[Cleaned up some phrasing for clarity on the occasion of Fidel Castro's 90th birthday, August 13, 2016]
The Nuclear Security Summit in Washington is reminds us that President Obama won his Nobel Peace Prize in large part because of his stated intentions concerning nuclear non-proliferation.
The Nuclear Security Summit in Washington is reminds us that President Obama won his Nobel Peace Prize in large part because of his stated intentions concerning nuclear non-proliferation.
The two most recent achievements in US counterproliferation
(Libya) and non-proliferation (Iran) have been tarnished by the destruction of
Libya as a counter-proliferation example for North Korea by the deposition and
murder of a WMD-bereft Muammar Qaddafi; the US inability to follow through on
President Obama’s ambitions to bring Israel into the NPT fold as a
self-acknowledged nuclear weapons power; and by US acquiescence to brutal Saudi
Arabia-led rollback operations against Shia forces in Syria, Yemen, and Bahrain
as compensation for US-Iran rapprochement.
In contrast to most sane Americans, I am not an enthusiast
for the NPT-enforced oligopoly of a few nuclear states. I think it distorts foreign policy,
particularly American foreign policy, which is keyed to the idea of leveraging
the US “nuclear umbrella” to establish the United States as the indispensable
security power everywhere and anywhere.
In Asia and the Middle East, beyond a continual need to
validate its credentials as the biggest bully on the block, the US is trapped
into reacting and overreacting to inhibit adversaries and allies alike from
doing the obvious: acquiring a nice, neat, powerful, and not-too-expensive
nuclear deterrent as an alternative to US dominance of their security regimes.
The United States commentariat is publicly appalled at
Trump’s casual comments about South Korea and Japan going nuclear. Me, not so much. I think everybody would behave better if
their neighbors had nukes. And the
United States would not have so big an incentive to militarize and escalate
local frictions to create a plausible role for Uncle Sam and his magic nuclear
umbrella.
In other words, in a world in which the US continually
maintains and improves its nuclear arsenal while inhibiting the emergence of counterbalancing
deterrence—and at the same time refusing to renounce nuclear first strike—maybe the big
nuclear danger is trying to keep the nukes out instead of letting the nukes in.
Recall the immortal Casey Stengel debunking the canard that
sex before a game was bad for ballplayers:
Being
with a woman all night never hurt no professional baseball player. It's staying
up all night looking for a woman that does him in.
So, what's more destabilizing? Proliferation, or US-led anti-proliferation? Discuss!
The one nuclear proliferation crisis everybody likes to cite to illustrate the benefits of anti-proliferation is Cuba 1962, when America’s Best and Brightest under Jack Kennedy stared down Nikita Khrushchev and his attempt to position strategic nuclear weapons in Cuba.
The one nuclear proliferation crisis everybody likes to cite to illustrate the benefits of anti-proliferation is Cuba 1962, when America’s Best and Brightest under Jack Kennedy stared down Nikita Khrushchev and his attempt to position strategic nuclear weapons in Cuba.
Let's look at it another way: as the time the Soviet Union tried to beat (or at least match) the US at its own global nuclear hegemon strategy and failed miserably (fundamental contradictions need a good deal of experience, skill, strength, and luck to keep papered over, none of which Khrushchev had); a cautionary tale that allies and proxies don't rate quite the same nuclear umbrella as the hegemon's homeland (Japan and South Korea take note); and anitproliferation is expensive, difficult, dangerous, and involves plenty of knock-on consequences (North Korea, of course).
Revisionist history a.k.a. facts have as usual removed some
of the good v. evil gloss slathered on the US by Kennedy hagiographers to reveal the political calculations underlying the confrontation.
It has emerged that Khrushchev was waaaaaaaay
on the wrong end of the notorious missile gap, contrary to Kennedy's claims during the 1960 election, with major shortfalls in
operational ICBMs and no strategic submarine capabilities and, indeed, with only 300 strategic nuclear devices overall compared to 1500 for the US. Soviet strategists were appalled by the
introduction of US Jupiter nuclear-tipped missiles into Turkey and Italy and justifiably
anxious about the prospect of a pre-emptive US strike.
Kennedy understood that standing up to the Soviets over Cuba--antiproliferating--was more a matter of US (and his) credibility and a reflection of US determination over Berlin than an issue of US national security. From the beginning of the crisis, his advisors are unambiguous in their analysis that the missiles in Cuba, when operational, would not effect the strategic balance.
Kennedy understood that standing up to the Soviets over Cuba--antiproliferating--was more a matter of US (and his) credibility and a reflection of US determination over Berlin than an issue of US national security. From the beginning of the crisis, his advisors are unambiguous in their analysis that the missiles in Cuba, when operational, would not effect the strategic balance.
Missiles in Cuba were intended by Khrushchev as a) a
stabilizing strategic riposte to the US missiles in Italy and Turkey and b) a neat way to
succor Cuba and bind it into a Soviet alliance by deterring a widely expected
US “regime change” style invasion.
Recently, the tape recordings of the Oval Office discussions
during the crisis were declassified and, according to Benjamin Schwartz in The Atlantic, yielded this priceless
nugget:
On the first day of
the crisis, October 16, when pondering Khrushchev’s motives for sending
the missiles to Cuba, Kennedy made what must be one of the most staggeringly
absentminded (or sarcastic) observations in the annals of American national-security
policy: “Why does he put these in there, though? … It’s just as if we
suddenly began to put a major
number of MRBMs [medium-range ballistic missiles] in Turkey. Now that’d be goddamned dangerous, I would think.”
McGeorge Bundy, the national security adviser, immediately pointed out: “Well
we did it, Mr. President.”
As for regime change, Soviet expectations were spot on;
after the Bay of Pigs debacle the Pentagon was busy with Operation Mongoose
planning for Castro’s overthrow.
Declassified documents reveal that the US would, as usual, take the high
ground by invading only in response to a Cuban outrage, albeit one manufactured
by the CIA. One scenario, thanks
to an anonymous writer with a strong historical understanding of what had
worked in US-Cuban relations:
a. We could blow up a U.S. ship in Guantanamo
Bay and blame Cuba.
The most interesting element of denuclearizing Cuba is that the United States didn’t think that the Soviet Union had any operational nuclear weapons capability in Cuba when it decided to go public and issue the ultimatum to Khrushchev.
In a piece I wrote about dead horses in Soviet Ukraine (one
of my favorite pieces about a pivotal event in Ukrainian history—must
read!) I remarked in passing on the assertion by Victor Marchetti, a CIA
whistleblower perhaps little remembered today, but a big deal in the last
century:
Marchetti,
by the way, claims to have been intimately involved in the intelligence aspects
of the Cuban crisis. He alleges that
President Kennedy was well aware that the missiles in Cuba were still lacking
their warheads and therefore posed no threat to the United States. Nevertheless, Kennedy and his hagiographers,
perhaps in order to provide America’s youth with sufficient pretext for a
frantic pre-apocalypse f*ckfest, have skated over this aspect of the crisis.
[We
didn’t] come as close to war as many think, because Khruschev knew he was
caught. His missiles weren't armed, and he hadn't the troops to protect them.
Kennedy knew this, so he was able to say: "take them out." And
Khruschev had to say yes.
Ah,
history. Or, as we say, “Whaddya know?”
Well, at the time Marchetti wrote that in 2001, the USSR had
met its demise, rehashing the Cuban Missile Crisis had become a cottage
industry and occasion for mutual backpatting by Russian and US national
security types who had saved the world, at least certain paleskinned bits of
the Northern Hemisphere, from destruction…
…and it was pretty categorically stated that Cuba was loaded
to the gunwales with nuclear weapons in October 1962, when the crisis started...
...and Marchetti was defending his initial, less alarmist assessments and dismissing the subsequent revelations as nefarious tag-team U.S.-Russian Federation disinfo...
...so post-1989 revelations do have to be parsed carefully since the Cuban missile crisis is apparently still a useful text for geopolitical jockeying between Russia and the United States...
...but emerging documents and memoirs pretty convincingly support the latter assessments.
Anyway.
162 gadgets is the number bandied about, a mixture of
strategic warheads for the medium and intermediate range missiles targeting the
US, and 92 tactical nuclear devices, especially cruise and short range missiles but also
including a pair of nuclear mines. As we shall see, Marchetti was right about the strategic warheads that could target the U.S. not being ready for prime time, but the tactical nukes were apparently good to go...
And as for Khrushchev “not having the troops”, there were allegedly forty
thousand Soviet troops in Cuba, not the few thousand estimated by Marchetti and the CIA, infiltrated
together with shiploads of military equipment under the noses of the CIA and
including infantry, anti-aircraft, and other defensive units to protect the
core strategic nuclear force.
Soviet
forces were commanded by
officers whose concept of operational routine was the Great Patriotic War
against Nazi Germany, had control over those tactical nuclear weapons, and had authority to use them
if the U.S. invaded and communications with Moscow were severed. Plenty of material, in other words, to turn
Cuba into a major battlefield, starting with the U.S. base at Guantanamo as a
focus of Soviet attentions.
Here’s a photo of the general in charge of Soviet forces in
Cuba, Issa Pliyev, wearing the “volunteer” civilian garb he
detested, standing with Castro, who is wearing the rarely-seen clunky glasses that, apparently, he detested)…
…and here's General Pliyev in his full military fig as veteran of Stalingrad, two
time Hero of the Soviet Union, seven time Order of Lenin, Hero of the Mongolian People’s Republic, Member,
French Legion of Honor, etc. etc.
However, Marchetti
is correct in terms of describing US perceptions at the time of the crisis, and as for the readiness of the strategic nuclear force i.e. the ability to launch a nuclear attack on the U.S. mainland from Cuba, apparently spot on.
The part about the strategic missiles not being operational was something of a lucky guess.
The part about the strategic missiles not being operational was something of a lucky guess.
According to the record, even after a U2 flight yielded
unambiguous photographic evidence that, indeed, the Soviets had established
intermediate and medium-range missile launch facilities in Cuba (built under a
crash program involving the labor of hundreds of thousands of Cubans), the CIA
didn’t know for sure that the warheads had arrived in Cuba.
Indeed, the photos reveal something that looks more like construction sites than comfy bases of mass destruction (the Soviets apparently
cloned their homeland missile facilities in Cuba, making photo analysis of the
nature and progress of the projects a bit easier), supporting the inference
that the warheads were not yet on site and integrated with the missiles. The CIA
conclusion appears to have been that the warheads weren’t in Cuba and if they
were, they were off in some warehouse somewhere and the missiles were
unarmed. It turns out the CIA was if not completely right,
it was not completely wrong; the warheads for the strategic missiles, it
transpires, were in Cuba but had not been deployed to the launch sites yet.
Another indication that the strategic missiles were not
operational in October 1962 is that Khrushchev was not yet prepared to formally
announce their existence.
Apparently, Khrushchev planned to announce the existence of
the missiles during a visit to the United States in November 1962, bringing to
mind this exchange from Kubrick’s 1964 film, Dr. Strangelove:
Dr.
Strangelove: Of course, the whole point of a Doomsday Machine is lost, if
you keep it a secret! Why didn't you tell the world, EH?
---Ambassador
de Sadesky: It was to be announced at the Party Congress on Monday. As
you know, the Premier loves surprises.
As for the tactical nuclear weapons, McNamara states that his
knees wobbled when he was told about them at a thirtieth anniversary
get-together in 1992 between the US, Russia, and Cuba. However, it's more accurate to state that he had been informed of the possible presence of tactical nukes on Cuba at the time of the crisis, but had simply refused to believe it.
According to the Kennedy tapes, by October 29, 1962 it was known thanks to low altitude surveillance that there were nuclear capable Soviet tactical missiles on Cuba, and US military commanders were asking for permission to use tactical nuclear weapons in the planned invasion: McNamara himself refused. I'm guessing McNamara chose to assume (erroneously) the missiles were not nuclear tipped and this was the version presented to Kennedy.
Therefore, President Kennedy had the certain luxury of
gaming his Cuba scenarios on the assumption that Cuba didn't have any usable nukes yet, the nuclear confrontation would play
out only within the parameters of a potential direct nuclear exchange between the US
and Russian homelands, and Khrushchev probably wouldn't escalate to global nuclear war if the U.S. dropped the hammer on Cuba.
The consensus opinion
in Washington in October 1962—buttressed by the reports cited by
Marchetti that the warheads had probably not arrived and there weren’t a lot of Soviet
troops on the island--was to launch massive airstrikes followed by invasion to
take out the missiles (and also, though it’s not much discussed in the official
hagiography, deal with that pesky Castro problem once and for all in
a geostrategic twofer). However, according
to McNamara, Kennedy was swayed to go for the quarantine --> ultimatum --> airstrikes + invasion to follow option instead by the general in charge of U.S.
Tactical Air Command, who cautioned that maybe a nuclear-armed missile might
survive the massive U.S. strike to hit the United States.
In other words, the group opinion was 99% sure everything
would go great, but Kennedy wanted 100%.
If the group opinion had prevailed and the US had invaded
Cuba and been surprised by 40,000 nuclear-armed Soviet troops, things would
have gone south in a hurry (together with McNamara's knees and career). Which is why
expert opinion has started to tilt away from “masterful statesmanship” toward
the “lucky accident” interpretation of the crisis.
As it transpired, the
most immediate nuclear risk during the crisis didn’t even involve the weapons
on Cuba. It was created by the US Navy enthusiastically
depth charging a Soviet sub nearing Cuba that was armed with a nuclear
torpedo. Unaware that the USN was
dropping undercharged “we want you to surface and identify yourself” ashcans
and not “we want to sink you” depth bombs and worried that his vessel was about
to be destroyed, the Soviet captain decided to dish out his 10-kiloton nuclear
torpedo and go down in a blaze of glory.
Fortunately, the launch was vetoed by his flotilla commander, who
happened to be on the boat. The sub,
happily, survived, as did significant swaths of the Soviet Union and US.
Khrushchev eventually obliged Kennedy, climbing down in a
nice superpower-to-superpower way, receiving in return a pledge that the United
States would not invade Cuba (a pledge honored somewhat in the breach) and a sub
voce US undertaking to remove soon-to-be-obsolete Jupiter missiles from Turkey
and maybe Italy (which were subsequently replaced by invulnerable sub-based Polaris missiles).
And that, of course, did not oblige Fidel Castro, who
regards Khrushchev as an ass and a wimp.
An ass, because instead of declaring to Kennedy that the
missiles were a deterrent and an sovereign Soviet security interest covered by
the USSR’s nuclear force when a U2 flight detected initial signs of missile
facility construction in August 1962, Khrushchev fudged and called them
defensive (with the apparent mental reservation that “defensive” meant “offensive
weapons that defend Cuba by virtue of their deterrent function”). This put the Soviet foreign policy
establishment on the wrong foot in vigorously and credibly defending the
initiative when it turned out in October that there were four dozen
strategic missiles in the package capable of reaching most of the continental United States.
And wimp, because Khrushchev backed down in October 1962 and
threw Cuba under the bus. Cuba under
Castro had irrevocably burned its bridges to the United States by hosting the
missiles, and was ready to do that socialist shoulder-to-shoulder thing and
risk US annihilation in an attack if the USSR was ready to take out the United
States in retaliation. But not to
be. Khrushchev caved to the US and removed
all the nukes, not just the strategic weapons he had promised Kennedy to
remove, but also the tactical nuclear weapons he had promised Castro in the
initial agreement would eventually be delivered to Cuban control—and Washington
didn’t even know about.*
So instead of getting a powerful, nuke-based alliance with
the USSR that would give Castro bargaining leverage against US security and
economic coercion—and maybe diplomatic recognition, who knows? The US
had extended the courtesy to a number of Soviet proxies with considerably less
national legitimacy than Cuba-- Cuba was
left as a lonely piñata twisting in the wind while the US took whacks at it for
over 50 years. President Obama marked
the continuation, rather than conclusion, of the effort by going to Cuba for a
triumphal visit that was interpreted, especially in the United States, as
receiving the Castros’ surrender to the forces of US democracy and capitalism,
notwithstanding Raul Castro’s effort to literally spin Obama’s flaccid wrist
into a display of equality and popular solidarity.
Here's how those socialist photops are supposed to look, by the way.
For the Soviet Union, a dismal botch that helped cost Khrushchev his job and, coming on the heels of the China debacle, pretty much put paid to Soviet overseas nuclear junketeering.
While the Soviet Union was out of the proliferation game, the US went all in on nukes as a geostrategic asset, not only maintaining its nuclear edge through technological improvements and integrating nuclear weapons into its security architecture in Asia as well as Europe, but also by antiproliferating, by seeking to deny new aspirants, allies as well as adversaries, entry to the club through suasion, sanctions, and even war.
In an interesting way, the US is now somewhat recapitulating the Soviet endgame in Cuba, with elements in Japan and the Republic of Korea becoming more vocal about their desire to control their own nuclear destinies rather than rely on the United States, thereby challenging the US nuclear weapons monopoly and the Asian security architecture which it underpins.
The forces advocating for nuclear proliferation are many; the US, while not standing alone as an anti-proliferater, is perhaps alone in its depth of conviction, interest, and determination. This creates challenges for President Obama as he tries to universalize the internationalized NPT legal regime and wean the United States from unilateral anti-proliferation and its occasional resort to violations of sovereignty to achieve its objectives.**
What about Cuba? What would have happened if the USSR, instead of putting its own nukes on Cuba, had just given Cuba some nukes? Or, in a strikingly plausible scenario, let Castro keep the tactical nukes after the Soviets withdrew? How would US relations with Cuba and the rest of Latin America evolved?
Looking at the cavalcade of instability in places like Chile,
Argentina, Colombia, Honduras, and Guatemala engendered by the successful US
rollback of socialism after Khrushchev bugged out, Latin America would certainly
have been different if Cuba had nukes…and maybe not worse off.
But that’s a possibility the US, for obvious
reasons, has no interest in exploring.
*The report that
Khrushchev had decided to let Castro keep the nukes post-crisis, but
his envoy, Deputy Prime Minister Anastas Mikoyan, evaluated that Castro (admittedly at that time 32 years old, emotionally vigorous, and under tremendous stress) was too headstrong & irrational, &
decided on his own initiative to negotiate their withdrawal is, by the
way, false. Mikoyan determined that Khrushchev's serial mismanagement of the crisis had alienated Castro to the degree that effective co-management of the weapons was impossible. Castro, in desperation, was prepared to inform the world through the UN that, despite the Soviet withdrawal, Cuba still had the nukes and an effective deterrent against US invasion. The decision to notify Castro the tactical weapons were being pulled
from Cuba was made in consultation with the Soviet Party Presidium.
**There was no basis under international law for the unilateral US blockade of Cuba in 1962. The legal recourse for the US would have been to obtain a 2/3 vote from the Organization of American States authorizing a blockade against a member state, something that the US wasn't willing to wait for. The legal end-around was to call it a "quarantine".
**There was no basis under international law for the unilateral US blockade of Cuba in 1962. The legal recourse for the US would have been to obtain a 2/3 vote from the Organization of American States authorizing a blockade against a member state, something that the US wasn't willing to wait for. The legal end-around was to call it a "quarantine".
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