Japan Peace Conference
Protecting the Empire:
Nuclear Weapons, Military Bases and the United States
Zia Mian
Program on Science and Global Security
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs
Princeton University
Japan Peace Conference
Tokyo, November 2005
Introduction
Wars leave many enduring legacies, for those who believe they
were defeated, for those who think they are victorious, and for
those who are trapped in between. Sixty years after World War
II, the most obvious legacies that remain are nuclear weapons
and the global military presence of the U.S. military. These nuclear
weapons, military bases and alliances give the United States a
global reach.
The U.S. is a nuclear-armed empire. It has over 10,000 nuclear
weapons, 2000 of which are still on hair-trigger alert and ready
to be used in fifteen minutes, and these missiles can reach almost
anywhere in the world.1 With these weapons, the U.S. can threaten
anywhere in the world. Ignoring its international legal commitments
under the nuclear nonproliferation treaty (NPT) to eliminate its
nuclear weapons, the U.S. is planning to develop new nuclear weapons
that are explicitly designed to last longer and to be seen to
be more useable. At the same time, the U.S. seeks to keep nuclear
weapons out of the hands of countries that may limit U.S. capacity
to exercise political and military power in key regions of the
world.
The United States is also an "empire of bases".2 It
has about 700 military bases in 130 or so countries and a large
number of other military facilities in these and other countries.
It is estimated there are now over 500,000 U.S. military personnel
and associated civilians stationed in over 150 countries.3 The
U.S. 2004 Global Defense Posture Review involves increasing the
number of foreign U.S. bases as part of the so-called Global War
on Terror. It has long been evident that the U.S. has placed its
needs for military bases far above any concern for democracy in
such countries. American agreements for creating and keeping bases
have recently been described as often no more than "deals
with devils." 4 Future base agreements will no doubt involve
the same kind of deals with the same kind of devils.
The U.S. has also long-standing military alliances with key
countries around the world. Many of them were first created at
the end of World War II and in the early years of the Cold War.
These alliances have continued to be important sixty years later.
They show signs of becoming stronger not weaker. There are also
new countries that the U.S. is trying to make into allies. It
has watched quietly as some of these allies have armed themselves
with nuclear weapons.
These nuclear weapons, bases and alliances are the most obvious
instruments of the American empire and allow it to exercise power
and influence every hour of every day across the world. It is
important to understand what roles they play and how they are
increasingly connected together. We look at each of these issues
here, and try to examine the connection between them and the danger
they pose.
Nuclear Weapons
After the American atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
Mahatma Gandhi declared: "The atom bomb brought an empty
victory to the Allied arms, but it resulted for the time being
in destroying the soul of Japan. What has happened to the soul
of the destroying nation is yet too early to see."
During the Cold War, it became clear what had happened to America.
It made more and bigger nuclear weapons and threatened to end
the world. It is estimated that the United States nuclear war
plan in 1960 (involving only some 3,000 nuclear warheads - out
of a total of 20,000 then available) would have resulted in the
deaths of 360-525 million people.5
The U.S. also deployed nuclear weapons and their components
to many other countries, including Canada, Cuba, Greenland, Iceland,
Japan, Morocco, Philippines, Puerto Rico, South Korea, Spain,
Taiwan, Belgium, Greece, Italy, Netherlands, Turkey, UK, and West
Germany. It seems that in some cases even the governments of these
countries did not know that U.S. bases in their country stored
nuclear weapons or nuclear weapons components. The lack of democratic
accountability was profound.
For many decades, U.S. leaders claimed these nuclear weapons
were a necessary part of the Cold War struggle against the Soviet
Union. But now fifteen years after the collapse of the Soviet
Union, nuclear weapons have become more important than ever as
instruments of U.S. policy. The Bush Administration's "Nuclear
Posture Review 2002" announced continued reliance for the
indefinite future on nuclear weapons, "to achieve strategic
and political objectives." It mandated new facilities for
the manufacture of nuclear bombs, research into new kinds of nuclear
weapons, new delivery systems, and much more.
The "Nuclear Posture Review 2002" laid out a new strategy,
in which nuclear weapons were to be used to "dissuade adversaries
from undertaking military programs or operations that could threaten
U.S. interests or those of allies". It named as possible
targets, Russia, China, North Korea, Iraq, Iran, Syria and Libya,
and opened the door to the use of nuclear weapons to respond to "sudden
and unpredicted security challenges." In particular, the
Nuclear Posture Review proposed that "in setting requirements
for nuclear strike capabilities," it was necessary to consider "unexpected
contingencies" which involved "sudden and unpredicted
security challenges," citing as an example "a sudden
regime change by which an existing nuclear arsenal comes into
the hands of a new, hostile leadership group."
The pressure for this has come from nuclear weapons designers
and nuclear military planners, a vast and powerful complex created
in the Cold War that has been looking for a new role in the world.
Senior officials from the nuclear weapons laboratories, who are
also advisors to the U.S. military, have proposed developing a
special low-yield nuclear arsenal, directed at Third World countries.
They suggest that in the post-Cold War world, the U.S. needs new
kinds of low-yield nuclear weapons because continued U.S. "reliance
on high-yield strategic [nuclear] weapons could lead to self-deterrence,
a limitation of strategic options."
The U.S. Congress has approved funds for a new nuclear weapons
development program, the Reliable Replacement Warhead program,
the purpose of which is to eventually replace all the nuclear
warheads in a future (~ 6,000 weapon) U.S. arsenal with newly-designed
and newly-built warheads, which are supposed to be more easily
built and maintained than the existing weapons, to last longer
and be more reliable, and to do this without nuclear testing. The
U.S. military has also now put in place a 2004 "Interim Global
Strike Alert Order" that requires it to be ready to attack
countries anywhere in the world at very short notice. The military
claims to be able to carry out such attacks within "half
a day or less" and to use nuclear weapons in such an attack.
It is clear from these developments that the nuclear legacy
of the Cold War has created a profound predicament for our time.
The U.S. is trying to create nuclear weapons that can be more
useable, especially against third world countries. They want to
lift the shadow of Hiroshima and Nagasaki that has stopped these
weapons from being used in war for sixty years.
Nuclear weapons and military bases
American concern about nuclear proliferation to the third world
is part of a long story. It is important to remember that the
Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty was negotiated and signed in
the late 1960s, a period in which the United States was engaged
in wars in South-East Asia and actively intervening in the Middle
East and Latin America. The NPT emerged in large part because
U.S. leaders believed the spread of nuclear weapons to a region
of vital interest to the United States would increase the risks
of any American intervention there.
However, after the Cold War, this concern about the spread of
nuclear weapons has grown. One reason is that without the Soviet
Union to counter it, the U.S. feels it can intervene in third
world countries with greater freedom. Third World militaries cannot
hope to fight and win a conventional war against the United States.
As one Bush administration official said of nuclear weapons: "It
is a real equalizer if you're a pissant little country with no
hope of matching the U.S. militarily."6 Nuclear weapons in
the hands of states in the regions where the U.S. wants to intervene
would clearly make any intervention far more costly and harder
to sell to American public opinion.
But the American drive to control nuclear proliferation is also
directly connected to the international network of U.S. military
bases around the world. Michael May, the director emeritus of
the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (America's second major
nuclear weapons laboratory) and Michael Nacht, former assistant
director of the US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency in the
Clinton administration have explained that:
"Since the cold war, the top US military priority, as stated
in congressional testimonies, has been to deploy the world's most
effective power projection forces. These forces have been used
in the Balkans, the Persian Gulf and central Asia. A power projection
force operates in or near hostile territory
Any power projection
force needs air bases and ports of debarkation and logistics centers
for sustained operations. These facilities must be rented or conquered.
Their number is limited - a handful in Iraq, and not many more
in East Asia, seven or so in Japan, some bases in South Korea,
and a few others. These facilities are highly vulnerable even
to inaccurate nuclear missile attacks. They are "soft targets",
not "hardened" against nuclear weapons
The nuclear threat to essential US force-projection assets
largely counterbalances the advantage provided by US conventional
forces, without necessarily consigning whole cities and industrial
bases to destruction. A great deal is at stake in constraining
the missile and nuclear weapons capabilities of North Korea
and other rogue states. The US thus must utilize all the resources
at its disposal, working constructively with its allies and
other interested parties, to deny these states the capabilities
they almost surely seek to acquire. A more resilient forward
defense and deterrent posture is essential to an effective American
global strategy."7
The fear of a nuclear threat to American military bases and
forces around the world has triggered the search for ways to defend
them and to project American power through other means. As Andrew
Lichterman has observed:
"For the wars of the 21st Century, the United States
is seeking unilaterally assured destruction, the capacity to
reach across the planet to destroy an adversary's most dangerous
weapons before they can be used, or to kill leaders it has declared
to be unacceptable, and then to prevent retaliation against
either U.S. forward deployed forces or the United States itself."8
There are many systems being developed for this purpose. One
example is the Space Based Laser program; it seeks to build lasers
that can shoot down long and short range missiles. This is part
of a much larger set of programs, including include anti-ballistic
missile systems for use on the battlefield, other systems to protect
U.S. aircraft carriers and battle ships, and an airborne laser
for shooting down missiles soon after launch, as well as a proposed
Global Protection Against Limited Strikes system that could be
capable of destroying 100-200 missile warheads.9
It would appear US military planners see future conflict as
inevitable, and confronted with military forces armed with weapons
and strategies based on following the U.S. example their response
is to find means to protect their imperial expeditionary forces
so that they can be deployed and can fight wars without taking
large casualties and so risking the loss of American public support.
Nuclear Alliances
The U.S. has also long relied on countries serving as allies
for regional conflicts. Some of these have been nuclear-armed.
Others have been used as bases from where U.S. nuclear forces
can be deployed. Still others have been encouraged to strengthen
their military and play a role in American war plans.
The most famous examples are Britain and France, who played
these roles in Europe during the Cold War. The United States helped
both countries with their nuclear weapons programs as part of
this relationship. In the Middle East, the most famous and controversial
example of a nuclear-armed U.S. ally is Israel. Israel has the
biggest and most successful nuclear weapons program outside of
the five major nuclear weapons states.10 It has not signed the NPT
and is believed to have several hundred nuclear weapons and to
possess ballistic missiles with a range up to 4000 km (Jericho-2), as
well as aircraft capable of delivering nuclear weapons and submarine
launched nuclear cruise missiles.
United States support for Israel seems to be without limit.
It has not been affected by Israel's preparations to use nuclear
weapons in its 1973 war, its 1982 invasion of Lebanon, in which
almost 20,000 people were killed and many more injured, its subsequent
occupation of South Lebanon until early 2000, its policy of assassinations
and bombings directed against Palestinians, to say nothing of
its widespread violation of international law as part of its illegal
occupation of the Palestinian West Bank and Gaza. It takes far
less for any other state to be dubbed a "rogue state" and
subject to censure and punishment by the U.S.
The U.S. has underpinned its cooperation through the provision
of $70-80 billion dollars of military and economic aid to Israel
over the past two decades, and it presently provides well
in excess of $3 billion a year. Israel may even have had access
to U.S. and French nuclear weapons design and test expertise.11 In 1998, the U.S. signed a Memorandum of Agreement with Israel
committing it to "enhancing Israel's defense and deterrent
capabilities" and "upgrading the framework of the U.S.-Israel
strategic and military relationship, as well as the technological
cooperation between them."12 The agreement included a U.S.
commitment to providing "ways and means of assuring and increasing
Israel's deterrent power by supplies of modern technology and
weapons systems."13 It is hard to read this as anything other
than a promise of active U.S. support for Israel having nuclear
weapons.
Another country that the US is trying to create as a nuclear-armed
ally is India. U.S. interest in India acquiring nuclear weapons
became evident in a 1961 proposal that the U.S. help India acquire
a nuclear weapon and conduct a test, so that a "friendly
Asian power beat Communist China to the punch."14 In 1964,
amid American concerns about China's first nuclear weapons test,
senior officials in the State Department and the Pentagon went
so far as to consider "the possibilities of providing nuclear
weapons under U.S. custody" to India. The plan envisaged
helping India modify aircraft to drop nuclear weapons, training
crews, providing dummy weapons for practice runs and information
on the effects of nuclear weapons for use in deciding targets.15 At the same time, the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission was considering
helping India with "peaceful nuclear explosions", which
would involve the use of U.S. nuclear devices under U.S. control
being exploded in India.16
In May 1998, first India and then Pakistan tested nuclear weapons.
But in 2000 the United States made clear it was seeking a new
relationship with India. A joint statement declared that "India
and the United States will be partners in peace, with a common
interest in and complementary responsibility for ensuring regional
and international security."17 India in effect agreed to 'complement'
the exercise of U.S. interests in return for the U.S. making a
place for India in the international arena. One early expression
of this was India's unprecedented support for President Bush's
plan to deploy a National Missile Defense.18
In January 2004, the US and India announced a "Next Steps
in Strategic Partnership" agreement, declaring that the United
States and India would "expand cooperation" in civilian
nuclear activities, civilian space programs, and high-technology
trade, as well as on missile defense. U.S. officials have made
clear the purpose of this agreement. A senior official announced
that "Its goal is to help India become a major world power
in the 21st century
.We understand fully the implications,
including military implications, of that statement."19 Former
senior U.S. officials have pointed out the inference that is to
be drawn from the new U.S. effort to "help India". Robert
Blackwill, who served in the Bush administration as U.S. ambassador
to India and then as deputy national security adviser for strategic
planning, has wondered, for instance, "Why should the U.S.
want to check India's missile capability in ways that could lead
to China's permanent nuclear dominance over democratic India?"20
The U.S. military, economic and political support for Israel
and its recent offer to help India become a major nuclear-armed
military power are in sharp contrast to the use of sanctions and
then war against Iraq to compel compliance with non-proliferation
agreements. U.S. policy to these countries is clearly determined
by the role they are willing to play as powerful regional clients
in the U.S. empire.
Another stark comparison that can be drawn is between U.S. policy
towards Iran and Japan. The U.S. insists that Iran should not
be allowed to have either uranium enrichment or plutonium reprocessing
capability, even though it is permitted to do so under the NPT
as long as such facilities are under International Atomic Energy
Agency Safeguards. The U.S. claims that enrichment and reprocessing
capabilities are all that would be needed to make Iran effectively
a nuclear weapon state. The U.S. also argues that nuclear energy
is uneconomic in Iran and is a cover for a nuclear weapons program.
The U.S. has imposed sanctions on Iran and seeks action from the
UN Security Council to force it to give up parts of its nuclear
program. Many fear that the U.S. is laying the basis for an American
war against Iran, or perhaps attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities.
Contrast this with Japan, which has developed both large-scale
uranium enrichment capability and a large reprocessing plant at
Rokkasho. The uranium enrichment plant in Rokkasho could produce
highly enriched uranium for over 150 nuclear weapons each year.
There are plans to increase its capacity. Japan's plutonium stockpile
and reprocessing plans provide it with an option to build many
more nuclear warheads. It has been estimated that once the Rokkasho
reprocessing plant is operational, then by 2020 Japan's plutonium
stockpile could reach 145 metric tons.21 This would give it sufficient
plutonium for over 10,000 nuclear weapons.
Japan's Rokkasho reprocessing plant is both a proliferation
and a safety concern. It is so large that inspections by the International
Atomic Energy Agency will be ineffective. According to estimates,
the material that will be unaccounted for during normal operations
at Rokkasho will be around 50 kg per year - enough for several
nuclear weapons.22 The plant has been built and will be operated
despite the fact that it would be much cheaper to store the spent
fuel rather than reprocess it.23
There is also a dangerous connection between the Rokkasho Reprocessing
Plant and U.S. military bases in Japan. The U.S. Misawa Air Force
base and firing range is located only 30km from the Rokkasho plant.
It was revealed in a court case that the government approved the
Rokkasho Plant's design even though it could not survive a crash
by a fighter jet. The design was approved because to make Rokkasho
safe against such a crash would have increased significantly the
cost and time of construction.24
At the same time, Japan and the U.S. have agreed on strengthening
their military cooperation. The U.S. has committed itself to "provide
all necessary support for the defense of Japan", which means
Japan being defended by U.S nuclear weapons and missile defenses.
Japan has also agreed to act as a base for the deployment of a
radar station for the U.S. missile defense system, and continue
to be a forward base for U.S armed forces for the Asia-Pacific
region.25 It is clear that the goal here is the same as U.S. policy
with India, to create a military ally who will help the U.S to
surround and pressure China.
Japan it seems, like Israel and India, is sheltered by the United
States from any concerns about proliferation because it serves
a military purpose. The parallels may go deeper. It may be that
as Frank Barnaby and Shaun Burnie have cautioned:
"In the 1960's, the Nixon administration considered the
option of arming Japan with nuclear weapons. Forty years on
it would be surprising if there were not those in Washington
considering that such a development would be in the medium term
interests of the United States. And anyway, the U.S. is already
signaling that it would not be able to stop it."26
Conclusion
Nuclear weapons, military bases and military alliances are an
integral part of the American empire. The U.S. is developing new
nuclear weapons, building new bases and strengthening its alliances
with key states, especially Israel, India and Japan.
The continued insistence on a nuclear-armed American future
has come despite growing opposition from the public and from senior
U.S. officials with long experience with these weapons. A 2005
poll found that two-thirds (66%) of Americans believe no nation
should have nuclear weapons, and in what is a hopeful sign, sixty
percent of younger people, aged 18 to 29 years, disapprove of
the bombing of Hiroshima.27 At the same time, former U.S. Defense
Secretary and nuclear cold warrior, Robert McNamara says "I
would characterize current U.S. nuclear weapons policy as immoral,
illegal, militarily unnecessary, and dreadfully dangerous."28
There is less pressure about the global network of military
bases and alliances. Most Americans do not know about them. The
bases are far away and do not intrude on the daily lives of ordinary
people. It is for citizens of the countries in which these bases
are located to mount a strong challenge and bring to attention
the existence of these bases and expose how U.S. military bases
are a threat to democracy and local communities and should be
removed.
America's old and new nuclear armed allies and those who sit
on the nuclear threshold like Japan have a special role to play.
Britain and France, Israel and India will have to give up their
nuclear weapons and break free of their alliances with the United
States if they want to become normal countries in their neighborhoods
and help lead the world towards peace. Japan could take similar
steps. It could not operate the Rokkasho reprocessing plant, give
up its long-term plutonium reprocessing plans, and start to just
store its nuclear fuel. It could begin to phase out nuclear energy
and shut down its uranium enrichment program. These steps would
lift the concerns about proliferation and strengthen global nuclear
disarmament. Japan could close its U.S. military bases and end
its alliance with the United States and by doing so help other
countries break free of the empire.
- "U.S. Nuclear Forces, 2005", Bulletin of Atomic
Scientists, January/February, 2005.
- Chalmers Johnson, The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism,
Secrecy, and the End of the Republic, Henry Holt, 2004.
- www.globalsecurity.org.
- Alexander Cooley, "Base Politics", Foreign
Affairs, November/December 2005.
- Matthew McKinzie, Thomas Cochran, Robert Norris and William
Arkin, The U.S. Nuclear War Plan: A time for change,
Natural Resources Defense Council, 2001.
- Bill Keller, "The Thinkable", New York Times,
May 4, 2003.
- Michael May
and Michael Nacht, "The
Real Nuclear Threat Is To America's Bases," Financial Times, September
22, 2005
- Andrew Lichterman, Missiles of Empire: America's 21st
Century Global Legions, WSLF information Bulletin, 2003, http://www.wslfweb.org/docs/missiles03.pdf.
- Michael O'Hanlon, Star Wars Strikes Back, Foreign Affairs,
November/December 1999.
- Avner Cohen, Israel and the Bomb, Columbia University
Press, 1998.
- Eric Arnett, "Implications of the Comprehensive Test
Ban for Nuclear Weapons Programmes and Decision Making," in
Eric Arnett, ed., Nuclear Weapons After the Comprehensive
Test Ban: Implications for Modernisation and Proliferation,
Oxford University Press, 1996.
- U.S.-Israel Memorandum of Agreement, October 31, 1998, Center
for Nonproliferation Studies, Monterey, http://cns.miis.edu/research/wmdme/isrl_moa.htm.
- Howard Diamond, "New
U.S.-Israeli Strategic Dialogue Announced; Israel Acquires
New Submarine," Arms Control
Today, July/August 1999.
- George Perkovich, India and the Bomb, University
of California Press, 1999.
- Perkovich, 1999.
- Perkovich, 1999.
- U.S.-India Relations: A Vision for the 21st Century,
White House website, https://secure.pcmac.org/cgi-bin/nph-prov-employment.cgi/000000A/http/www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/democracy/fs_000321_us_india.html.
- "India to Hear Out Armitage on NMD", The Hindu,
May 11, 2001.
- "US unveils plans to make India 'major world power", Reuters,
March 26, 2005
- Robert D. Blackwill, "A New Deal For New Delhi", Wall
Street Journal, March 21, 2005
- Frank Barnaby and Shaun Burnie, Thinking the Unthinkable:
Japanese Nuclear Power and Proliferation in East Asia,
2005; http://cnic.jp/english/publications/pdffiles/ThinkingTheUnthinkable.pdf.
- Barnaby and Burnie, 2005.
- International Critical Review Committee on the Long Term
Nuclear Program, Institute for Sustainable Energy Policies,
Tokyo, 2005.
- Rokkasho Reprocessing Plant: Exposure of Inadequate Protective
Measures against Aircraft Crashes, http://cnic.jp/english/newsletter/nit99/nit99articles/planecrash.html.
- U.S.-Japan Alliance: Transformation and Realignment for
the Future, Security Consultative Committee October 29,
2005.
- Barnaby and Burnie, 2005.
- Will Lester, "Poll:
Most in U.S. Oppose Nuclear Weapons," AP,
March 31, 2005
- Robert S. McNamara, "Apocalypse
Soon," Foreign
Policy, May/June. 2005, p. 29-35
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