U.S.-RUSSIA INK AGREEMENT ON
MISSILE WARNING INFO
Defense Daily
September 8, 1998
The initiative announced last week by President Clinton and Russian
President Boris Yeltsin on
the exchange of information on missile launches is an attempt to
codify earlier agreements and
demonstrate a positive result from the summit meeting, according to
arms control experts.
The agreement builds on the 1971 Agreement on Measures to Reduce the
Risk of Outbreak of
Nuclear War Between the United States and the former Soviet Union,
according to Spurgeon
Keeny, former deputy director of the Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency.
"This agreement is repackaging things that already exist," Keeny told
Defense Daily in a
telephone interview, "It [the 1971 agreement] appears to have a lot of
what they're talking about
now in it. The issue is to what extent the agreements have been
implemented."
The new initiative calls for cooperation and sharing of early warning
data on missile launches, as
well as possibly expanding to include other nations in a multilateral
agreement. The measures are
an effort to increase confidence between the command authorities of
the two countries in case of
an accidental or misinterpreted launch.
Concerns over accidental or rogue launches have been heightened by
recent economic hardships
in Russia, as well as the proliferation of ballistic missile
technologies to other countries like India,
North Korea, Iran and Pakistan.
North Korea launched a Taepo Dong I missile last week with a range of
over 1,200 miles. Such
an unannounced launch could be dangerous if misinterpreted by U.S. or
Russian missile
watchers, Keeny said. In 1995, a scientific rocket launched from
Norway was misinterpreted
and caused the Russians to go to a full strategic alert that brought
them to within minutes of firing
missiles in response.
"I interpret this as an attempt to flesh out and institutionalize
earlier agreements," Keeny said. "I
think it's a positive development. One has to see the details to see
how it will be worked out.
This is an effort to have more facility to do this quickly and improve
our confidence."
The details of the agreement, however, have not yet been fully worked
out. Possibilities include
sharing early warning sensor information and even operating a joint
early warning center between
the two countries. That raises the question of how much sensitive data
the United States will
release on their data collection methods.
"There are some technical issues in how you alert them, but this kind
of thing [an accidental
launch] is a serious matter, and I think we will do what we have to,"
Keeny said.
The agreement also dovetails nicely with the presidential summit and
recent efforts to encourage
the Russian military in its custody of nuclear weapons.
"All summits seek to come up with some positive result. Some of these
agreements have roots in
the past, but this [agreement] was to do some current business, in the
context of the summit."
EMAIL RON REGEHR