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Ploughshares Working Paper
02-1
No Launch on Warning
by Alan F. Phillips, M.D.
Preface
Any post-Cold War temptation to complacency in the
pursuit of nuclear weapons prohibition or abolition should quickly
give way to a sobering sense of urgency on reading Alan Phillips
account of nuclear arsenals poised for launching within minutes
of an order to do so. And the fact that such an order could (in
some instances almost has) come in response to a false warning of
attack only serves to add a sense of the macabre to the urgency.
Its not that Dr. Phillips account is alarmist; quite
the opposite. Through careful analysis he concludes that a clear
policy rejecting launch-on-warning is logical, possible, and necessary
to dramatically reduce the risk of inadvertent nuclear war.
Nuclear weapons abolition remains an urgent goal that
must be pursued as a longer-term objective. But until nuclear disarmament
is a reality, it is critically important that nuclear weapon states
be persuaded to take all possible measures to reduce nuclear dangers
and prominent among these dangers is the possibility of nuclear
attacks being precipitated by a false warning of attack. Policies
to preclude launch-on-warning would yield immediate benefits by
reducing the risk of inadvertent war, and would also help pave the
way toward more extensive de-alerting measures to make launch-on-warning
impossible.
We commend to nuclear disarmament NGOs and advocates
both the analysis and the policy proposal advanced here by Dr. Phillips.
His is an important contribution that clearly sets out an issue
of immediate concern and a credible and achievable policy response.
This study will help the nuclear disarmament community explore ways
in which support for a policy of no launch-on-warning can become
part of our ongoing efforts toward complete and irreversible nuclear
disarmament.
1. Introduction.
2. Definition of Launch on Warning.
3. The Emergence of a Launch on Warning Policy.
4. The Danger of Inadvertent Nuclear War from False Warnings or
Chance Coincidences.
5. Distinguishing Between De-Alerting and NO L-o-W.
6. Exploring the NO L-o-W Posture.
7. The Effect on Deterrence.
8. De-Alerting: Methods, Benefits and Difficulties.
9. Conclusion.
1. Introduction
This paper argues for abandoning the policy of "Launch
on Warning" (L-o-W). The discussion is based on the simplifying
assumption of a one-against-one nuclear stand-off between the US
and Russia, with the stability in that stand-off based on nuclear
deterrence. The assumption is appropriate because L-o-W is only
relevant between adversaries that regard themselves as mutually
vulnerable to a "disarming first strike," rather than,
say, to a surprise attack on cities. It is those two countries,
and probably only those two, that now follow a policy, or retain
the option, of L-o-W. In the present relationship between the two
countries an intentionally started nuclear war is extremely improbable.
There is, however, the risk of an unintended war starting from one
cause or another, and under the policy of L-o-W the likeliest cause
is a false warning.
The prevention of any nuclear war is of very great importance. Prevention
of nuclear war between Russia and the US is vital for the future
of the world because both countries retain such large arsenals that
if they should go to war the result would be much more extensive
than complete destruction of both countries. Radioactivity, and
smoke from the many firestorms, would severely affect at least the
whole of the northern hemisphere. Nuclear winter, widespread starvation,
and other consequences might even combine to exterminate the human
species. To risk such a disaster happening because of a mere accident
to a man-made system is absurd.
While the claim that long-term stability can be assured
through nuclear deterrence must be rejected, deterrence remains
the central basis upon which arms control discussions, and agreements,
between the governments and military establishments of the US and
Russia take place. Nuclear deterrence is assumed for the present
discussion because the focus here is on changing just one feature
in the two States' military posture. It is argued that the change
to a policy of "NO L-o-W" is a logical necessity and is
readily possible; it is urgently needed, and it does not require
any immediate change in the assumptions upon which current policy
is based, whether these are valid or not. The change can and should
be made immediately. It can be initiated unilaterally, without causing
relative strategic advantage or disadvantage to either side. It
does not require formal agreement, nor verification.
The change from L-o-W to NO L-o-W is financially neutral,
not requiring substantial expense, nor yielding significant savings.
It does not require physical changes to the weapons systems.
2. Definition of Launch on Warning
The term "Launch on Warning" is used here in reference
to retaliation with rocket-mounted nuclear weapons to a perceived
nuclear attack. A L-o-W capacity is one that would make it
possible to launch a retaliatory attack in response to a warning
(by radar or satellite sensors) of attacking missiles, before any
incoming warhead had arrived and detonated. This allows the option
of L-o-W, which permits a decision, within the few minutes available
between the warning and the predicted time of first impact, on whether
or not to launch a response before impact. A L-o-W policy
is one in which it would be standard procedure for a retaliatory
launch to be actively considered and probably carried out before
the first impact, though in the American case only after authorization
by the President, assuming he could be consulted within the short
time available.
The term "Launch under Attack" has been used less precisely
by US Strategic Command and in Congress, possibly sometimes with
the intention of causing confusion. It is commonly presented as
meaning the prompt launch of retaliation as soon as one or more
incoming nuclear weapons have detonated. However, in the late 1970's
it was included in the dictionary of military terms by the Joint
Chiefs of Staff and explained as "execution by National Command
Authorities of Single Integrated Operational Plan Forces subsequent
to tactical warning of strategic nuclear attack against the United
States and prior to first impact."1 This definition
is identical to L-o-W. But at times military personnel have said
their policy is not L-o-W, but "launch under attack",
implying that there is a difference, and that retaliation would
be launched only after impact or detonation.
An alternative distinction has sometimes been implied:
that L-o-W means to launch on a warning from one system (radar or
satellite) alone, and "launch under attack" means launching
retaliation before detonation, but only if the warning is confirmed
by a second system.2
In any event, both Russia and the US have launch on
warning capacity, and thus must be assumed to maintain a L-o-W policy3
or, at the very least, a policy of considering the option of L-o-W.
3. The Emergence of a Launch on Warning Policy
The avowed function of nuclear-armed ballistic missiles is "deterrence".
Deterrence is in theory achieved when a potential attacker is convinced
that an attack will be unavoidably followed by retaliation so devastating
that it would be irrational to attack in the first place.
As the accuracy of nuclear weapons advanced, it was
realized that a massive pre-emptive salvo directed at command and
control systems and retaliatory weapons could diminish or eliminate
a capacity to retaliate. If either side believed it could achieve
such a "disarming first strike", it might be tempted to
attack. To avoid this weakening of deterrence through the pre-emptive
destruction of an adversarys retaliatory forces, both sides
explored the possibility of launching retaliation before the first
impact of a pre-emptive strike - thus "Launch On Warning".
It was probably put into effect as soon as such a quick launch became
possible, the development of solid fuel as rocket propellant (around
1960) being a decisive factor.
During atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons in the
early 1950's the electrical phenomenon called "Electro-Magnetic
Pulse" (EMP) was discovered.4 Around 1960 the US
conducted a series of high-altitude nuclear explosions to investigate
it, incidentally causing significant disruption of radio communications
each time. The purpose was presumably two-fold: to explore the possibility
that the phenomenon could be used by either side to enable a disarming
first strike, and to study methods of protecting their own electronic
equipment so that deterrence would be maintained even if the enemy
was planning to use EMP. This possibility that electrical disruptions
might prevent retaliation provided a second reason to adopt L-o-W.
As early as 1960 the propriety and morality of adopting
L-o-W was being discussed because of the recognized danger of launching
on a false warning, and so starting an unintended nuclear war.5
In that year the Planning Board wrote that it was "essential"
to avoid the possibility of launching unrecallable missiles based
on a false warning. They stressed the importance of a "reliable
bomb alarm system to provide early positive information of actual
missile hits."6 Such a system was in fact installed.
It was not without defects, and at least once these caused a spurious
alert.7
In 1962, Robert McNamara said that as long as he was
Secretary of Defense and Jack Kennedy was President, the US would
never launch on warning.8 But the same year, the Secretary
of the Air Force must have been thinking of L-o-W when he informed
Kennedy that once the Minuteman missiles had been deployed in the
first complex, in their "normal alert status", all "twenty
missiles will be able to be launched in thirty seconds."9
A discussion in 1969 is on record as showing that
some who were opposing "Ballistic Missile Defense" favoured
L-o-W, but The White House is said to have opposed it "on the
grounds that 50% of warnings from Over-the-Horizon Radar were false".10
(No true warning of a nuclear ballistic missile attack has ever
been received, so presumably the other 50% were true observations
of test rocket launches.) However the newly developed satellite
early warning system was estimated to produce only one false warning
per year, which appears to have been regarded as acceptable. Georgy
Arbatov, a Soviet deterrence specialist who had joined the National
Security Council, assured Council members that "neither side
would wait if it received warning of an attack but instead ... would
simply empty its silos by launching a counter-strike at once."11
That reduces concern about failure of deterrence against a surprise
first strike, but underlines the danger from a false warning.
It is probable that by 1969 L-o-W was the military policy on both
sides, and had been for a number of years, notwithstanding the record
that in 1973 Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird expressed the hope
that "that kind of strategy would never be adopted by any Administration
or by any Congress."12 The recollections of former
officers and enlisted men of Strategic Air Command (SAC) from the
early 1970's confirm that L-o-W was in effect then.13
The capability, and presumably the policy, of L-o-W are retained
by the US and Russia, even though the Cold War is regarded as over.
This seems inexcusably dangerous.
4. The Danger of Inadvertent Nuclear War from False Warnings or
Chance Coincidences
Launch on Warning has kept the world exposed, for at least 30 years,
to the danger of a nuclear war caused by nothing but a coincidence
of radar, sensor, or computer glitches, and a temporary failure
of human alertness to appreciate that an unexpected message of attack
from the warning system is false, the enemy having done nothing.
There is at most 20 minutes for the human operators and commanders
to call and conduct a "threat conference", while the chief
of Strategic Command is put in touch with the President to advise
him, and the President decides whether to order retaliation. The
disaster of an accidental nuclear war has not happened yet, in spite
of a large number of false warnings of which at least a few have
had very dangerous features. This is a credit to the care and alertness
of the military in both Russia and the US. It should not be taken
as reassurance. A single instance of launch of nuclear weapons on
a false warning would result in nuclear war, and the end of civilization,
just as surely as a nuclear war started by an actual attack. There
would be no chance to review the system to make it safer after one
failure of that kind.
The threat conferences require, and so far have achieved, the extraordinary
standard of perfect accuracy. They have not been rare events. Probably
most of them have been routine and it was easy to exclude a real
attack; others have been serious enough that the silo lids were
rolled back. To get an idea of how the laws of chance apply to the
situation, suppose we make a very conservative assumption: that
just one conference a year had a risk of error as high as 1% (and
that the rest had a much lower risk). It is a simple calculation
to show that taking one 1% risk of disaster per year for 30 years
results in a 26% probability of one actual disaster in that period.
On that assumption, then, we had approximately 3 to 1 odds in favour
of surviving the period 1970 - 2000, and we did survive. But that
means, from the risk of accidental war alone, we had (on that assumption)
a one in four chance of not surviving. A single trial of
Russian roulette is safer: it gives a one in six chance of death,
or 5 to 1 odds in favour of surviving.14
During the Cold War, many mishaps within the nuclear
retaliation system on the US side are known to have occurred, including
false warnings. There must have also been many similar incidents
on the Russian side. One has been reported in which a Russian officer
decided on his own initiative not to report an apparently grave
warning on his computer screen, on the correct belief that it was
a false warning. He may have saved the world, but was disgraced
for failing to follow his orders; his career was ruined, and he
suffered a mental breakdown.15
In a study of rival theories of accident probabilities, Scott Sagan
described a large number of errors and accidents within the US nuclear
deterrence system. He concluded that the risk of nuclear war from
accidents had not been excessive.16 I came to the opposite
conclusion from his data. I have collected 20 instances of mishaps,
from that source and others, which with less alertness among military
officers, or accompanied by chance by some coincidental problem,
might have started a nuclear war.17
One example of a situation which was difficult to
assess correctly at the Command Center, was this: On the night of
24 November, 1961, all communication links between SAC HQ and NORAD
went dead, and so cut SAC HQ off from the three Ballistic Missile
Early Warning Sites, at Thule (Greenland), Clear (Alaska), and Fylingdales
(England).18 For General Power at SAC HQ, there were
two possible explanations: either enemy action, or the coincidental
failure of all the communication systems, which had multiple ostensibly
independent routes including commercial telephone circuits. The
SAC bases in the US were therefore alerted by a code message instructing
B-52 nuclear bomber crews to prepare to take off, and start their
engines, but not to take off without further orders. In the hope
of clarifying the situation, radio contact was made with an orbiting
B-52 on airborne alert which was near Thule (5,000 kilometers away)
at the time. Its crew contacted the Thule base and could report
that no attack had taken place, so the alert was cancelled. The
reason for the "coincidental" failure was that the "independent"
routes for telephone and telegraph between NORAD and SAC HQ all
ran through one relay station in Colorado. At that relay station
a small fire had interrupted all the lines.19
There was a coincidental mishap during this event, which could have
been disastrous. It seems there was an error in transmitting the
alert code to 380th Bomb Wing at Plattsburg, New York. A former
aircraft maintenance technician who was serving at that B-52 bomber
base, recently told the author his vivid recollection of the incident.
The code order first received by the bomber crews was "alpha",
instructing them to take off and proceed directly to their pre-assigned
targets, and bomb. They had never received that code before. Before
any bomber had taken off the code was corrected to "cocoa",
meaning "wait with engines running". If the corrected
code had not been received in time it could have been very difficult
to stop the bombers.
The episode just described took place before L-o-W was instituted
for the ICBMs that were in service. By 1979 the policy of L-o-W
was in effect and in that year, on the morning of 9 November, a
war games tape was running on a reserve computer when failure of
the operational computer automatically switched in the reserve to
take its place. The Threat Conference saw the picture of a massive
attack in a realistic trajectory from Russian launch sites. On that
occasion, preparation to retaliate got as far as launch of the president's
National Emergency Airborne Command Post (though without the president),
before the error was discovered.
The most recent example known to the public was on
25 January 1995 when, as described in a report of the Standing Committee
for Foreign Affairs and International Trade, "the Russian missile
early warning system detected a scientific rocket launched off the
coast of Norway. This area is frequented by U.S. submarines, whose
ballistic missiles could scatter eight nuclear warheads over Moscow
within fifteen minutes. Norway had informed the Russian Foreign
Ministry about the upcoming launch, but this information had not
been transmitted to the military. Over the next several minutes
President Yeltsin was informed of the possible American attack,
and, for the first time ever, his 'nuclear briefcase' was switched
into alert mode for emergency use, allowing him to order a full
Russian nuclear response. Tension mounted as the rocket separated
into several stages, but the crisis ended after about eight minutes
(just a few minutes before the procedural deadline to respond to
an impending nuclear attack) when it became clear that the rocket
was headed out to sea and would not pose a threat to Russia."20
5. Distinguishing Between De-Alerting and NO L-o-W
"De-alerting" is a term commonly used in
suggestions and recommendations that nuclear weapons should be taken
off "hair-trigger alert" by introducing physical changes
to impose an unavoidable delay between a decision to launch
and the irrevocable step that actually starts the launch. With such
a delay L-o-W would of course be impossible; but it is possible
and highly desirable to abandon the policy of L-o-W immediately,
without waiting for the changes involved in introducing such a delay.
Several reports to governments have indicated the
importance of abandoning a hair-trigger stance with weapons of such
terrible destructive power. Most of them, however, have not distinguished
between terms like "high alert" or "hair-trigger
alert", which usually imply the technical ability to "launch
on warning", and the policy or option actually to launch before
any incoming warhead explodes.
The Canberra Commission on the Elimination
of Nuclear Weapons was established by the Australian government
in 1995. Its mandate was to recommend practical steps towards elimination
of nuclear weapons from the world. Its report states: "The
first requirement for movement towards a nuclear weapon free world
is for the five nuclear weapon states to commit themselves unequivocally
to proceed with all deliberate speed to a world without nuclear
weapons ...".21 It then defines six additional immediate
steps starting with these two: taking nuclear forces off alert,
and removal of warheads from delivery vehicles.
The Canberra report emphasizes the danger of launch on warning or
launch-under-attack options, implying that they are different, but
it does not indicate that giving up either option can be different
from "taking nuclear forces off alert." It goes on to
say that "taking nuclear forces off alert could be verified
by national technical means and nuclear weapon state inspection
arrangements. In the first instance, reductions in alert status
could be adopted by the nuclear weapon states unilaterally."
The report does not make the point that, if nuclear deterrence
is to remain the policy, it is acceptable to abandon L-o-W unilaterally
but unacceptable to de-alert unilaterally.
Similarly, the Report of the Canadian Standing Committee
on Foreign Affairs and International Trade, entitled Canada and
the Nuclear Challenge: Reducing the Political Value of Nuclear Weapons
for the Twenty-First Century, discusses in a general way the
need for both Russia and the United States to reduce the alert status
of their nuclear arsenals:
In the interest of increased nuclear safety and stability,
and as a means to advance toward the broader goal of eliminating
nuclear weapons, the Committee recommends that the Government of
Canada endorse the concept of de-alerting all nuclear forces, subject
to reciprocity and verification - including the arsenals of the
permanent members of the UN Security Council and the three nuclear-weapons-capable
States - and encourage their governments to pursue this option.22
At least two studies have advocated the adoption of a clear policy
declaration on rejecting launch on warning options as a first step
toward de-alerting. A major work from the Brookings Institute, Nuclear
Turning Point: A Blueprint for Deep Cuts and De-alerting Nuclear
Weapons, defines de-alerting as a two-step process. "It
seeks first to eliminate the hair-trigger option of launch on warning"
- essentially a policy commitment not to exercise a L-o-W option,
even though there is a capacity for it. Second, in the words of
the Brookings paper, de-alerting moves from a policy to forego L-o-W
options, to measures that physically "extend the launch preparation
time to days, weeks, or longer through graduated reciprocal measures
instituted by the two parties."23
The Committee on Nuclear Policy coordinated
by the Stimson Center made a similar recommendation in its 1999
report. It called on the United States to "declare its intention,
with a parallel, reciprocal commitment from Russia, to eliminate
the launch-on-warning option from nuclear war plans." In other
words, it calls on the two states to make mutual commitments to
abandon launch on warning options. This commitment, the report said,
should be followed by "discussions among the five nuclear weapon
states on verifiably removing all nuclear forces from hair-trigger
alert." 24
These are important calls for the public rejection
of L-o-W postures and options, but in both instances the reports
call for reciprocal NO L-o-W policies. Under deterrence theory
and practice, however, rejection of the launch on warning policy
or option does not need to be symmetrical or verifiable. It is of
value even if only one side does it, and it is argued below that
the only theoretical disadvantage in rejecting L-o-W is actually
less if it is not verified. If the US were to immediately
renounce the L-o-W option, it would then be in a position to tell
Russia why it has done so and ask for a reciprocal commitment. One
side making that commitment and carrying it out unilaterally does
not produce any relative advantage or disadvantage for either side,
but it does confer an advantage on both sides, namely, lowering
the risk of accidental war.
6. Exploring the NO L-o-W Posture
If Russia and the US were actually to abandon the
option of launching on warning, even while they retained the capability,
they would eliminate the risk of a nuclear war being started by
a false warning. Since a false warning is immediately revealed as
such when the predicted time has passed for the first rockets to
arrive and no detonation has been detected, simply delaying retaliation
until there has been a nuclear detonation guarantees that a war
will not be started accidentally from that cause.
Incidents as a result of which a purely accidental war might have
been started seem to have outnumbered the actual geopolitical crises
when nuclear war was intentionally threatened. And most of the deliberate
threats to resort to nuclear weapons, though extremely troubling
and dangerous, have been regarded more as threatening gestures than
as actual intentions.
Since the Berlin Wall came down, the most serious threat of a nuclear
war between Russia and the US known to the public was the "Norwegian
Rocket event" of January 1995, described above. Without L-o-W,
that is, if the Russian policy had been never to launch a retaliatory
attack until after a nuclear detonation was detected, the Russian
alert and the anxious few minutes would still have occurred, but
there would have been absolutely no danger of nuclear war because
the rocket was unarmed. There could not have been a nuclear explosion,
even if the guidance system had malfunctioned and directed the rocket
over Russia.
To change from L-o-W to NO L-o-W does not require any change of
alert status of the retaliatory system. It only requires a change
of standing orders and standard operating procedure, such that no
launch may take place until a nuclear detonation is reported.
The elimination of L-o-W does not eliminate any other
retaliation options. It just ensures that retaliation would not
take place without confirmation of a nuclear detonation. As soon
as a warning of attack was received, one which a threat conference
deemed to be real, the order to prepare for a retaliatory launch
could be given. The President (in the US case) would then be charged
with deciding, not whether to launch immediately and risk it being
an irrevocable response to what could still be a false warning,
but whether to launch immediate retaliation in the event of a
detonation. If the decision was to retaliate upon detonation,
full preparation would be made to launch immediately upon receipt
of a positive bomb alarm signal.
Bomb alarms were installed many years ago near all
military installations and all big cities in the US, and presumably
in Russia, which automatically and instantaneously indicate at the
Strategic Command Centers the location of any nuclear explosion.
If, and only if, indication of a nuclear explosion was received
at the predicted arrival time of the attack, the final order to
launch could be sent immediately to the silos. No delay to obtain
presidential authorization would be needed at that point. The actual
retaliatory launch could probably take place within a minute of
the first detonation. If the final order to launch was not received
within a certain short time after the time of predicted impact,
the launch preparations would be reversed.
A policy of NO L-o-W would not eliminate the horrific
threat of nuclear annihilation. Only the abolition of nuclear weapons
can do that; but a NO L-o-W posture would remove the danger of launching
nuclear-armed rockets in response to a false warning. That would
probably eliminate 90% of the current risk of nuclear war between
the US and Russia. A secondary benefit would be the reduced stress
on the President during those vital minutes in which a reported
attack was being assessed. He would know that he was not in danger
of starting a war on a false warning. Under L-o-W that worry might
impair his concentration on the main issues.
Neither side wants an accidental war. They know that if either side
mistakenly launches nuclear weapons both countries are going to
be destroyed: it makes no difference who started it. If one side
changes to NO L-o-W the risk of a purely accidental war from a false
warning is approximately halved, immediately. It does not even depend
on the other side knowing that the change has been made.
7. The Effect on Deterrence
There can be few grounds for objection, by the military
or by the governments, to this very necessary safety measure. One
possible objection has to be taken seriously: that "NO L-o-W"
might impair deterrence and tempt one side to try a "disarming
first strike". There are good reasons why this objection should
not be allowed to prevent the policy change.
For either side to consider first strike to be a rational
option, the attacking side would have to be absolutely sure that
its first salvo would fully disarm the others retaliatory
capacity. They would know that any surviving weapons would pose
a retaliatory threat that could be launched immediately after the
first attack had hit its target. Under NO L-o-W the degree of alertness
of surviving weapons would not be reduced, and retaliation for a
real attack could still be launched promptly, probably within a
minute of the first detonation. Synchronization of detonation times
of the opening salvo, from widely separated launch sites to widely
separated targets - the enemy missile launch sites and command posts
- could not be assured to such precision.
The other possible method of preventing retaliation would be a first
salvo engineered to maximize Electro-Magnetic Pulse and disable
the other sides electronics. It is hardly credible that the
attacking side could feel sure that their EMP would disrupt communication
and launch mechanisms sufficiently, since they would know that military
electronics will have been shielded. Furthermore, they would know
that submarine-launched missiles would not be disabled, because
the sea-water shields submarines and their contents.
The side planning a pre-emptive attack would also have to be sure
that its adversary had in fact changed to and remained under a policy
of No L-o-W. They cannot be sure of this without verification. So
from the point of view of preserving deterrence, verification is
actually undesirable. Verification that L-o-W policies were no longer
in place would help to reassure the other countries of the world,
but it is not necessary in order to gain the benefit of the change.
Thus, a NO L-o-W policy on either side would have
minimal impact on deterrence, and would be an advantage to both,
simply because it halves the risk of a purely accidental nuclear
war. NO L-o-W by both sides makes this particular risk zero.
If, despite these arguments, the military establishment on either
side is not persuaded to abandon L-o-W, the head of state must balance
the elimination of the very definite risk of accidental war due
to a false warning, against a hypothetical possibility of weakened
deterrence resulting in war. The results of a nuclear war would
be the same, whether started by accident or by intention.
8. De-alerting: Methods, Benefits and Difficulties
As described in the report from the Brookings Institute,
"de-alerting" moves beyond the policy to forego L-o-W
options, to measures that physically extend the launch preparation
time to days, weeks, or longer, through graduated reciprocal measures
instituted by the two parties.
A wide variety of methods has been suggested to introduce
the delay necessary to constitute a de-alerted posture. A very radical
measure would be to have all warheads removed from all delivery
vehicles, and stored at a distance from them. Less drastic measures
could be used to enforce shorter delays, and possible methods include:
- making a heap of earth and rocks on silo lids
that would require heavy machinery to remove it;
- removing hydraulic fluid from the machines that
raise silo lids;
- de-activating the mechanism that rolls back garage
roofs (Russia);
- pinning open a switch in a place that takes time to reach, or
within a casing that takes time to open; and
- removing batteries, gyroscopes, or guidance mechanisms
from rockets or re-entry vehicles.
For de-alerting to be effective, it should be noted
that every nuclear weapon on both sides would have to be de-alerted.
Heads of state and diplomats have been apt to say "de-alert
as many weapons as possible", but that would not be adequate.
To launch one nuclear weapon is sufficient to start a full-scale
nuclear war.
Full de-alerting would make sure that nuclear weapons
could not be brought into use hastily. It would tend to reduce reliance
on them in crisis situations, and thus be a step towards their eventual
elimination from national arsenals. De-alerting would also make
unauthorized launch of a nuclear weapon far more difficult to do,
and would remove entirely the risk of accidental war due to a false
warning. It would make more improbable the already unlikely event
of a serious dispute between Russia and the US pushing either of
the two into intentionally starting a war, by giving more time for
diplomatic exchanges between the hostile governments and for conciliatory
efforts by third parties.
However desirable and urgent de-alerting is, it poses significant
challenges. Until elimination of the weapons is complete and assured
by treaty, the two states will continue to regard the possession
of nuclear weapons as essential to deterrence. To maintain deterrence
it is necessary for the enforced delay to be closely equal on the
two sides, otherwise the side that could launch first might be tempted
to try a "disarming first strike". This symmetry will
not be easy to ensure, considering that the warheads, the delivery
vehicles, and the launch procedures are different in the two countries.
Thus de-alerting will require complex arrangements,
and intrusive verification, to ensure the completeness of the de-alerting
measures actually carried out, and to ensure that they cannot be
secretly reversed. This may require observers from neutral countries,
and perhaps from the adversary, in the vicinity of each sides
launch sites. At the same time, both sides will be concerned about
maintaining the secrecy of key features of their systems. Verification
acceptable for submarine-launched missiles would be extremely difficult.
It would take prolonged technical study and negotiation to set up
these two systems, the de-alerting itself and the verification,
in a way that would satisfy the two parties. Once that had been
achieved (which might prove impossible) a formal written agreement
would be needed. This might require negotiation of a treaty, needing
ratification by the parliament on each side, which raises another
possibility of disappointing failure after years of work.
9. Conclusion
For the present, adoption of a NO L-o-W policy offers a quick and
simple means of reducing the danger of accidental war. It does not
need symmetry, verification, agreement, nor even trust, between
the adversaries. If adopted unilaterally by one side it is of immediate
benefit to both, and it does not impair deterrence. Unilateral operation
of NO L-o-W by one country for a time, might well be sufficient
for the other to understand the benefit and to realize that the
change did not in fact invite a first strike.
Putting NO L-o-W into effect requires only an executive order, followed
by a change in standing orders to the effect that no rocket is launched
until a nuclear explosion is reported to Strategic Command. There
is no reduction in alert status. There would be minor changes in
the launch sequence to suit whatever safeguards would be made to
ensure that no launch could occur while the crews in the silos were
waiting for the final order, and that they would be ready for instant
launch if that order came through.
All the world's people would be safer for the change. Therefore
all governments have a duty to their people to urge the US and Russian
governments to make it at once.
Acronyms
EMP
ElectroMagnetic Pulse
HQ
Headquarters
ICBM Inter-Continental
Ballistic Missile
L-o-W Launch on
Warning
NORAD North American Aerospace Defense Command
SAC
Strategic Air Command (later changed to "Strategic Command")
SIOP Single
Integrated Operational Plan
SLBM Submarine-Launched
Ballistic Missile
The author acknowledges valuable research assistance
by Sarah Estabrooks of Project Ploughshares, and very helpful editing
by Sarah and by Ernie Regehr.
Notes
1. In Bruce Blair, The Logic of Accidental Nuclear
War (Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institute) 1992.
2. This is too uncertain a distinction to rely on.
If one system were temporarily out of action there would be great
pressure to act on an indication from the remaining one.
3. If this is true of Russia, they must be relying
on warning from only one system for a large fraction of the time.
Their satellite fleet is incomplete and there are periods when segments
of their periphery are not doubly monitored. Some of the radar complexes
installed under the Soviet system are now in independent States.
There is said to be a corridor along which missiles could approach
giving no warning early enough for evaluation of the situation before
impact. We have no way of knowing whether, for that direction of
attack, their retaliation would be purely reflect or would wait
for impact.
4. The Electro-Magnetic Pulse (EMP) is an extremely
sharp and energetic electromagnetic impulse that is emitted by electrons
traveling at nearly the speed of light from a nuclear explosion.
It is maximal when the detonation is at very high altitude and the
electrons interact with the earths magnetic field above the
atmosphere. It disrupts unshielded electrical and electronic equipment
over a wide area.
5. Memorandum of Gerard C. Smith, Director, U.S. Department
of State Policy Planning Staff to Foy Kohler, Assistant Secretary
of State for European Affairs, 22 June 1960. Marked TOP SECRET.
Source: National Security Archive microfiche collection, U.S.
Nuclear History: Nuclear Weapons and Politics in the Missile Era,
1955-68. Washington, D.C. 1998. National Security Archive electronic
briefing book, "Launch on Warning: The development of U.S.
capabilities, 1959-79", William Burr, ed., April 2001. Document
3. http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB43/
6. Memorandum for the National Security Council from
the National Security Council Planning Board, 14 July 1960. Marked
TOP SECRET. Subject: U.S. Policy on Continental Defense. Source:
National Security Archive microfiche collection, U.S. Nuclear
History: Nuclear Weapons and Politics in the Missile Era, 1955-68.
Washington, D.C. 1998. Burr, Document 4.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB43/
7. Scott D. Sagan, The Limits of Safety (Princeton,
N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1993), p. 183.
8. Account quoted by Jeffrey Richelson citing an interview
with Jack Ruina in Americas Space Sentinels: DSP Satellites
and National Security (Lawrence, KS: University of Kansas Press,
1999), p. 256. no. 37. In Burr, 2001.
9. Letter from Secretary of the Air Force, Eugene
M. Zuckert, to President John F. Kennedy, 26 October 1962. Source:
National Security Archive microfiche collection, U.S. Nuclear
History: Nuclear Weapons and Politics in the Missile Era, 1955-68.
Washington, D.C., 1998. Burr, Document 7.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB43/
10. Memorandum from Lawrence Lynn, U.S. National Security
Council Staff, to Henry Kissinger, Assistant to the President for
National Security Affairs, 1 May 1969. Subject: Talking Paper on
"Firing on Warning" Issue. Marked TOP SECRET when with
attachment. Source: National Security Archives Nixon Presidential
Materials Project, National Security Council Files, Box 840,
Sentinel ABM System, Vol. II, 4/1/69. Burr, Document 9.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB43/
11. Memorandum from Helmut Sonnenfeldt, National Security
Council Staff to Henry Kissinger, 22 September 1969. Subject: "Message"
to You from Arbatov. Marked SECRET/NODIS. Source: National Security
Archives Nixon Presidential Materials Project, National
Security Council Files, Box 710, USSR Vol. V, 10/69. Burr, Document
10.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB43/
12. U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (ACDA)
Public Affairs Bureau, "The Launch on Warning Question in the
First Phase of SALT", 21 December 1973. Marked SECRET NOFORN.
Source: ACDA FOIA release to National Security Archive. Burr, Document
11.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB43/
13. Authors personal communication with former
Air Force Personnel. Anonymity retained.
14. This is not an attempt to calculate an actual
probability. It is merely an example to illustrate the cumulative
effect of any low-probability risk that is taken repeatedly, or
accepted continuously, over a period of time.
15. Incident reported by Allan Little in "How
I Stopped Nuclear War", BBC News, 21 October 1998.
16. Sagan, The Limits of Safety.
17. Alan F. Phillips, "20 Mishaps that Might
Have Started Accidental Nuclear War" (Toronto: Defence Research
and Education Centre) 1998.
18. Sagan, p. 176.
19. Ibid., p. 176.
20. Report of the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs
and International Trade, Canada and the Nuclear Challenge: Reducing
the Political Value of Nuclear Weapons for the Twenty-First Century,
December 1998.
21. Report of The Canberra Commission on the Elimination
of Nuclear Weapons, Executive Summary, 30 January 1997.
22. SCFAIT Report, Recommendation 5, p. 24.
23. Bruce Blair, The Nuclear Turning Point, A Blueprint
for Deep Cuts and De-Alerting, (Washington, D.C.: The Brookings
Institute) p.101.
24. Report of the Committee on Nuclear Policy, Jump-START:
Retaking the Initiative to Reduce Post-Cold War Nuclear Dangers,
The Henry L. Stimson Center, February 1999.
References
Blair, Bruce in Feiveson, Harold A. et al.
The Nuclear Turning Point, A Blueprint for Deep Cuts and De-Alerting.
Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institute. 1999.
Blair, Bruce. The Logic of Accidental Nuclear War.
Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institute 1992.
Burr, William, ed. National Security Archive electronic
briefing book, "Launch on Warning: The development of U.S.
capabilities, 1959-79". April 2001. http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB43/
Little, Allan. "How I Stopped Nuclear War".
BBC News. 21 October 1998.
Phillips, Alan. "20 Mishaps that Might Have Started
Accidental Nuclear War". Toronto: Defence Research and Education
Centre. 1998. Online at: www.nuclearfiles.org/anw/
Report of The Canberra Commission on the Elimination
of Nuclear Weapons, 30 January 1997.
Report of the Committee on Nuclear Policy, Jump-START:
Retaking the Initiative to Reduce Post-Cold War Nuclear Dangers.
The Henry L. Stimson Center. February 1999.
Report of the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs
and International Trade, Canada and the Nuclear Challenge: Reducing
the Political Value of Nuclear Weapons for the Twenty-First Century,
December 1998.
Sagan, Scott D. The Limits of Safety. Princeton,
N.J.: Princeton University Press. 1993.
About the Author
Dr. Alan Phillips graduated with honours in physics
at Cambridge University in 1941. He spent the rest of World War
II doing radar research for the British Army. After the war he qualified
in medicine at Edinburgh University and specialized in the treatment
of cancer by radiation. He retired in 1984. His retirement activities
have included the study of nuclear armaments and the risks of accidental
nuclear war.
Project Ploughshares Working Papers are published to contribute
to public awareness and debate of issues of disarmament and development.
The views expressed and proposals made in these papers should not
be taken as necessarily reflecting the official policy of Project
Ploughshares.
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