow the U.S. to use nuclear arms in response to nonnuclear attacks.

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