November 1, 1999
PEACE ACTIVISTS' DEMAND FOR AN END TO NUCLEAR MADNESS PLAYED
A DECISIVE ROLE.
How We Ended the Cold War
by JOHN TIRMAN
It is now ten years since the Berlin wall crumbled, but the question
of how and why the cold war was concluded still lingers.
As the apparent winner, the West has tended to regard its triumph as
a vindication of cold war policies or, more modestly, as a case of Soviet
"exhaustion." Neither of those views is satisfying because each discounts
the role played by the peace and antinuclear movements. Evidence is mounting
that their influence on events was more important than most historical
accounts admit--perhaps even decisive. Recounting this influence is imperative
for two reasons. The dominant view of the right and center is that military
intimidation was the root of victory, a dangerous axiom then and just as
foolish today and tomorrow. Second, the history demonstrates the ability
of popular movements to effect change, a lesson that sharply diverges from
the habits of historians and news media alike, which generally give far
more attention to the actions of elites.
The three main interpretations of the cold war's demise reflect, not
surprisingly, the right, center and left of US politics. Since the tearing
down of the Berlin wall, the right wing has claimed a resounding victory
for Reagan's military buildup and tough talk. Their argument pivots on
the intimidating qualities of the US arsenal (especially the Strategic
Defense Initiative, or "Star Wars"); NATO's deployment of Euromissiles
as a rejoinder to the Soviet Union's installation of SS-20 nuclear missiles
aimed at Europe; the Reagan Doctrine of battling leftist regimes in Southern
Africa, Central America and Afghanistan; and the grandiloquent campaign
for personal freedom. The rapid expansion of US military spending, it is
argued, also threatened Moscow with bankruptcy. Given the dismal prospects
of trying to keep up with the American technological juggernaut and protect
its puppet regimes, the Politburo sued for peace by electing Mikhail Gorbachev.
Some Reaganites even assert that this was their intention all along: to
crush the Soviet Union and win the cold war.
Centrists, typically visible as the Democratic Party leadership, view
things differently. They argued that the forty-year effort to check and
reverse Soviet influence was a bipartisan endeavor. The core of America's
strategy--the policy of containment--was forged in the late forties by
Truman advisers George Kennan, Paul Nitze and others, and carried out with
persevering fidelity. Truman, Kennedy and Johnson played indispensable
roles in standing up to the USSR, a Democratic Congress authorized the
policy and the money, and even the much-maligned Jimmy Carter ordered up
the neutron bomb, the MX missile, Euromissiles and anticommunist actions
in the Third World. The European alliance, which included many democratic
socialist governments over the years, was vital to the outcome as well.
Diplomacy played a major role, as did foreign aid, trade, the communications
revolution and other factors. Gorbachev came to be regarded as a kind of
improvising reformer who saw the USSR as dysfunctional, but whose perestroika
was unworkable and whose glasnost careened out of control. Reagan
just happened to be there at the end.
Both views contain some truth, but neither is wholly accurate. There
is a third view, that of the left, which sees the cold war as a logical
and reprehensible outgrowth of a US political system seemingly dependent
on military spending for prosperity, constantly in need of an enemy, determined
to maintain class and race privileges for the few, and willing to put the
whole world at risk for its perfervid anticommunism. This perspective,
which often (though not often enough) imputed similar qualities to the
Soviet Union, was the cornerstone of the New Left, which so effectively
challenged US policy in Southeast Asia in the sixties and early seventies.
By the early eighties, this perspective was invigorated by a mass movement
that was a hybrid of many gradations of political sentiments. Its engine
was exceptionally broad-based citizen activism, and naturally enough, the
demise of the cold war is seen mainly as a result of the loud and persistent
public demand for peace stirred by such activism. That included the efforts
to stop and reverse the arms race, counteract the power of the military-industrial
complex, condemn the US government's comfort with apartheid and overturn
the US imperialism conspicuous in Central America and the Caribbean.
Some of the right's claims can be quickly discarded. The call for liberty
behind the "Iron Curtain" was hardly unique to Reagan; it had been a standard
rhetorical device for forty years. The Helsinki Final Act of 1975, which
established a human rights framework for all of Europe, had been denounced
by the right wing. Jimmy Carter, the first President to make human rights
a core goal of US foreign policy, was condemned by conservatives for placing
human rights above other national interests. The Reagan Administration
not only tolerated or even embraced regimes that were among the worst violators
of human rights--South Africa, Turkey, El Salvador, Argentina, Chile and
so on--it created and funded movements that committed numerous atrocities
in the name of fighting communism.
The Reagan Doctrine supplied guerrillas in Angola, Nicaragua and Afghanistan
to battle supposedly Marxist regimes. There is little doubt that the Afghan
fighters, lavishly supplied by the CIA, helped to convince the Soviets
to leave Afghanistan, and the CIA-backed contras destabilized Nicaragua
enough to tip an election against the Sandinistas. The UNITA insurgents
in Angola, helped enormously by Reagan, continue to wreak havoc in that
country. These interventions were hardly decisive in the undoing of Soviet
Communism, however. Neither Angola nor Nicaragua was consequential to the
Soviets. Afghanistan was important, but the bulk of US aid to the mujahedeen
came in the late eighties, most prominently after March 1986, a year after
Gorbachev came to power with the intention of withdrawing Soviet troops
from Afghanistan.
The claim that Reagan's military buildup unhinged Soviet Communism,
and that the coup de grâce of the rearmament was Reagan's cherished
Star Wars program, is also exaggerated. While Soviet leaders did view the
buildup and the belligerent statements of Reagan, Alexander Haig, Jeane
Kirkpatrick and Caspar Weinberger with alarm--and were particularly concerned
about a possible invasion of Cuba--Soviet military planning did not change
appreciably in the early eighties. As a number of scholars have concluded
after combing the Soviet archives opened in the nineties, there was no
panicky response to the Reagan rearmament that led to Soviet economic or
political depletion.
Soviet leaders were suspicious of Reagan's motives for upgrading America's
longstanding program to research ballistic missile defenses under the Strategic
Defense Initiative, but they did relatively little in their military preparations
(aside from howling about it). They rightly saw an SDI deployment as improbable,
but if such a system did come to fruition, they would respond not by trying
to match it but by investing in more ballistic missiles or cheap technologies
to defeat it.
As a result, when Gorbachev came to power in March 1985, the Soviets
were maintaining the cold war status quo. It was Reagan who was moving
toward a more moderate stance by mid-decade: He put some far-reaching arms-reduction
schemes on the negotiating table in 1983 and made a major conciliatory
speech in January 1984.
The claim that the Reagan rearmament and rhetoric made Moscow bow, therefore,
is weak and unproven. Were the Soviets alarmed by loose talk of nuclear
warfighting? Of course. Did they seek to restrain SDI? Naturally. They
were interested in the relative stability of nuclear parity that was achieved
in the seventies with the SALT process and the ABM Treaty. But their actions
were quite moderate in response to Reagan's brinkmanship. Until Gorbachev
gained full authority in the Kremlin, continuity reigned.
The centrist explanation for the cold war--that the steadfast, long-term,
bipartisan support for containment, both military and diplomatic, finally
paid off--omits the disarray among many Democrats, and indeed among a large
segment of the arms-control community. Centrists took a "we don't and can't
know" attitude toward Soviet intentions under Gorbachev, never quite believing
that the Soviet leader's proposals were anything more than the counterpart
of Reagan's own extraordinary public relations. By 1986 many despaired
of achieving any arms control and were deeply suspicious of (and essentially
opposed to) the deep-cuts proposals coming from the two leaders and the
peace movement in Europe and the United States. They argued that nuclear
deterrence was not only moral but virtually sacrosanct. Increasingly, the
centrists spoke of modest military procurement reform and investing in
measures to avoid accidental nuclear war as the primary alternatives to
Reagan's policies, and thereby fashioned themselves "owls" rather than
hawks or doves. Many persuaded themselves that Nicaragua and Southern Africa
really were important venues of superpower competition and that some of
the Reagan Doctrine should be supported. Their rhetoric never failed to
be cloaked in terms of US security interests, above all else. In other
words, smooth the rough edges of Reaganism, but advance the basic tenets
of the cold war. The centrists' claims of playing a leading role in the
demise of the superpower competition rest on virtually the same dubious
grounds as the right wing's.
The Peace Movement's Role
The case for the peace movement's crucial role in ending the cold war
rests on two phenomena. The first is the way peace activism created a public
demand for an end to the nuclear madness. The second was how a parallel
expectation was devised within the new Soviet elite surrounding Gorbachev.
The public demand came in several parts, not so much as a conscious
strategy but as an improvisation that sometimes led and as often responded
to events. It began with a calculated effort to stigmatize nuclear weapons,
to clarify and amplify the vaguely held notion that these were fundamentally
unusable weapons. This was quickly achieved by Physicians for Social Responsibility
in particular, whose Paul Revere-like flurry altered the national discourse
about nuclear deterrence between 1980 and 1982. Within those two years,
the conventional thinking about nukes went from a shadowy concern about
the Russians being "ahead" to abhorrence at the thought of the weapons
ever being used. Even Reagan, in this most hyperbolic phase of his belligerency,
was forced to state that the weapons could not be used and that--his Administration's
doctrine notwithstanding--no winners were possible in a nuclear war. The
physicians and scientists did the technical work and raised the alarm,
and the growing antinuclear movement (especially in Europe, which saw itself
as the helpless victim of both superpowers) provided the mass angst that
made the warnings politically potent.
The rise of the nuclear freeze campaign in the early eighties was both
an outcome of this growing stigma and a spur that galvanized further public
outrage. Thousands of freeze chapters sprang up overnight all over the
country; the movement's scale was apparent in the June 12, 1982, demonstration
in Central Park, the largest ever, when 750,000 people gathered to protest
the arms race. News media coverage of the movement and its proposals was
almost a daily occurrence. It was a citizens' crusade that in part questioned
the very legitimacy of elite decision-making, and this constituted a threatening
political movement. It also stimulated a clamor about the moral validity
of deterrence, something the centrist arms-control community was never
prepared to do; it drew the voluble support of many clerics, including
the Conference of Catholic Bishops, and innumerable Sunday sermons from
Protestant pulpits. This was quite a serious challenge and one that resonated
with the American people. Thirty-six nuclear freeze referendums were passed
in November 1982. A large demonstration in Central Park on a sunny summer
day and articles in policy journals were one thing, and possibly negligible;
thirty-six victories in thirty-nine referendums--including eight of nine
states--was something Washington took to heart.
That this public reproach was transformative can be clearly seen in
opinion surveys. In 1981, as Reagan entered office, only about a third
of Americans favored the worldwide elimination of nuclear weapons. But
by 1983 the number had leaped to four out of every five. Even the deployment
of the Euromissiles was viewed suspiciously, with nearly two-thirds favoring
a delay to negotiate with the USSR. Support for a nuclear-weapons freeze
was steady and high, reaching a peak of 86 percent. This sentiment was
verified by the low support for a "get tough" attitude toward Moscow, which
dropped from 77 percent in 1980 to just 44 percent in May 1982.
At first, the White House mobilized every means possible to defeat the
freeze referendums, but it gradually abandoned its bellicose rhetoric and
moved steadily toward serious negotiations with the Soviet Union. "Ronald
Reagan came into office on a Republican platform explicitly pledging the
new government to achieve 'technological and military superiority' over
the Soviet Union," explains David Cortright, a leader of SANE and SANE-Freeze
in the eighties. "Popular culture became increasingly antinuclear as the
freeze movement swept the country. Faced with this unreceptive political
climate, the Reagan Administration largely abandoned its harsh rhetoric
and quietly dropped the concept of superiority." Cortright provides one
of the few meticulously documented histories of how the Reagan Administration
responded to the freeze and its allies in his 1993 book, Peace Works,
and it is apparent from his interviews with top Reagan aides that such
bold measures as the START proposals and the "zero option" for eliminating
nuclear missiles from Europe were stirred significantly by the growing
antinuclear activism in the United States and Europe.
Even at the time, it was apparent that Reagan's peace offensive was
aimed as much at freeze inventor Randy Forsberg as at Leonid Brezhnev.
"Our main concern," a top Administration official told the New York
Times on May 2, 1982, "is to go on the record quickly with a simple
and comprehensible plan to show the Reagan team is for peace, thus taking
some of the steam out of the nuclear freeze movements in Europe and the
United States." Mary Kaldor, a leading historian and activist in England,
noted wryly that the "zero option" idea itself was stolen by Reagan aides
from the protesters they routinely decried as dupes of Moscow. "I remember
having a drink with a senior Reagan Administration official the night the
zero option was announced," she recalled. "'We got the idea from your banners,'
he said, chuckling." Michael Deaver, Reagan's image maestro, also said
the zero option "was our response to the antinuke people."
The Reagan White House rarely responded directly to the peace movement;
more often, it dealt with a Congress that was increasingly aroused by the
peace movement. By the autumn of 1981, the number of initiatives flowing
from Congress on nuclear policy mounted quickly to include, over the next
few years, unilateral restraint on antisatellite weapons and SDI testing,
curbs on nuclear-weapons tests, reductions in Pentagon spending, complex
formulas for stabilizing the nuclear deterrent and negotiating cuts with
the Soviet Union, and resolutions on the freeze idea itself. It was an
astonishingly bold assortment of legislation. While little of it was actually
enacted (the Senate was Republican until 1987), and the Democratic leadership
was wary, the amount and variety of arms-control bills were unprecedented.
Congress was not only acting to restrain the President, as it did in the
seventies, but actually initiated arms-control policies with far-reaching
consequences--as with the space-weapons bans.
It is apparent that the outcry represented by the freeze campaign and
its public-interest allies emboldened the Hill's liberal wing to look more
skeptically at the "winnable nuclear war" ideas and technologies being
promoted by the Reagan Administration. As Brookings Institution scholar
Barry Blechman puts it, the antinuclear movement "radically altered the
political calculus of arms control. Politicians who preferred to forget
in 1980 that they ever said a positive word about arms control could not
work hard enough two years later to make clear their commitment and support."
The Congress "did not originate the freeze movement--far from it," Blechman
continues. "It served instead as a conduit, responding to popular concerns
about nuclear weapons." The freeze and the professional organizations helped
establish a permanent capacity for arms-control initiatives in Congress
that lasted well beyond the apogee of activism in the early to mid-eighties.
The House and Senate particularly responded to the technical expertise
of scientists on issues of nuclear doctrine, SDI, antisatellite weapons
and related matters, a persuasive power that reshaped political culture
far beyond Capitol Hill. It has been suggested that SDI itself was a response
to the freeze, a peculiar reflection of Reagan's own doubts about the morality
of mutually assured destruction. Whatever SDI's origin, the scientists'
disapproval--especially the technical critiques that revealed it to be
an extremely improbable prospect--was one of the decade's most decisive
episodes. First came the broad critique by the Union of Concerned Scientists,
whose team included Nobel laureates and weapons scientists like Hans Bethe,
Richard Garwin and Henry Kendall, then similar appraisals from several
other institutes. The news media were receptive to the scientists' broadsides,
and as a result, the public never wholly bought in to Reagan's dream. Large
numbers (e.g., 48 percent in October 1984) believed it would escalate the
arms race, and occasionally, even large majorities deemed it too expensive
to deploy--ideas that came directly from the professional opposition.
By early 1985, when Gorbachev rose in the Kremlin, several panels of
leading American scientists had stoutly declaimed Star Wars as an unworkable--and
dangerous--addition to the nuclear rivalry, one that the Soviets could
easily counter but would nonetheless view (rightly) as mounting a potential
first-strike threat against them. At that pivotal moment, virtually no
one in policy-responsible circles believed that SDI as articulated by Reagan
was a plausible concept.
By the time Gorbachev and Reagan started their slow dance in the summit
meetings, the contours of American attitudes were rather firmly set. The
public, at first alarmed by the possibility of nuclear war, then upset
by the "externalities" of the cold war--the costs, the hazards of the weapons
complex, the moral corruption of the Central America imbroglio--sustained
their distaste well beyond the salad days of the freeze campaign. The public
and elites of all kinds wanted better relations with the Soviets and were
pressing to cut nuclear weapons, SDI and conventional forces in Europe.
This was manifestly a different agenda from what Reagan had set out to
achieve. It was vastly more wide-ranging than what the Democratic leadership
had articulated in 1980-81. It was, indeed, more assertive and visionary
than what the arms-control establishment (as opposed to disarmament groups)
proposed through most of the eighties. As my colleague Matt Fellowes notes
in a study of public opinion: "In 1986, 80 percent were in favor of an
underground nuclear test ban, 82 percent were against weapons in space,
and 84 percent were in favor of reducing Soviet and US warheads by 50 percent."
Despite Reagan's popularity, "the public remained highly supportive of
arms-control negotiations, and became increasingly opposed to further defense
spending increases. This point became more clear by the mid-'80s, when
the public clearly had begun to withdraw support for further nuclear development
and militarization, while maintaining high levels of support for continued
arms-control negotiations. This trend developed despite increasingly confrontational
rhetoric from the White House and near-record lows in American feelings
about the Soviets."
A highly symbolic reckoning in the decade came at the Reykjavik summit
in late 1986. This is where Reagan and Gorbachev nearly agreed to total
nuclear disarmament, causing consternation among the foreign policy elite
and the conservative parties running much of Western Europe, which had
spent so much political capital (and actual pounds, marks and francs) on
the alleged need for nuclear deterrence. The American President and the
Soviet Communist boss nearly did what only the most brazen peaceniks had
been proposing--get rid of the nukes. The fact that these two implacable
foes could come within a hairbreadth of eliminating their nuclear arsenals
was a testament to their own sense of responsibility for the survival of
civilization, forged in the specter of nuclear winter, the horrifying consequences
of the Chernobyl accident and the escalating, worldwide demand for action
to reduce the nuclear danger.
Reykjavik also led to the next moment emblematic of the demise of the
cold war--the signing of the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty in 1987.
Reagan had been crippled by the Iran/contra scandal, which threatened
for a time to bring down his presidency. He responded by moving closer
to Gorbachev. The INF agreement was the first major consequence of Reagan's
transformation, signed just a year after the Iran/contra scandal
became public. The "zero option," cursed by conservatives and many arms
controllers alike because it supposedly "decoupled" US and European nuclear
security, became the first arms-reduction treaty of the eighties. It was
opposed by Senate majority leader Robert Byrd and Representative Les Aspin,
both key Democrats, and numerous others in Washington's higher circles,
including Henry Kissinger, Richard Nixon and Brent Scowcroft. But the overwhelming
public approval of the treaty--more than 80 percent--collapsed the opposition.
The INF agreement, ratified by the Senate in 1988, was the first payoff
for the sustained and clamorous public demand for an end to nuclear madness.
Later that year, the odd couple of Gorbachev and Reagan sketched what would
eventually become the two Strategic Arms Reduction treaties, which dramatically
cut into strategic nuclear arsenals, again earning the enthusiastic approval
of the American public.
How the movement to prevent intervention in Central America affected
the end of the cold war is harder to gauge. What the long struggle over
US policy did do was to depreciate the hyperbolic claims of the Reaganites
about Communism. Most Americans never believed the notion that the Sandinistas
represented a national security threat to the United States. Coupled with
obvious, false piety toward the contras and the junta in El Salvador,
including tolerance of their outrageous human rights conduct, the policy
significantly devalued the moral validity of anticommunism. The Reagan
assault in Central America, often illegal and almost always immoral, hollowed
out the residual American distrust of all things Communist and made it
easier for peace activists to argue successfully for a deep and abiding
détente.
The peace movement in the West had succeeded brilliantly at "changing
the conversation" about the morality of nuclear weapons, the nature of
East-West relations and the ill effects of the cold war. As described by
a leading scholar of social movements, Thomas Rochon, "the peace movement
was the agent behind the transformation of the INF issue from being a policy
decided primarily on military grounds by a few political leaders and technical
experts to being a massively debated issue invested with political meaning."
That transformation describes the American disarmament crusade as well,
one that captured and held hostage the discourse on nuclear weapons for
nearly a decade.
The Echo Effect
Perhaps the more remarkable part of the story, however, is how the public
demand for change in the West was echoed in Moscow, with tangible results
then replayed on the world stage. The steady parade to the Soviet Union
and Eastern Europe by ordinary citizen diplomats, lawyers, doctors, scientists
and a variety of dissident politicians created an entirely different--and
largely unanticipated--dynamic for détente. At one level, all this contact
merely turned up the volume of popular clamor in Western capitals by broadcasting
the peace agenda from different venues. Someone like Dr. Bernard Lown of
International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War could say precisely
the same thing in Moscow that he said in Boston, but with a Russian physician
at his side, after a meeting with a Soviet leader, his message carried
more weight. This simple, self-induced echoing was the most plentiful East-West
activity among nonprofit groups, practiced by a veritable deluge of sister-city
envoys, caravans of students, delegations of this union or that recreation
club, ad infinitum. These forays had one salient virtue: They raised the
temperature on politicians in Europe and the United States, a constant
reminder that a popular will was escalating. When the local Rotary Club
president visits Moscow, sees an apparent desire for better relations and
returns to telephone the local newspaper editor and member of Congress,
that is retail democracy at its most vigorous; repeated thousands of times--as
it was--it sends an unmistakable message.
This seemingly spontaneous outbreak of citizen diplomacy also touched
Eastern Europe, particularly Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and East Germany.
The political dynamics were different, of course. Even before Reagan was
elected, the labor union Solidarity had already begun its astonishing and
formidable challenge in Poland, a revolt not just of the unions but of
civil society and clerics, which served as a touchstone for the remainder
of the decade. Political dissent was rife in the other "captive" nations
and was championed more and more by dissidents in the West. From an early
stage of the antinuclear protests, efforts were mounted to connect to the
human rights activists in the Warsaw Pact countries, and another unlikely
alliance was forged, one that saw the nuclear madness and repression as
part of the same loathsome superpower manipulation.
Possibly the most consistently influential echo effect was the one created
by "policy entrepreneurs" who engaged the Kremlin over a number of years.
The most notable of these was Pugwash, scientists from around the world
who met regularly, formed working groups, issued papers and the like from
the fifties on. By the eighties, Pugwash-convened task forces had addressed
the whole range of arms issues besetting the superpower rivalry--nuclear
testing, ballistic missile defense, conventional forces, nuclear doctrine--and
provided Soviet scientists with insights on arms control that they may
not have found elsewhere. By the early eighties, the Pugwash group was
supplemented by several others, notably Frank von Hippel and Jeremy Stone
of the Federation of American Scientists, Manhattan Project physicist Victor
Weiskopf, Tom Cochran of the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC),
Bernard Lown, Randy Forsberg of the Institute for Defense and Disarmament
Studies and many more.
The policy entrepreneurs went to Moscow typically to create some sense
of momentum toward arms control that would resonate in the United States.
What was less expected was how hungrily the Soviets would take up their
suggestions for arms restraint and the "new thinking" inherent in the American
and European peace community. The Soviet policy elite, beginning in the
Brezhnev era but flowering, of course, under Gorbachev, adopted several
of the most important initiatives of the Western activists. For several
years there had been a group of Soviet intellectuals, leaders of influential
institutes in the Soviet Academy of Sciences, who were pushing internally
for reform, a circle that included Yevgeny Primakov, Georgy Arbatov, Yevgeny
Velikhov and Georgy Shaknazarov, among others. They were the dynamic core
of a struggle for deep-seated political and economic change within the
Soviet Union, separate from the appeals from the West. But their receptivity
to the new initiatives from the US and European peace community reinforced
their own transformative agenda and provided the outsiders with instant
access to Kremlin power.
Among the more penetrating influences was the Palme Commission, a high-level
group of political leaders convened by Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme
to formulate alternative security ideas. It argued at length in 1982 for
a "common security" framework in which the security of one's adversary
becomes a key consideration in one's own defense thinking. "The work in
the Palme Commission began a very important stage in my life," top Kremlin
adviser Arbatov wrote years later, "and exerted a major influence on my
understanding of politics and international relations." In fact, the entire
complex of peace researchers working on new, nonoffensive security concepts--led
by Anders Boserup in Denmark, Egon Bahr and Lutz Unterseher in West Germany
and Randy Forsberg in the United States--apparently had a profound influence
on the Russians that extended beyond conventional forces to nuclear doctrine.
The thinking seeped in through many pores in the membrane of Soviet Communism
via the scientists' exchanges, the many intellectual forums sponsored by
peace groups and through the influence exerted by particular Soviet officials
who later became prominent in Gorbachev's inner circle.
Moscow's embrace of common security concepts accounts for the firm attitude
that nuclear arsenals should be eliminated or drastically cut. The nuclear-testing
moratorium, unilaterally pursued by Moscow in 1986-87, was an early, concrete
expression of this view; it was aided magnificently by the NRDC seismic-monitoring
project, which created a technical system that could detect a nuclear test,
thereby answering one of the primary objections to a nuclear-test ban--that
it could not be verified. This technical breakthrough not only bolstered
the public relations value of the test ban but actually influenced Gorbachev's
thinking about issues of nuclear stockpile maintenance, verification and
the like. In the crucial realm of conventional forces, Boserup, his British
associate Robert Neild and others (including Americans Forsberg and von
Hippel) directly lobbied Gorbachev to explore the new concepts of nonoffensive
defense.
The result of this and many other such intellectual inroads was the
1988 treaty language offered by the Soviets in the negotiations to reduce
conventional forces in Europe. It was, in all important respects, a nonoffensive
defense design, a radical departure from previous Soviet positions. So,
too, were the unilateral reductions in conventional forces in Eastern Europe
in late 1988, especially significant since Gorbachev pledged before the
United Nations that December not to intervene in the affairs of other Warsaw
Pact countries--fateful declarations, given the events of late 1989, when
Soviet control over Eastern Europe suddenly dissolved in a tidal wave of
popular resistance. Soviet officials also credited Boserup and others with
a central role in the US-USSR talks leading to the Conventional Forces
in Europe Treaty in 1990.
Similarly, the scientist-diplomats convinced Gorbachev to abandon the
Soviet position of demanding that the United States halt Star Wars before
reductions in nuclear missiles could be negotiated. Von Hippel and Jeremy
Stone, given their access to Gorbachev, were essential agents of this message,
but it was also a view widely held among the most prestigious scientists
in the West and readily conveyed to their Soviet counterparts through innumerable
visits, forums, books, articles and so forth. By the time the issue was
decided, the thundering critique of SDI in America had resonated throughout
Moscow. It was an opinion strongly held by Andrei Sakharov, the legendary
Soviet physicist who had played an important role in moving Moscow to sign
the ABM Treaty in 1972.
Sakharov had informed Soviet officials of the need to separate SDI from
arms-reduction talks as early as 1986, and he gave a speech asserting that
position to a huge East-West peace forum in Moscow in February 1987, at
which Gorbachev was present. Soon afterward, Gorbachev announced the delinking
of SDI from arms reductions, and the INF Treaty and START draft soon followed.
Gorbachev's public position on Star Wars reflected the view of many of
the American scientists who opposed the program: If you want to eliminate
the threat of nuclear weapons, then eliminate nuclear weapons.
Throughout this astonishing process, the many peace researchers and
activists involved made concerted efforts to relay the good news of Moscow's
depth of change to Western capitals. Both Russians and those from the West
were involved in this, briefing policy and opinion leaders, introducing
new twists to each extraordinary Gorbachev gambit. By 1989, even before
the Berlin wall was a target of German chisels, the West had essentially
surrendered to Gorbachev's entreaties.
For all explanations of the end of the cold war, Gorbachev is pivotal.
What actually motivated him and how his actions were formulated is crucial.
Clearly, the proposals and arguments of the "policy entrepreneurs" were
exceptionally influential. This phenomenon is illuminated by Cornell University
professor Matthew Evangelista's 1999 book, Unarmed Forces: The Transnational
Movement to End the Cold War, a thorough and scholarly exploration
that delves into the Soviet archives for answers. He concludes that Gorbachev
"seemed to welcome transnational contacts--and not only on technical issues
of nuclear arms control. He paved the way for transnational activists to
challenge the Soviet military's competence within their core domain of
planning for conventional warfare in Europe. The influences of foreign
scientists and peace activists in preparing the intellectual ground for
ending the East-West military standoff in central Europe contributed much
to the peaceful demise of the Cold War."
The ingredients contributing to the end of the US-Soviet rivalry are
too numerous, too intertwined and too enigmatic to gauge with absolute
confidence. The proponents of Reagan's "victory" have a few valid points,
as do the centrists, with their emphasis on containment. A full rendering
of the topic would have to account for a large number of disconnected factors
as well: the Polish Pontiff, the accident at Chernobyl, the growing prosperity
of Western Europe, the penetration of new consumer technologies and even
influences like rock and roll.
The rivalry was also a multifaceted affair, one of ideology and culture
and political styles. First and foremost, however, it was one of armaments.
The US-Soviet confrontation was, by the mid-sixties, a highly formalized
conflict, attended by vast bureaucracies of arms-making and arms control,
strategists for war-making and strategists for coexistence, with universities
and laboratories and institutes and manufacturers all in place to sustain
it. Only something extraordinary could break up this powerful, self-perpetuating
colossus. Ronald Reagan, with his eccentric blend of utter stupidity and
deft political acuity, was very much in the tradition of US cold warriors--the
bad cop, the anticommunist crusader, the militaristic Commander in Chief.
Even SDI was just a twist on a very old theme. It took something more radical--more
disruptive and normative--to crack the ice of the cold war.
That disruption was brandished in the cacophonous demand for an end
to the nuclear madness that resonated first throughout Europe and then
quickly in the United States. It found a soulmate of sorts in the new Soviet
leader, who somehow opened his mind to new ideas for disarmament and cooperation.
That the peace movement stood at both ends of this triumph, creating a
loud and persistent echo from West to East and back again, is one of the
great achievements of the twentieth century.
John Tirman has headed the Winston Foundation
for World Peace, one of the largest peace philanthropies in the United
States, since 1986. In December he will be a Fulbright scholar in Cyprus.