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22 June 2002
Don’t
Nuke Iraq
British and US ministers
and officials have issued veiled nuclear threats against Iraq,
despite the fact that there is no solid evidence that Iraq possesses
weapons of mass destruction, raising the prospect, as threatened
in the 1991 war against Iraq, of nuclear weapons being used in
a conflict with a non-nuclear nation.
HOON’S TRIPLE THREAT
Just before he left on
a ‘peace mission’ to India and Pakistan, Jack Straw was asked
on Radio 4’s Today programme why the two countries should
pay any attention to a country which had never itself renounced
the first use of nuclear weapons. The Foreign Secretary ‘said
everyone knew the prospect of Britain (and the US and France)
using nuclear weapons was "so distant as not to be worth
discussing".’
Guardian columnist
Hugo Young commented that Straw’s response was ‘about as misleading
an answer as can be found in the entire record of Britain’s conduct
as a nuclear power.’ The journalist then referred to the repeated
nuclear threats made by Jack Straw’s Cabinet colleague Geoff Hoon
this Spring. (‘Hoon’s talk of pre-emptive strikes could be catastrophic’,
Guardian, 6 June 2002)
1)
On 20 March 2002, British Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon told the
House of Commons Select Committee on Defence that states like
Iraq ‘can be absolutely confident that in the right conditions
we would be willing to use our nuclear weapons.’
2)
Then, on 24 March, Geoff Hoon appeared on ITV’s Jonathan Dimbleby
show and ‘insisted that the government "reserved the right"
to use nuclear weapons if Britain or British troops were threatened
by chemical or biological weapons.’ (Richard Norton-Taylor, ‘Bush’s
nuke bandwagon’, Guardian, 27 Mar. 2002)
3) Finally, Hoon was asked
about his threats in the House of Commons in a debate on 29 April
Hoon said, ‘ultimately and in conditions of extreme self-defence,
nuclear weapons would have to be used.’
In the House of Commons
debate, Diane Abbott MP pressed the Defence Secretary for an explanation
of what these ‘conditions of extreme self-defence’ might be. Hoon
refused to be specific. The Defence Secretary confined himself
to saying that it was ‘important to point out that the Government
have nuclear weapons available to them, and that - in certain
specified conditions to which I have referred - we would be
prepared to use them.’ This deliberate ambiguity is thought
by the Government to be a useful form of ‘deterrence’.
NON-PROLIFERATION PROMISES
MPs
have expressed concern as to whether Hoon’s threats might be in
contravention of international commitments given by the UK. In
1978, the five declared nuclear powers promised that they would
avoid firing nuclear weapons at non-nuclear-weapon states. The
US and British promises - or ‘negative security assurances’ (NSAs)
- were full of exceptions and loopholes.
Restated
in 1995, the British NSA said, ‘The United Kingdom will not use
nuclear weapons against non-nuclear-weapon States Parties to the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons except in the
case of an invasion or any other attack on the United Kingdom,
its dependent territories, its armed forces or other troops, its
allies or on a State towards which it has a security commitment,
carried out or sustained by such a non-nuclear weapon State in
association or alliance with a nuclear-weapon State.’ (This was
looser wording than given in 1978.)
In
contrast, the 1995 NSA from China said, ‘China undertakes not
to be the first to use nuclear weapons at any time or under any
circumstances. China undertakes not to use or threaten to use
nuclear weapons against non-nuclear-weapon States or nuclear-weapon-free
zones at any time or under any circumstances.’
In
1989, Nigeria proposed an international treaty banning the use
of nuclear weapons against any non-nuclear-weapon State which
had signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty, unless that State had
nuclear weapons stationed on their territory. Britain and the
other nuclear powers have resisted such proposals.
BROKEN PROMISES
Iraq
is a member of the Non-Proliferation Treaty. There is no evidence
that Iraq possesses functioning nuclear weapons. Iraq is not allied
with any nuclear weapon state. Therefore, unless the British Government
claims that Iraqi military action against British and US troops
in any coming war is ‘in association’ with China or Russia, the
1995 Negative Security Assurance ought to rule out the possibility
that Iraq could be attacked by British nuclear missiles.
Hence the question by
Malcolm Savidge MP to Mr Hoon on 29 April:
‘Do the Secretary of
State's recent comments concerning the possible use of nuclear
weapons against Iraq signal a change of Government policy, whereby
Britain is reneging on assurances given to non-nuclear weapons
states under the nuclear non-proliferation treaty? Indeed, are
the Government abandoning the policy of successive British Governments
of regarding nuclear weapons as a deterrent of last resort?’
Hoon
said that nuclear weapons were still a ‘deterrent of last resort’,
but did not respond to the question about Britain’s NSA.
The
promise not to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear-weapon
States is fundamental to the Non-Proliferation Treaty. A French
diplomat was asked about Hoon’s comments, ‘Don’t you think that
all this might encourage small countries that are still developing
nuclear arms to acquire atomic bombs themselves and therefore
ruin all the efforts so far to elminate nuclear weapons of mass
destruction?’ The representative
of the French Mission to the UN replied, ‘The danger you point
out is real. We’ve drawn the attention of our partners and allies
to this difficulty many times.’
CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL EXCEPTIONS
Giving testimony to the
Defence Select Committee in March, Hoon cast some doubts on whether
British nuclear threats might work in relation to ‘a country like
Iraq that, for example, places the lives of its own citizens at
little value and might be prepared to contemplate taking on a
nuclear power like the United Kingdom and accept the consequences.’
Iraq doesn’t have any nuclear weapons, so far as we know, and
the International Atomic Energy Agency continues to inspect Iraqi
nuclear sites.
What
Hoon is afraid of is the possibility that Iraq may have some chemical
or biological weapons which it succeeded in keeping hidden.
Former
UN Special Commission (UNSCOM) weapons inspector Scott Ritter
says that’s not possible: stocks of chemical and biological weapons
‘would no longer be viable’: ‘Weapons built before the Gulf war
that slipped through the UNSCOM net would by now have passed their
sell-by date.’ (Guardian, 5 Mar. 2002, p. 16) ‘Contrary
to popular belief, BW [biological weapons] cannot simply be cooked
up in the basement; it requires a large and sophisticated infrastructure,
especially if the agent is to be filled into munitions. As with
CW [chemical weapons], the CIA has not detected any such activity
concerning BW since UNSCOM inspectors left Iraq.’ (Ritter, Arms
Control Today, June 2000)
But
the fear in the Pentagon and the Ministry of Defence is that if,
somehow, Iraq does have chemical or biological weapons, there
would be no reason for Saddam Hussein to hold back from using
them against British and US troops (and perhaps Israel) if Washington
and London launched a war aimed at deposing and killing him. Hence
the attempt to ‘deter’ him from using his weapons of mass destruction
by threatening to use British and US weapons of mass destruction
in retaliation.
THE NUCLEAR POSTURE REVIEW
A
leaked US policy document - the ‘Nuclear Posture Review’ - ‘is
understood to identify three circumstances in which nuclear weapons
could be used: against targets able to withstand non-nuclear attack;
in retaliation for the use of nuclear, biological or chemical
weapons; and "in the event of surprising military developments".’
(Sunday Telegraph, 10 Mar. 2002, p. 1) Iraq is mentioned
as a possible target.
TACTICAL TRIDENT
Tory
Defence Secretary Malcolm Rifkind said in November 1993 that because
the threat of an all-out nuclear assault might not be ‘credible’
against certain enemies, it was important for Britain to be able
to ‘undertake a more limited nuclear strike’ to deliver
‘an unmistakable message of our willingness to defend our vital
interests to the utmost.’
This
limited strike would be carried out by a single nuclear warhead,
fired from a Trident submarine, on a ‘Tactical Trident’ missile,
possibly carrying a 5-20 kiloton nuclear warhead. Hiroshima was
destroyed by a 15kiloton bomb.
VITAL INTERESTS
The
policy of using nuclear weapons to defend ‘vital interests’ was
confirmed by New Labour’s ‘Strategic Defence Review’, which concluded
in July 1998 that Britain’s nuclear arsenal should be the minimum
needed to ‘deter any threat to our vital interests’. (Chapter
4, para. 61) The Review explained that ‘our vital interests are
not confined to Europe. Our economy is founded on international
trade... We invest more of our income abroad that any other major
economy... We depend on foreign countries for supplies of raw
materials, above all oil.’ (Ch. 2, para. 19) So, ‘vital interests’
include economic and financial interests abroad as well as national
survival.
FOUR SCENARIOS
According
to the respected military journal International Defense Review
(Sept. 1994) Tactical Trident has four possible roles: ‘At what
might be termed the "upper end" of the usage spectrum,
they could be used in a conflict involving large-scale forces
(including British ground and air forces, such as the 1990-91
Gulf War) to reply to enemy nuclear strikes.
‘Secondly,
they could be used in a similar setting, but to reply to enemy
use of weapons of mass destruction, such as bacteriological
or chemical weapons, for which the British possess no like-for-like
retaliatory capability.
‘Thirdly, they could be
used in a demonstrative role, ie aimed at a non-critical,
possibly [!] uninhabited area, with the message that if they country
concerned pursued its present course of action, nuclear weapons
will be aimed at a high-priority target. Finally, there is the
punitive role, were a country has committed an act, despite
specific warning that to do so would incur a nuclear strike.’
Only
one of these scenarios involves an enemy with nuclear weapons.
CONCLUSION: TOWARDS AN ETHICAL FOREIGN POLICY
1) Geoff Hoon should be
forced to make an explicit statement that British nuclear weapons
will not be used in any war on Iraq that may take place.
2) The Defence Secretary
should withdraw from any planning for such a war, and the Government
should state that Britain will not participate in a war on Iraq.
3)
The Government should make a clear, unambiguous and legally-binding
Negative Security Assurance that it will never, at any time or
under any circumstances, use nuclear weapons against a non-nuclear-weapons
State which has signed up to the Non-Proliferation Treaty, and
which has no nuclear weapons on its territory.
4)
The Government should publicly abandon the idea of ‘defending’
financial and economic ‘vital interests’ overseas with British
nuclear weapons.
Select
Committee on Defence, 20 Mar. 2002
Malcolm
Savidge and Diane Abbott, oral questions to Geoff Hoon, 29
Apr. 2002
ARROW
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