MILNET Brief Beres on the Mideast "A fully zero leakage-rate would be necessary to adequately protect Israel against nuclear and/or biological warheads, and such a zero leakage-rate is unattainable" - Dr. Louis Rene Beres, 9/28/2004 |
Israel`s security from enemy state aggression depends upon a carefully
conceived mix of deterrence, preemption and war-fighting postures. It
also requires an integrated and capable system of active defenses. The
current core of Israel`s active defense system is the Arrow
anti-ballistic missile program. An Israel Air Force (IAF) operational
undertaking, the Arrow was developed jointly by Israel and the United
States and is managed by the Israel Missile Defense Organization (IMDO)
in close cooperation with the US Missile Defense Agency (MDA). The
prime contractor for the Arrow ABM is Israel Aircraft Industries/MLM
Division.
On July 29, 2004, as part of the ongoing Arrow System
Improvement Program (ASIP) which is carried out jointly by Israel and
the United States, an Arrow ABM successfully intercepted and destroyed
its target at the Point Mugu Sea Range in California. This was the 12th
Arrow intercept test and the seventh test of the complete Arrow system.
According to a statement issued by Israel`s Ministry of Defense (MOD)
on that same day: "The target trajectory demonstrated an operational
scenario and all the Arrow system components performed successfully in
their full operational configuration."
From the standpoint of
Israel`s security, these test results are very significant. They
indicate not only continuing close cooperation between Washington (DOD)
and Tel-Aviv (MOD), but also the intrinsic technical promise of
Israel`s ballistic missile defense. But now, serious decisions need to
be made. Still faced with a steadily nuclearizing Iran, Israel must
quickly consider carefully whether it can rely upon a suitable
combination of deterrence and active defenses or whether it must also
prepare energetically for an appropriate form of preemption.
On
its face, it would appear that with a successfully operating system of
ballistic missile defense, Israel`s preemption option is now
substantially less urgent. Indeed, if the Arrow is truly efficient in
its reliability of intercept, it would seem that even an irrational
Iranian adversary armed with nuclear and/or biological weapons could be
dealt with effectively by Israeli active defenses. This means that even
if Israel`s nuclear deterrent were immobilized by an enemy state
willing to risk a massive "countervalue" Israeli reprisal, that state`s
ensuing first-strike would still be blocked by Arrow. Hence, why
preempt?
But this argument would rest upon altogether untenable
assumptions. Ballistic missile defense systems cannot be appraised
dichotomously; that is, as either "reliable" or "unreliable." Here,
Operational Reliability of Intercept is a continuous variable, and any
BMD system — however successful in its tests — will always have
"leakage." Whether or not such leakage would fall within acceptable
levels would depend, primarily, upon the kinds of warheads fitted upon
the enemy`s incoming missiles. Moreover, the Arrow`s recent success in
intercepting a Scud might not be as easily replicated with more
advanced targets. Iran`s newest missile — the Shahab-3 — travels almost
three times as fast as the Scud.
In evaluating its preemption
option via-a-vis Iran, Israeli planners will need to consider the
expected "leakage rate" of the Arrow. Expressed as a percentage, a very
small number of enemy missiles penetrating Arrow defenses could be
acceptable if the associated warheads contained only conventional high
explosive or even chemical high explosive. But if the incoming warheads
were nuclear and/or biological, even an extremely low rate of leakage
would almost certainly be unacceptable. A fully zero leakage-rate would
be necessary to adequately protect Israel against nuclear and/or
biological warheads, and such a zero leakage-rate is unattainable. It
follows, given intrinsic limitations of deterrence, that Israel can not
depend entirely upon its anti-ballistic missiles to defend against any
future WMD attack from Iran, and that even a very promising Arrow
system would not obviate Israel`s preemption option.
At the
same time, a rational adversary will need to calculate that Israel`s
second-strike forces are substantially invulnerable to first- strike
aggressions. Additionally, this adversary will now require many more
missiles for an assuredly destructive first-strike against Israel than
would be the case without Arrow. This means that Israel`s Arrow will at
least compel a rational adversary such as Iran to delay any intended
first- strike attack until such time as this adversary can deploy a
fully robust nuclear and/or biological offensive missile force.
In this way, ballistic missile defense — while not permitting Israel to
reject the preemption option altogether — does offer Israel two
distinct and complementary levels of protection: (1) protection
afforded by Arrow`s demonstrated capacity for physical interception of
incoming ballistic missiles; and (2) protection afforded by Arrow`s
allowing Israel to "buy time" until a nuclearizing adversary is able to
deploy a more or less substantial number of offensive ballistic
missiles. By definition, of course, Arrow will have no deterrent effect
upon any irrational adversary, but it could still have some
consequential damage-limiting benefit in the event of an enemy attack
by such an adversary.
In the best of all possible worlds,
Israel would not need to make any of these complex strategic
calculations, and could rely instead upon those codified norms of
international law associated with methods of peaceful dispute
settlement. But we surely do not yet live in the best of all possible
worlds, and Israel surely still faces a number of state enemies in the
Middle East whose undisguised preparations for the Jewish State are
authentically genocidal. Jurisprudentially and strategically, war and
genocide need not be mutually exclusive, and certain ongoing enemy
state preparations for war against Israel are fully consistent with the
definition of genocide found in the 1948 Convention on the Prevention
and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
(To be continued)
LOUIS
RENE BERES (Ph.D., Princeton, 1971), Professor of International Law at
Purdue University and Strategic and Military Affairs columnist for The
Jewish Press, is Chair of "Project Daniel."
Copyright © The Jewish Press. First published in the Jewish Press.
All rights reserved, used with the Author's permission.