By
William D. Hartung and Frida Berrigan
Only days
before the fifth anniversary of Sept. 11, President George
W. Bush addressed military officers in Washington to warn
that nuclear-armed terrorists could “blackmail the free world
and spread their ideologies of hate and raise a moral threat
to America.” This alarmist vision was accompanied by the White
House’s release of “A National Strategy for Combating Terrorism,”
which painted a picture of a “troubling potential WMD terrorism
nexus emanating from Tehran.” The administration is building
the case for war against Iran—a job made easier by President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s recent announcement that Iran can now
enrich uranium on an industrial scale—despite the fact that
many Iran-watchers and nuclear experts consider their claims
of enrichment capacity to be an overblown boast.
This
is not the first time the “no-nuclear-weapons-for-you” ploy
has been used to lay the groundwork for a war. On Oct. 7,
2002, while making the case for regime change in Iraq, Bush
said: “America must not ignore the threat gathering against
us. Facing clear evidence of peril, we cannot wait for the
final proof—the smoking gun—that could come in the form of
a mushroom cloud.” Yellow cake, aluminum tubes and histrionics
about Saddam Hussein’s nuclear capabilities followed
. . . all of which were challenged at the time, and have turned
out to be completely fabricated. And, when not grinding the
ax of preemptive war as counterproliferation strategy, the
administration periodically raises the specter of nuclear
terrorism, in the form of dirty bombs and suitcase-sized warheads.
But while
the United States demands that other countries end their nuclear
programs, the Bush administration is busy planning a new generation
of nuclear weapons. Nearly 20 years after the Berlin Wall
crumbled, the United States is allocating more funding, on
average, to nuclear weapons than during the Cold War. The
Bush administration is pumping this money—more than $6 billion
this year—into renovating the nuclear-weapons complex and
designing new nuclear weapons. Such hypocrisy is one of the
main obstacles to nuclear-arms reductions because it runs
the risk of shattering the 1970 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty
in which the nuclear-armed states pledged to begin the process
of disarmament if the non-nuclear states opted not to pursue
the deadly technology.
The centerpiece
of the administration’s move toward developing a new generation
of nuclear weapons is “Complex 2030,” a multiyear plan introduced
last April by the National Nuclear Security Administration
(the semi-autonomous agency within the Department of Energy
that oversees the nuclear weapons program). Complex 2030 calls
for the construction of new or upgraded facilities at each
of the National Nuclear Security Administration’s eight nuclear
weapons-related sites throughout the country. The plan also
calls for building a new nuclear weapon, the Reliable Replacement
Warhead, inside the old warheads. The program was conceived
in response to concerns that the cores of existing nuclear
weapons could be wearing out and need to be replaced. But
RRW development has gone much further than that.
The Department
of Energy notes in its summary of Complex 2030 that one of
the major goals of the program is to “improve the capability
to design, develop, certify and complete production of new
or adapted warheads in the event of new military requirements.”
In short, while the Bush administration has publicly stressed
reductions in nuclear weapons, it is working to produce new,
more usable nuclear weapons.
As a
candidate for president in 2000, and during his first months
in office, Bush suggested that the United States should significantly
cut its nuclear arsenal. In his first address before a joint
session of Congress, the new president went so far as to pledge:
“We can discard Cold War relics and reduce our own nuclear
forces to reflect today’s needs.” He followed through on this
promise with the 2002 Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty,
which calls for reducing the U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals
from 6,000 each—the limit established under the 1991 Strategic
Arms Reduction Treaty—to between 1,700 and 2,200 warheads
each over a 10-year period.
Presidents
Bush and Putin signed the treaty at Konstantin Palace in St.
Petersburg right after the city celebrated its 300th birthday
in June 2003. Also known as the Treaty of Moscow, SORT has
serious flaws. It has no method for verifying that each side
is meeting its commitments; the cuts are not permanent—neither
side is obligated to destroy or dismantle the warheads, only
to take them “off-line”; and both sides would have to agree
to extend the treaty if they have not met their obligations
by the time the treaty expires in 2012. After the Senate unanimously
voted to ratify the treaty, Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) called
it “as flimsy a treaty as the Senate has ever considered.”
Yet even with these flaws, SORT establishes important benchmarks
and offers the potential of trust-building between the former
superpower rivals.
Another
positive development occurred in mid-February, when the Bush
administration, after years of work through the “six party
talks,” announced a deal with North Korea. The hermit nation
agreed to take the first steps toward dismantling its nuclear
program in exchange for large supplies of fuel oil and eventual
political recognition. The first phase of the agreement calls
for North Korea to take concrete steps within 60 days, including
closing down its nuclear reactor at Yongbyon, getting inspectors
from the International Atomic Energy Agency on the ground,
and beginning to reveal the locations of its other nuclear
facilities. In exchange, it will receive 50,000 tons of fuel
oil at the end of the 60-day period. The agreement demonstrates
that the Bush administration is slowly learning the nuances
of diplomacy—you have to give to get.
More
good news surrounds the recent fate of the Robust Nuclear
Earth Penetrator. One of the most controversial new weapon
designs proposed by the nuclear-weapons complex, the RNEP
promised to destroy hardened and deeply buried targets, such
as underground bunkers containing chemical and biological
weapons and military command centers. Such a difficult challenge
would necessitate decades of steady and climbing investment,
making it the kind of techno-fantasy that the nuclear-weapons
complex of the future would love to tackle.
In 2003,
Congress allocated $15 million to study the RNEP. But in 2004
and 2005, Rep. David Hobson (R-Ohio), then chair of the Water
and Energy Subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee,
led successful fights to defund the RNEP. Later, he boasted:
“It’s dead, forget about it! Go conventional. If I have to
kick it three or four times, I’m going to keep kicking at
it until we think we’ve totally gotten it out of the way.”
The Bush
administration has aggressively counteracted these small positive
developments with a succession of negative and destabilizing
actions and statements—the most significant of which is the
assertion that nuclear weapons are a central component of
U.S. military and political strategy. This stunner was concealed
within the administration’s 2002 Nuclear Posture Review (NPR),
a Pentagon report that relies on input from the Joint Chiefs
and the armed services to define the role of nuclear weapons
in U.S. security. The final classified report concluded that
nuclear weapons “play a critical role in the defense capabilities
of the United States, its allies and friends.”
Submitted
to Congress in January 2002, the NPR was not made public until
portions were leaked to the press two months later. It states,
“The need is clear for a revitalized nuclear weapons complex
that will . . . be able, if directed, to design, develop,
manufacture and certify new warheads in response to new national
requirements; and maintain readiness to resume underground
testing if required.”
The NPR
introduces the concept of a “new Triad,” composed of nuclear
and non-nuclear strike capabilities, defensive systems, and
“responsive infrastructure” for maintaining and/or producing
nuclear weapons as requested. The report also emphasizes the
development of creative new nuclear weapons—like low-yield
or surgical warheads that are able to “reduce collateral damage,”
and nuclear bombs with “earth penetrating” capabilities.
The NPR
concluded that nuclear weapons “provide credible military
options to deter a wide range of threats, including WMD and
large-scale conventional military force.” The Bush NPR explicitly
named potential targets—Iran, Syria, North Korea, China and
Russia. The review explained that the United States might
use nuclear weapons to retaliate for the use of chemical or
biological weapons against U.S. targets, as the ultimate tool
in a military conflict over Taiwan, or, disturbingly, as a
response to undefined “surprising developments.”
During
the Cold War, spending on nuclear weapons averaged $4.2 billion
a year. When the Cold War ended, DOE officials and members
of Congress imagined the conversion of the nuclear-weapons
complex. But innovative proposals for civilian or green-technology
labs never got off the ground, and the nuclear labs successfully
lobbied Congress for a new infusion of weapons money. By the
end of President Clinton’s tenure, nuclear-weapons activities
within the DOE’s annual budget had jumped to $5.2 billion—more
than the Cold War average, but less than what the new Bush
administration would say it needed.
Since
then, spending on nuclear weapons has increased by almost
14 percent to a 2007 total of $6.4 billion (after adjustment
for inflation), but it is not enough to satisfy a nuclear-obsessed
administration. The National Nuclear Security Administration,
formed in 2000 to manage the nation’s nuclear weapons complex
within the DOE, has a five-year “National Security Plan” that
calls for annual increases that will push the nuclear weapons
budget to $7.4 billion by 2012.
Compare
these significant increases in nuclear spending to what the
DOE is allocating for nonproliferation and prevention of nuclear
conflict. The NNSA spends more than nine times more on “Atomic
Energy Defense Activities”—a category that includes nuclear
weapons, naval nuclear reactors and environmental cleanup
at military nuclear facilities—than it does on nuclear arms
reductions and nonproliferation.
In addition,
spending on nuclear weapons research, development and maintenance
in the DOE budget far outpaces the funding devoted to the
development of alternative energy sources, a critical need
in the age of global warming and dwindling oil supplies. The
DOE’s proposed budget for “Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy”—which includes non-nuclear, non-fossil-fuel forms
of energy—is $1.2 billion for FY 2008, one-thirteenth of expenditures
on “Atomic Energy Defense Activities.”
Under
Complex 2030, the NNSA is
taking steps to boost the U.S. ability to test and produce
new warheads, and to consolidate production of uranium, plutonium
and non-nuclear components within nuclear weapons.
The central
component of Complex 2030 is the Reliable Replacement Warhead
program. The official rationale for the RRW program is to
produce weapons that are safer and more durable than the warheads
in the current stockpile. Supporters of RRW fear that the
components of nuclear weapons could wear out and that the
only way to know if the warheads are viable is to replace
their inner workings. And—the line of thinking continues—as
long as scientists are replacing the plutonium or uranium
cores, they might as well “tweak” the weapon’s design.
But the
assertion that the old nuclear weapons need to be replaced
by reliable new warheads is undermined by a recent NNSA study
that indicates that the existing plutonium triggers, or “pits,”
may be viable for another 90 to 100 years. The report, issued
in November and reviewed by an independent panel of scientists
and academics, indicates the need for considerable skepticism
of the Complex 2030 claims.
In addition,
the RRW program will establish the infrastructure needed for
future development of new warheads with new capabilities.
A key element of this upgraded and consolidated nuclear infrastructure
is a new facility to produce “pits,” the plutonium triggers
that set off the explosion of a hydrogen bomb. The DOE has
proposed constructing a Modern Pit Facility, but Congress
has deemed the $2 to $4 billion price tag too steep, and has
rejected funding proposals for two years running.
As an
alternative, the department is pushing the idea of a Consolidated
Plutonium Center (CPC) that would bring all of the
plutonium-related activities together at one site. The new
facility would be a sort of “modern pit facility-plus,” capable
each year of producing 125 plutonium pits to trigger nuclear
weapons, and at the same time develop new military applications
for plutonium. This more expansive concept is likely to cost
more than the facility alone, but NNSA has yet to provide
a cost estimate to Congress. A small down payment for the
CPC—$24.9 million—is proposed in the FY 2008 budget; budget
projections for continuing work on the CPC total $282 million
through 2012.
Under
Complex 2030, the new CPC will be one of a series “transformed”
and “consolidated” nuclear sites. Currently, there are eight
facilities—Los Alamos National Laboratory (N.M.), Lawrence
Livermore Laboratory (Calif.) and Sandia National Laboratories
(N.M.), the Nevada Test Site (R&D activities, including
sub-critical experiments), the Oak Ridge Y-12 Plant in Tennessee
(uranium and other components), the Pantex Plant in Texas
(warhead assembly, disassembly, disposal), the Kansas City
Plant (non-nuclear components), and the Savannah River Site
(tritium extraction and handling) in Georgia.
While
Complex 2030 would mandate that some of the sites have a smaller
“footprint” (less floor space), it would also require the
investment of tens of billions of dollars for new or upgraded
factories, including two new factories—a Highly Enriched Uranium
Materials Facility (HEUMF) and a Uranium Processing Facility
(UPF)—at the Y-12 site; a new Chemistry and Metallurgy Research
Replacement facility at Los Alamos National Laboratory to
“support plutonium operations”; a new factory for the production
of non-nuclear components of nuclear weapons at the current
site of the Kansas City plant; and significant upgrades at
the Pantex warhead assembly/disassembly facility. The spending
on the CPC is only a small portion of the as yet unknown costs
of the Complex 2030 initiative.
All of
this raises concerns for Robert Civiak. A program examiner
for Department of Energy national security programs in 1988
and 1989, Civiak now does research for Tri-Valley Cares, a
group that advocates the elimination of nuclear weapons. He
calls the Reliable Replacement Warhead a “multibillion dollar
effort to redesign and replace every nuclear weapon in the
U.S. arsenal.” Jay Coghlan, executive director at Nuclear
Watch of New Mexico, agrees, calling RRW a “nukes forever
program, and a Trojan horse for future new designs.”
NNSA’s
planning documents call for the production of the first RRW
by 2012, and according to analysis by James Sterngold in the
San Francisco Chronicle, the work is already beginning.
He writes, “Lab officials said researchers not only have produced
extensive designs . . . but they have already conducted non-nuclear
tests of the critical detonation devices and other components.
They have begun to plan in detail how the weapons would be
manufactured.”
Rep.
Pete Visclosky (D-Ind.), the new chairman of the House Energy
and Water Appropriations Subcommittee, has criticized the
RRW project for its “make-it-up-as-you-go-along” approach.
“There appears to have been little thought given to the question
of why the United States needs to build new nuclear warheads
at this time,” he says. “My preference is that the DOE would
have spent their resources reconfiguring the old Cold War
complex and dismantling obsolete warheads.” He has not ruled
out slowing or eliminating the RRW if the administration is
unable to present a strategy “that defines the future mission,
the emerging threats and the specific U.S. nuclear stockpile
necessary to achieve strategic goals.”
In an
August 2005 speech to a symposium on post-cold-war nuclear
strategy, Rep. Hobson described the administration’s call
for research on new bombs and the Nuclear Earth Penetrator
as “very provocative and overly aggressive policies that undermine
our moral authority to argue that other nations should forgo
nuclear weapons.”
Hobson’s
concerns are shared by a number of his colleagues on the other
side of the aisle, including Reps. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), John
Spratt (D-S.C.) and Lynne Woolsey (D-Calif.), all of whom
joined him in successfully leading an effort to defund the
Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator. Skepticism about the need
for massive investment in nuclear weapons at a time of huge
war bills and growing deficits, a growing sophistication about
nuclear issues, and a Democratic majority means that for the
first time in years the nuclear-weapons complex is feeling
the heat.
Sen.
Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) represents the state that houses
the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, which recently
won the Reliable Replacement Warhead competition. In a press
release issued after the decision, she said, “While I appreciate
the fact that Lawrence Livermore was selected, this in no
way answers my questions about the Reliable Replacement Warhead
program”—a program that she remains “100 percent opposed to.”
Despite
support from the White House, the DOE, key contractors, and
a number of powerful members of Congress such as Sen. Pete
Domenici (R-N.M.), Rep. Zach Wamp (R-Tenn.) and Rep. Joe Barton
(R-Texas)—all of whom have nuclear weapons facilities in their
states or districts—the Complex 2030 plan to modernize the
U.S. nuclear weapons infrastructure may be scaled back or
rejected by congressional opponents, who will receive backing
from arms control and environmental organizations. But it
will take more than cutting a million here or a billion there,
more than gunning against a specific corner of the Complex
2030 plan, more than defunding the most aggressive or alarming
aspects of the nuclear weapons complex, to deal with nuclear
weapons in the 21st century. Members of Congress are going
to need to challenge the bedrock of administration foreign
policy—that nuclear weapons should occupy center stage as
a guarantor of U.S. security.
But they
will not do that without being pushed—and pushed hard—by civil
society. The urgency of the task creates opportunities for
a big tent of strange bedfellows to work together: Weary cold
warriors like George Shultz, William Perry, Henry Kissinger
and Sam Nunn, who in January co-authored a Wall Street Journal
op-ed titled “A World Free of Nuclear Weapons”; well-established
Washington organizations like the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace and the Arms Control Association; disarmament activists
like Helen Caldicott and the Abolition 2000 network; and members
of the international community from the United Nations on
down are all saying the same thing: The United States cannot
insist that other nations disarm or opt not to pursue nuclear
technology, while aggressively ramping up U.S. nuclear capabilities.
This hypocrisy cannot stand.
Global
security through nuclear disarmament or a world awash in nuclear
weapons. The choice is obvious. And it is ours to make.
This
article first appeared in the May issue of In These Times,
and can be found online at www.inthesetimes.com. William D.
Hartung is a senior fellow at the World Policy Institute and
the director of the Arms Trade Resource Center and Frida Berrigan
is a senior research associate at the Arms Trade Research
Center.