Former Titan II Missile in its silo, Sahuarita, Arizona. Source: The Titan Missile Museum.
December 2019
By Daryl G. Kimball
Forty
years ago, on Nov. 9, the U.S. Defense Department detected an imminent nuclear
attack against the United States through the early-warning system of the North
American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD). U.S. bomber and missile forces went
on full alert, and the emergency command post, known as the “doomsday plane,”
took to the air.
At
3 a.m., National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski was awakened by a call
from his military assistant. He was told that NORAD computers were reporting
that 2,200 Soviet missiles had been launched against the United States.
According to Brzezinski, just one minute before he planned to call President
Jimmy Carter to recommend an immediate U.S. nuclear retaliatory response, word
came through that the NORAD message was a false alarm caused by software
simulating a Soviet missile attack that was inexplicably transferred into the
live warning system at the command’s headquarters.
The
1979 incident was one of the most dangerous false alarms of the nuclear age,
but it was not the first or the last. Within months, three more U.S. system
malfunctions set off the U.S. early-warning systems.
The
Soviet Union also experienced false alarms. On Sept. 26, 1983, a newly
installed early-warning system erroneously signaled that the United States had
launched a small salvo of missiles toward the Soviet Union. Lt. Col. Stanislav
Petrov, the officer in charge that night, would later report that he defied
standard military protocol and refused to pass the alert to Moscow because
“when people start a war, they don’t start it with only five missiles.”
On
Jan. 25, 1995, a large weather rocket launched off the coast of Norway created
the appearance on Russian radars of an initial phase of a U.S. nuclear attack.
Russian President Boris Yeltsin reported that the launch prompted him to
activate Russia’s mobile nuclear command system.
Although
the Cold War standoff that gave rise to massive U.S. and Russian nuclear
arsenals ended decades ago, the nuclear strategies that could lead to the
firing of hundreds of nuclear weapons remain susceptible to false alarms.
Today,
each side deploys some 1,400 strategic nuclear warheads on hundreds of sea- and
land-based missiles and long-range bombers—far greater than is necessary to
deter an attack and more than enough to produce catastrophic devastation. Each
side maintains hundreds of warheads that can be fired within minutes of a
launch order from the president, and both leaders retain the option to
retaliate before they confirm that nuclear weapons have been detonated on their
territory. These dangerous launch-under-attack postures perpetuate the risk
that false alarms could trigger a massive nuclear exchange.
Complicating
matters, Washington and Moscow each reserve the option to employ nuclear
weapons first in a crisis or conventional conflict. Each possesses hundreds of
so-called tactical nuclear bombs, which produce relatively smaller explosive
yields, for use on the battlefield. Both sides regularly conduct drills and
exercises involving their respective nuclear forces.
Today,
U.S. and Russian leaders have a responsibility to pursue immediate and decisive
actions to reduce these grave risks. To start, they should invite all
nuclear-armed states to affirm the 1985 pledge made by Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev and U.S. President Ronald Reagan that “a nuclear war cannot be won
and must never be fought.”
Given
the risks of escalation, no plausible circumstance could justify legally,
morally, or militarily the use of nuclear weapons to deal with a non-nuclear
threat. All nuclear-armed states should announce policies that rule out the
first use of nuclear weapons and the use of nuclear weapons before nuclear use
on their soil has been confirmed.
In
fact, the dangerous launch-under-attack policies of the United States and
Russia are unnecessary because a large portion of their nuclear forces could
withstand even a massive attack. Given the size, accuracy, and diversity of
their forces, the remaining nuclear force would be more than sufficient to
deliver a devastating blow to any nuclear aggressor.
Another
key line of defense against nuclear catastrophe is dialogue. Washington and
Moscow can and should resume a regular military and political dialogue on
strategic stability. Such talks can avoid miscalculation over issues such as
the use or nonuse of cyberattacks against nuclear command-and-control systems, missile
defense capabilities and doctrine, nuclear launch exercises, and more. Similar
talks with China should also be pursued.
Presidents
Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin also should promptly agree to extend the New
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START) by five years, as allowed by the
treaty, and begin talks on a follow-on deal to set lower limits on all types of
nuclear weaponry. Without the treaty, which expires in 2021, there would be no
legally binding, verifiable limits on the world’s largest nuclear arsenals for
the first time since 1972; and the likelihood of a dangerous, all-out nuclear
arms race would grow.
We
were lucky the false alarms of the Cold War did not trigger nuclear war.
Because we may not be so lucky in the future, our leaders must act now to take
the steps necessary to reduce and eliminate the nuclear danger.
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