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Viewing cable 05OTTAWA304, A/S RADEMAKER,S MEETINGS WITH CANADIANS ON ARMS

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
05OTTAWA304 2005-02-01 18:52 2011-08-30 01:44 CONFIDENTIAL Embassy Ottawa
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 06 OTTAWA 000304 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/01/2015 
TAGS: PARM CD CA NPT FAC
SUBJECT: A/S RADEMAKER,S MEETINGS WITH CANADIANS ON ARMS 
CONTROL AND DISARMAMENT ISSUES 
 
REF: A. (A) OTTAWA 269 (BWC/CWC) (NOTAL) 
     B. (B) OTTAWA 124 (MISSILE DEFENSE) 
 
Classified By: POL M/C BRIAN FLORA.  REASONS 1.4 (B) AND (D). 
 
1. (SBU)  SUMMARY.   During a day of consultations in Ottawa 
on January 11, Assistant Secretary for Arms Control Stephen 
Rademaker and AC/PDAS Frank Record exchanged views with 
Canadian Foreign Affairs (FAC) and National Defense officials 
on U.S. and Canadian arms control and disarmament policy. 
This cable covers discussion of FMCT and this year's vote in 
the UN First Committee (UNFC), the Conference on Disarmament 
(CD), differences on landmine policy, the 2005 NPT Review 
Conference, and space security.  Canada proposed follow-on 
discussions in Washington to better understand aspects of 
U.S. concerns about FMCT verification, including the cost and 
intrusiveness of a credible verification regime.  Discussion 
of Canada's prospective participation in ballistic missile 
defense and status of progress relative to BTWC and CWC are 
reported septels (refs A and B).  END SUMMARY. 
 
2. (C) In welcoming remarks, FAC Director General for 
International Security Paul Chapin summarized the current 
political landscape in Canada, noting that the government's 
"minority" status very much was driving the domestic agenda 
and had an impact on all Canadian government policies.  At 
the same time, Prime Minister Martin wanted to leave a 
positive mark on his tenure.  A preoccupation with Canada's 
place in the world was reflected in the PM's extensive travel 
abroad his first 6 months in office, and efforts to cultivate 
strong relations with the Administration in Washington.  The 
Martin government considered the U.S. relationship to be 
"damn important", as reflected in the government's commitment 
of funds and expenditure of efforts on homeland security 
issues.  The upcoming renewal of the North American Aerospace 
Defense Command (NORAD) agreement in 2006 presented a key 
opportunity for Canada and the U.S. to examine and improve 
upon their joint defense of the continent.  Globally, Canada 
continued to work with the U.S. to combat terrorism as 
evidenced in its commitment to standing up a Provincial 
Reconstruction Team in Kandahar in the second half of 2005 
and, in due course, a "battle group" (early 2006).  Chapin 
noted that the Cabinet was due to approve an overall plan for 
Afghanistan this month.  Though Canada did not have troops in 
Iraq, Chapin said, it had committed reconstruction funds for 
Iraq and was participating in the NATO training of Iraqi 
soldiers. 
 
THE "MEDIUM-POWER" PERSPECTIVE 
 
3. (C) Alluding to Canada's preference for a multilateral 
versus bilateral approach on all issues, Chapin sought 
insight on U.S. policy approaches under the new 
Administration.  Rademaker said that the ultimate test of the 
effectiveness of multilateralism is whether it is working or 
not.  In the CD, the veto of states like North Korea and Iran 
tended to undermine effectiveness.  But the U.S. was not 
nave enough to believe that it alone could get Iran to 
adhere to norms to which we all needed them to adhere.  He 
acknowledged that the debate within the USG was colored by 
the Iraq experience.  Advocates of multilateralism, he said, 
had a tough case to make in view of how multilateralism was 
applied to Iraq from 1991 on.  It simply hadn't worked. 
Multilateralism had to be taken seriously.  PDAS Record noted 
that the problem went beyond the UN, citing the OSCE and 
problems with Russia in other organizations.  Chapin agreed 
that effective multilateralism, as opposed to "mindless" or 
"feckless" multilateralism, was key, and observed that the 
use of the qualifying adjective "effective" increasingly had 
become standard within the Canadian bureaucracy. 
4. (C) FAC Nonproliferation, Arms Control and Disarmament 
Director Rob McDougall said he saw multilateralism in the 
nonproliferation context as a "toolbox" approach, where the 
Proliferation Security Initiative, Sea Island initiatives, 
UNSCR 1540 and the Global Partnership constituted component 
parts.  The best way to improve the effectiveness of the 
approach was to bolster existing regimes, he said.  In some 
situations, such as North Korea, McDougall went on, 
multilateralism didn't work.  Canada did not support 
multilateralism as the "only" approach, but did favor 
"robust" multilateralism.  A/S Rademaker agreed, but with the 
caveat that there had to be acknowledgement of situations 
where professed support for a multilateral approach was, in 
effect, intended to be a self-defeating strategy. 
 
KEEPING THE CD ALIVE 
 
5. (C) Paul Chapin characterized the situation in the 
Conference on Disarmament as a "knot we need to untie;" it 
was important to re-start FMCT negotiations with fresh ideas. 
 To this end, Canada had some modest proposals that it wanted 
to run by the U.S. notwithstanding, he added, the fact that 
Canada had "dumped on" the U.S. ideas last summer.  A/S 
Rademaker said the CD had proved itself historically capable 
of producing good results; keeping the institution available 
to us was important.  Nonetheless, there was a risk that the 
forum was approaching irrelevance and in this context new 
issues were needed -- hence, the USG landmines and FMCT 
proposals. 
 
6. (C) Rademaker said the U.S. was "dismayed" at Canada's 
reaction, noting that it was clear that the proposals had 
struck a nerve in Ottawa.  In presenting its FMCT proposal, 
it was not the USG's intention to target the 1998 "Shannon 
mandate," he said.  Rather, the fundamental motivation was to 
give the CD something meaningful to do.  The concept of an 
FMCT was an "old" idea that asked virtually nothing of 
non-nuclear weapon states beyond what already is required of 
them under the NPT.  For non-nuclear weapons states, it was 
the equivalent of suspenders to go with the belt they were 
already wearing .  A case in point was Iran:  If a country 
chose to defy its NPT obligations in the first place, then 
the FMCT had little added value as a restriction on that 
state.  With the exception of China, FMCT was no longer about 
the NWS, because they are no longer interested in producing 
fissile material for weapons purposes.  Rather the real 
target of FMCT is the "borderline" states like India and 
Pakistan. After the 1998 tests, the rationale for FMCT had to 
shift from preventing a nuclear breakout in India and 
Pakistan to "capping" their nuclear weapons programs. 
 
... WITHOUT VERIFICATION 
 
7. (C) The USG's review of its FMCT policy took into 
consideration the end of the cold war and whether a legally 
enforceable ban still served a purpose.  The situation of the 
threshold countries had changed.  India and Pakistan were on 
similar trajectories: when their need for fissile material 
was satisfied, they probably would be glad to accede to the 
FMCT.  Though FMCT still made sense, its value diminished 
with every year that went by.  With regard to verification, 
some aspects to consider were the prospective cost and 
whether verification was effective, i.e. could we reasonably 
expect it to detect cheating.  In addition, we needed to be 
satisfied that the U.S. could agree to the level of intrusion 
that would make verification effective. 
 
8. (C) Rademaker noted that in light of its cold war arms 
control legacy, the U.S. probably had taken a closer look at 
these questions than most governments.  For effective 
verification to take place, a highly intrusive regime would 
be needed, he said.  It would be costly, the magnitude of 
investment probably similar to that in the IAEA.  What likely 
could be agreed in Geneva would fall short of what was 
needed.  Any treaty submitted to the U.S. Senate would 
require a certification regarding whether the treaty was 
effectively verifiable.  The CTBT experience had been 
instructive:  The Senate had rejected the Treaty largely out 
of concern that it was not effectively verifiable, rejecting 
the Clinton Administration's judgment that CTBT was 
verifiable.  Negotiations in Geneva on the FMCT would take 
many years.  Many governments in the CD had reservations 
about FMCT, and they would be able to use the verification 
negotiations to delay the treaty for years.  For example, 
Pakistan wants verification of existing stocks knowing that 
the U.S. opposes verification of existing stocks.  The 
Shannon mandate requires effective verification but USG 
doesn't believe that is realistically achievable at this 
time. 
 
9. (C) Chapin responded that it was incumbent upon both sides 
to explore the rationale for policies over which we disagree. 
 He proposed traveling to Washington to learn in greater 
detail the elements of USG concerns about verification. 
Canada might be in a better position to "nuance" its views as 
a consequence, he said, and could work with the UK, France 
and others to try and move forward.  Rademaker welcomed the 
offer of follow-on expert consultations on verification. 
 
CANADA WANTS FMCT NEGOTIATED UNDER THE SHANNON MANDATE; U.S. 
SHOULD BE AT THE TABLE 
 
10. (C) Director for Arms Control, Nonproliferation and 
Disarmament Rob McDougall ardently defended Canada's position 
that the 1998 "Shannon mandate," so-named for the Canadian 
chair under whom the CD agreed to negotiate an FMCT, was the 
"most expeditious" way to re-start stalled FMCT negotiations. 
 In Canada's view, McDougall said, the CD should be making it 
as complicated and difficult as possible for countries to 
make nuclear weapons.  Acknowledging that this was a "medium 
power" approach, McDougall recognized that "most of the P-5 
would be inconvenienced."  Nonetheless, he continued, the 
advantage of an FMCT was that it provided an opportunity to 
engage with countries like India, Pakistan and Israel, and 
"gray area" countries.  He argued that the treaty would give 
a better handle on what Iran is up to. 
 
11. (C) Responding to U.S. objections to verification, 
McDougall said that a number of countries were not prepared 
to go ahead without the possibility of a verification regime. 
 At the same time, the U.S. had some of the best expertise 
and experience in the world.  If the Shannon mandate were 
re-opened, he argued, "things could fall apart" completely, 
as many issues finessed by Shannon might be overridden in the 
current environment.  Countries like Pakistan would "fall 
off."  The Shannon mandate, McDougall asserted, set 
verification as a goal, not a requirement.  Similarly, the 
USG goal should be an effective, intelligent agreement.  In 
entering negotiations USG would not/not have to accept that 
verification is final outcome, or that it should be part of 
the outcome.  Regardless of what the Mandate says, the U.S. 
can always say it is unacceptable.  McDougall urged the U.S. 
to enter FMCT negotiations "with the understanding" that USG 
does not accept that verification is a necessary component. 
Discussion about verification concerns could then take place 
in the context of negotiations. 
 
12. (C) Negotiations on technical issues would help find a 
way around U.S. redlines, McDougall continued.  He floated 
the notion of a "black box" approach to set aside topics of 
concern to the U.S., such as nuclear propulsion.  FAC Arms 
Control Deputy Director Marina Laker added that nothing in 
the mandate required that stocks be negotiated.  That would 
be a side discussion, she said.  A/S Rademaker responded that 
stocks don't even come into the picture if we drop 
verification altogether and deal only with a ban on fissile 
material production. 
 
13. (C) P/DAS Frank Record expressed appreciation for 
McDougall's perspective adding, however, that those who 
disagreed would "throw it back at us."  The very fact of our 
sitting at the table would be taken as a signal that our 
bottom line had changed, he said.  Rademaker reiterated the 
USG's conclusion that the Shannon mandate needed to be 
changed.  Pakistan did not want to be isolated, and China, 
which also does not want verification, was protecting 
Pakistan.  Russia had indicated that it would go for FMCT 
without verification.  Canada's intentions were beyond 
reproach, Rademaker concluded, but it inadvertently was 
giving protection to Pakistan's position.  The U.S. proposal 
was for a construct similar to what we have in the BWC:  Get 
the prohibition in place. 
 
CANADA'S UNFC VOTE NOT A "ROGUE" OPERATION 
 
14. (C) P/DAS Record raised Canada's conduct at UNFC, noting 
that there was a "lingering bad feeling" over the fact that 
Canada had forced the FMCT vote in spite of U.S. concerns and 
after it had indicated that these would be taken into 
consideration.  Many in the U.S. arms control community felt 
that Canada had been duplicitous, he said, and it was 
important to be able to clear the way forward if progress was 
to be achieved. 
 
15. (C) DG Chapin insisted that Canada's vote in New York was 
not a "rogue" operation by Permanent Staff and that it had 
the "full weight of the government" behind it.  He stressed 
that this was not a Canadian effort to force the U.S. to 
repudiate its policy.  With regard to moving on, Chapin 
proposed that the U.S. and Canada work to hold discussions 
well in advance of the next meeting.  The objective, he said, 
would be to find common ground before a critical time. 
 
2005 NPT REVIEW CONFERENCE 
 
16. (C) Rademaker stated that the upcoming NPT Review 
Conference loomed large on the AC Bureau's calendar.  The 
U.S. arms control agenda with Russia continued to move along, 
he said.  On prospective missile defense cooperation, the 
U.S. was "more eager than them."  While Russians professed 
interest in cooperation, they tended to be rigid and 
bureaucratic, needing an umbrella agreement and a lot of 
documentation.  This approach was holding up cooperation in 
other areas as well.  Marina Laker underscored Canada's 
perspective that the U.S.-Russia relationship was vital and 
that it had a direct impact on a range of multilateral 
relations. 
 
17. (C) McDougall posited two "realistic" outcomes out of 
three possible for the Review Conference: 
-- an all-rhetorical outcome that would be fairly 
even-handed, with "no new promises." 
-- some hard-nosed commitments on disarmament, 
nonproliferation and peaceful use 
-- some combination of the first and second scenarios (which 
he deemed highly unlikely) 
 
Canada would be pushing for the second outcome, McDougall 
said.  For this to be achieved, in his view, the NWS would 
have to be willing to agree to additional disarmament steps 
beyond what had been agreed in the past.  Operation of the 
treaty mattered and all states parties were responsible for 
implementation of the treaty.  Canada was not after a 
secretariat with a budget and complicated rules of 
 
SIPDIS 
procedures.  At the same time, an "interim approach" was 
needed to handle inter-sessional activity. McDougall recalled 
that the Indian and Pakistani tests and decisions to withdraw 
from the Treaty had transpired at a time when NPT adherents 
could not convene for several months.  An interim approach 
was needed. 
 
18. (C) Another area Canada hoped to address was the 
inclusion of NGOs at relevant meetings.  From the perspective 
of non-nuclear weapons states, McDougall said, it would be 
important to increase the participation of NGOs.  A great 
deal of Canada's nuclear expertise was with NGO groups. 
Moreover, it was through the NGOs that the Canadian 
government maintained public support for its policies. 
 
19. (C) Nuclear and Chemical Disarmament Agency Deputy 
Director Terry Wood raised the need to address inconsistency 
in the relationship of Article 4 to Article 3 of the Treaty. 
He noted that under the IAEA statute, a finding of 
non-compliance automatically triggered a report to the UNSC. 
 
20. (C) A/S Rademaker responded that the U.S. wants a 
successful Review Conference.  He agreed with McDougall's 
take on three possible outcomes but said it was not realistic 
to expect the U.S. to commit to more disarmament beyond what 
was as outlined in the "13 steps" agreed at the 2000 Revcon. 
Laker said that the U.S. should implement existing 
commitments set forth in the 13 steps.  Canada believed that 
a large group of "middle countries" would go along.  Nobody 
expected the Bush Administration to ratify the CTBT, but some 
of the 13 steps could be palatable.  Rademaker noted that 
some of the steps were already over taken by events.  It was 
unlikely, he said, that the U.S. could agree to anything that 
would be seen as progress beyond 2000.  McDougall noted that 
adherence to the 13 steps was unlikely and said he didn't see 
the necessity of reinforcing the 13 steps.  The real question 
was how to present new concrete steps with which the U.S. was 
comfortable. 
 
21. (C) McDougall said that on tactical nuclear weapons, for 
example, the U.S. had carried out its commitments to the 
letter.  But we get no credit for this.  PDAS Record observed 
that it would be useful if Canada could say something 
publicly about its views on this issue, including its 
assessment of the extent to which NWS have implemented their 
Article VI commitments. 
 
CANADA AND THE NEW AGENDA COALITION 
 
22. (C) A/S Rademaker raised U.S. unhappiness over the New 
Agenda Coalition resolution in the UNFC.  Canada had 
supported the resolution, as had some other NATO allies, 
including some that hosted non-strategic nuclear weapons 
(NSNW) on their territory.  There were very few NSNW left in 
NATO, but when a European government voted to say that NSNW 
should be reduced further, it had the effect of actively 
recruiting others to the New Agenda Coalition.  Governments 
needed to think through what they wanted, Rademaker said. 
Russia had not fulfilled its Yeltsin commitment.  PDAS Record 
noted that in some forums (NATO and HLG), the issue was 
handled behind closed doors.  But in public forums like the 
UNFC, the approach was quite different.  It seemed that some 
government were "subcontracting" crucial policy issues to 
NGOs, which at some point might not be in the government's 
best interests.  Though NATO wanted NSNW left in Europe, 
continued support by NATO governments for resolutions like 
the one just adopted could ultimately make this untenable. 
 
23. (C) McDougall said that the 2004 resolution calling on 
"states to withdraw all non-strategic nuclear weapons" from 
foreign territory was a reflection of Canadian policy.  It 
was a general statement only, he said, applicable more to 
Russia than the U.S.  In general, he said, the matter had 
been left up to the Alliance and the basing states, which in 
retrospect was out of sync with a "changed environment." 
There were arguments against any nuclear weapons, McDougall 
continued, but the matter had never been seriously addressed. 
 The 2004 resolution was a "considerable improvement" and 
Canada's position carried the full weight of the government 
behind it, he asserted.  Rademaker responded that the 
Alliance clearly had made a judgment that there was continued 
utility to nuclear weapons.  He acknowledged that the 
Alliance would continue thinking about these things. 
McDougall said that Canada supported a more up-front public 
posture on nuclear weapons, as more could be done with 
documents and information available.  If you are going to 
have an NPT, he affirmed, nuclear weapons have to be a topic 
of discussion.  NATO had to make the case that it was a good 
disarmament citizen, McDougall concluded. 
 
CANADA WANTS DISCUSSION OF "SPACE SECURITY" AT THE CD 
 
24. (C) Robert Lawson of FAC's International Security 
Research and Outreach Programme (ISROP) presented a briefing 
on "space security," including the assessment by advocates of 
the "Prevention of an Arms Race in Outer Space (PAROS)" group 
that space security had been reduced in 2003.  The briefing 
underscored the panel's conclusion that developments related 
to national space security policies and doctrines, space and 
terrestrial military operations, space systems negation, and 
space-based strike weapons were "assessed to have had 
negative impact on the sustainability of space security over 
the longer term."  In this regard, Canada was focusing on 
establishment of a PAROS Ad Hoc Working Group with a 
discussion mandate at the CD as a first step to development 
of a ban on space-based weapons.  Canada would continue to 
engage key players in the space security debate, Lawson said, 
"to explore shared interests and seek means to move forward 
cooperatively."  He identified the U.S. as a key potential 
partner for this endeavor and proposed an exchange of experts 
on space security policies and doctrines. 
 
LANDMINES 
 
25. (C) Opening the discussion on landmines, A/S Rademaker 
stated that the U.S. had not sought to embarrass Canada in 
presenting a proposal at the CD to ban the sale or export of 
persistent landmines.  Rather, a review of U.S. landmine 
policy had presented a possible opportunity to revive the CD, 
which was at gridlock over its traditional agenda.  It was an 
important multilateral institution that was atrophying.  The 
U.S. considered raising the landmines transfer ban at the 
Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW), but determined that 
the CCW would not be able to handle an additional landmines 
proposal. 
 
26. (C) Rademaker commended the success of the Ottawa 
Convention and its signatories for drawing attention to the 
humanitarian problem of landmines and mobilizing U.S. funding 
for humanitarian de-mining.  However, the Convention was a 
means to an end, not an end in itself.  Though not obsolete, 
the Convention was a fine solution for countries that don't 
need landmines.  It was not a realistic scenario for the 
U.S., however.  Rademaker noted that Germany had not given up 
landmines until the end of the cold war, and the U.S. and ROK 
were still in a cold war scenario on the Korean Peninsula. 
Moreover, the U.S. was giving up persistent landmines. 
Because non-persistent landmines were built to self-destruct 
or de-activate in a matter of hours or days, the humanitarian 
concern behind the Ottawa Convention would be fully addressed 
by the new U.S. policy.  In some respects, the U.S. policy 
was better than Ottawa, Rademaker said, because it also 
covered anti-vehicle mines.  Under the policy, the U.S. would 
eliminate all of its persistent anti-vehicle mines, which are 
permitted under Ottawa.  The Convention also was susceptible 
to evasion of its stated goals in the case of anti-vehicle 
mines with anti-handling devices, which can function like 
anti-personnel mines.  Finally, Rademaker noted that Russia 
was unlikely to adhere to the Ottawa Convention and senior 
Russian officials had told Rademaker that Russia "needs" 
non-detectable anti-vehicle persistent mines.  At the same 
time, it was prepared to negotiate a transfer ban on 
landmines. 
27. (C) Acknowledging that there were obvious policy 
differences between the U.S. and Canada, Special Envoy for 
Landmines Ambassador Ross Hynes said that a great deal of 
progress nonetheless had been made in collaborations with A/S 
Bloomfield and senior PM staff.  The Ottawa Convention, he 
asserted, was the only multilateral disarmament agreement on 
landmines and the U.S. proposal had serious implications for 
the parties to the Ottawa treaty.  Canada and parties to the 
OC could not negotiate a separate treaty on a sub-category of 
landmines, Hynes asserted.  Canada continued to advocate a 
ban on all persistent antipersonnel and anti-vehicle 
landmines; participation in negotiations would imply that 
Canada "accepted" trade in other categories of landmines. 
The U.S. should not expect Canada and 144 signatories to the 
Ottawa Convention to negotiate a "lesser" standard than a 
comprehensive ban. 
 
28. (C) Rademaker said there was a difference between caring 
about the "problem" of landmines and simply wanting to 
promote the Ottawa Convention.  Russia's willingness to 
negotiate a specific ban on transfers seemed to be a critical 
opportunity, and senior Russian officials had said they did 
not desire an ad hoc process similar to Ottawa.  Chapin 
responded that there was a tremendous debate about the 
Convention, even in Canada.  It was important to think of 
ways to associate as many people as possible with efforts to 
mitigate the problem of landmines.  For Canada, a parallel 
treaty was undesirable.  But there were downsides to doing 
nothing and he acknowledged that Rademaker had raised some 
key points that should be addressed in another meeting. 
 
29. (C) Hynes countered that the new U.S. policy on landmines 
was a disappointment and it seemed that Washington had not 
come to grips with the problem of landmines.  There were 
humanitarian arguments and concerns about non-persistent 
landmines.  There was no acknowledged trade anywhere in the 
world, Hynes said.  Canada was not wedded to the Ottawa 
Convention for ideology or "amour propre."  It was keen to 
address aspects of Convention but could not negotiate on 
proposals that sought to distinguish between persistent and 
non-persistent.  Finally, the higher technological standards 
of anti-vehicle mines were a luxury that only the U.S. could 
afford - hence why the U.S. had gotten nowhere with its 
proposal. 
 
30. (U) This cable has been cleared by Assistant Secretary 
Rademaker. 
 
Visit Canada's Classified Web Site at 
http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/wha/ottawa 
 
DICKSON