By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Feb. 26, 2018 — The goal of the Nuclear Posture
Review, unveiled earlier this month, is to deter war, David J. Trachtenberg,
deputy undersecretary of defense for policy, said at the Heritage Foundation
here today.
“If nuclear weapons are used in war, it is because
deterrence failed,” he said. “The goal of the 2018 NPR is to make sure
deterrence will not fail.”
Trachtenberg stressed that the review is not a break with
the past, but rather a continuation of long-held nuclear doctrine.
Situations have changed since the last nuclear posture
review in 2010. At that time, U.S. officials thought they could work with
Russian and Chinese leaders to bring them into the comity of nations.
Engagement would continue progress along the path to ultimate nuclear
disarmament, and the officials made recommendations concurrent with that
baseline.
Operating Outside International Norms
But Russia and China have since proven they are not
following international norms. Russia annexed Crimea and fomented war in
eastern Ukraine. They have modernized their nuclear arsenal and almost all
aspects of their military. Russia’s support for the Bashar al Assad regime in Syria,
its interference with its neighbors, and even its cyber campaign to influence
elections, show that it is working against accepted international standards.
China has also shown it is working against the accepted
rules-based international order, which has done so much to advance the economic
well-being in Asia. China has also modernized its nuclear arsenal and
modernized many aspects of its army. China is building islands in the South
China Sea in an attempt to cut off freedom of navigation.
This is a return to great power competition, Trachtenberg
said, and the U.S. “must field a more modern, ready and flexible force, which
reverses the erosion of our military advantages.”
And the heart of American defense is the nuclear arsenal.
The 2018 review lays out the path to ensure America’s nuclear deterrent is
modern, robust, flexible, resilient, ready and tailored to deter 21st century
threats and reassure allies, he said.
Not an Arms Race
The review is not a new arms race, nor is it a return to the
Cold War. Rather, it is a hard-eyed view of the world as it is, Trachtenberg
said.
Nuclear threats also emanate from rogue states such as North
Korea, which has made repeated threats against the United States, South Korea
and Japan.
Iran’s nuclear future remains uncertain, Trachtenberg said.
The regime is still testing ballistic missiles, still engaging in malign
activities throughout the Middle East and still trying to gain hegemony in the
Persian Gulf, he said.
All this means the United States must increase deterrence
efforts. Modernizing the American nuclear triad -- intercontinental ballistic
missiles, nuclear-capable bombers and submarine-launched missiles -- must
happen, he said. So, too, must improvements in the command and control system.
Strengthening Deterrence
The posture review spells out how the United States views
nuclear weapons and follows the long-held doctrine on the use of them,
Trachtenberg said. The aim is to strengthen deterrence and lessen the chances
that adversaries may miscalculate.
The review does call for the United States to develop a
sea-launched nuclear cruise missile and modification of a small number of
submarine-launched ballistic missiles to include a small-yield option, he said,
noting that both can be done within current treaties.
These capabilities will help tailor U.S. deterrence strategy
to contemporary requirements, he said. “Effective deterrence must shape
potential adversaries calculations to ensure they do not see employment of
nuclear weapons as a useful option in any circumstances,” he said. “If an
adversary believes he can achieve his objectives through the limited use of
nuclear weapons, then we risk deterrence failure.”
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