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THE NUCLEAR POSTURE REVIEW:

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Title: THE NUCLEAR POSTURE REVIEW:


1
  • THE NUCLEAR POSTURE REVIEW
  • Past, Present, and Prospective

Presentation to AIAA Strategic and Tactical
Missiles Conference David J. Trachtenberg Vice
President CACI-NSR, Inc. 31 January 2006 Note
The views represented here are those of the
briefer and not those of CACI International or
CACI-NSR, Inc.
2
What Is the Nuclear Posture Review?
  • Mandated by Congress in FY 2001 NDAA
  • A broad-based strategic review
  • An effort to explain the nature of the dynamic
    security environment
  • An attempt to match military means with strategic
    ends
  • A rationale for tailoring our deterrent to
    contemporary threats

U.S. Nuclear Policy Cannot Be Based on Bluff To
Be Effective, It Must Be Credible
3
The ABCs of the NPR
  • The global security environment has changed
  • Russia no longer an enemy not an immediate
    threat
  • Future relationship with China uncertain
  • Regional nuclear tensions (e.g., Iran/Israel
    India/Pakistan)
  • Rogue states seek WMD capabilities
  • U.S. strategic capabilities must be transformed
  • Deterrence increasingly uncertain against rogue
    states that may not act rationally (as we
    define it) Cold War approach no longer
    appropriate
  • Nuclear weapons still necessary to deterrence,
    but not sufficient
  • Broader range of strategic capabilities necessary
  • Advanced non-nuclear strike
  • Missile defenses
  • Robust infrastructure
  • Improved C2, intelligence, and adaptive planning
  • Nuclear weapons remain vital to U.S. security
    strategy
  • Smaller arsenal reflects change in security
    environment
  • Nuclear weapons support assurance, dissuasion,
    deterrence, defense
  • Nuclear and non-nuclear capability gaps reduce
    credibility of deterrence

4
NPR Future Contingencies
  • Immediate Contingencies
  • Well-recognized, current dangers
  • Examples include Soviet threat in Cold War, WMD
    attack on U.S. forces or allies
  • Potential Contingencies
  • Plausible, but not immediate dangers
  • Timely warning can be expected
  • Examples include emergence of hostile coalition,
    re-emergence of hostile peer competitor
  • Unexpected Contingencies
  • Sudden, unpredicted challenge
  • Examples include unanticipated regime change,
    surprise WMD acquisition by hostile group
  • Dealing with uncertainty is the greatest challenge

5
Policy Guidance
  • Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) called for
    capabilities-based approach
  • Replace Cold War Strategic Triad with New
    Triad, including greater emphasis on advanced
    conventional systems and deployment of missile
    defenses
  • Reduce strategic nuclear forces consistent with
    security requirements and changes in security
    environment
  • Maintain maximum flexibility (i.e., Responsive
    Capability) to respond to changes or
    technological surprise

6
The New Triad

7
Implementation Path

8
New Triad Capabilities
  • Nuclear and non-nuclear strike capabilities
  • ICBMs
  • Bombers
  • SLBMs
  • Advanced strike capabilities (e.g., new delivery
    vehicles and conventional precision munitions)
  • Defenses
  • Active and passive (incl. missile defense)
  • Responsive Infrastructure
  • e.g., test readiness, pit facility
  • C2, Intelligence, Adaptive Planning

9
Defense Policy Goals
  • Assure allies and friends
  • U.S. security guarantees must be credible
  • U.S. nuclear capability must be second-to-none
  • Active defenses protect allies and friends and
    forward deployed forces
  • Dissuade competitors
  • Broad spectrum of capabilities reduces incentive
    to compete
  • Advanced non-nuclear capabilities maintain U.S.
    advantages
  • U.S. strategic edge maintained by robust
    infrastructure

10
Defense Policy Goals (2)
  • Deter aggressors
  • Tailored deterrent based on portfolio of
    capabilities
  • Defenses discourage attack by complicating
    adversary plans
  • Robust infrastructure helps U.S. maintain
    technological edge
  • Defeat enemies
  • Broad capabilities provide flexible options
  • Defenses protect should deterrence fail
  • Rapid response assured by enhanced C2,
    intelligence, and adaptive planning

11
Critical Problems
  • Little public knowledge of the NPR and New Triad
  • Document remains classified
  • Little public domain information most articles
    negative
  • Requires turning Cold War theories on their head
  • e.g., stability, MAD, etc.
  • Limited public understanding of national security
    policies and relevance to contemporary security
    threats
  • Nuclear strategy considered a Cold War academic
    discipline
  • Congressional understanding and interest minimal
  • Lack of comprehension regarding relevance of
    nuclear weapons in global war on terror
  • Budget austerity, other priorities lead to
    atrophy of nuclear capabilities
  • Belief that these are weapons that will never be
    used
  • Bureaucratic impediments
  • e.g., Service priorities
  • Lack of understanding, experience, and support
    among senior decision-makers and military
    officials
  • Organizational issues
  • Process for generating sustained support for NPR
    initiatives within DOD requires adaptation

12
Some NPR Myths
  • According to critics, the NPR
  • Rejects deterrence
  • Blurs the distinction between conventional and
    nuclear forces
  • Places greater emphasis on nuclear weapons
  • Makes nuclear weapons more useable
  • Calls for new nuclear weapons and nuclear testing
  • Lowers the nuclear threshold
  • Spurs nuclear proliferation
  • Supports nuclear preemption
  • NPR critics use Cold War logic to challenge
    its findings

13
Some NPR Facts
  • The NPR validates deterrence, it does not
    repudiate it
  • It rejects the Cold War balance of terror
    philosophy
  • Because deterrence is increasingly uncertain, we
    need new tools to strengthen it
  • The NPRs New Triad is intended to provide
    those tools
  • The New Triad would provide a wide spectrum of
    capabilities to better tailor deterrent
    strategies to more diverse threats
  • This includes nuclear and non-nuclear, offensive
    and defensive capabilities
  • The NPR keeps the distinction between nuclear and
    non-nuclear weapons intact
  • It does not revise procedures for nuclear release
    authority
  • It preserves the firewall between nuclear and
    conventional systems
  • The NPR downgrades the role of nuclear weapons in
    U.S. defense strategy
  • It supports reductions in nuclear forces to the
    levels of the Moscow Treaty
  • It advocates improvements in conventional and
    defensive capabilities

14
Some NPR Facts (cont.)
  • The NPR sees nuclear weapons as important for
    deterrence, not warfighting
  • Deterrence rests on having credible capabilities
  • Current nuclear capabilities were designed for a
    different adversary in a different era
  • Existing nuclear capabilities are inappropriate
    to todays threats
  • Hence, their deterrent effect is questionable
  • Modern nuclear capabilities, tailored to todays
    threats, would be a more credible deterrent
  • Lower yield nuclear weapons may be critical to
    deterrence because of their ability to hold
    targets at risk that cannot be defeated with
    current capabilities
  • The NPR does not lower the nuclear threshold or
    make nuclear weapons more useable
  • The decision to use nuclear weapons of any
    yield remains fraught with significant
    consequences
  • The nuclear threshold remains as high as always
  • The NPR seeks to deter nuclear proliferation, not
    accelerate it
  • Nations act in their own self interest
  • U.S. nuclear disarmament may provoke
    proliferation as enemies seek an equal footing
    with the United States and friends seek to
    compensate for loss of the U.S. nuclear
    umbrella
  • Rogue states see benefits in acquiring nuclear
    weapons, regardless of U.S. actions

15
Status of NPR Implementation
  • Policy and Guidance
  • NSPDs, SecDef guidance, etc.
  • Implementation actions
  • Budgets and Programs
  • FY05 and FY06 results, POM process
  • Nuclear drawdown
  • New Triad capabilities
  • Congressional Action
  • Statutory direction
  • Opposition concerns
  • Issues and Impediments
  • Implementation Challenges

16
Conclusion
  • The NPR is not well understood
  • Public commentary, Congressional interest lacking
  • NPR Implementation is in jeopardy
  • Lack of senior-level attention competition for
    scarce resources belief that nuclear weapons
    less relevant to todays challenges
  • Opposition to modernizing our nuclear
    capabilities will leave us with a deterrent that
    is
  • Structured for Cold War threats
  • Insufficient for deterring todays challenges
  • Increasingly seen as not credible
  • Based on bluff

17
Solutions
  • Public Education
  • Speaking, writing, and setting the record
    straight on the NPR
  • Organized Activities, e.g.
  • AIAA Conferences
  • U.S. Nuclear Strategy Forum
  • Commission on the Implementation of the New
    Strategic Posture of the United States
  • Defense Science Board Task Force on Nuclear
    Capabilities
  • Top-Level Leadership
  • Need to overcome bureaucratic and organizational
    impediments to understanding need for U.S.
    nuclear deterrent
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