SVG
Commentary

NATO, "Nuclear Sharing," and the "INF Analogy"

New Paradigms Forum

Senior Director for WMD and Counterproliferation, National Security Council

My participation in the most recent NATO Nuclear Policy Symposium, held in mid-March in Tirana, Albania, brought home to me the degree to which longstanding policies of NATO "nuclear sharing" have become controversial within the Atlantic Alliance. My remarks to the symposium, reprinted here on NPF on March 24, 2011, were intended to frame the scope of its discussion by offering thoughts on the future of nuclear deterrence in the 21st Century, rather than to present my own views on "nuclear sharing." Because the Alliance is now studying what its nuclear policy should be within the general framework set by the Lisbon Summit Declaration of November 2011, however – an examination being undertaken under terms of reference approved within the past few weeks – I thought I'd offer my own more specific thoughts here.

For readers unfamiliar with NATO's "nuclear sharing" policy, it refers to arrangements by which the United States today forward-deploys a relatively small number of nuclear gravity bombs at certain locations in Europe, keeping them carefully in American custody, on the understanding that these weapons may be made available for delivery by non-American NATO assets in time of war. The original idea of this approach, as I understand it, was twofold.

First and most obviously, it aimed to deter Soviet aggression in Central Europe, providing for the possibility of a nuclear response, in practice, at the hands of the very Allies who faced this invasion most directly. This was felt advantageous from a deterrence perspective by undercutting the traditional critique of "extended deterrence" which worried that it might not seem credible for Washington to endanger U.S. cities in order to forestall harm to those of its European friends. Making it clear that NATO allies actually in the line of the Warsaw Pact's advance might – in the event of World War Three, though carefully and emphatically not until such point – end up with their hands on nuclear weapons was felt to add to the ability of our Alliance to deter Soviet adventurism.

Second, and less explicitly, "nuclear sharing" was also a nonproliferation tool – designed to lessen perceived incentives, and remove excuses, for certain NATO allies such as Germany to consider developing nuclear weapons on their own. It was a way to tell hem, and for them to feel, that they would be able to use nuclear weapons if their existence were threatened, but without actually allowing them have nuclear weapons. This distinction survived into the era of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty – Article I of which prohibits a nuclear weapons state from transferring possession or control of nuclear devices – because no such transfer ever actually occurred: the weapons were kept under American lock and key, and were expected to remain so in all but the most extreme circumstances. (Not unlike other aspects of nuclear deterrence, the idea seems to have been to be prepared for a crisis in part in order never to have to execute any such plans. It seems to have been understood that if Soviet tanks were rolling through the Fulda Gap and the very existence of the relevant NATO allies hung in the balance – the only sort of worst-case scenario in which it would ever be imaginable actually to execute such "sharing" arrangements – the exigencies of the moment would outweigh Article I scruples.)

In today's post-Cold War era, the assets available for "nuclear sharing" have dwindled to a fairly small number of non-strategic nuclear weapons (NSNW) deployed in Europe, suitable for delivery on "dual-capable" aircraft (DCAs) maintained by certain NATO allies. The continuation of this U.S. deployment and its associated "nuclear sharing" policy, however, is controversial. Some NATO allies – principally those in the East, who formerly lived under Soviet domination as members of the Warsaw Pact, and who still feel a residual threat from Russian bullying – wish to keep the nuclear status quo very much in place. Others, principally in the more westerly parts of Europe, feel NATO's nuclear policy to be obsolete and in some sense philosophically offensive, a needless Cold War relic that affronts global aspirations for nuclear disarmament, causes needless intra-Alliance friction, and deters nothing anyway.

I. The Context

It is common to hear NATO described as being, in part, "a nuclear alliance." U.S. Secretary of State Clinton declared at the informal meeting of NATO ministers in Talinn in April 2010, for example, that "as long as nuclear weapons exist, NATO will remain a nuclear alliance." When I first came across such phrasing – and it's worth noting that NATO has repeated this wording for some time – I worried that the words might be an evasion, especially when shorn of more specific details, as has indeed become customary in high-level pronouncements. As a matter of grammar and syntax, it seemed to me, such comments could conceivably have meant no more than that NATO is a "nuclear alliance" because some NATO members are nuclear weapons states likely to remain armed with nuclear weapons unless and until complete nuclear disarmament is achieved. This phrasing is clearly understood within NATO, however, to mean that the Alliance is a "nuclear alliance" not merely in that it is an alliance some of whose members happen to be nuclear weapons possessors, but instead in the fuller sense that it is "nuclear" as an alliance. The phrasing, in other words, is precisely a reference to some kind of "nuclear sharing."

The Obama Administration has professed itself not opposed to some reductions in U.S. NSNW deployments in Europe. It apparently does not, however, think it wise to remove all such weapons, at least without some kind of an arrangement with Russia – which possesses far more of such "tactical" weapons than does the United States. The U.S. 2010 Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) has referred favorably to American NSNW "deployed forward in key regions," noting that such devices have long helped safeguard "U.S. allies and partners against nuclear attacks or nuclear-backed coercion by states in their region that possess or are seeking nuclear weapons." A NATO "Expert Group" report in May 2010 agreed, recommending that "the Alliance … retain a nuclear component to its deterrent strategy," including – "under current security conditions" – "the retention of some U.S. forward-deployed systems on European soil." These deployments, it declared, "reinforce the principle of extended nuclear deterrence and collective defence."

As noted, however, some NATO partners clearly want us to continue our European deployments, while others would like to end them, making this issue one on which Alliance members are troublingly divided against each other. The declaration issued by the NATO Summit last year in Lisbon to some extent sidestepped the issue. In order "to bolster deterrence as a core element of our collective defence and contribute to the indivisible security of the Alliance," it opined, NATO plans to "maintain an appropriate mix of conventional, nuclear, and missile defence forces." Lisbon thus seems to have reaffirmed at least that the alliance remains "nuclear" as an alliance, but on just what the "appropriate mix" of such capabilities is, however, members were apparently unable then to agree. Lisbon sidestepped the direct issue of whether any U.S. nuclear weapons should remain deployed in Europe. Some allies clearly wish them to be withdrawn, leaving whatever NSNW "nuclear sharing" understandings that remain dependent entirely upon weapons based elsewhere.

To an outsider like me, it is striking how contentious this question has become. No such uncertainty was evident in NATO's previous "Strategic Concept" in 1999. Then, the Alliance made clear that "[t]he presence of United States … nuclear forces in Europe remains vital to the security of Europe, which is inseparably linked to that of North America." To wit,

"A credible Alliance nuclear posture and the demonstration of Alliance solidarity and common commitment to war prevention continue to require widespread participation by European Allies involved in collective defence planning in nuclear roles, in peacetime basing of nuclear forces on their territory and in command, control and consultation arrangements. Nuclear forces based in Europe and committed to NATO provide an essential political and military link between the European and the North American members of the Alliance. The Alliance will therefore maintain adequate nuclear forces in Europe. These forces need to have the necessary characteristics and appropriate flexibility and survivability, to be perceived as a credible and effective element of the Allies' strategy in preventing war."

For this reason, it was then declared, NATO would "maintain, at the minimum level consistent with the prevailing security environment, adequate sub-strategic forces based in Europe which will provide an essential link with strategic nuclear forces, reinforcing the transatlantic link."

Since 1999, opposition by some governments within NATO to Europe-deployed American NSNW has clearly grown – which, in the nature of such diplomatic matters, has resulted in official pronouncements becoming more vague in order to avoid having members publicly disagree. The Bucharest Summit Declaration of April 2008, for instance, spoke frequently of "nuclear" issues, but only in the context of how well Alliance members had been doing in reducing their nuclear arsenals, and in connection with the threats presented by nuclear weapons proliferation. It did not mention NSNW. The "Declaration on Alliance Security" issued after the NATO summit in Strasbourg/Kehl in 1999 noted the issue, but only in order to sidestep it with vague and essentially noncommittal "appropriate mix" language that – as we have seen – was later emulated in Lisbon.

II. Framing the Issue

When it comes to the status quo of forward deployments and "nuclear sharing," I tend to be of the "it ain't broke, so don't worry so much about fixing it" school. But since the issue of whether to "fix" things is very much in play right now within the Alliance, let me offer, as it were, some thoughts on how I believe we should think about it.

A. Military Versus Political Utility

To begin with, I think it must be admitted that U.S. non-strategic nuclear weapons as presently deployed in Europe probably have relatively little utility in a purely military sense, and certainly not much by comparison to their anticipated wartime role in years past. According to press accounts, our current deployment consists only of B-61 gravity bombs for delivery by "dual-capable" aircraft (DCAs) in the possession of NATO allies – aircraft, moreover, that are reportedly now kept on a notably leisurely readiness timetable, for nuclear missions, of "months." (It was apparently "minutes" during the Cold War, and "weeks" from about 1995 until 2002.)

In an era when NATO no longer faces the threat of a massive invasion in overwhelming numbers, such assets probably add little to NATO's military capabilities when operating from their present bases. I'm not willing to say they add nothing, however. I think it must be admitted, for example, that DCAs are pretty flexible instruments, capable of a range of visible postures and thus peculiarly useful for strategic "signaling" in a nuclear crisis.

Nor is it true – as I've sometimes heard it said in disarmament circles – that NATO's DCAs "can't hit any potentially relevant nuclear target" from their present European bases. Earlier this month, RAF Tornado tactical bombers used conventional weapons to strike targets in Libya on an eight-hour round trip from their base at RAF Marham in East Anglia, in the United Kingdom. As I figure it, that's a flight of some 1,700 miles each way – making clear that with in-air refueling, such aircraft have very long "legs" indeed. NATO officials generally refuse to refer to Russia as a potential DCA target, but since Russian threats remain very much in the mind of our NATO allies in Eastern Europe, it's useful to remember that the distance between London and Moscow is only a bit over 1,500 miles. Without getting into the precise locations from which nuclear-armed DCAs might be flying, I think it's safe to say that Russia, at least, remains within their reach. (For that matter, some NATO locations could even put the Persian Gulf within reach.) Thoughtful people disagree over whether there is any need for Europe-based NSNW at all, but the current DCAs' potential range isn't really the issue.

Even if one disputes their specifically military utility, moreover, this is far from saying that DCA-borne NSNW are unimportant to NATO. Indeed, especially in the wake of the dramatic U.S. NSNW drawdown of 1991, it is generally recognized that the most important function of our weapons in Europe is political. To some extent, and particularly for some governments, these U.S. deployments have become part of the coinage of trans-Atlantic solidarity – a graphic illustration, in symbolically evocative and historically freighted colors, of Washington's continuing commitment to stand by its NATO allies even if the very worst sort of crises should come to pass.

This was made quite clear in 1999 Strategic Concept, for example, which declared that "[t]he fundamental purpose of the nuclear forces of the Allies is political: to preserve peace and prevent coercion and any kind of war." These devices, it was said, helped form an "essential political and military link between the European and the North American members of the Alliance." The U.S. deployment, in other words, underlined the point made above: that NATO was a nuclear alliance not merely in the sense that some of its members just happened to have nuclear weapons, but also in the sense that the Alliance itself approaches nuclear weapons issues and nuclear deterrence as an Alliance.

The political symbolism of the deployments seems to have been important in the eyes of NATO members who have joined since the Cold War in successive rounds of enlargement beginning the very year in which this nuclear dynamic was thus spelled out in the 1999 Strategic Concept. The politico-symbolic role of the U.S. deployments was therefore part of what those new members, and everyone else, understood the Alliance to be at the point of their accession. It still seems to mean a great deal to many of them.

I don't mean to suggest that continued NSNW deployments are essential to the survival of the Atlantic alliance, for there is, of course, far more to NATO than that. Indeed, most of the most interesting and important things our governments have been doing together as allies in recent years have had nothing to do with nuclear weaponry at all. (NATO is presently engaged, by the way, in two entirely non-nuclear wars: an ongoing one in Afghanistan and a new one in Libya.) But Alliance solidarity is the foundation upon which all of our collective endeavors rest, and we should be careful to keep this foundation as solid as possible.

If we were establishing NATO from scratch today, there might be little or no need to make nuclear weapons part of the equation. But we aren't starting from scratch. Trans-Atlantic nuclear deployments are by no means the only – or even the best – way to bolster Alliance solidarity, but they are part of how NATO has indeed done this for many years. This creates challenges as we struggle with the nuclear issue, because of the potential impact NSNW elimination could have if an adequate substitute is not found for whatever such political and symbolic function such weapons still fulfill.

The scholar Elaine Bunn has cleverly illustrated this problem with a comparison that some NPF readers have probably heard before: the wedding ring. Nothing, after all, requires a married couple to wear wedding rings to symbolize their commitment and make their devotion clear to each other and to third parties. There may be very solid relationships that do not involve that particular type of statement. If you happen to be in a good relationship that has involved wearing a wedding ring for many years, however, you need to be quite cautious about suddenly taking it off, lest your partner (or third parties) draw pernicious conclusions. In this analogy, of course, America's NSNW deployment is that ring: not necessarily inherently indispensible, but something the disappearance of which should not be taken lightly or done hastily and without proper preparation, if at all.

It must also be said, in this connection, that defense spending decisions by most NATO governments in recent years may have tended to make the specifically nuclear aspects of the Alliance seem especially important. The few American NSNW remaining in Europe might seem a smaller thing, in politico-symbolic terms, if NATO members maintained strong military establishments and demonstrated their commitment to the alliance by "voting with their pocketbook" in favor of robust defense spending. NATO governments, however, have been sending just the opposite sorts of signal in recent years, with most members unwilling to meet the defense spending targets upon which they themselves have agreed. (NATO recommends a figure of at least two percent of gross domestic product, but very few members bother to comply. Even before the recent global financial crisis, only six of 26 members met the two percent target, with Belgium, Hungary, and Luxembourg coming in at merely 1.1, 1.1, and 0.7 percent, respectively, as of 2007.) European governments' disinterest in non-nuclear defense risks making the nuclear part of the alliance relationship feel, by default, more important than ever.

B. Whither Russia?

A second point of caution obviously relates to Russia – which I did not accidentally make one focus of my aerial range calculations above. NATO's NSNW debate is clearly complicated by Russia's own "tactical" nuclear posture – which has, sad to say, not changed that much since the Cold War. Today, the Russians still retain thousands of non-strategic weapons, a stockpile dwarfing the U.S. deployments that have become so controversial inside NATO. To put it crudely, a great many Russian NSNW can reach NATO territory, while precious few, if any, American ones are in any position to return the favor.

Unfortunately, while NATO-Russian relations are today thankfully nothing like the tense rivalry that existed during the Cold War, planners in Moscow still sometimes seem to go out of their way to rattle the sub-strategic nuclear sabre in dealing with NATO. President Dmitri Medvedev, for instance, announced in late 2008 that he would be deploying ambiguously nuclear-capable SS-26 Iskander short-range ballistic missiles to the Baltic enclave of Kaliningrad in order to pressure the United States and NATO over planned missile defense deployments in Eastern Europe. A year later, a Russian military exercise reportedly included practice in actually attacking Poland with non-strategic nuclear weapons. Not surprisingly, NATO officials are said to believe that Russia remains ready to use nuclear weapons in a range of low-level or other conflicts, while some Eastern European NATO members feel distinctly uneasy.

The enormous disparity between U.S. and Russian NSNW holdings – and Putin-era Russia's penchant for nuclear muscle-flexing and regional bullying – have made the NSNW issue particularly troublesome. Nor is this just a challenge for NATO's NSNW debates.

It is hard, in fact, to imagine there being much future for U.S.-Russian strategic arms control unless the NSNW imbalance is somehow also addressed, particularly because strategic reductions are making shorter-range systems an ever greater proportion of the powers' overall arsenals. The Obama Administration's 2010 Nuclear Posture Review, for example, urges Russia "to allay concerns in the West about its non-strategic nuclear arsenal, such as [by] further consolidating its non-strategic systems in a small number of secure facilities deep within Russia." "Non-strategic nuclear weapons," we are told "… should be included in any future reduction arrangements between the United States and Russia." Pentagon officials have described our forward-deployed NSNW as being closely tied to Russia's non-strategic holdings, and serious movement on NSNW is widely seen as a potential sine qua non for U.S. Senate ratification of any future strategic agreement with Russia. The Senate's resolution of ratification for the "New START" agreement called for negotiations with Russia on verifiably addressing the disparity between Moscow's tactical stockpile and our own.

The U.S.-Russian imbalance also creates challenges for NATO's struggle with non-strategic weapons, insofar as it raises questions about the role that America's European deployments can or should play in helping the Alliance address the issue of Russian NSNW. Before leaving the U.S. Government, I spoke frequently with foreign diplomatic counterparts about NSNW, and was struck by the degree to which even representatives of NATO governments committed to ending our deployments freely admitted, though only privately, that they didn't particularly care about our weapons. As some of them put it to me, they just publicly harped on our weapons in order to seem "even-handed" while working more privately for what they claimed really to desire: Russian reductions. (Being flamboyantly against American nuclear weapons was apparently supposed to give them "street cred" in dealing with the Russian question.) This seems to have been counterproductive, however, because the emergence of such seemingly anti-American positions within NATO has encouraged the Kremlin to insist that U.S. weapons be removed from Europe before serious talks about Russian weapons can begin. As I'll discuss below, the odds of movement on Russian NSNW might actually improve if NATO were seen more clearly to embrace American deployments. For now, however, I'll just highlight the deep entanglement of Russian and NATO NSNW issues: they seem neither analytically nor politically separable.

We should not forget, moreover, that from Russia's perspective, the NSNW question is not simply a bilateral issue with NATO. Russian officials sometimes claim to fear NATO "encirclement," and are reputed to worry that their still somewhat dysfunctional conventional forces cannot handle a conflict with such sophisticated powers; this is said to increase their reliance upon the potential early use of "tactical" nuclear weaponry. I think I am not alone, however, in suspecting that Russia's main fear in this regard is China – a country with a long border and an equally long history of troubled relations with Russia, a country with a vastly larger population and more vibrant economy than Russia, and a country that has been making notable strides in modernizing its huge military.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has claimed to be confident that Russia has nothing to fear from China, but Russian officials are said privately to be very concerned about the future in this regard. My guess is that the issue of Russian NSNW is probably much more entangled with Sino-Russian military, economic, and demographic imbalances than it is with NATO deployments. This will constrain what we can expect from any future American NSNW negotiations with Russia, at least one conducted the basis of nuclear weapons arithmetic alone.

C. The DCA Driver

As far as I know, there is no urgent technical driver for decision-making with respect to the deployment of U.S. weapons in Europe per se. The B-61 bomb has been repeatedly refurbished, and the United States is reportedly now working to give it a "full scope life extension … including enhancing safety, security, and use control" enhancements apparently not unlike those once contemplated for the "reliable replacement warhead." In the absence of NATO agreement to terminate "nuclear sharing" policies, therefore, U.S. weapons would presumably be able to rest in their European bunkers for quite a while.

The more interesting question probably relates to the state of the non-American Allies' fleet of nuclear-certified "dual-capable" aircraft (DCAs) suitable for use in either conventional or nuclear strike roles. As noted, the nuclear weapons capabilities of the Alliance – as an alliance – presently rely entirely upon bombs deployable on various Allied dual-capable tactical aircraft such as the F-16C/D, F-15E, and Tornado. These airframes, however, are ageing; it is an open question how long they will remain in service, and whether their successors will be DCA certified.

According to a 2008 report prepared for SIPRI, NATO's current generation of DCAs are getting long in the tooth, and "life extension programmes can only do so much to postpone the moment when an expensive modernization will have to be undertaken." As a result, doubts have been raised about whether European air forces will be choose or be able to maintain DCA capabilities over the longer term. A number of European governments may replace existing aircraft with variants of the F-35 – which will itself have a DCA variant in U.S. service – but how many of these aircraft end up being dual-capable is, to my knowledge, not yet known.

To be sure, it may not mean too much to be DCA certified these days. In theory, in this era of highly-sensitive modern avionics, computer systems, and fly-by-wire flight controls, aircraft allocated for potential nuclear missions should be given special radiation "hardening," to make their electronics more resistant to the electromagnetic pulse and other radiant energies associated with a nuclear explosion. (Otherwise, dropping a nuclear weapon on someone might become a suicide mission.) In my understanding, however, NATO militaries these days don't usually bother much, if at all, with "rad hardening." (Nor even do U.S. forces, except for strategic bombing missions.) In an equipment sense, it is my understanding that being a DCA now means little more than having a special "black box" installed to handle the sensitive process of arming the nuclear weapon in flight. Some bureaucratic or perhaps political problems have reportedly arisen over the idea of DCA-certifying the modern Eurofighter "Typhoon" aircraft, with some European governments being reluctant to give U.S. specialists access to its avionics for this purpose. For the most part, however, making a tactical bomber into a DCA probably isn't terribly difficult or expensive.

(Delivering nuclear weapons can also involve different aerial tactics than simply dropping conventional high explosives, including special procedures in the event of an airborne malfunction. This means that DCA-certified pilots really should have some special training, such as through the use of flight simulators with some sort of nuclear-specific software module. This does not sound to me like a terrible burden, however.)

Given how difficult it apparently isn't to maintain DCA capability, it is ironic that there remain so many questions about NATO Allies' willingness or ability to do so. Nevertheless, some observers fear that the "DCA issue" – that is, the threat of capability decay through aircraft succession – will at some point bring NATO's NSNW debates to a head, and not necessarily in constructive ways.

I myself find the DCA issue worrisome because national procurement decisions on dual-capable aircraft may tend to force the Alliance into some kind of de facto collective decision on "nuclear sharing" without the kind of inter-Allied consultations and agreement that officials have hitherto emphasized is critical to alliance cohesion in struggling with the NSNW question. Backing into such an important decision without properly considering it – or perhaps even without actually admitting that a decision is being made at all – would represent a serious collective failure of NATO leadership. I'll come back to this shortly.

III. Some Suggestions

So what should we do in light of all these complications? Here are some thoughts, for whatever they are worth.

A. Don't Destabilize

First, before making more positive suggestions, let me first speak against a notion that seems to have too much currency in Washington right now. I do not believe it wise, as the Obama Administration's Nuclear Posture Review seems to suggest, for us to place any serious reliance upon a policy of rush-deploying nuclear weapons on DCAs from the United States to Europe in the event of crisis.

The NPR emphasized that we have "a small number of nuclear weapons stored in the United States for possible overseas deployment in support of extended deterrence to allies and partners worldwide," and that this force of "U.S.-based nuclear weapons … could be deployed forward quickly to meet regional contingencies." According to the Review, we plan to "[r]etain the capability to forward-deploy U.S. nuclear weapons on tactical fighter-bombers and heavy bombers … [and thus] the capability to forward-deploy non-strategic nuclear weapons in support of its Alliance commitments."

I have no problem with having such a capability, for it offers U.S. strategists a potentially helpful degree of flexibility, including the ability to use such moves as a "signaling" tool in extreme circumstances. Such moves should, however, be kept as optional as possible. It would be quite unwise to depend upon forward re-deployment for "baseline" nuclear deterrence, or in order to promote Alliance cohesion in a crisis.

I would think it, in fact, to be a recipe for crisis-management disaster to put ourselves in a position in which our posture is felt to require us to take steps, early in a crisis, that would be highly visible and provocative to a potential adversary. Rushing to Europe flights of dual-capable aircraft slung with B-61 gravity bombs strikes me as being just such a step. In certain circumstances, we might wish to have the option of doing this as a sort of deliberate risk-manipulation, but precisely because of their potential to heighten tensions, it is foolish to make our basic strategy depend upon such moves.

Such an "early forward deployment" policy is in some sense the worst possible approach to NSNW. Its near-requirement of provocative moves early in a crisis might be insufficiently credible to deter adversaries or reassure allies ahead of time, because its very provocativeness seems to "stack the political deck" against deployment even in a crisis. (Could our friends really count upon us making such an inflammatory decision?) At the same time, such moves could be very destabilizing if indeed actually undertaken. If nuclear deterrence or alliance solidarity really needs there to be U.S. weapons in Europe, we should keep some such devices – and DCA delivery assets – in Europe rather than relying upon some assumption of forward deployment in a crisis.

And there may be another reason to fault the Obama Administration's position in this regard, for I am not confident that we actually have dual-capable tactical aircraft in the United States that even could be rush-deployed forward in the ways suggested by the 2010 NPR. Careful readers will perhaps have noted that the NPR says that the United States has a number of weapons that could be so deployed in a crisis. It does not actually assert that we have any DCAs in the United States capable of carrying them. To my knowledge, the only American DCAs not devoted to strategic missions (as, for example, are B-2 bombers) are already based in Europe, which means that we could only fly U.S.-based NSNW forward if we had already first pulled our own DCAs back from Europe. If this is true – and I invite feedback from NPF readers who might be better informed about this than I am – the Obama Administration's account of U.S. rush-deployment capabilities is basically fraudulent, as well as being game-theoretically foolish. The casuistry of such purported reassurances is not likely to engender confidence among NATO members who prize their positions under the American "nuclear umbrella," and might ironically have the effect of making it more problematic than ever to consider withdrawing U.S. weapons from their current European locations.

B. Reassurance

And here's another cautionary recommendation. I would urge NATO not only not to take additional steps to reduce or eliminate American NSNW deployments without an inter-Allied consensus, but also not to make any such move without first adopting some kind of compensatory measures explicitly designed to "make up" for the loss of whatever political and symbolic clout forward-deployed weapons are felt to have in the eyes of some allies, particularly in Eastern Europe. It is not clear to me what kind of alternative commitment, deployment, or relationship would make such governments feel equally comfortable in a post-NSNW world, but this is presumably an empirical question rooted in perceptions and needs that they are perfectly capable of expressing if asked.

Rather than simply invoking quasi-theological disarmament narratives – about such things as how useless non-strategic nuclear weapons are said to be, or how ending U.S. forward deployments would magically transform the nonproliferation environment, prevent nuclear terrorism, reduce Europe's complicity in some kind of existential atomic evil, or shame Russia into its own NSNW reductions – opponents of NATO "nuclear sharing" might thus do better to focus on addressing the security and political concerns of allies who support continuing such arrangements. The anti-NSNW discourse within NATO should really be about empowering those nervous allies, and seeing what can be done to make our Alliance everything they need it to be in a post-NSNW environment.

C. DCAs

As suggested earlier, I would also urge NATO not to allow itself to make its NSNW decision by stealth, through a non-consultative and muddled process of capability decay driven by ad hoc national aircraft procurement decisions. Even if advocates of continued U.S. deployments have overestimated the degree to which NSNW function politically as one of the indicia of trans-Atlantic solidarity, having the issue be effectively decided by fiat – as the result of certain national governments' willingness to countenance the collapse of DCA capabilities – could create real inter-Alliance problems of trust and good faith.

Whatever the decision ultimately reached, NATO has staked much on the integrity of the process by which it makes any eventual decision. To my eye, the Experts Group got it right in emphasizing that any change in NATO's current policy, "including in the geographic distribution of NATO nuclear deployments in Europe, should be made … by the Alliance as whole" through "in-depth consultations." A situation in which some members effectively compel an Alliance decision could be very corrosive indeed, particularly if it were to create a perceived "bait-and-switch" problem for newer NATO members in Eastern Europe who had joined the Alliance in part on the basis of the nuclear reassurances expressed in the 1999 Strategic Concept.

Whatever the right answer for NATO on American NSNW, we should make this decision together with eyes open and full transparency, at least among ourselves. (I understand the need to avoid talking too much in public about deterring Russian threats, of which there officially aren't any. But we need at least to be honest entre nous.) To take a de facto decision in a stumbling, patchwork fashion, merely because some members opt individually against keeping dual-capable aircraft, would be a disgrace. Alliance nuclear policy is too important to be left to decisions made sub silentio by procurement bureaucrats, or by national leaders keen to avoid accountability for what they are really doing.

The potential decay of DCA capabilities is particularly ironic because it seems to me that there are today perhaps more reasons than ever to maintain aircraft outfitted in such a way as to be fully capable of nuclear missions. Nuclear-release "black box" equipment may actually be the least of it: if you ask me, it's worrisome that the United States and its NATO allies have allowed themselves to get so sloppy about "rad hardening" their tactical aircraft. Such protections may be getting more, not less, important – even in non-nuclear conflicts.

The proliferation of active, electronically-scanned array (AESA) antennae will in future conflicts permit more and more platforms to possess not just ordinary radar capabilities but also potent electronic attack (EA) powers through which "non-kinetic" assaults can be made directly upon the electronics of adversary aircraft. The widespread availability of AESA-based EA options, moreover, is expected to be coupled with the emergence of new high-powered microwave (HPM) and electromagnetic pulse (EMP) weaponry designed to disable semiconductor-based electronics with massive, high-frequency power surges.

Readers shouldn't just take my word for this, of course, but all this suggests to me that there may be an increasing need for something not unlike nuclear-level electronic hardening if NATO aircraft are to survive in the high-energy electronic battlespace of the future. It's one thing to bomb Serbians in 1999, or Afghans and Libyans in 2011, but if NATO wants to maintain the capability to face a sophisticated 21st-Century adversary, its aircraft – and other systems – will need to expect increasing EA, HPM, and EMP threats. Whether or not you ever care about delivering nuclear weapons, in other words, there may be good reasons to pay the "tax" of DCA-related hardening anyway. In this sense, therefore, I would suggest that NATO should not abandon but should in fact augment its de facto DCA capabilities.

D. Bargaining Issues

Whether or not termination of NATO "nuclear sharing" policies is in fact the right answer in the abstract, it seems pretty clear that in light of the general desire to get Moscow to cut its own huge NSNW stockpile, NATO elimination is precisely the wrong answer if undertaken unilaterally. Given Russia's doctrinal attachment to such devices and the lurking issue of Moscow's military insecurity vis-à-vis Beijing, it may not be possible fully to address the Russian NSNW issue by means of a purely nuclear bargain anyway. But, it would seem madness to throw away NATO's only current bargaining chip before the negotiating game has yet been joined.

Russian officials have apparently been quite clear in claiming that the elimination of U.S. weapons in Europe is a precondition for even beginning to talk with them about their own NSNW. We should expect such a posture, at least at first, for they are old hands at bargaining. But I agree with Secretary Clinton's remarks suggesting that eliminating U.S. deployments in Europe should not even be considered except as some kind of grand bargain.

NATO's foreign ministers have hinted at a possible deal in which Russia would eliminate a portion of its stockpile and move the remainder away from areas from which they can reach NATO soil. It is hard to say how feasible this would be in negotiations with the Kremlin – nor how verifiable such an arrangement would be in the first place, nor whether the United States should accept a deal that might thus increase nuclear threats to our allies in East Asia. It should be obvious that if any such deal is desirable, however, preemptive concessions are a foolish way to seek it.

E. The "INF Approach"

Let's look a bit at the challenges of such bargaining. If we were to seek a NSNW deal with Russia, it must be admitted that NATO's bargaining position is not incredibly strong. After all, most public accounts put U.S. weapons in Europe at something like 200 B-61 nuclear gravity bombs, for a total of only perhaps 500 even counting those stored in the United States. In comparison with Russian holdings, which may be on the order of 3,800, this isn't much to negotiate with on a purely numerical basis.

To be sure, the U.S. weapons in Europe are at least on the same continent as Russia, whereas Moscow's NSNW are generally far from most potential American targets. (With apologies to Ms. Palin, I won't discuss Alaska here, though in considering any deal that might permit Russia to maintain NSNW in the Far East one would need to bear Alaska very much in mind, as well as our South Korean and Japanese allies.) This is presumably little consolation to Poles, Balts, or Hungarians within reach of Russian weapons, but it suggests at least that U.S. negotiating leverage vis-à-vis Moscow is a bit better than the sheer disparity in raw numbers would indicate. Nevertheless, the prospects for traditional "one-for-one" arms control bargaining are not ideal.

To be a bit provocative, however, let me speculate about whether NATO could make these odds better. As NPF readers may recall, it wasn't that long ago that the Alliance faced a similar situation – one in which it confronted a threatening deployment of delivery systems in which Russia initially enjoyed a huge numerical advantage. I am referring, of course, to the issue of intermediate range nuclear delivery systems 30 years ago. In facing this challenge, NATO's answer was bold, and it was hugely successful. It led to the elimination of that threat in an unprecedented arms control and disarmament success.

Faced with Soviet deployments of SS-20 missiles, of course, NATO leaders chose to counter-deploy their own intermediate-range nuclear delivery systems – mobile and super-accurate Pershing II ballistic missiles and ground-launched cruise missiles (GLCMs). It was not an easy decision, and indeed proved bitterly controversial. But after finally being confronted with a countervailing NATO deployment that they greatly feared, the Soviets came to the table and agreed to a remarkable arms control deal. Pursuant to the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty of 1987, that entire class of delivery systems disappeared from the arsenals of the two powers. By 1991, some 2,692 systems had been eliminated – 846 by the United States and 1,846 by the Soviet Union – under verification procedures of unprecedented stringency, provisions that also provided a precedent making possible the verification mechanisms in the START and "New START" strategic arms agreements.

You can probably see where I'm going with this: I am suggesting the possibility of approaching the problem of Russian NSNW in something of the way we approached the SS-20 challenge. Let me hasten to say, however, that I am not suggesting that NATO re-deploy thousands of nuclear weapons in Europe in order to force Moscow to talk. NATO domestic politics would hardly permit such a strategy at this point, and because of its worries about China, Russia probably wouldn't agree to any INF-analogous NSNW deal anyway.

But let me suggest a variation on the INF's "make-a-countervailing-deployment-then-start-bargaining" theme. It is part of the nuclear disarmament vision of the Obama Administration – as indeed it also was even for the Bush Administration – that Washington is looking for non-nuclear means to accomplish more and more missions that were previously felt to require nuclear weapons. As President Obama has himself put it, we aim "to move towards less emphasis on nuclear weapons," in part by ensuring "that our conventional weapons capability is an effective deterrent in all but the most extreme circumstances." One manifestation of this idea of reducing reliance upon nuclear weapons through the development of improved conventional capabilities is our "Conventional Prompt Global Strike" (CPGS) program, pursuant to which the U.S. military hopes to be able to hit precision targets at global ranges and on extremely short notice. The main focus of CPGS is proliferator regimes and terrorist targets, but long-distance prompt-strike capabilities presumably do make up at least part of the suite of non-nuclear capabilities that are helping us rely less upon nuclear weaponry.

Such prompt-strike capabilities may be highly relevant to NATO's NSNW predicament, for it may be that an alliance effort along similar lines could have benefits in the political and symbolic realm as well as in more strictly military terms. After all, according to the U.S. Government, improvements in our advanced conventional strike capabilities have already, among other things, "contributed to our ability to … assur[e] allies and partners of our security commitments, and [aided in] reinforcing regional security." If this sounds a bit like the role nuclear weapons play within NATO, that's my point.

Just by way of a gedanken experiment, then, what if NATO wished to follow the example of its INF success, but did not want to deploy new nuclear weapons? Wishing both to develop improved state-of-the-art military capabilities potentially useful elsewhere and to acquire something with real "trade" value in NSNW negotiations with Russia – which is to say, perhaps putting it brutally, something that the Kremlin would fear – might NATO leaders in such circumstances wisely choose to develop a new suite of (presumably sub-strategic range) prompt strike systems?

If we indeed managed to leverage such capabilities into a grand bargain that would comprehensively address the NSNW issue, this would be a signal accomplishment. Even if we not get complete satisfaction on tactical weapons, moreover – and one should remember that the "China factor" alone might preclude Russia accepting a full-blown "zero option" with NATO – alliance members would still have worked productively in a trans-Atlantic collaboration to develop an important new capability at the cutting-edge of modern military technology, and a capability some of which a merely partial deal with Russia would presumably permit the Alliance to retain. In such a situation, from either a military or a political perspective, NATO might end up both better equipped for a broad landscape of potential future conflict scenarios and more cohesive than ever. For this, I would not think it so hard to give up nuclear "sharing."

But what do you readers think? I look forward to your feedback.