203. Information Memorandum From the Chairman of the Policy Planning
Council (Rodman) to Secretary of
State Shultz1
Washington, August 2,
1984
SUBJECT
- Looking Ahead: NSC Papers
The NSC staff, as part of its own
“Looking Ahead” exercise, has commissioned (in-house and around the
government) a series of papers on key issues.2 These papers will not be completed until
mid-August, and I am assured we will get a chance to see them.
Attached are the terms of reference for four such papers. They are useful
not only because they raise good questions but because they confirm that
we and the NSC are thinking seriously
about some of the same issues as part of this exercise. The four papers
are on:
- —
- Soviet-American relations: Strategic
Overview: Soviet perceptions and actions, the role of
negotiations, economic leverage, summitry, talks on regional
issues, etc. (TAB 1)
- —
- US, West Europe, and NATO: Outline of a broad
inquiry into political, military, and economic dimensions of the
Alliances. It touches on new conventional-force doctrines, ways
of assisting Europe’s industrial/technological development, etc.
(TAB 2)
- —
- Strategic weapons and arms control: Evolution of the strategic balance, and
arms control implications. (TAB 3)
- —
- Central America:
This paper asks such questions as: Are our means proportional to
the ends we seek? What is a feasible diplomatic agenda for
dealing with Nicaragua? (TAB 4)
Unfortunately, none of these papers tells us what the answers are. But
the papers that are to come should be interesting.
[Page 858]
Tab 1
Paper Prepared in the National Security Council3
Washington, undated
SOVIET AMERICAN RELATIONS: STRATEGIC OVERVIEW
Key Questions:
- 1.
- What are Soviet perceptions of the current strategic
situation (broad balance of power, US purposes, principal
Soviet opportunities, risks of conflict, etc.)?
- 2.
- What impact will Soviet leadership politics have on
foreign policy in next 2 years? (How weak and divided are
they? Is a “stonewall-coalition” in place? Does internal
stalemate make US probe pointless?)
- 3.
- How to conduct a probe of Soviet positions on most
advantageous terms (without sacrificing bargaining leverage,
without demobilizing public opinion on issues to be
negotiated, without limiting freedom of action on other
issues)?
- 4.
- Do we face great obstacles in being understood by Moscow,
in proving “good faith”—or is this just a Soviet pose? If
problem is real, how to overcome it? How to avoid being
manipulated?
- 5.
- How can Moscow’s agenda be matched to ours—what are the
issues of greatest Soviet interest? What are the points of
greatest vulnerability? Which of these offer opportunities
for the US to exploit? Where would it be counterproductive
to apply pressure?
- 6.
- On which, if any, disputed issues is it possible to
achieve results in the short term (first year of
Administration)? On which only in the long term?
- 7.
- To what extent can Soviet conduct in the Third World be
moderated through direct US-Soviet discussions (recognizing
that the most effective restraints are created by
independent US cooperation with friendly states)? On which
issues? What is the role of “linkage” in these discussions?
In the absence of any understandings with the US, is Soviet
posture in Third World likely to become more or less
dangerous? Where is the Soviet challenge to Western
positions likely to remain strongest even if some agreements
can be reached?
- 8.
- Is Western economic leverage of any importance in
affecting Soviet foreign policy choices? If so, how to use
it?
- 9.
- What can be the place of human-rights issues in US
strategy? Can the US take a consistent approach to them,
through the up’s and down’s of relations with Moscow? Do
signs of internal tightening suggest that human rights
practices will be a growing obstacle
to improved relations?
- 10.
- What is the place of a summit in policy toward the Soviets
over the next two years? Would the Soviets be interested,
even in the absence of agreements? How acceptable is it to
have an inconclusive summit—with a full airing of views, but
still tense and without agreements (i.e., not so different
from Mitterrand’s visit)?4 What would be the principal advantages and
disadvantages?
- 11.
- How useful can “small steps” (agreements or contacts on
peripheral issues—e.g. maritime boundary talks, fishing
agreements, etc.) be in US strategy? Should they be saved to
ratify progress on other issues, or used up to signal our
interest in the course of a probe?
- 12.
- If no (or very low) results are most likely over next
several years, what is implication for US policy? Is it necessary to push harder with extra
initiatives and offers (because no other way to force Soviet
leadership to make decisions)? Safe
to do so (because little chance they’ll accept)? Or
important to sit tight (because
anything given away now will be wasted)?
Tab 2
Paper Prepared in the National Security Council5
Washington, undated
U.S., West Europe, and
NATO Terms of Reference
- I.
- Trends
- A.
- Economy of key West European countries
- —
- GNP rate of
growth?
- —
- Sectors of high unemployment?
- —
- Movement into high growth industrial, service
sectors?
- —
- International competitiveness?
- —
- Energy dependence?
- —
- Other
- B.
- Political trends in West Europe
- —
- Tendencies toward protection?
- —
- Movement toward, away from, European economic,
political integration?
- —
- Arms control/anti-nuclear sentiment
- —
- Perceptions of, attitudes toward, U.S.? Areas of friction
with U.S.?
- —
- Perceptions of, attitudes toward
Soviets?
- —
- Other
- C.
- Military
- —
- Non-nuclear force balances in Central Region?
Trends in balance? Trends in operating concepts
(nuclear/conventional operations, OMG “deep strikes” by
NATO or
Soviets)?
- Ground force balance and trends
- Air warfare balance and trends
- Special forces, unconventional warfare
trends
- —
- Force balance and trends in Northern Region
- Air balance?
- Maritime balance?
- Ground force balance?
- Implications for Soviet SSBN strategy?
- —
- Force balances and trends on Southern
Flank?
- —
- Trends in theater nuclear forces
- Soviet TNF
vs. likely Soviet target set?
- NATO
TNF vs. likely
NATO target
set?
- Impact of Soviet defenses, hardening on
TNF
balance?
- Political implications?
- —
- Trends in mobilization and reinforcement
capabilities, NATO and Warsaw Pact?
- —
- Sustainability?
- —
- Non-nuclear strike systems?
- II.
- NATO Strengths and
weaknesses, Warsaw Pact strengths and weaknesses
- A.
- NATO
strengths?
- B.
- NATO weaknesses?
[Page 861]
- —
- Disagreement between U.S. and West Europe on proper level of
defense spending
- —
- Low levels of U.S. defense spending for NATO 1970–1980
- —
- Low levels of West European defense spending
1980–future
- —
- Unintegrated R&D, logistics systems
- —
- Absence of strategic reserves
- —
- Key rear area targets are few in number,
vulnerable
- C.
- Warsaw Pact strengths
- —
- Military superiority in many cases
- —
- Integrated force structure
- D.
- Warsaw Pact weaknesses
- —
- Strong, latent anti-Soviet feeling in East
Europe
- —
- War plan may critically depend on execution of
pre-planned timetable that could be
disrupted
- III.
- Goals?
- A.
- Minimum—maintain status quo: avoid or reduce U.S.-West European
frictions, keep military balance in Central region from
declining further, muddle through
- B.
- Revive NATO
- —
- Measures to strengthen West European
economies
- —
- New doctrines for NATO to increase NATO confidence in
ability to deter Soviet attack, increase Soviet
worries about security of East Europe in
wartime
- C.
- Build alternatives to NATO
- —
- Bilateral arrangements between U.S. and key West
European governments may avoid problems of getting
NATO-wide
agreement, be more flexible
- —
- Bilateral or other West European defense
arrangements independent of U.S.
- —
- Others?
- IV.
- Strategies
- A.
- Muddle through
- —
- Identify low cost military measures where
consensus has emerged, is emerging, and act on
them, e.g., infra-structure, aid for Turkey
- —
- Resolve NATO
crises in Congress, with Europeans, as they
arise
- —
- Resolve economic disputes with Europe through
established mechanisms
- B.
- Strategy to revive NATO?
- —
- Economic plan to help West European
economies?
- —
- Ways to move NATO to new doctrines? New
weaponry?
- C.
- Alternatives to NATO
- —
- Reinforce strategy, positive tendencies toward
cooperation in groups smaller than full NATO membership?
- —
- Ways for U.S.
to transfer to key West European countries
technologies, capabilities that would be required
for European defense of Europe
- —
- Develop alliances with European countries that
U.S. needs for
strategic missions other than defense of Europe
(e.g, Turkey for Southwest Asian contingencies,
Norway for maritime missions)
- V.
- Obstacles
- A.
- To reviving NATO
- —
- Transferring resources from U.S. to West Europe will
be opposed. Counter arguments for use on
Hill?
- —
- Shift to new, non-nuclear defense doctrine
will be opposed. Counter arguments for use in
Europe?
- B.
- To alternatives to NATO
- —
- West Germany outside of NATO may appear
dangerous to other Europeans, Soviets.
Countermeasures?
- —
- Shift to greater European self-reliance could
cause shift to West European neutralism,
anti-U.S. policies
around the world. Countermeasures?
Tab 3
Paper Prepared in the National Security Council6
Washington, undated
STRATEGIC WEAPONS AND ARMS CONTROL ISSUES
1. What is our understanding of how the Soviets evaluate the
strategic nuclear balance? Is there evidence or analysis that
suggests which U.S. strategic
capabilities are most important in Soviet calculations
[Page 863]
and which, therefore, help
most to deter attack? Possible categories for discussion:
- —
- strategic defenses
- —
- precision guided weapons
- —
- Stealth technologies
- —
- strategic ASW
2. What are the capabilities that are likely to emerge in Soviet
strategic weapons systems over the next five years? What impact will
they have on our strategic forces? Issues include:
- —
- If the Soviets deploy mobile missiles, what effect does
that have on our requirement for high accuracy weapons to
attack fixed targets?
- —
- If the Soviets deploy various forms of ABM, what effect will that
have on U.S. penetration
capabilities?
- —
- If the Soviets develop under-ice operations for SSBNs, what effect does that
have on our strategic ASW
capabilities and programs?
3. Which U.S. strategic weapons
technologies now appear to have technological and strategic promise?
- —
- Near-real-time reconnaissance and targeting
capabilities?
- —
- Autonomously guided weapons?
- —
- Stealth?
- —
- BMD?
4. In view of Soviet perceptions of the balance and foreseeable
Soviet and U.S. weapons programs,
how should our strategic modernization program and our strategic
defenses initiative be changed?
5. Similarly, are there changes that should be made in the operation
of our strategic forces as a result of an evaluation of Soviet
perceptions, and U.S. and Soviet
capabilities?
6. What steps should be taken now to prepare the way for these
program and operational changes? What are the best ways to utilize
the opportunities for decision present at the start of a new term?
What follow-up measures will be necessary to support and sustain
these measures in the face of foreseeable opposition in the
bureaucracy, the Hill, and
the arms control community?
7. What are the conceivable arms control measures most compatible
with the U.S. strategic programs and
operations that you recommend? What should be the timing for these
arms control measures?
[Page 864]
Tab 4
Paper Prepared in the National Security Council7
Washington, July 1984
CENTRAL AMERICA
KEY PLANNING ISSUES
- I.
- Strategic Overview
- —
- Ends:
- What are the stakes in Central America? Are
they as high as we have said? Are our objectives
attainable given the threat? What is the range of
acceptable outcomes? How are they related to the
pursuit of other US policy objectives, elsewhere
in the hemisphere and beyond?
- —
- Means:
- Are our means proportional to the ends we
seek? How different are the means needed to attain
maximum (vs. satisfactory) goals?
- II.
- Political-military problems, opportunities, and options:
- —
- El Salvador:
- What can be achieved militarily with current
level of aid? Vulnerability to sudden collapse
increasing or decreasing? Any prospect of major
military break-through by government forces, or of
steadily growing control over insurgency?
- How to assure continuing human rights
improvement? Is this the key merely to our problem (sustaining current
policy) or also to their
problem (stabilizing the situation)?
- How to increase international legitimacy of
Duarte
government (e.g. revocation of Ungo recognition by
SI)?
- —
- Nicaragua:
- What is a feasible diplomatic agenda—how much
can we get/should we give? How strong our position
if covert aid preserved? If not? Priority of
internal and external goals (i.e. democratization,
pluralism vs. limits on quantity and quality of
outside arms supply, military advisers,
etc.)
- What feasible diplomatic process—role of
Contadora (especially Mexico), Cuba,
Soviets?
- —
- Elsewhere in the region:
- What greatest medium-term vulnerabilities
(Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras)?
- US measures to deal with worsening in one or
more countries—in anticipation, in direct
response. How sustainable a US strategy that has
to deal with several of these wars at once?
- III.
- Kissinger Commission Recommendations:
- —
- Managing the follow-through
- Reformulations, refinements needed to make
Commission package more effective?
- Is a scaled-back program of any value? Any
real impact in region, or merely precondition to
sustain military aid? To induce Nicaraguan
restraint?
- —
- Congressional prospects:
- How dependent on progress in El Salvador, or
on diplomatic probe toward Nicaragua?
- IV.
- Long-term military posture:
- —
- New missions (e.g. narcotics interdiction)
- —
- Infrastructure requirements
- —
- Political implications (including compatibility with
different negotiated outcomes)