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February 1994
Reagan and the Russians
The Cold War ended despite President Reagan's arms buildup, not because of
it--or so former President Gorbachev told the authors
by Richard Ned Lebow and Janice Gross Stein
Shortly after the Berlin Wall was torn down, prominent political leaders and
commentators concluded that the U.S. military buildup under President Ronald
Reagan had won the Cold War. "We were right to increase our defense budget,"
Vice President Dan Quayle announced. "Had we acted differently, the
liberalization that we are seeking today throughout the Soviet bloc would most
likely not be taking place." Even Tom Wicker, a New York Times columnist
with impeccable liberal credentials, reluctantly conceded that the Strategic
Defense Initiative (SDI) and the Reagan buildup "seemed to impress the Soviets
as a challenge that they might not be able to meet."
Hanging tough paid off. Forty years of arms competition, so the argument goes,
brought the Soviet economy to the brink of collapse. The Vatican's Secretary of
State, Agostino Cardinal Casaroli, said, "Ronald Reagan obligated the Soviet
Union to increase its military spending to the limits of insupportability."
When the Soviet Union could no longer afford the competition, its leaders
decided to end the Cold War. A modified version of this argument holds that the
American military buildup simply worsened the Soviet economic quandary; it was
the straw that broke the camel's back. Neither the strong nor the weak version
of the proposition that American defense spending bankrupted the Soviet economy
and forced an end to the Cold War is sustained by the evidence.
The Soviet Union's defense spending did not rise or fall in response to
American military expenditures. Revised estimates by the Central Intelligence
Agency indicate that Soviet expenditures on defense remained more or less
constant throughout the 1980s. Neither the military buildup under Jimmy Carter
and Reagan nor SDI had any real impact on gross spending levels in the USSR. At
most SDI shifted the marginal allocation of defense rubles as some funds were
allotted for developing countermeasures to ballistic defense.
If American defense spending had bankrupted the Soviet economy, forcing an end
to the Cold War, Soviet defense spending should have declined as East-West
relations improved. CIA estimates show that it remained relatively constant as
a proportion of the Soviet gross national product during the 1980s, including
Gorbachev's first four years in office. Soviet defense spending was not reduced
until 1989 and did not decline nearly as rapidly as the overall economy.
To be sure, defense spending was an extraordinary burden on the Soviet economy.
As early as the 1970s some officials warned Leonid Brezhnev that the economy
would stagnate if the military continued to consume such a disproportionate
share of resources. The General Secretary ignored their warnings, in large part
because his authority depended on the support of a coalition in which defense
and heavy industry were well represented. Brezhnev was also extraordinarily
loyal to the Soviet military and fiercely proud of its performance. Soviet
defense spending under Brezhnev and Gorbachev was primarily a response to
internal political imperatives--to pressures from the Soviet version of the
military-industrial complex. The Cold War and the high levels of American
defense spending provided at most an opportunity for leaders of the Soviet
military-industrial complex to justify their claims to preferential treatment.
Even though the Cold War has ended and the United States is no longer
considered a threat by the current Russian leadership, Russian defense spending
now consumes roughly as great a percentage of GNP as it did in the Brezhnev
years.
The Soviet economy was not the only economy burdened by very high levels of
defense spending. Israel, Taiwan, and North and South Korea have allocated a
disproportionate share of resources to defense without bankrupting their
economies. Indeed, some of these economies have grown dramatically. A far more
persuasive reason for the Soviet economic decline is the rigid "command
economy" imposed by Stalin in the early 1930s. It did not reward individual or
collective effort; it absolved Soviet producers from the discipline of the
market; and it gave power to officials who could not be held accountable by
consumers. Consequently much of the investment that went into the civilian
sector of the economy was wasted. The command economy pre-dated the Cold War
and was not a response to American military spending. The Soviet Union lost the
Cold War, but it was not defeated by American defense spending.
Former Soviet officials insist that Gorbachev's decisions to withdraw Soviet
forces from Afghanistan and to end the arms race were made despite the Reagan
buildup and SDI. In 1983 Gorbachev, then the youngest member of the politburo,
visited Canada and spent long hours in private conversation with Aleksandr
Yakovlev, then the ambassador in Ottawa. The two men talked openly for the
first time about the deep problems that the Soviet Union faced and the urgent
need for change. To their mutual surprise they agreed on the folly of the
Soviet intervention in Afghanistan and the necessity of ending the Cold War
before it led to catastrophe for both superpowers. Both men hoped to reduce the
burden of military spending in the USSR, and thus free resources for domestic
reform and renewal.
By the time Gorbachev became General Secretary, in March of 1985, he was deeply
committed to domestic reform and fundamental changes in Soviet foreign policy.
"I, like many others," he observed recently, "knew that the USSR needed radical
change. If I had not understood this, I would never have accepted the position
of General Secretary." Within a month of assuming office he attempted to signal
his interest in arms control to the United States by announcing a unilateral
freeze on the deployment of Soviet intermediate-range missiles in Europe. The
deployment of the SS-20, Yakovlev explains, was a "stupid and strange policy"
that defied logical explanation. Yakovlev considered the deployment illogical
and self-defeating before President Reagan announced SDI and the buildup of
American military forces. He and Gorbachev were "united" on this issue.
Gorbachev felt free to make a series of proposals for deep cuts in his
country's nuclear arsenal because he was confident that the United States would
not attack the Soviet Union. In conversation with his military advisers he
rejected any plans that were premised on war with the West. Since he saw no
threat of attack by the United States, Gorbachev was not intimidated by the
military programs of the Reagan Administration. "These were unnecessary and
wasteful expenditures that we were not going to match," he told us. If both
superpowers were to avoid the growing risk of accidental war, they had to make
deep cuts in their strategic forces. "This was an imperative of the nuclear
age."
Reagan's commitment to SDI made it more difficult for Gorbachev to persuade his
officials that arms control was in the Soviet interest. Conservatives, some of
the military leadership, and spokesmen for defense-related industries insisted
that SDI was proof of America's hostile intentions. In a contentious politburo
meeting called to discuss arms control, Soviet armed forces chief of staff
Marshal Sergei Akhromeyev angrily warned that the Soviet people would not
tolerate any weakening of Soviet defenses, according to Oleg Grinevsky, now
Russia's ambassador to Sweden. Yakovlev insists that "Star Wars was exploited
by hardliners to complicate Gorbachev's attempt to end the Cold War."
President Reagan continued to regard the Soviet Union as an "evil empire" and
remained committed to his quest for a near-perfect ballistic-missile defense.
To break the impasse, Gorbachev tried at the two leaders' summit meeting in
Reykjavik to convince Reagan of his genuine interest in ending the arms race
and restructuring their relationship on a collaborative basis. For the first
time, the two men talked seriously about eliminating all their countries'
ballistic missiles within ten years and significantly reducing their arsenals
of nuclear weapons. Although the summit produced no agreement, Reagan became
"human" and "likable" to Gorbachev and his advisers, and the President,
convinced of Gorbachev's sincerity, began to modify his assessment of the
Soviet Union and gradually became the leading dove of his Administration. The
Reykjavik summit, as Gorbachev had hoped, began a process of mutual reassurance
and accommodation. That process continued after an initially hesitant George
Bush became a full-fledged partner.
The Carter-Reagan military buildup did not defeat the Soviet Union. On the
contrary, it prolonged the Cold War. Gorbachev's determination to reform an
economy crippled in part by defense spending urged by special interests, but
far more by structural rigidities, fueled his persistent search for an
accommodation with the West. That persistence, not SDI, ended the Cold War.
Copyright © 1994 by The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights
reserved.
The Atlantic Monthly; February 1994; Reagan and the Russians; Volume 273, No. 2;
pages 35-37.
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