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Withdrawal from ABM treaty signals escalation of US militarism
By Joseph Kay
27 December 2001
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President George W. Bush formally announced December 13 that
the United States will unilaterally withdraw from the Anti-Ballistic
Missile (ABM) Treaty.
The move is not a surprise, given the administrations
public opposition to the treaty. Nevertheless, it is a milestone
in the development of American foreign policy and in postwar international
relations. It marks the first time in the nuclear era that the
United States has abandoned a major arms control treaty.
Bushs announcement underscores the fact that his administrations
international coalition against terrorism does not
represent a retreat from his unilateralist policies, as some commentators
have suggested, but rather a means of imposing Washingtons
agenda on enemies and nominal allies alike.
The treaty was signed by the Soviet Union and the United States
in 1972, with Russia taking the place of the USSR after the latters
collapse in 1991. It was meant to limit the buildup of nuclear
arms by prohibiting the construction of missile defenses. A provision
allows for the withdrawal of either side after giving six months
notice.
The ABM treaty was an important part of the general framework
of international relations sponsored by the United States following
the Second World War. The predominant view within American ruling
circles at that timearticulated first by President Eisenhowerwas
that arms control agreements and international institutions such
as the United Nations were necessary and positive, from the standpoint
of US interests, in a world where the US had to contend with the
Soviet Union. They were seen as a component part of the overarching
Cold War policy of containment: arrangements could be made with
the Soviet Union that would preserve a certain amount of international
stability while allowing the US to advance its interests abroad
at the expense of Moscow.
Ascendancy of the extreme right
From the beginning, however, an extreme-right tendency within
the political establishment opposed the ABM, and arms control
measures in general, as an impermissible concession to the Soviet
Union and an unacceptable constraint on the use of US military
power. For decades, this tendency was held in check and remained
in the minority within the bourgeois establishment. Even during
the presidency of Ronald Reagan, which saw a major expansion of
the military, the American government operated within the framework
of international arms control agreements.
Since the end of the Cold War, this extreme-right tendency
within the American ruling elite, concentrated in the Republican
Party and a section of the military brass, has insisted with increasing
truculence on the lifting of all treaty limitations. In the absence
of any state capable of militarily challenging American hegemony,
it sees a unique opportunity to employ armed force to assert American
interests internationally.
In recent years this unilateralist faction has gained increasing
control over American foreign policy. In a major blow to the foreign
policy of the Clinton administration, the Republican Senate in
1999 rejected ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty
(CTBT), which would have limited the capacity of the United States
to test nuclear weapons. More recently, the Bush administration
has moved to scuttle the Biological Weapons Convention, which
would have placed similar constraints on American germ warfare
programs.
The ABM treaty has long been a favorite target for these forces.
During the Clinton administration, construction of a national
missile defense and the abandonment of the ABM treaty were prominent
planks in the Republican Party program, which Republican leadersin
particular, then-Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
Jesse Helmssought to advance as part of the campaign of
political intrigue and dirty tricks against the Democratic White
House.
The installation of George W. Bush as president last January
was seen as a golden opportunity to junk the ABM treaty and initiate
a further buildup of American military might. As with every reactionary
policy pursued by the American government since the September
11 terrorist attacks, Bush has attempted to justify the abandonment
of ABM by declaring it a necessary step in the war on terrorism.
In a December 11 speech at the Citadel Military Academy, he stated,
The attacks on our nation made even more clear that we need
to build limited and effective defenses against a missile attack....
We must protect Americans and our friends against all forms of
terror, including the terror that could arrive on a missile.
Bush critics in the Democratic Party have pointed to the obvious
fact that, if anything, the hijack-bombings showed that a missile
defense is of little use in preventing terrorist attacks. The
Taliban and Al-Qaeda are not even close to having the capacity
to attack the US with ballistic missiles.
But the construction of a missile defense has far broader purposes.
Abandoning the ABM will allow the US to pursue a wide range of
tests over the coming months, including defense systems involving
land, sea, air and space-based weapons. The Pentagon has plans
for various systems, which would, if successful, allow for an
even more aggressive military policy by removing the capacity
of states to retaliate with missile strikes against the US.
In line with the general foreign policy objectives of the Republican
Party and the Pentagon, the very idea of an international treaty
codifying military restrictions has become something of a bogeyman.
Bush has repeatedly indicated his aversion to treaties in general,
feeling that the US should be able to do what it wants, when it
wants.
Indeed, Russia has indicated its willingness to make amendments
to the ABM treaty that would allow for the tests the US plans
to conduct. But because such proposals would preserve the treaty,
the Bush administration has rejected them.
The Washington Post quoted an administration official
who summed up the basic disagreement that led to American withdrawal:
The Russians wanted a treaty. The administration didnt
want a treaty. The administration wants maximum flexibility. The
Russians wanted something that allowed them some oversight.
The response in Russia and Western Europe
For the time being, the Russian response to the withdrawal
has been somewhat muted. Since September 11, Russia has sought
closer relations with the US as a means of advancing its own interests
abroad, including its ongoing struggle against Muslim separatists
in the southern province of Chechnya, near the Caspian Sea. Russian
President Vladimir Putin has also been courting American support
for Russian entry into the World Trade Organization and closer
relations with NATO.
Moscows post-September 11 diplomacy is partially responsible
for Bushs decision to announce the withdrawal now, at a
time when he could count on a conciliatory Russian response. In
a reply that had been carefully coordinated with Washington over
the previous week, Putin repeated his opposition to the abandonment
of the ABM treaty, but added, I think that the current level
of bilateral relations between the Russian Federation and the
US should not only be retained, but also used in order to work
out the new framework of a strategic relationship as soon as possible.
This response is in sharp contrast to more bellicose warnings
made by Russia in the past. While Putin is hoping that by accommodating
the US he will be in a better position to advance Russian interests,
a substantial section of the Russian ruling elite, especially
within the military establishment, is not satisfied with the gains
this policy has brought. It is very wary of American involvement
in Central Asia and the former Soviet Republics, as well as the
implications for Russia of a unilateral buildup of American military
power.
Bushs announcement is likely to harden divisions within
the Russian ruling circles, with some advocating a strong stance
against the United States. Vladimir Lukin, vice-speaker of the
state Duma and former Russian ambassador to the US, summarized
the frustration felt within the Russian elite: We supported
the US unconditionally, we worked, we shared all sorts of very
sensitive data that have to do with combating terrorism. What
happened after that is, the moment we scored the victory [in Afghanistan],
the following line prevailed in the US: Thanks, but on matters
concerning the both of us, we will be acting the way we want.
Within the Russian military, there are many calls for abandoning
the strategic arms limitation treaties (START I and II).
The opposition within Europe to American withdrawal from the
ABM treaty has been more vocal than in Russia. The British newspaper,
Financial Times, remarked in an editorial on December 13,
There is a disturbing return to unilateralism suggested
by Mr. Bushs decision. He has proclaimed the virtues of
multi-lateralism in the anti-terrorism war. But he has yet to
show that on issues close to his heart he can bend to the wishes
of his allies. He could have finessed the disagreements over the
ABM treaty but chose not to. There will be other questions on
which Washington will disagree with its NATO allies. Mr. Bush
should not forget that even if the US needs no outside military
support, political backing is invaluable, as the current war has
shown.
The ruling elites of Europe are concerned about the prospect
of growing conflicts with the United States, as is evident in
the Financial Times oblique reference to the divisions
within the NATO alliance. On issues such as a potential intervention
in Iraq and the character of the post-Taliban regime in Afghanistan,
the interests of the various states within NATO are opposed.
The question running through the minds of many European officials
is: What happens when the American government wants to pursue
a course of action contrary to the interests of the states of
Europe? The answer suggested by Bushs policy toward the
ABM treaty, as well as its previous unilateralist course, is that
the interests of Washingtons NATO allies will not be a major
factor in American decision-making.
Destabilizing international relations
The abandonment of the ABM treaty is certain to have an extremely
destabilizing effect in other parts of the world as well. Many
commentators have pointed to the fact that China will likely modernize
its nuclear weapons in response, which could lead to a general
arms race in Asia, a region that is already at the boiling point.
India will likely respond by increasing its nuclear capacity,
provoking Pakistan to do the same. The Pakistani newspaper Frontier
Post has reported that the US has plans to set up a missile
defense in Afghanistan, which would only further undermine whatever
stability remains in the region.
The consequences that withdrawal will have on international
relations has provoked concern within sections of the American
ruling class, particularly in the Democratic Party. These factions
feel that American interests are threatened if relations with
Russia and Europe are undermined. The Democrats are not opposed
to the aims that Bush seeks to pursue by withdrawing from the
ABM treatyin a word, the establishment of American hegemonybut
the means by which the administration seeks to advance these aims.
Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle stated, [The decision]
undermines the fragile coalition that we have with our allies.
In order to pursue its war in Afghanistan, some Democrats have
argued, it has been necessary to garner the support of other countries.
Withdrawing from the ABM treaty will undermine such support in
future interventions. In response, some Senate leaders have threatened
to pass legislation that would withhold funding for any tests
that would violate the treaty.
There is no reason to believe that Democratic opposition to
Bushs policy will be serious or prolonged. Over the past
decade, the consensus within the corporate, political and military
elite has shifted far to the right, undermining support for the
traditional means by which American imperialism sought to advance
its interests, a strategy that combined covert operations and
military force with arms control and related international agreements.
The Democrats have moved to accommodate this change. During
the Clinton administration, the Democrats increasingly sought
to appease Republican opposition to the ABM treaty. Clinton initiated
the most recent plans to construct a missile defense, and at one
point during his administration a bipartisan bill was passed that
obliges the government to construct a missile defense as soon
as technologically feasible. The bill diplomatically omitted any
mention of the ABM treaty.
The incendiary role of US imperialism
While the war in Afghanistan has been cloaked in the rhetoric
of an international campaign against terrorism, it is, in reality,
an attempt to assert American interests in the regionabove
all, control over the vast oil reserves in and around the Caspian
Sea. Scuttling the ABM treaty is entirely consistent with the
unilateralist and aggressive character of this war.
For some 40 years, from the late 1940s until the breakup of
the Soviet Union in 1991, the US served as the main force for
stabilizing inter-imperialist relations and maintaining an overarching
framework for the economic development of world capitalism. The
ABM treaty and the arms control system of which it is a part were
cornerstones in this international structure.
Now Americas role has been reversed. The US is the primary
force within world capitalism for the destabilization of international
economic, political and military relations. It pursues its national
interests with scant regard for international treaties and institutions
or the needs of its nominal allies. It seeks to use its economic
and, above all, military superiority to throw its weight around
and bend everyone else to its demands, or crush them. This is
an extremely reckless policy that is creating the conditions for
international crises of unprecedented proportions, which inevitably
will give rise to new revolutionary upheavals and future debacles
for US imperialism itself.
See Also:
Bushs nominee to head
Joint Chiefs promotes militarization of space
[30 August 2001]
China-Russia treaty: a reaction
against aggressive unilateralism in Washington
[23 July 2001]
Bush pushes rapid development
of US missile defense
[17 July 2001]
US Militarism
& Military
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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