25.10.2018 Author: Gordon Duff
Column: Politics
Region: USA in the World
America has developed a secret
military capability using both existing drones such as the Global Hawk and
Raptor and a newer class of stealth drones based on the RQ180 first seen when
captured by Iran some years ago.
This is important now with America
announcing its withdrawal from the INF treaty. Signed in 1987, the INF or
Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, covered weapons, at the time guided
missiles only, with ranges from 500 to 5,500 kilometers.
It is important to note that, at the
time the US and Soviet Union signed, no other nation had this type of
capability or even a perceived need. There were no real US tensions with China
and, as things are today as well, the intermediate range nuclear missiles of
both India and Pakistan are, it is assumed, aimed at each other only.
Today, things are different, or as
Washington sees it, according to John Bolton, chief security advisor to
President Trump. From Foreign Policy:
“Washington plans to withdraw from
the INF Treaty, according to U.S. President Donald Trump, who says that Russia
has violated the agreement for years. Coupled with the prospect of no extension
to the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, Washington may thus be opening the door
to a return of a terrifying past. The Trump administration is not just
threatening to roll back a slew of protections and safety precautions; it is
also quite consciously restarting the arms race, with a full nuclear
modernization plan that could cost up to $1.6 trillion over 30 years, according
to an October 2017 report from the Congressional Budget Office and other accounts. The Russians and Chinese will undoubtedly respond,
but with the cessation of treaty-authorized inspections, governments will be
far more in the dark about what the other side is building.
“It’s extremely worrying to leave us
without eyes and ears inside Russian strategic forces for the first time in 40
years,” said Alexandra Bell, a former senior Obama administration official now
at the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation. ‘There’s no way to get
information except with reciprocal inspections.’
Trump told reporters on Monday that he would increase the
U.S. nuclear stockpile—including against China—“until people come to their
senses.” He didn’t define what that meant but suggested that the resurrection
of a nuclear threat from Washington will bring other countries into submission.
“’It’s a threat to whoever you want,’
Trump said. ‘And it includes China, and it includes Russia, and it includes
anybody else that wants to play that game. You can’t do that. You can’t play
that game on me’”
Less visible and not likely taken
into account by Trump are the threats from the nuclear arsenal of Israel and
India. Both have sought positions as preeminent regional nuclear powers but are
suspected to harbor wider ambitions which have led to longer range missiles,
genuine ICBMs.
The same can be said, to a degree, of
North Korea. Though the Korean peninsula is being rapidly demilitarized despite
American efforts to raise tensions in the region, North Korea still maintains a
nuclear arsenal of both intermediate and, according to some US sources, much
longer range nuclear capable missiles as well.
The real American target, according
to leaks from the administration, is China. China’s Donfeng 41 ICBM has the
longest range and largest payload of any military ICBM now deployed and, along
with this system, China has more than a dozen more capable of air, land or sea
launch, both intercontinental and intermediate range.
China, during the Cold War, wasn’t a
player at all but today their nuclear capability is robust.
Still, the real issue is and will be
a showdown between the US and Russia and Russia’s sensitivity has been in the
arena of America’s dependence on drone aircraft.
The key to Russia’s concerns is what
is called “loiter time.” A Global Hawk can carry a payload of nearly two tons
and stay aloft for up to 35 hours at ranges up to 8000 miles.
New variants rumored to be “in the
works” are capable of staying just outside Russia’s territory while armed with
short range nuclear missiles. The combination of capabilities, according to
Russia, has violated the INF treaty.
There are also accusations by
Washington regarding the Russian Iskander missile whose listed range is within
what is allowed. From Defense24.com, written by Jakub Palowski:
“The recent reports suggest
that the Russian Iskander ballistic missile system has a range which
exceeds 500 kilometres. The said system is also said to be
capable of striking targets at distances of up to 700 kilometres. If
the above statements are true, this would mean that Russia has just
obtained a set of capabilities which is prohibited by the INF treaty. Not only
has Moscow done that through implementation of a new cruise missile, but also
through introduction of ballistic missile into the utilized arsenal. The latter
weapon is faster, and harder to intercept. This would mean that the
agreement signed by the leaders of the United States of America and USSR is
even less meaningful now, than it was before.
Russia has deployed the Iskander
tactical missile system within the Kaliningrad Oblast, using a civil vessel,
within the framework of an exercise. On that occasion, reports emerged
suggesting that the maximum range of the ballistic missiles used within the
system is between 500 to 700 kilometres. The claims that had been made earlier
said that the aforesaid parameter was characterized by a value of up to 500
kilometres. This was indirectly confirmed by, among other subjects, the
Lithuanian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Linas Linkevičius who noted that the international treaties might
have been broken, once Moscow decided to introduce the weaponry mentioned above
into the array of equipment used by the Armed Forces. Jacek Durkalec
representing the Polish Institute of International Affairs (PISM) think tank
also referred to the issue above. Formally, the maximum range of a ballistic
missile, according to the INF treaty, is defined as a distance at which the
missile has been tested. The same parameter referring to a cruise missile
defines the distance which may be reached by the weapon used in a standard
cruise mode. However, the above conditions do not have an impact on the fact
that the basic assumption of the INF treaty was to eliminate the ballistic
missiles with ranges between 500 and 5500 kilometres. Development of tactical
weapons, the range of which exceeds 500 kilometres, is an issue which is
negating the aforesaid assumption.”
One must note that the claims made by
Palowski, on which Trump and Bolton claim to base their decision to withdraw,
are unsupported by subjective data and the semantics used here to support
Russia as negating the treaty are well outside norms accepted by the
international community.
The real issue, of course, is that
these systems, an expanded range nuclear armed Iskander which may or may not
exist and the US nuclear armed drone/missile fleet which does exist and how
they impact the threat environment the 1987 agreement intended to create.
When one looks at the US position vis
a vis China in the Far East, intermediate range weapons the US claims to fear
may well not represent a threat at all. The only strategic bases close to China
are Andersen Air Force Base in Guam, around 3000 kilometers, and Al Udeid Air
Base in Qatar, over 6000 kilometers away.
American fears are, it seems
predicated on China’s wish to maintain a “nuclear saturation screen” near its
own coastline, one it deems necessary because of America’s vast fleet of
aircraft carriers and military doctrine of dominating the Far East.
Despite rhetoric about China or North
Korea, the real impact of a cancelled INF treaty will be a cloud of nuclear
doom over Europe. With American nuclear bases in Germany and Italy and a new
American base being built in Poland, with an American military presence in the
Black Sea, Romania and Ukraine, Russia is likely to not only bolster nuclear
forces but to maintain a much higher degree of readiness as well.
The US will do the same and none of
it was necessary as the perceived differences between the US and Russia have
yet to be established. The US, it seems, is arming for a war but has no enemy,
thus, it is seeking one.
Gordon Duff is a Marine
combat veteran of the Vietnam War that has worked on veterans and POW issues
for decades and consulted with governments challenged by security issues. He’s
a senior editor and chairman of the board of Veterans Today, especially for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook.”
https://journal-neo.org/2018/10/25/inf-meltdown-america-s-doomsday-drone-force-revealed/
https://journal-neo.org/2018/10/25/inf-meltdown-america-s-doomsday-drone-force-revealed/
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