This paper was presented at a conference entitled "Carnegie Council's Program on U.S. Global Engagement: a Two-Year Retrospective."
The conference took place at the Pocantico Center of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund from June 1-3, 2011. Organized by the Carnegie Council in cooperation with the U.S. Army War College, the conference served to review and report on two years of program activity, and to generate new ideas and resources among an international group of innovative thinkers on U.S.-Russian relations, nuclear arms control and nonproliferation, European and NATO security challenges for the future, including Afghanistan, and competition and cooperation in the Arctic region.
The U.S. Global Engagement program gratefully acknowledges the support for its work from the following: Alfred and Jane Ross Foundation, Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Donald M. Kendall, Rockefeller Family & Associates, and Booz & Company.
Introduction
The so-called New Start Treaty between Russia and the United States entered
into force in February 2011. Consequently this treaty constitutes a baseline
for all future bilateral, if not multilateral, efforts at arms control and
nonproliferation involving these two powers, including President Obama's long-term
commitment to reaching nuclear zero. Moreover, due to the saliency of the
issues of tactical nuclear weapons (TNW) and missile defenses in any future
negotiation, this treaty possesses great importance for the future architecture
of European security as well. Likewise, as the major nuclear powers reduce
their arsenals and as China's military potential grows and increasingly causes
anxiety among Russian and U.S. military and political leaders, the treaty
and subsequent arms control developments will possess considerable or even
greater significance for Asian security, especially from Russia's standpoint.1
Finally, this treaty is the most important and impressive manifestation of
what the two governments view as the success of the Obama Administration's
"reset" policy since 2009. Certainly it is the most tangible expression
of bilateral cooperation under that policy framework. So if something happened
to the treaty and the new regime it postulates, the reset policy would likely
fall apart. Yet, despite its importance, the success of the reset policy and
of future bilateral or multilateral accords on arms control and nonproliferation
is by no means guaranteed. Indeed, one thing both sides as well as external
observers agree about is the very fragility of the reset policy.2 And it is
quite likely that if this policy were to falter it would also diminish chances
for further reductions in strategic arsenals among all nuclear powers, not
just Russia and the United States. Thus the reasons for this fragility and
the consequences for arms control and future cooperation on nonproliferation
issues must be clarified.
There are many reasons for this fragility. Already by February 2011, discordant
notes on European security were being heard in the European-Russian dialogue,
a large part of whose current agenda is connected to issues of missile defenses
and TNW indicating substantive differences of outlook on key questions and
continuing mutual mistrust.3 Moreover, Russian governmental figures like Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov now say that the test of Russian relations with
NATO and of NATO's "sincerity" is progress towards creating a joint
missile defense system on Russia's terms.4 This posture is analogous to Moscow's
similar statements that the success of the new treaty depends on the United
States not building its missile defense system, for Russia has already formally
stated that such construction, if it continues, represents grounds for withdrawal
from the treaty. Some may believe that these positions are merely negotiating
tactics. But they also suggest a continuing Russian resort to the Soviet tactic
of endless demands based on a sense that Moscow can keep pushing at no cost
to divide NATO and induce Western concessions, while also attempting to browbeat
or intimidate the West into concessions. They also suggest Moscow's continuing
obsession with being able to intimidate Europe with the unimpeded threat of
nuclear strikes against key European targets, and its linked belief in the
possibility of using nuclear weapons in a warfighting role, however circumscribed
that role might be. Nevertheless, Russia's positions on these particular issues
are hardly the only reasons for concern over the fragility of the reset policy,
arms control, and progress on non-proliferation.
Beyond those policy differences and the long-standing mutual suspicion between
Moscow and the West as a whole (not just Washington), there exist substantial
domestic constituencies in both the United States and Russia who are still
driven by fundamental mistrust of each other. While those parties could not
stop ratification of the treaty, major strategic issues still divide Russia
and the United States as much as they unite them. For example, 39 Republican
Senators cautioned the Obama Administration about allowing Russia undue influence
over the United States (and NATO) missile defense program.5 And Republican Senate leaders are now attempting to force the Administration to lock in $85
Billion for nuclear modernization programs.6 One could easily find analogous
constituencies in Russian politics.
What drives these state-to-state, or NATO-Russia, and intra-state domestic
struggles are deep-rooted fears of each other as well as continuing regional
rivalries. Apart from the fate of arms control in the future, the potential
for major regional rivalries in Eurasia, or unforeseen events like the U.S.-UK-France
and then NATO air operation against Libya that began in March, 2011 have the
potential to undermine, disrupt, and even possibly rupture the reset relationship.
Apart from consideration of trends in arms control policy we must remember
Lincoln's observation that "I claim not to have controlled events, but
confess plainly that events have controlled me." Thus issues unrelated
to the arms control agenda can seriously compromise both Russia's and the
United States' capability to move forward on that agenda, as happened in 2001
to 2009. Indeed, it has generally been the case that while Moscow and Washington
have been able to find agreement on issues of bilateral arms control, previous
efforts at détente have faltered largely due to rivalries over regional
security questions in Eurasia. This happened in the 1970s and again in the
1990s and 2000s. Today because so many of those issues remain unresolved and
new ones like the NATO operation in Libya frequently crop up on the international
agenda, the potential for discord remains strong.
This is especially the case as major bilateral disputes over missile defenses,
TNW, and Eurasian security have only been temporarily suppressed but not resolved,
while both sides' gains from the reset are of dubious durability. Furthermore,
as Libya shows, Russia remains unwilling to accept the bottom line of U.S.
national security policy, i.e. American leadership and (the intermittent)
promotion of a global democratic order (which Russia regards as efforts at
a unilateralist hegemony).7 Likewise, the gains for the United States may not
be lasting either. As of this writing, there is no sign of lasting progress
in Afghanistan, even though the United States killed Osama Bin Laden on May
2, 2011 (local time) and U.S. plans on remaining there after 2014 already
arouse Russian supicions.8 Moreover, as discussed below both Iranian and North
Korean proliferation continue unabated, calling into question the profitability
and sustainability for the United States of the reset policy.
Russia's American Obsession
Meanwhile in Russia's case, it is even fair to call its fears about U.S. power,
policies, and proclivities, obsessions concerning the United States' objectives.
Russian journalist Leonid Radzikhovsky has said, "The existential void
of our politics has been filled entirely by anti-Americanism" and that
to renounce this rhetoric "would be tantamount to destroying the foundations
of the state ideology."9 Similarly, Fedor Lukyanov, editor of Russia
in Global Affairs, writes that,
The mentality of Russian politics is such that relations with the United States remain at the center of universal attention and virtually any problems are seen though an American prism. This is partially a reflection of inertia of thinking which is finding it hard to break with perceptions of Cold War times. It is partially a demonstration of a hidden desire to have a sense of our own significance. There is still a desire to compare ourselves specifically with the only superpower.10
Lukyanov also notes that both the United States and Russia see the other as
being a power in decline.11 And at least one Russian writer boasts that Russia
bears primary responsibility for frustrating American unilateralism by shaping
blocking coalitions that restrained and ultimately foiled U.S. designs.12 This
kind of thinking would conform to the contention by Kari Roberts, a Canadian
scholar, that "It appears as though the common themes in Russian foreign
policymaking continue to be how Russia views itself vis-à-vis the United
States and its pragmatic approach to identifying and tackling foreign policy
problems."13 For example, there is good reason to see Russia's Iranian policy
as being closely tied to its perceptions of U.S. policies.
Concurrently, in Russia (if not the United States) issues connected to nuclear
weapons make for major manifestations of political theater, and in both countries
these issues are utilized for scoring points for or against parties in power,
regardless of the truth.14 In the Russian case, this appears not just in overt
and covert domestic political struggles, but also in the widespread, ingrained,
and wholly unsubstantiated conclusion that the United States is essentially
Russia's enemy and is trying to suppress it if not break it up and that U.S.
politics, like Russian politics, are essentially a matter of dictating to smaller
powers and endless conspiracies, either mainly against Russia or within the
U.S. government. After all, that is the elite's own experience of Russian politics.
And this habit of Russian projection of domestic phenomena and values onto the
"other," i.e. the main enemy, the United States, dates back to Lenin
and Stalin. This projection process institutionalizes what can only be called
political or nuclear paranoia in the realm of threat assessment and political
analysis, as well as the personal predilections of Putin and many other figures.15
As this writer has observed elsewhere, Russian elites still officially subscribe
to a watered-down version of a Leninist threat paradigm that links together
supposed internal "enemies" of the regime with outside powers and
this paradigm is regularly invoked by Russian authorities whenever problems
manifest themselves.16
Indeed, it is not too much to say that there is a deeply-held elite obsession
with the United States as an exemplar, enemy, and potential partner, yet which
is simultaneously regarded as being an a priori hostile power. This obsession
with status, sovereignty, etc. and the U.S. attitude towards Russia, which is
often attributed to be the mainspring of the United States' overall international
policy, contrasts sharply with the growing relative indifference in U.S. elite
circles to Russia and its affairs.17 Thus Richard Perle, former assistant secretary
of defense in the Reagan Administration wrote about the U.S.-Russian relationship
that,
In fact, that relationship has declined in importance to the point where it makes little difference whether the Russians have more nuclear weapons or fewer than they do now. The calculations of the consequences of a nuclear exchange between the United States and Russia, a proper obsession during the Cold War are no longer relevant, and despite President Obama's overblown claims, the New START Treaty is of no substantial benefit.18
This argument infuriates Russian elites, but there actually is considerable
truth to it, as anyone observing the level of U.S. interest in Russia would
quickly find out.
Another way of articulating this problem is to note that it is the fundamental
nature of the Russian domestic political system, and a fact heightened by its
juxtaposition to the U.S. and European systems, which drives the dynamic of
hostility in East-West relations and fosters a situation where Russian thinking
about security takes its cognitive and policy points of departure from what
the German philosopher Carl Schmitt called the "presupposition of conflict."19
On a regular basis, the glaring asymmetries in the two sides' domestic political
systems engender long-lasting perceptions based on mutual or reciprocal suspicion
among powerful domestic constituencies that then try to obstruct meaningful
progress in arms control or in overcoming outstanding differences on regional
security issues in Eurasia. Consequently, any effort to determine not just Russia's
posture but its evolving perspectives must take into account both the competing
security orientations of the two states and the so-called values gap that fuels
the mistrust, in order to understand Russian thinking to determine where accords
can be reached or differences bridged and where they cannot be so resolved.
Meanwhile despite the treaty and the supposed bonhomie generated by the bilateral
rapprochement, from 2010 to 2011, the supposed U.S.-NATO threat still drives
Russian planning. We see this in many different expressions of Russian policy.
For example, Dmitri Trenin has written that,
To demonstrate how seriously the Kremlin views that issue of U.S. missile defense capabilities, look at Russia's national security strategy, released in May (2009). The document calls a U.S. first-strike capability, which is attainable once the United States builds a seamless global missile defense system, the most serious external military threat to Russia. Short of an actual first strike, a shift in the strategic balance would allow the United States to blackmail Russia politically. This may be paranoia, but there are reasons for it. In a situation when the United States and Russia are not allies, or even strategic partners, nuclear deterrence has become the unique pillar of Moscow's strategic independence vis-à-vis Washington.20
Similarly, Dmitri Suslov also argues that Moscow considers the United States
as a "potential enemy" and seeks to maintain nuclear parity with it
by any means and a quantitative advantage in TNW to include Anglo-French nuclear
forces as hostile. Indeed, he observes that Russia is now discussing developing
new types of nuclear missiles to compensate for the creation of a missile defense
element within the NATO framework in Bulgaria, Romania, the Eastern Mediterranean,
and Poland.21 In a similar vein, it is not unusual to find in the Russian press
analyses purporting to argue that despite the visible denuclearization of the
U.S. arsenal, Washington still has plans that it is developing for a preemptive
nuclear strike against Russia.22
By the same token we find exceptionally well-connected analysts like Sergei
Karaganov, director of the Council on Foreign and Defense Policy, claiming that
those pursuing nuclear zero are either motivated to or are unwittingly preparing
trouble for Russia. Thus he writes that,
It is obvious that the philosophy of mutual confrontation has not been overcome and has even received an energetic fillip as a result of the disarmament talks [this was before the treaty—author], although we do not actually threaten each other. We no longer have the contradictions whose resolution might envisage war, and we have many common interests. The professional 'disarmers' who have become more lively as a result of the treaty's success are ready to draw us into new disarmament races which will open new "Pandora's boxes." The American coalition of antinuclear dreamers and cold cynics, who were seeking to convert the United States' non-nuclear superiority into political influence through the reduction of its nuclear arms that were cheapening it, has failed to launch movement toward a "nuclear zero." In addition, it turns out that it will not be possible to maintain even this superiority because of budget deficits in America.23
We also see this threat assessment in the new effort to create a force to
keep the United States at bay. President Dmitry Medvedev has recently decreed
the creation of a new joint aerospace defense strategy and forces that combines
existing air forces, antiaircraft, and ballistic missile defense (BMD) units
with Russia's early warning system and space control assets that is to be organized
by the end of 2011.24 The subsequent creation of a new aerospace defense force
(Vozdushno-Kosmicheskaya Oborona or VKO) with 70,000 new officers can only reinforce
that threat perception since it is precisely a NATO-U.S. air-space attack that
is the scenario most dreaded by Russian planners.
In fact, Russian military leaders openly state that in the context of the concurrent
negotiations that led to the treaty, its aftermath, and Russia's defense reform
that began in 2008, the role of the Strategic Rocket Forces (SRF) will actually
grow, despite the reductions in numbers.25 Moreover, beginning in 2009, the Russian
military began to modernize its nuclear arsenal with new systems, prolong existing
ones, develop its command control capabilities, etc. In that context, the chief
claim of the new RS-12 and RS-24 (Yars) missile systems is that they have independently
targeted warheads and can evade (or so it is claimed) any Western missile defense,
an attribute that allegedly fulfills former President Vladimir Putin's earlier
promise of asymmetric measures against U.S. missile defenses.26 Simultaneously,
Russia is pursuing an agreement with the Obama Administration that would give
it access to U.S. technology for interceptors designed to destroy enemy missiles
on impact.
Although critics of the Administration's policy point to this effort that is
consonant with the Administration's efforts to loosen export controls, reset
with Russia, and move towards nuclear zero, as a perfect storm, it is equally
if not even more illustrative of the schizophrenic Russian attitude that while
the United States is its main enemy, it also is the purveyor of the most desired
and needed Russian defense technologies. Therefore, a reset or détente-like
policy with America is needed.27 Even after the treaty was signed, prominent defense
commentators like Mikhail Barabanov wrote that the role of nuclear deterrence
in Russian relations with the United States will actually grow because,
The United States will never view Russia as a friend even in principle, because existence of other powerful countries is in principle unacceptable to America as the world hegemon, as they limit Washington's claims for world supremacy by the very fact of their existence. There are two such countries now, namely Russia and China. Actually this very fact is the main reason for tensions in the U.S.' relations with Russia and China under any regimes.28
Other arguments along this line, e.g. a recent commentary by retired General
M.A. Gareyev, president of the Academy of Military Sciences, typically argue
that geopolitical pressures from the United States and China will only grow,
that future wars may not be confined to local or regional theaters and that
"regarding security, Russia has never been in such a crunch as in the early
21st century since, perhaps, 1612," a rather bizarre and even hysterical
threat perception for a World War II veteran.29 Nevertheless, such analyses are
all too visible in Russian public commentary on defense and security issues.
Meanwhile, this fear of such a U.S. and allied aerospace attack has been a major,
though hardly the only, cause of both a dramatic increase in defense spending,
with these systems being a priority after nuclear weapons, and the termination
of Russia's defense reform of 2008 to 2011. The Russian press frequently comments
about the potential for U.S. aerospace attack both by existing weapons and new
ones in design like the X-37B Orbital Aircraft.30 Increasingly, Russian military
writers see the air and space attack from the United States and/or NATO as an
integrated operation as in Libya and Kosovo, and regard it as the primary operational
threat to Russia.31 Since Russian analysts and officials regard U.S. conventional
precision-strike capabilities as being strategic ones in their impact, they
are not only striving to build an integrated aerospace defense against them
but to use the treaty process, both in 2009-10 and in the future, as a means
of reducing the threat.32
Indeed, so great is the perception of threat (before Libya) that Russia, in
complete contradiction to the earlier defense reform's stated goals of reducing
a bloated army and officer corps, is expanding active duty officer ranks by
70,000 new officers to this new aerospace defense formation. And it is more
than doubling officer pay even as it sharply raises procurement targets. A new
justification for this rise in defense spending, though it was planned no later
than 2010, is the NATO intervention or air operation in Libya that officials
from Premier Putin on down now claim justifies this immense expansion of defense
spending. Thus a report on a recent visit to the defense plant in Votkinsk observed
that,
Putin pointed out that the enormous sums being invested in the State Defense Order are being diverted from other areas. And these sacrifices have to be justified. The state-of-the-art technologies that will emerge in the OPK will subsequently cross over into civilian sectors. And the events surrounding Libya also leave the premier in no doubt regarding the necessity for and timeliness of the reinforcement of Russia's defense might. All too readily do the United States and its allies decide to employ armed force against sovereign states, Putin stressed.33
This argument suggests that the Libyan operation will exact substantial costs
upon the new reset policy of the Obama Administration and Russo-American relations.
All this is happening even as Russia cannot stop the insurgency that is inflaming
the entire North Caucasus and as its economy as a whole stagnates. Nor does
it want to even study counter-insurgency to deal with this threat or the equally
serious potential one of insurgency in Central Asia, as its response to ethnic
pogroms in Kyrgyzstan in 2010 illustrates.34
Clearly, Russia also sees nothing wrong with missile defenses that can presumably
take out the U.S. nuclear capability, despite years of argumentation against
BMD. But this new branch of the armed forces also shows the expectation of what
Russian military writers believe would be the decisive first strike by the United
States and Allied forces, namely a conventional aerospace and missile attack
supported by space-based assets.35 Therefore this enduring mistrust and melange
of asymmetric cognitive approaches between Washington and Moscow are not simply
a matter of differing ideas about the future trajectory of arms control and
nonproliferation discussions. Rather they continue to reflect and to express
a fundamental clash of values that does not preclude negotiated treaties on
arms control—which, after all, date back to 1963—but which seriously
impedes reaching such accords.
One major consequence of this presumption of hostility that impedes, though
it does not prevent, the reaching of accords with Moscow is that deep-rooted
belief of the Russian leadership that due to this presumption of hostility,
Russia must remain wedded to a posture of mutual assured destruction, mutual
deterrence, and an almost literal and crude argument in favor of the offense-defense
reaction described in earlier generations of writing on these subjects. From
Russia's standpoint, the only way it can have security vis-à-vis the
United States, given that presupposition of conflict, is if America is shackled
to a continuation of the mutual hostage relationship based on mutual deterrence
that characterized the Cold War, so that it cannot act unilaterally. To the
degree that both sides are shackled to this mutual hostage relationship, Russia
gains a measure of restraint or even of control over U.S. policy. For as Patrick
Morgan has observed, this kind of classic deterrence "cuts through the
complexities" of needing to have a full understanding of or dialogue with
the other side. Instead it enables a state, in this case Russia, to "simplify
by dictating the opponent's preferences."36 (Italics in the original.)
Thanks to such a mutual hostage relationship, Russian leaders see all other
states who wish to attack them or even to exploit internal crises like Chechnya
as being deterred. Therefore, nuclear weapons remain a critical component in
the ensuring of strategic stability and, as less openly stated, in giving Russia
room to act freely in world affairs.37
Russian Chief of Staff General Nikolai Makarov warned that,
The factor of parity should be accompanied by the factor of stability, if the U.S. missile defense begins to evolve; it will be aimed primarily at destroying our nuclear missile capabilities. And then the balance of force will be tipped in favor of the United States With the existing and maintained parity of strategic offensive means, the global missile defense being created by the United States will be able to have some impact on the deterrence capabilities of the Russian strategic nuclear force already in the medium term. This may upset the strategic balance of force and lower the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons. Although missile defense is a defensive system, its development will basically boost [the] arms race.38
Neither is this just rhetoric. A recent article also points out that current Russian nuclear programs aim to overcome or even neutralize U.S. missile defenses.
The impression is that the Kremlin no longer believes in America's military omnipotence. Russia responded to the ultimatum with a maiden flight of its latest T-50 fighter and rearmament of its antiaircraft defense system with T-400 Triumph complexes. [This may be referring to what we call the S-400 SAM--author]. To all appearances, Triumphs are ASAT weapons also capable of intercepting and destroying inbound ballistic warheads. Continuation of Bulava missile tests was proclaimed as well. Work on the missile will be brought to its logical end, sooner or later. Specialists are even working on a concept of the future strategic bombers that will replace TU-95s and Tu-160s one fine day.39
Since Moscow rigorously adheres to this mutual hostage concept it cannot trust the United States, and any unilateral U.S. advance in defenses must be compensated by greater Russian offensive and defensive capabilities. For example, as noted above, missile defenses should lead Russia to procure missiles that can evade any defense. The following citations demonstrate this deep-rooted belief in the mutual hostage relationship, deterrence of the enemy, and the action-reaction process regarding armaments among the Russian political and military leadership. First, Lavrov told an interviewer in February 2007 that,
Our main criterion is ensuring the Russian Federation's security and maintaining strategic stability as much as possible. We have started such consultations already. I am convinced that we need a substantive discussion on how those lethal weapons could be curbed on the basis of mutual trust and balance of forces and interests. We will insist particularly on this approach. We do not need just the talk that we are no longer enemies and therefore we should not have restrictions for each other. This is not the right approach. It is fraught with an arms race, in fact, because, it is very unlikely that either of us will be ready to lag behind a lot.40
Here, Lavrov signaled Russia's unwillingness to leave a mutually adversarial
relationship with America and its presupposition of mutual hostility as reflected
in both sides' nuclear deployments. Similarly, Alexei Arbatov then ridiculed
the Bush Administration's view, stated by Ambassador Linton Brooks, the former
U.S. arms control negotiator, that because the two sides are no longer adversaries,
detailed arms control talks are no longer necessary, as either naiveté
or outright hypocrisy.41
Since then, Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov subsequently stated that,
Issues of strategic offensive and defensive arms are inextricably linked. To deny this relationship is meaningless because it is the essence of relations between the countries that have the appropriate potential in both areas. An augmented capacity of one of the parties in the realm of missile defense is automatically echoed in the form of plans and decisions of the other party in the realm of strategic offensive arms. And not even obliquely, but in the most direct way what is happening in the field of missile defense and U.S. relations with its East European allies on this topic has an impact on our START follow-on negotiations. Without recognition of the relationship between strategic and offensive defensive arms, there can be no such treaty, it cannot take place.42
Likewise, Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov told the Munich Security conference in February 2010,
It is impossible to speak of reducing nuclear potentials in earnest while a state that possesses nuclear weapons is developing and deploying systems of defense against means of delivery of nuclear warheads that other states possess. It is like the sword and shield theory, where both are continuously developing with the characteristics and resources of each of them being kept in mind.43
Putin's late 2009 remarks in Vladivostok fit right into this outlook.
The problem is that our American partners are developing missile defenses, and we are not, But the issues of missile defense and offensive weapons are closely interconnected ... There could be a danger that having created an umbrella against offensive strike systems, our partners may come to feel completely safe. After the balance is broken, they will do whatever they want and grow more aggressive.44
And this outlook has continued since the treaty was signed. As part of its
ratification process the Duma formally stated that both parties to the treaty
accept that strategic offensive weapons and defenses are interrelated and that
this relationship becomes more important as reductions in offensive systems
occurs.45 Similarly, Ivanov, speaking at the 2011 Munich Security conference,
stated that the creation of missile defenses leads to the development of strategic
offensive weapon and thus a new arms race. Any efforts to build a shield inevitably
lead to comparable efforts to build a sword.46
Regional Security in Eurasia in Russian Thinking
Under the circumstances it is not surprising that many Russian writers rightly
attribute the persistence of deep mistrust despite our being 20 years past the
end of the Cold War to the frozen mentality of deterrence and/or the mentality
of a containment policy.47 Thanks to all these factors that go into Russian thinking
about arms control and nuclear weapons, the linkages between competing regional
security policies and programs in Eurasia and the two states' orientations to
those issues are invariably linked with the agenda of arms control and nonproliferation
negotiations. To cite some obvious examples: The current discussions on connecting
Russia to the United States and NATO missile defense programs or the linkage
between progress on the CFE treaty negotiations and the issue of TNW—including
all of Russia—testifies to the abiding, if not growing, importance of these
regional and strategic linkages.
In particular for the Russian Federation, this linkage between regional security
and strategic agendas has become a paramount feature of overall Russian thinking
about Russian security in both Europe and Asia. As Jacob Kipp has written,
For Russia, which inherited the Soviet nuclear arsenal, but has faced a serious change in its international position, the nuclear equation is, in fact, shaped by Russia's status as a regional power in a complex Eurasian security environment, where nuclear issues are not defined exclusively by the U.S.-Russian strategic nuclear equation but by security dynamics involving interactions with Russia's immediate periphery. On the one hand, Russia's security responses have been shaped by a post-Soviet decade of sharp internal political crises, economic transformation, social instability, demographic decline, and the collapse of conventional military power. The impact of these developments has been uneven across Russia, leading to very distinct security environments which have demanded regional responses. The initial focus of security concerns for both the Soviet Union and the Russian Federation was primarily upon European security. This was the primary focus of the U.S.-Soviet strategic competition and the place where its militarization was most evident.48
Consequently, despite the treaty and the evident satisfaction of both parties
with the current course of policy the problems stemming from this fundamental
disparity between them have not been overcome and the reset policy is therefore
subject to reversal, particularly if issues of regional security in Eurasia
lead one or both sides to revert back to the presupposition of a conflicted
relationship. If we are to understand the cognitive mainsprings of Russian thinking
and security policy, we must further clarify this point of the nexus between
regional and global security in Russian thinking and policy.
Fedor Lukyanov, like many others, has observed that while Russia has lost its
global perspective, it seeks to retrieve it.49 Andrei Tsygankov further amplifies
this observation by stating that although Russia seeks to remain a regional
power in Europe, the Caucasus, Central and East Asia, it acts globally. In other
words, it uses its geographical location astride several key Eurasian regions
to force itself into both regional balances and thus leverage itself into being
accepted as a global actor. To the extent that it feels itself excluded, as
it did, by the United States, from participating in key regional security fora,
policies, or institutions, it pursues a policy of resistance using, among other
instruments of power, its nuclear weapons.50 As a result, and following Kipp's
remarks above, from Russia's standpoint there can be no purely regional crisis
in the key regions where it is situated or where it deems itself to have important
interests. Consequently the potential for any crisis to escalate, even against
its participants' intentions, creates the ever-present possibility of a global
crisis, if not conflict, where nuclear arms provide either the background music
or are the primary instrumental soloists.51
This inherent linkage from the regional to the global level also shapes Russian
approaches to the future agenda of arms control. Apart from the perceived linkages
from regional to strategic level issues in Moscow's perspective, several prospective
issues for future negotiations are intrinsically linked in Russian eyes. For
example, the United States (and NATO) have long since argued that the next round
of arms control treaty negotiations deal with the issues of TNW in Europe. Moscow
has equally consistently rejected that stance, saying that countries owning
or possessing TNW must first remove them to their home territory before any
such talks could begin, thereby leaving Europe denuded of them. But now, according
to Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov, Russia argues that although it has repeatedly
called on other nuclear states to remove TNW from abroad and leave them at home,
restrict maneuvers with them on the territory of non-nuclear states, and disassemble
structures for their prompt deployment abroad, nonstrategic nuclear weapons
"grow increasingly outside NATO and Russia." In his words, North Korea,
Pakistan, Israel and China are Russia's neighbors and their TNW, particularly
China's, provide a threat.52 While Ivanov's remarks should enlighten us concerning
what Russia regards as its real strategic borders, what also is noteworthy here
is the announcement again, even if implicitly, that China and Israel are potential
enemies and Pakistan is both a potential enemy and proliferation threat.
Beyond the fact that this statement reflects a comparable presupposition of
conflict with regard to all these states from Moscow's standpoint, Ivanov's
remarks also reflects Moscow's posture as well, that in any future round of
arms control talks, all nuclear states, not least China should be at the table.53
Makarov too has advocated bringing all nuclear powers to the table in the next
negotiating round.54 And now the Foreign Ministry has followed suit, saying that
the five major nuclear powers must join the next round of arms reductions talks.55
Thus, progress on TNW on our agenda must somehow take account of the growing
threat Russia perceives from China's increasing TNW threat as well as its steadily
developing conventional missiles and forces.56 Other analogous linkages may well
exist with regard to Russian perspectives on arms control issues. Again, for
example, as Sam Nunn has argued, if there is to be success on curbing proliferation
of nuclear (and chemical and biological) weapons, multilateral cooperation is
essential. Thus, other nuclear states must be fully committed partners.57 Therefore
virtually every conceivable issue will play into the agenda of any future multilateral
arms control negotiation, allowing any of those states to obstruct nonproliferation
measures to secure its nuclear agenda making cooperation on nonproliferation
even more complicated than those in the past have been.
Ivanov's remarks fall into a broader context, namely that of the developing
or growing Russian anxiety about Chinese military power and Russia's lack of
anything near an adequate conventional response to it. There are multiplying
signs of this anxiety and of Russia's efforts to reposture its conventional
forces to deal with it. But of course, ultimately the TNW and other nuclear
systems are the great equalizer in this theater, i.e. the Russian Far East [RFE].58
By the time Moscow published its new defense doctrine in 2010, it had begun
to consider the rise of China, not only as an example that could be emulated
but also as a potential threat to the RFE. Thus the doctrine not only reiterated
the long-standing invocation of a NATO threat, it also added new threats that
appear to be focused, albeit without saying so, on China. Specifically, the
2010 doctrine cites a "show of military force with provocative objectives
in the course of exercises on the territories of states contiguous with the
Russian Federation or its allies" and "stepping up the activities
of the armed forces of individual states (groups of states) involving partial
or complete mobilization and the transitioning of these states' organs and military
command and control to wartime operating conditions."59
Commentators here and abroad interpreted this language as pointing to the Russian
perception of an increased potential Chinese threat based on the modernization
of the Chinese armed forces and on exercises in 2009 that seemed to presage
a possible mission directed against the RFE.60 Indeed, in 2009, commanders for
the first time began to speak publicly, undoubtedly with Moscow's assent, about
a genuine military threat from China.61 So while one motive for the Vostok- 2003,
and possibly the more recent Vostok -2010 exercises may be connected with the
need to defend energy deposits in the RFE, a second motive clearly had to do
with the rise of China.62
Vostok-2010 ended with a simulated tactical nuclear weapon strike on China to
repel a ground invasion of Russia. Meanwhile the extensive American coverage
of China's new Stealth Fighter, the J-20 and its naval construction program,
including advanced anti-ship ballistic missiles (ASBMs) overlooks the fact that
all these capabilities could be used against Russia as well. And China has its
own TNW as well as thousands of conventional and nuclear missiles that could
easily be targeted on Russia. As Jacob Kipp observed in 2010,63
A year ago, informed Russian defense journalists still spoke of the PLA [China's People's Liberation Army] as a mass industrial army seeking niche advanced conventional capabilities. Looking at the threat environment that was assumed to exist under Zapad 2009, the defense journalist Dmitri Litovkin spoke of Russian forces confronting three distinct types of military threats: "an opponent armed to NATO standards in the Georgian-Russian confrontation over South Ossetia last year. In the eastern strategic direction Russian forces would likely face a multi-million-man army with a traditional approach to the conduct of combat: linear deployments with large concentrations of manpower and firepower on different axis. In the southern strategic direction Russian forces expect to confront irregular forces and sabotage groups fighting a partisan war against "the organs of Federal authority," i.e., Internal troops, the border patrol, and the FSB [Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation].64 By spring of this year, a number of those involved in bringing about the "new look" were speaking of a PLA that was moving rapidly towards a high-tech conventional force with its own understanding of network-centric warfare.65 Moreover, the People's Liberation Army conducted a major exercise "Stride-2009" which looked like a rehearsal for military intervention against Central Asia and/or Russia to some Russian observers.66
Beginning in 2009, overt discussions of the potential Chinese military threat began to surface in the military press. These statements were deliberately planned to call attention to Chinese military prowess.67 And they all pointed to the threat of an invasion, not just by a large, multi-million-man army, but also, as Roger McDermott observes, to the example derived from China's military modernization that has led China to an informatizing, if not informatized, high-tech, capable military in just over a decade.68 In a dilapidated and remote theater that is an economy of Force Theater with vast distances inadequate infrastructure, and a declining industrial and manpower base,
In the first instance, in any military conflict the Russian VVS (Air Forces) cannot guarantee air superiority against the Chinese. Moreover, they do not possess sensor-fused cluster munitions, though in theory their surface-to-surface missiles (SSM's) could deliver cluster munitions depending on whether the missile troops remained intact long enough. Faced with an advancing PLA division or divisions' early use of TNW would present a viable option.69
In this context, what is particularly telling about Russia and China's relations
regarding the Arctic and Pacific energy deposits is the new trend in Russian
naval policy; Russia's new plans for naval construction, especially in the RFE
also have access to the Arctic in mind.70 Indeed, experts see the primary direction
or mission of four new directions for the fleet and its new modernization program
as being the protection of Russia's access to oil, gas, and other mineral reserves
or deposits on Russia's continental shelf. All in all 36 submarines and 40 surface
ships are to be added by 2020.71 But beyond this primary mission and the other
three directions for future naval construction these plans betray a reorientation
of Russia's naval emphasis to the Asia-Pacific, and to a new emphasis on meeting
the challenge posed by China's naval buildup.72 This naval construction is supposed
to help Russia compensate for its vast conventional inferiority in numbers and
quality vis-à-vis China in the RFE.73
Here we should understand that Russia's forces, particularly those in the North
and the Far East may be deployed on a "swing basis" where either the
fleet or air forces in one theater move to support the fleet or air forces in
the other. Russia has carried out exercises whereby one fleet moves to the aid
of the other under such a concept.74 Likewise, Russia has rehearsed scenarios
for airlifting ground forces from the North to the Pacific in order to overcome
the "tyranny of distance" that makes it very difficult for Russia
to sustain forces in Northeast Asia. And the revival of regular air patrols
over the oceans have clearly involved the Pacific-based units of the Long Range
Aviation forces as well as some of the air forces based in the North and Arctic
who fly in the areas around Alaska.75 Indeed, nuclear exercises moving forces
or targeting weapons from the North to the Pacific or vice versa have also occurred.76
To the degree that Arctic missions become part of the regular repertoire of
the Russian armed forces, they will also to some degree spill over into the
North Pacific. And this all preceded Vostok-2010. Since then, China's military
program has continued apace. Consequently new Chinese developments like the
conventional IRBM (Intermediate Range Ballistic Missile) DF-16, the new ASBM,
etc. threaten not just the United States and its allies but also a whole range
of Russian military targets deep into Russia.77
Russia's Force Modernization and Positions on the New Nuclear Agenda
The foregoing perspectives are essential to the understanding of Russian thinking
as we discuss possibilities for future arms control negotiations involving Russia.
And from February-March 2011, Russian spokesmen outlined Russia's positions
on almost all the outstanding issues for a future arms control negotiation.
Russia's positions concerning the evolving nuclear agenda as well as its ongoing
weapons program reflect its assessment not only of the situation created by
the new treaty but also its assessment of current or future threats and longstanding
Russian policy objectives.
First of all, Russia is currently undertaking its newest in a series of long-term
defense modernization projects. The State Armament Program submitted to Medvedev
and the Duma for 2011-20 now totals 20.7 trillion rubles ($646 Billion) of
which 19.4 trillion rubles goes to the needs of the Ministry of Defense. Seventy-nine
percent of that total will go to the acquisition and purchase of high-tech armaments
(including nuclear weapons which remain a priority). This represents a tripling
of the current 2006-15 program that supposedly provides for delivery of 1300
models of equipment and armament of which 220 require modernization or creation
of new capacities.78 Within this new program that also entails the comprehensive
modernization of the entire machine tool sector along with the high-tech sector;
the state order (Goszakaz) for 2011 will go up by a third to 1.5 trillion rubles
in 2011 and then another third by 2013 to 2 trillion rubles.79 Right now there
is a serious debate regarding the nuclear sector. Many sectors of defense industry
possess the ambition to virtually double Intercontinental Ballistic Missile
(ICBM) production through 2020 by modernizing production lines and producing
heavy liquid-propellant missiles and spending nearly 77 billion rubles towards
these ends.80 Russia aims to modernize its quantitative arsenal to conform to
the new treaty's requirements. Furthermore because it maintains that the United
States has not definitively settled upon a missile defense model (which is strange
given the Administration's policy) it allegedly needs to modernize qualitatively
to have designs that can counter space weapons, a set of weapons that Moscow
apparently fully believes the United States intends to create.81
Therefore, one way to meet these demands is to create a heavy liquid-propelled
ballistic missile, an issue that has touched off a major debate among missile
designers with First Deputy Defense Minister Vladimir Popovkin supporting it
and Yuri Solomonov, a famous missile designer at the Moscow Institute of Thermal
Technology, opposing it. In opposition to the calls for this new missile are
the designers of the Topol-M, Yars, and Bulava solid propellant systems. In
other words, Russia's nuclear program, although work has started on the liquid-propellant
system, is in the throes of a debate, so its final outcome and prognosis remains
somewhat unclear at this time.82 Despite this as yet unresolved debate, the current
expectation is that the ultimate design will copy that of the Satan (SS-18 ICBM)
and be insensitive to the effect of an electromagnetic (EMP) impulse, launchable
from a silo even after a missile has hit it, and capable of carrying a large
complex of defense penetration aids so that it can evade missile defenses and
deliver a ten-ton combat payload to any point in the world. It also will include
ten individually-guided warheads of the megaton class, i.e. it will be MIRVed.83 These plans date back at
least to 2008, when it was first announced that the new RS-24 would be MIRVed.84
Meanwhile Deputy Defense Minister Vladimir Popovkin is moving forward and outlining
a huge Russian conventional and nuclear rearmament program through 2020.
Popovkin said Russia plans to develop a new liquid-fueled heavy ICBM to carry up to ten warheads, and having a service life of up to 35 years. Former RVSN Commander General-Lieutenant Andrey Shvaychenko talked about a new liquid heavy missile as far back as late 2009, and the issue's been debated in the Russian military press since. Popovkin said the Defense Ministry plans to accept the Bulava SLBM and the first two Borey-class SSBNs this year. There will be 4-5 Bulava launches this year. Recall [that] to date only seven of 14 Bulava tests have been successful. Addressing the missile's past failures, Popovkin said there were many deviations from the design documentation during production. He also said Russia plans to build eight SSBNs to carry Bulava by 2020. He was unclear if this includes the first two Borey-class boats.85
It is clear that this construction program contemplates not just deterrence but also a war using nuclear weapons, albeit in what is possibly a restricted number of contingencies, but clearly premised on a U.S./NATO attack. Indeed, as Popovkin said in another interview, the first priority is the strategic deterrent which includes nuclear weapons, early warning missile and aerospace defense (i.e. the new VKO force).
The first priority [is] the strategic deterrent force. They have two components: the strategic nuclear forces, as well as a system of missile warning, missile defense and aerospace defense. The second priority [is] a long list of high-precision weapons, whose use is based on information support from space. Third: automated command and control. In the next two or three years [it is proposed] to link all species of ACS in a single management system. Modernize it so it was with an open architecture and it allows you to build the capacity in any direction.86
Finally, as part of the nuclear program the General Staff commissioned research
institutes to determine how many nuclear warheads are needed for a guaranteed
retaliatory strike against a potential enemy, presumably to confirm the General
Staff's earlier insistence on 1,500 warheads a an irreducible minimum under present
circumstances.87 These studies and building programs obviously have a great deal
of bureaucratic muscle and financing behind them so in practical terms it will
be very difficult to win Russian assent to large reductions in strategic forces
until and unless other nuclear powers including but besides the United States,
also agree to them. This makes attaining the goal of nuclear zero anytime soon
a very dubious proposition.
However, beyond this set of considerations there are also other reasons for
suspecting that despite the effort to complete a huge conventional upgrading
of the Russian military that Russia in 2015-20 will continue relying much more
on nuclear weapons and nuclear deterrence. Basically it has already become clear
that the defense industry, which has never been able to provide the armed forces
with its requirements, has again failed as of 2010. Recent articles make the
extent of this failure very clear. Specifically,
Last year, for example, they did not get a single nuclear submarine cruiser, although the Yuri Dolgoruky with 12 Bulava missiles on board and a multirole Yasen-class nuclear submarine were to have been commissioned at the very least, and only five out of 11 communications and reconnaissance satellites were sent into space. Nor did the fleet get a project 20380 corvette. Only six out of nine Yak-130 aircraft planned for delivery were received and just 78 out of 151 BMP-3 infantry fighting vehicles.88
Yet typically nobody received a reprimand for this, confirming that "non-fulfillment of the Army's orders in the defense industry has become the norm for our country."89 Under the circumstances the planned modernization of the forces' armaments remains a dubious proposition. But in turn that raises the question of how the military is to fulfill President Dmitry Medvedev's 2008 directive that by 2020 Russia should have,
A guaranteed nuclear deterrent system for various military and political circumstances must be provided by 2020 … We must ensure air superiority, precision strikes on land and sea targets, and the timely deployment of troops. We are planning to launch large-scale production of warships, primarily, nuclear submarines with cruise missiles and multi-purpose attack submarines… We will also build an air and space defense network.90
Furthermore, the planned conventional modernization also seemed to imply an
interest in exploring the possibilities for more sophisticated conventional
means of deterrence. Thus, former Deputy Defense Minister and current Duma member
Andrei Kokoshin called the Severodvinsk class of fourth generation nuclear powered
but conventionally armed submarines a non-nuclear deterrent, suggesting this
interest in non-nuclear forms of deterrence and of a concept of deterrence "ladders"
some or most of which would only require the use or display of conventional
systems.91 Absent sufficient capabilities of this kind, Russia will have little
choice but to rely predominantly on nuclear deterrence against the United States
(NATO), China, and potential proliferators in its vicinity. Yet as Medvedev
and Defense Minister Serdyukov have publicly said, Moscow will not even be able
to reach the treaty's limits for nuclear weapons by 2020, forcing it both to
modernize its existing arsenal, extend existing weapons past that date, and
hope for the best regarding conventional systems till 2020.92 Therefore the already
visible failure of Russia's modernization project adds another to a long series
of question marks that must be put against the idea of obtaining serious nuclear
reductions in the foreseeable future.
Indeed, Kokoshin has said that nuclear deterrence will remain the keystone of
Russian defense for the future, that there are no conceivable alternatives to
nuclear deterrence even in the distant future (i.e. the presupposition of hostility
with both the West and China, not to mention everyone else cited here will continue
till then). Therefore, Russia must continue modernizing its land, sea, and air-based
nuclear weapons and its tactical and operational-tactical nuclear systems too.93
Russian Perceptions of the New Treaty
Russian perceptions of where it stands as a result of the new treaty also represent
an obstacle to progress because they are firmly ensconced in the matrix of the
mutual hostage and presumption of hostility mentioned above. Deputy Defense
Minister Anatoly Antonov, who negotiated the treaty, calls it the gold standard
for future treaty negotiations.94 He and his colleagues certainly regard it favorably
but largely because it reduced the United States' threat and strengthened Russia's
relative position, not because it enhanced international security. Lavrov echoed
Antonov's description of the treaty.95 Serdyukov stated that not only does the
treaty provide a guaranteed level of deterrence adequate to Russia's security;
it allows Russia to update 70 percent of strategic carriers and warheads or
90 percent of those belonging to the Strategic Missile Troops, while America
must reduce its arsenal. Like Lavrov, he said that if the United States continues
to build missile defenses the treaty allows Russia to make "an adequate
response, i.e. withdraw from the treaty."96 Medvedev's national security
advisor, Sergei Prikhodko, voiced his approval of the clauses limiting deployed
delivery vehicles and launch systems and the incorporation of heavy bombers
into those categories that limit the United States' breakout potential, a key
Russian demand.97
Other commentators cheered the reduction of inspection visits to each other's
facilities, which they regarded as burdensome and as a means of transmitting
intelligence data to Washington. Therefore they also cheered the elimination
of the requirement for transmitting remote telemetry of test launches of new
missiles for the same reasons. Russia also secured exemption for monitoring
for road-mobile Topol land-based ICBMs. And getting the United States to count
some conventional carriers as strategic ones equating them to nuclear weapons
in line with Russian assessments of those systems is another positive outcome
from Russia's point of view. Yet Russia's capabilities for building up its arsenal
were not affected. At the same time of course, the treaty was a compromise and
reflected some American gains.98 Similarly Ruslan Pukhov, a noted defense commentator,
observes that these benefits for Russia along with the overall reduction of
both sides' nuclear potential are very beneficial for Russia and that, "It
is obvious that this is not very beneficial for the United States on the whole."99
Likewise, Alexei Arbatov argues that the treaty limits both U.S. nuclear and
conventional strategic forces and gives Russia means of leverage upon the United
States.100 For these reasons, given the Russian sense of having won or at least
prevailed in the negotiations, it is hardly surprising that Antonov said further
disarmament is contingent upon both sides implementing the treaty (presumably
with the hidden implication that should the United States build defenses, Russia
might exercise its option for withdrawal).101 Unfortunately it is precisely these
Russian gains that have aroused the ire of Republican opponents of the treaty
in the United States and underscores the continuing bilateral mistrust that
could yet poison the reset policy and future arms control talks, not to mention
progress towards a nuclear zero.
Finally, in advance of a new round of negotiations there is a decided difference
in the contending approaches of Russia and the United States. As recently reported
in connection with Deputy Foreign Minister Ryabkov's recent visit to the United
States,
While U.S. officials have focused publicly on a nuclear treaty that would cover reducing the numbers of not just strategic arms but also shorter-range tactical nuclear weapons, Ryabkov talked first about turning to the control of conventional arms in Europe and reaching some predictability of forces on the continent. He said shaping the military relationships on the ground, where Russia has vastly fewer troops and less equipment, would relate to the future of nuclear disarmament. He [Ryabkov] talked about the difficulty of finding the correct "platform" for any future agreements, saying that weapons in outer space, non-nuclear strategic weapons, other nuclear nations and missile defenses also have to be considered. 102
This last impediment to future reductions and progress to nuclear zero is hardly insurmountable in and of itself. But added to the existing obstacles, and to the pressure of unforeseen events like Libya, all of these obstacles to further reductions represent serious obstructions to negotiations toward that end.
NOTES
1 Stephen Blank, "The Military Dimension of Russo-Chinese Relations," Forthcoming
2 Marcin Kaczmarski, The Fragile 'Reset.' The Balance Sheet and the Prospects for Changes in Russian-US Relations, Centre for Eastern Studies, Warsaw, www.osw.waw.pl, 2011
3 Andrew Monaghan, "From Lisbon to Munich: Russian Views of NATO-Russia Relations," Research Report, NATO Defense College, February, 2011
4 Moscow, Interfax, in English, March 23, 2011, Open Source Center, Central Eurasia, (Henceforth FBIS SOV), March 23, 2011
5 "GOP Senators Wary of Russian Influence on European Missile Defense," Global Security Newswire, April 15, 2011, www.nti.org
6 Elaine M. Grossman, "GOP Leaders Aim to Enforce Obama's Nuclear Modernization Promises," Global Security Newswire, May 10, 2011, www.nti.org
7 Kaczmarski, passim
8 Ahmed Rashid, "How the US Intends to End War With Taliban," Financial Times, April 19, 2011, p. 9
9 Cited in Cathy Young, "From Russia With Loathing," New York Times, November 21, 2008, www.nytimes.com
10 Fyodor Lukyanov, "Political No-Road Map," Moscow, Gazeta.ru, in Russian, April 3, 2008, FBIS SOV, April 3, 2008; Tsypkin cites analogous examples of this, Tsypkin, pp. 784-787
11 Fyodor Lukyanov, "Rethinking Russia: Russian Dilemmas in a Multipolar World," Journal of International Affairs, LXIII, No. 2, Spring/Summer, 2010, p. 28
12 Timofey Bordachev, "Multipolarity, Anarchy, and Security," in Ivan Krastev et al, What Does Russia Think?, European Council on Foreign Relations, www.ecfr.eu, 2009, p. 63
13 Kari Roberts, "Jets, Flags, and a new Cold War?," International Journal, LXV, NO. 4, Autumn, 2010, p. 962
14 Mikhail Tsypkin, "Russian Politics, Policy-Making and American Missile Defense," International Affairs, LXXXV, No. 4, 2009, pp. 784-787
15 Ibid., pp. 784-797
16 Stephen Blank, "No Need to Threaten Us, We Are Frightened of Ourselves: Russia's Blueprint for a Police State," in Stephen J. Blank and Richard Weitz, Eds., The Russian Military Today and Tomorrow: Essays in Memory of Mary Fitzgerald (Carlisle Barracks, PA: Strategic Studies Institute US Army War College, 2010), pp. 19-150
17 This does not contradict the uproar over the arms control treaty because the key issue for the Republican opposition was missile defenses which they regard with almost theological veneration. While they are innately suspicious of Russia it is seen as much less of a problem than Islamic terrorism or China and as a result gets far less attention.
18 Richard Perle, "Yes, Nukes: the Global Zero Utopia," World Affairs, March-April, 2011, p. 52
19 Stephen Blank, "Russia and Nuclear Weapons," in Stephen J. Blank, Ed., Russia's Nuclear Weapons, Past, Present, and Future, Carlisle Barracks, PA: Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College, 2011
20 "Missile Defense Could Be the Silver Bullet," Moscow Times, November 3, 2009
21 Dmitri Suslov, "From Parity to Reasonable Sufficiency: Russian-U.S. Relations; How to Break the Vicious Circle," Russia in Global Affairs, VIII, No. 4, October-December, 2010, pp. 51-52
22 Igor Dzhadan, "The Doctrine of Preemptive Retaliation," Moscow, Agentstvo Politicheskikh Novostey, in Russian, October 21, 2009, FBIS SOV, October 21, 2009
23 Sergey Karaganov, "Forward From Rest," Moscow, Rossiyskaya Gazeta Online, in Russian, February 17, 2011, FBIS SOV, February 17, 2011
24 Pavel Felgenhauer, "The US Threat Dominates Russian Defense Spending and Foreign Policy Decisions," Eurasian Daily Monitor, February 10, 2011
25 Moscow, Interfax, in English, January 11, 2009, FBIS SOV, January 11, 2009
26 Ibid.; Alexander Osipovich, "Russia Tests ICBM Designed to Overcome Missile Shield," www.defensenews.com, August 28, 2008
27 "Russia Seen Pursuing U.S. Missile shield Tech," Global Security Newswire, March 24, 2011, www.globalsecuritynewswire.org
28 Moscow, Interfax-AVN Online, in English, November 3, 2010, FBIS SOV, November 3, 2010
29 Moscow, Interfax-AVN Online, in English, March 28, 2011, FBIS SOV, March 28, 2011
30 Ivan Karev, "Examination By Experts," Moscow, Voyenno-Promyshlennyi Kuryer Online, in Russian, May 12, 2010, FBIS SOV, June 1, 2010; General Anatoly Kornukov (Ret) "Test of Orbital Aircraft Leads to Militarization of Space," Moscow, Interfax-AVN Online, in Russian and English, April 23, 2010, FBIS SOVF, April 23, 2010
31 Colonel I.M. Kruptsov, "Bor'ba s Giperzvukovym Letal'nymi Apparatami (GZLA): Novaya Zadacha I Trebovaniia k Sisteme Vozdushno-Kosmicheskoi Oboroni (VKO)" (The Struggle Against Hypersonic Flying Machines: the New Task and Demand for a System of Aero-space Defense)," Voynnaya Mysl' (Miliary Thought), No. 1, 2011, pp. 10-17
32 Moscow, Interfax, in English, December 24, 2010, FBIS SOV, December 24, 2010; Oleg Zegonov, "Obama's Nuclear Doctrine Opens Pandora's Box," Moscow, www.infox.ru, in Russian, April 6, 2010, FBIS SOV, April 19, 2010; Moscow, RIA Novosti, in Russian, April 29, 2010, FBIS SOV, April 29, 2010; Moscow, Interfax-AVN Online, in English, July 15, 2010, FBIS SOV, July 15, 2010
33 Mikhail Sergeyev and Igor Naumov: "Vladimir Putin's Golden Mace, Premier Prepared To Spend R20 Trillion on Rearming Army and Navy", Moscow, Interfax-AVN Online, in Russian, March 21, 2011, FBIS SOV, March 27, 2011
34 Pavel Felgenhauer, "The US Threat Dominates Russian Defense Spending and Foreign Policy Decisions," Eurasian Daily Monitor, February 10, 2011
35 Moscow, Interfax-AVN Online, in English, January 26, 2011, FBIS SOV, and January 26, 2011 indicates Defense Minister Sedyukov's open statement that Russia is continuing to build its own missile defense system.
36 Patrick M. Morgan, Deterrence Now, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003, p. 66
37 Moscow, Agentstvo Voyennykh Novostey Internet Version, in Russian, September 10, 2008, FBIS SOV, September 10, 2008
38 Moscow, ITAR-TASS, in English, March 22, 2010, FBIS SOV, March 22, 2010
39 Andrei Uglanov, "What is Behind Washington's Ultimatum,?" Moscow, Argument Nedeli in Russian March 10-17, 2010, Johnson's Russia List, March 17, 2010
40 "Interview with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov," Rossiyskaya Gazeta, in Russian, February 21-28, 2007, www.mid.ru
41 Alexei Arbatov, "Russia and the United States—Time To End the Strategic Deadlock," Carnegie Moscow Briefing Paper, June 2008 p. 2
42 Ryabkov, Interview, FBIS SOV February 25, 2010
43 Moscow, Interfax, in English, February 6, 2010, FBIS SOV, February 6, 2010
44 "Putin Says Russia Will Build Weapons to Offset Planned US Missile Defences," http://www.guardian.co.uk, December 29, 2009
45 Moscow, Interfax, in English, January 21, 2011, FBIS SOV, January 21, 2011
46 Moscow, Interfax in English, February 5, 2011, FBIS SOV, February 5, 2011
47 Suslov, pp. 51-64, Mikhail Troitsky, "Containment Must Be Overcome: Long Cycles of Russian-U.S. Relations," Russia in Global Affairs, VII, NO. 4, October-December, 2010, pp. 40-50
48 Jacob Kipp, "Russia's Nuclear Posture and the Threat That Dare Not Speak Its Name," in Stephen J. Blank Ed., Russia's Nuclear Weapons, Past, Present, and Future, Carlisle Barracks, PA: Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War College, 2011
49 Lukyanov
50 Andrei P. Tsygankov, "Russia's Power and Alliances in the 21st Century, Politics, XXX, NO. 4, October, 2010, made available in manuscript from by the author
51 Kipp
52 "New START Enters Into Force," Global Security Newswire, www.nti.org, February 7, 2011
53 On Pakistan see, Alexei Arbatov, "Terms of Engagement: WMD Proliferation and US-Russian Relations," paper prepared for the US Army War College Conference "US and Russian: Post-Elections Security Challenges. Carlisle Barracks, PA, March 6-7, 2008, in Stephen J. Blank, Ed., Prospects for US-Russian Security Cooperation, Carlisle Barracks, PA: Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War College, 2009, pp. 147-149
54 Moscow, ITAR-TASS, in Russian, April 12, 2010, FBIS SOV, April 12, 2010
55 Moscow, Interfax-AVN Online, in English, February 7, 2011, FBIS SOV, February 7, 2011; Moscow, Interfax, in English, August 2, 2010, FBIS SOV, August 2, 2010
56 "Power Posturing—China's Tactical Nuclear Stance Comes of Age," Jane's Intelligence Review, August 12, 2010, http://www4.janes.com/subscribe/jir/doc_view.jsp?K2DocKey, Accessed August 13, 2010
57 Steven Andreasen, Malcolm Chambers, and Isabelle Williams, NATO and Nuclear Weapons: Is a New Consensus Possible?, Royal United Services International, 2010, p. 9, www.rusi.org
58 Kipp
59 "Military Doctrine of the Russian Federation," February 5, 2010, www.kremlin.ru, FBIS SOV, February 9, 2010
60 Roger McDermott, "Russian Military Doctrine Looks East," Eurasia Daily Monitor, February 23, 2010; Jacob Kipp, "Russia's Nuclear Posture and the Threat That Dare not Speak Its Name," Paper Presented to the Conference Strategy and Doctrine in Russian Security Policy, Washington, D.C., National Defense University, Fort Lesley J. McNair, June 28, 2010
61 Skokov
62 Alekseev
63 Kipp, "Russia's Nuclear Posture and the Threat That Dare not Speak Its Name"; Roger McDermott, "Russia's Conventional Armed Forces, Reform and Nuclear Posture to 2020," Paper Presented to the Conference Strategy and Doctrine in Russian Security Policy, Washington, D.C., National Defense University, Fort Lesley J. McNair, June 28, 2010
64 Dmitri Litovkin, "Ucheniia Popali v Seti," Izvestiya, (28 September 2009), cited in Ibid.
65 A. Kondrat'ev, "Nekotorye Osobennosti Realizatsii Kontseptsii Setsentricheskaia Voina' v Vooruzhennykh Silakh KNR," Zarubezhnoe Voyennoe Obozreniye. No. 3 (March 2010, pp. 11-17), cited in Ibid.
66 "Ucheniia," Zarubezhnoye Voennoye Obozreniye, No. 8 (31 July 2009), and Aleksandr Khramchikhin, "Starye Osnovy Novoi Doktriny," Voyenno-Promyshlennyi Kuryer, Bo. 6 (17 February 2010), p. 5, cited in Ibid.
67 Simon Saradzhyan, "The Role of China in Russia's Military Thinking," International Relations and Security Network, May 4, 2010, www.isn.ethz.ch; Kipp
68 Kipp, "Russia's Nuclear Posture and the Threat That Dare not Speak Its Name"; McDermott, "Russia's Conventional Armed Forces, Reform and Nuclear Posture to 2020"
69 Ibid.
70 FBIS SOV, November 28, 2010; "Reforma Flota"
71 Mikhail Lukanin, "Navy Prepares to Defend Russian Oil," Moscow, Trud, November 24, 2010, FBIS SOV, November 28, 2010; "Reforma Flota: Glavnaya Ugroza na Dalnem Vostoke," Voyennoye Obozreniye, December 10, 2010, http://topwar.ru/
72 Ibid.
73 Ibid.
74 Dmitri Litovkin, "We Didn't Send Him For a Star: A Skif Flew From the North Pole to Kanin Nos," Moscow, Izvestiya Moscow Edition in Russian, September 13, 2006, FBIS SOV, September 13, 2006
75 Moscow, ITAR-TASS, in English, May 5, 2008, FBIS SOV, May 5, 2008; Yuri Gavrilov, "Long-Range Aviation Inhabits Arctic Skies," Moscow, Rossiyskaya Gazeta, in Russian, May 15, 2008, FBIS SOV, May 15, 2008; Moscow, IRAR-TASS, in English, March 20, 2008, FBIS SOV, March 20, 2008
76 Dmitri Litovkin, "We Didn’t Send Him For a Star: A Skif Flew From the North Pole to Kanin Nos," Moscow, Izvestiya Moscow Edition in Russian, September 13, 2006, FBIS SOV, September 13, 2006; Moscow, Agentstvo Voyennykh Novostey, April 9, 2008
77 Wendell Minnick, "China Ramps Up Missile Threat With DF-16," www.defensenews.com, March 21, 2011
78 Moscow, Interfax-AVN Online, in Russian, December 13, 2010, FBIS SOV, December 13, 2010; Moscow, RIA-Novosti Online, in Russian, December 8, 2010, FBIS SOV, December 8, 2010; Moscow, ITAR-TASS, in English, December 13, 2010, FBIS SOV, December 13, 2010; Moscow, RBK Online, December 14, 2010, FBIS SOV, December 14, 2010
79 Moscow, RIA-Novosti Online, in Russian, December 8, 2010, FBIS SOV, December 8, 2010
80 Dmitriy Litovkin, "Successors to the 'Topol' Have Appeared," Moscow, Izvestiya Online, in Russian, March 24, 2011, FBIS SOV, March 25, 2011
81 Ibid.
82 Ibid.
83 Ibid. (MIRV stands for multiple independent reentry vehicles)
84 Mark A. Smith, A Russian Chronology, July-September 2008, Conflict Studies Research Centre Advanced Research assessments Group, www.da.mod.uk/arag, 2008, p. 25
85 "Popovkin Details the GPV," http://russiandefpolicy.wordpress.com/tag/vladimir-popovkin, February 25, 2011
86 Yuri Gavrilov, "To Arms! First Deputy Defense Minister Vladimir Popovkin Revealed Plans to Re-equip the Army," Moscow, Rossiyskaya Gazeta, in Russian, July 2, 2010, http://russiadefence.englishboard.net/t1294-interview-with-vladimir-popovkin
87 Moscow, Interfax-AVN Online, in English, March 4, 2011, FBIS SOV, March 4, 2011
88 "Supreme Commander in Chief's Five Tasks. New People Are Needed to Fulfill Them," Moscow, Nezavisimaya Gazeta Online, in Russian, March 21, 2011, FBIS SOV, March 30, 2011
89 Ibid.
90 President Dmitry Medvedev, cited in "Russia Ready for Meaningful Military Reform. Again. Really," in http://www.moscowsshadows.wordpress.com/2008/09/27
91 Moscow, Interfax-AVN Online, in Russian, March 24, 2011, FBIS SOV, March 28, 2011; Alexander Vladimirovih Muntyanu, Yuri Anatolyevich Pechatnov, "Problems of Developing a Strategic Deterrence Mechanism," Moscow, Yubileynyy Straticheskaya Stabilnost', in Russian, August 12, 2010, FBIS SOV, August 12, 2010
92 Krasnoyarsk, www.NuclearNo.ru, in Russian, March 8, 2010, FBIS SOV, March 14, 2010; Moscow, Interfax, in Russian, January 26, 2011, FBIS SOV, February 3, 2011
93 Jacob W. Kipp, "A Long Way to Zero; Moscow Remains Reluctant to Take the Next Step," Eurasian Daily Monitor, February 11, 2011
94 Moscow, Ekho Moskvy Radio, in Russian, February 7, 2011, FBIS SOV, February 8, 2011
95 Moscow, Interfax, In English, March 1, 2011, FBIS SOV, March 1, 2011
96 Viktor Litovkin, "War of Resolutions," Moscow, Nezavisiamyoye Voynnoye Obozreniye," in Russian, December 29, 2010, FBIS SOV, January 6, 2011; Moscow, Interfax, in English, December 24, 2010, FBIS SOV, January 4, 2011
97 Moscow, Interfax, in English, April 2, 2010, FBIS SOV, April 2, 2010
98 "Arms Fitting," Moscow, Moskovskiy Komsomolets, in Russian, December 17, 2009," Johnson's Russia List, December 18, 2009
99 "Russia Seeks to Avoid Past Mistakes at Arms Cuts Talks With US-Expert," Moscow, Interfax-AVN, December 23, 2009, Johnson's s Russia List, December 23, 2009
100 "Interview With Aleksey Arbatov," Moscow, Izvestiya Online, in Russian, January 30, 2011, FBIS SOV, January 30, 2011
101 Moscow, Interfax-AVN Online, in Russian, February 7, 2011, FBIS SOV, February 8, 2011
102 Walter Pincus, "Russia's Ryabkov on U.S.-Russia Relations: 'We Can Offer Tangible Results, And We Will Do More in the Future'," Washington Post, January 31, 2011, http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/russias-ryabkov-on-us-russia-relations-we-can-offer-tangible-results-and-we-will-do-more-in-the-future/2011/01/31/ABkrC6Q_story.html