During the 2016 campaign for the presidency the authority
the president has over the use of our nuclear weapons became a topic of
considerable interest. Concern was
driven by the fact that Donald Trump could become our next president and could
gain control over those weapons. Could a
psychologically unstable and perhaps demented person launch a nuclear weapon
based solely on his own initiative was the question. Several articles appeared in the media
essentially claiming that yes he could.
An article from vox.com titled
If President Trump decided to use nukes, he could do it easily was an example.
The implication was that the president had the authority to do almost
any damned thing he wanted to do.
Trump has now been president for almost a year and the
concerns about his mental state have not subsided; rather, they have been
augmented by a perceived lack of knowledge and understanding on his part of
what a nuclear explosive is and what it is capable of doing. The ongoing exchange of schoolboy taunts and
threats between Trump and North Korea’s leader have served to elevate the level
of concern even further. Recent articles
have come out raising anew the question of the extent of authority an incompetent
president might have in initiating the use of nuclear weapons. Garry Wills wrote Big Rocket Man for the New
York Review of Books and Adam Schatz produced The President and the Bomb for the London Review of Books. Both
authors expressed the concern that there was no mechanism in place to stop
Trump from impulsively launching an unwarranted nuclear attack.
One of the difficulties in addressing this issue is that
the mechanisms in place are not known to the people writing about
them—including myself. The people who
know are not about to publicly acknowledge the procedures they adhere to. One must rely on incidents from the past and
experiences of people who have had incomplete knowledge about the process of
nuclear authorization. Most of what is
discussed is based on what is presumed known of presidential authority in the
case of an ongoing nuclear attack on the United States by another power. In that situation, where mere minutes are
available to initiate a response, absolute authority to launch by a single
person, the president, is the only option.
The concern with Trump is that he will go rogue and launch an attack on
his own initiative with no credible threat justifying such an act. That is a completely different situation in
which his presidential authority could come up against limitations. In such a situation it would have been
foolish to give unlimited authority to a single individual. One has to assume that after seventy years of
wrestling with these issues a system that makes sense would have been
developed.
Wikipedia is
usually a credible source of information, but in this case it illustrates the
risk in drawing conclusions from dubious sources. Under the rubric of “National Command Authority” its knowledge is summarized in two
brief paragraphs, one of which is merely a definition of the term. The second is as follows.
“Only the President can direct
the use of nuclear weapons by U.S. armed forces, including the Single
Integrated Operational Command (SIOP). While the President does have unilateral
authority as commander-in-chief to order that nuclear weapons be used for any
reason at any time, the actual procedures and technical systems in place for
authorizing the execution of a launch order requires a secondary confirmation
under a two-man rule, as the President's order is subject to secondary
confirmation by the Secretary of Defense. If the Secretary of Defense does not
concur, then the President may in his sole discretion fire the Secretary. The
Secretary of Defense has legal authority to approve the order, but cannot veto
it. The Secretary of Defense succession
plan designates numerous individuals that may serve after a President removes
his or her predecessor. Traditionally, a
civilian United States officer must countersign a Presidential order or resign.”
The notion that a two-man rule is in place at the
presidential level while our country is presumed to be under a nuclear attack with
only a few minutes available to take action seems dubious. At that point there is no time to waste in discussing
the plan to move forward. As a practical
matter, the decision that an actual attack is underway must have already been vetted
through the Secretary of Defense or his/her representative. Before the president even hears about the
situation, the system has decided that this is real, in which case the
president and his advisors should have already gamed out what to do when this
occurs. The idea that the Secretary of Defense
could decide to change his mind about the appropriate course of action forcing
everyone to wait until a search is initiated to find the next person on the
succession list seems ridiculous.
The paragraph from Wikipedia
quoted above lists three references to support it. One is the vox.com article referred to earlier, one is from Politico, and the third is from the New York Times. None of these articles offer any hard sources
for any of their conclusions. In fact,
only the vox.com article makes the
claim about a two-man rule being in place; the other two disagree with this
assertion. So much for reliability in
what you read.
The above situation assumes that at least one nuclear
weapon is headed towards the United States.
When that is not the case, there is time to have a more leisurely process
in place, and one would hope that at least a two-man rule is active, and there
are mechanisms whereby others can provide counsel. It would make no sense to assign the
president unquestionable authority in this case.
Some hope of enforced sanity is obtained from a few remarkable
comments coming from General John Hyten, head of the U.S. strategic Command
(STRATCOM), the entity responsible for operational control of our strategic nuclear
weapons. As reported by Kathryn Watson
under the heading Top General says he would resist ‘illegal’ nuke order from Trump (11/18/2017).
“Air Force Gen. John Hyten,
commander of the U.S. Strategic Command (STRATCOM), told an audience at the Halifax
International Security Forum in Halifax, Nova Scotia, on Saturday that he has
given a lot of thought to what he would say if Mr. Trump ordered a strike he
considered unlawful.”
"’I provide advice to the
president, he will tell me what to do,’ Hyten added. ‘And if it's illegal,
guess what's going to happen? I'm going to say, 'Mr. President, that's
illegal.' And guess what he's going to do? He's going to say, “What would be
legal?” And we'll come up options, with a mix of capabilities to respond to
whatever the situation is, and that's the way it works. It's not that
complicated’."
The notion that the president can “put his finger on the
nuclear button” seems misleading. The “nuclear
football” that is always nearby the president is apparently a device that
allows the president to authenticate his presence and set up a communication
link with those who have operational control.
General Hyten’s comments suggest that the president can’t press the
button, somebody else has that responsibility.
And that someone else, Hyten for example, seems to have procedures in
place that must be followed before acquiescing to whatever the president might
wish to do. It is interesting that the
general used the word “illegal” with respect to potential actions Trump might
wish to take. That implies there is a code
of ethics written down somewhere with respect to the usage of nuclear weapons.
“Hyten said he has been trained
every year for decades in the law of armed conflict, which takes into account
specific factors to determine legality -- necessity, distinction,
proportionality, unnecessary suffering and more. Running through scenarios of
how to react in the event of an illegal order is standard practice, he said.”
"’If you execute an
unlawful order, you will go to jail. You could go to jail for the rest of your
life,’ Hyten said.”
Whether Hyten is in a position to say “hell no” to a
president is not clear, but the fact that he refers to the penalty for
acquiescing to an “illegal” usage suggests he might have the justification to
do just that.
It would seem that the nation’s leaders have put in place
a system that has anticipated the existence of a rogue president.
It seems one
fool is not sufficient to start a nuclear war, so perhaps we should relax a
bit. It seems it would take a number of fools to stumble into a
nuclear conflict…..well…. maybe we should be at least a little worried.
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