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Eurasia: Looking For Areas Of Possible US-Russian Arms-Control Coope

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  • Eurasia: Looking For Areas Of Possible US-Russian Arms-Control Coope

    EURASIA: LOOKING FOR AREAS OF POSSIBLE US-RUSSIAN ARMS-CONTROL COOPERATION
    Richard Weitz

    EurasiaNet
    Nov 3 2008
    NY

    Despite the recent deterioration in the West's relations with
    Russia following the August war in Georgia, two scholars at a recent
    panel discussion in Washington, DC, urged the next US presidential
    administration to engage the Kremlin and explore possibilities for
    new arms control agreements in Eurasia.

    Rose Gottemoeller, one of the participants at the October 29
    round-table sponsored by the Carnegie Endowment for International
    Peace, foresaw a period of unpredictability in Russian-American
    relations due to the presidential transitions in both countries. She
    therefore advised that in coming months both sides should strive to
    "hang on to the superstructure of our relationship, as it has existed
    in the many treaties and agreements that we have put together over
    the years."

    Responding to Defense Secretary Robert Gates' call for fresh efforts
    to bolster the US nuclear deterrent, outlined in a speech given at
    the Carnegie Endowment on October 28, another round-table speaker,
    George Perkovich, reaffirmed his support for abolishing nuclear
    weapons as an "idea we can actually take seriously." [For additional
    information, click here]. Perkovich, the Carnegie Endowment's vice
    president for studies, acknowledged that "we can't do it alone,"
    and urged the United States to promote this aim in collaboration
    with other countries. "The first condition that would have to be met,
    obviously, is US-Russian leadership."

    Neither speaker was optimistic about achieving reductions in the
    large stockpile of Russian tactical nuclear weapons deployed in
    Eurasia. Perkovich pointed out that Moscow would require major
    concessions since this is one of few areas in which Russia enjoys
    numerical superiority over NATO.

    While supportive of the status quo over the near term, Gottemoeller
    suggested that modifications to existing arrangements should ultimately
    be explored. "I am not in anyway advocating preserving agreements
    as they have existed in the past and simply leaving them alone,"
    she said, adding that Moscow and Washington ought to view "these
    [existing] treaties and agreements as building blocks for our further
    relationship."

    For example, Gottemoeller said that, even though "we are now casting
    around for a vaunted new security system in Europe" following the
    war in Georgia, Washington and Moscow should try to revitalize the
    Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) Treaty. She went on to claim
    that "the data exchanges, the notifications, the verification and
    inspection measures that were at the core of the CFE treaty" have
    helped dampen Russian concerns about NATO enlargement. While Moscow
    may have acquiesced to the incorporation of the Baltic States into
    the Atlantic alliance, the Kremlin, it deserves mentioning, remains
    adamantly opposed to the admission of either Georgia or Ukraine. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Referring obliquely to the ongoing situation in Georgia, Gottemoeller
    asserted that "we need to review and again embrace key CFE principles,"
    especially "the principle of host nation consent to the presence of
    foreign troops on their territories," a norm that also underpins the
    Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.

    Gottemoeller, a Carnegie Endowment expert on non-proliferation issues,
    argued that a distinct advantage of using the CFE process rather than
    other European security institutions is that "it gets everybody to
    the table, not only the NATO countries, new and old, and not only
    Russia, Ukraine and Georgia, but also countries we have been very
    concerned about because of instability between them, like Armenia
    and Azerbaijan."

    In response to a question from EurasiaNet about the effects of
    the Georgian War on WMD proliferation through the South Caucasus,
    Gottemoeller agreed "that this whole area of what has loosely been
    called threat reduction cooperation is a very good area not only"
    in order to reduce nuclear threats (the original purpose of the
    Nunn-Lugar program), "but also to help us to address the agenda that
    was raised by Russia's invasion of Georgia." [For background see the
    Eurasia Insight archive].

    Gottemoeller urged the next US administration to work with Moscow in
    curbing Iran's nuclear ambitions. "There are certain ways that I think
    we should look again at what are some Russian proposals" to give Iran
    alternatives to developing the means to manufacture indigenous nuclear
    fuel though uranium enrichment, since the same technologies could
    enable Tehran to produce nuclear weapons. She specifically urged
    renewing support for Moscow's offer to allow Iran to participate
    in the International Uranium Enrichment Center in Angarsk, a joint
    venture between Russia's Tekhsnabeksport and Kazakhstan's Kazatomprom
    that is open to tightly controlled third-party involvement regarding
    non-weapons related nuclear technologies.

    Editor's Note: Richard Weitz is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute
    in Washington, DC.
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