[Mb-civic] US needs nuclear policy - Michael A. Levi - Boston Globe Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Mar 7 03:56:44 PST 2006
US needs nuclear policy
By Michael A. Levi | March 7, 2006 | The Boston Globe
LAST WEEK, President Bush sealed a landmark nuclear deal with India.
This week, the International Atomic Energy Agency's Board of Governors
meets to confront the Iranian nuclear program. At the same time,
Congress has been grappling with a raft of nuclear items in the
president's budget. And all the while, the nuclear standoff with North
Korea continues. This bursting nuclear agenda begs a question: Does
America need a nuclear weapons policy?
When Henry Kissinger posed a similar question in his 2001 book ''Does
America Need a Foreign Policy?" he meant to criticize the conduct of
foreign policy as the sum of exercises in crisis management. A similar
critique applies to American nuclear weapons policy today.
The alternative -- sorely needed now -- is a nuclear weapons policy
based upon enduring foundations. The United States, of course, faces
crises that must be addressed now. But it faced crises during the Cold
War, and still sustained a core set of nuclear arms control principles
for several decades. Today, a new set of fundamental principles --
whatever their specific details -- would provide coherence, direction,
and predictability to American nuclear weapons policy. That would make
American policy far more effective.
American nonproliferation policy is incoherent. The United States
proposes to promote nuclear energy technologies in India that might
increase the risk of nuclear weapons proliferation, while it attempts to
persuade Iran to curb its own activities. In recent years, it has
explored a range of new nuclear weapons concepts while counseling others
that nuclear weapons are anachronistic. There will inevitably be tension
among elements of American policy, and even apparent double standards
will sometimes make sense. But the current state reflects a lack of
underlying principles to guide policy makers through these conflicts,
with the result being a nonproliferation strategy that often works
against itself.
American policy also lacks direction. During the Cold War, our aim was
stability -- we sought to avoid nuclear war. But what is the shape of
the nuclear world that the United States now aims to create? Is our goal
to prevent all future proliferation? It might seem so, but we have
already failed with North Korea. Is our aim to reduce the impact where
proliferation occurs? If it is, we have not sufficiently engaged Iran's
neighbors to prevent a chain reaction should Iran go nuclear. Is our
object to prevent nuclear terrorism? Perhaps, but we have allowed Cold
War-style concerns about Russia to interfere with efforts to secure its
arsenal from terrorists. This lack of direction and long-term vision
means that steps taken today will provide an inadequate foundation for
the future.
All of this makes United States policy unpredictable, for allies and for
enemies alike. As a result, friends are wary of following the United
States -- they do not know where its policy will lead. In the case of
Iran, this has led to a two-year delay in referring Iran to the UN
Security Council. Every time the United States suggested making that
move, its European allies protested that they did not know what would
come next.
Principles would provide guidance in resolving tensions, thus producing
more coherent policy; they would provide direction by defining long-term
goals; and, as foundations that would last longer than specific
policies, they would promote predictability in the American approach.
They would also provide boundaries within which partisans could debate
American policy, much as Cold War arms control principles once
effectively channeled partisan debate.
Building long-term foundations will not obviate the need to resolve
today's crises, and the administration has become more effectively
engaged in addressing a range of problems. But gains today may prove
illusory without a long-term plan.
Michael A. Levi, coauthor of ''The Future of Arms Control," is a fellow
at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/03/07/us_needs_nuclear_policy/
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