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    Greater China
     May 30, 2007
China's not so new nuclear strategy
By David Isenberg

WASHINGTON - A new study released by the US Army War College's Strategic Studies Institute is the latest addition to the "China is a worrisome threat" crowd.

The 51-page monograph is a sort of literary review, the result of exploiting sections of a doctrinal text, "A Guide to the Study of Campaign Theory", published for People's Liberation Army (PLA) higher military schools by the Chinese National Defense



University.

The monograph finds:
In the view of many in the PLA, the military power of the United States, the potential to use that power to coerce or dominate China, and the ability to threaten China's pursuit of its own interests [present] a latent threat to China. Additionally, China's own threats against democratic Taiwan, and the fact that PLA leaders believe that the United States is likely to come to Taiwan's assistance in the event of Chinese aggression in the Taiwan Strait, magnifies the threat that PLA officers perceive from the United States. This perceived threat drives the PLA to follow US military developments more carefully than those of other nations and to be prepared to counter American forces.

The PLA is mixing nuclear and conventional missile forces in its military doctrine. Also, some in China are questioning whether the doctrine of "no first use" of nuclear weapons serves China's deterrent needs.
The monograph has been exciting attention in US national-security circles because it asserts that China's nuclear strategy could bring about a nuclear war. Supposedly Beijing may be trying to develop the capability to destroy entire US aircraft-carrier battle groups in the Pacific Ocean by targeting them with nuclear-armed intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).

The monograph was written by Larry Wortzel, a retired US Army officer and former official of the conservative Heritage Foundation in Washington, DC, as well as commissioner on the congressionally appointed US-China Economic and Security Review Commission.

But a close reading of the monograph suggests there is less than meets the eye. Many of the developments that Wortzel points to are, in fact, things the United States long ago accomplished during the Cold War.

For example, Wortzel is alarmed by the fact that China is experimenting with both multiple re-entry vehicles (MIRV - a collection of nuclear weapons carried on a single ICBM or a submarine-launched ballistic missile) and maneuverable re-entry vehicles (MARV - a type of nuclear warhead capable of shifting targets in flight) as well as other penetration aids or countermeasures on its warheads as means to respond to potential missile defense.

But the US developed MIRVs in the 1960s when the weapons laboratories had designed small thermonuclear weapons, a necessary condition for deploying multiple re-entry vehicles on the relatively small Minuteman missile.

And the United States also developed MARVs decades ago, both for its Trident missiles, which had to be able to evade Soviet anti-ballistic-missile systems, and for the Pershing II missile that was deployed to Europe in the 1980s.

Indeed, if imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, the US should be feeling very pleased.

Another Chinese development that Wortzel finds noteworthy is that Chinese military officials have picked target sets that would would disrupt the enemy's economy, reconstitution and resupply capabilities. Specifically:
  • Enemy political centers.
  • Economic centers.
  • Major enemy military bases and depots.
  • Enemy command centers.
  • Enemy communications and transportation networks.
  • Major troop concentrations.

    This too is classic counter-force nuclear targeting. The US started putting together such lists in the 1950s, when 5,500 Soviet targets were listed as potential Strategic Air Command bomber strikes.
    Yet another doctrinal development that Wortzel finds noteworthy is the Chinese emphasis on "guaranteed survivability and strike", meaning Chinese nuclear forces must be able to ride out a nuclear attack and emerge to conduct their own counterstrike. This too is straight out of the old US Cold War playback. This is what nuclear strategists called second-strike capability: the assured ability of a country to respond to a nuclear attack with powerful nuclear retaliation against the attacker. To have such an ability (and to convince the opponent of its viability) is considered vital in nuclear deterrence.

    Even a development that is genuinely, at least potentially, destabilizing, which Wortzel notes - the decision by Beijing to put nuclear and conventional warheads on the same classes of ballistic missiles - also mirrors a recent US initiative. That is the US Prompt Global Strike Capability, which seeks to convert Trident II D-5 submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) to carry conventional warheads to satisfy the desire of US Strategic Command for a near-term strike option.

    This initiative has been heavily criticized by the arms control community because is brings an inherent risk of triggering a nuclear war. It seems likely, for example, that Russian and Chinese early warning radars would be unable to differentiate between US nuclear and conventional SLBM and/or ICBM launches, as the heat signatures of both would be the same. The ambiguity, by causing doubt and uncertainty, and possible delay in response, would also inevitably strengthen the capacity for a successful US nuclear first strike. Countries targeted by any ICBM strike would need to treat any attack as a nuclear one if they were to avoid being open to a successful surprise US nuclear first strike.

    Ironically, it is this sort of initiative - which makes it more likely that China might execute a preemptive nuclear counterattack if it believes that an adversary is about to attack it - that Wortzel worries about.

    David Isenberg is a senior research analyst at the British American Security Information Council, a member of the Coalition for a Realistic Foreign Policy, a research fellow at the Independent Institute, and an adviser to the Straus Military Reform Project of the Center for Defense Information, Washington. These views are his own.

    (Copyright 2007 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)

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