RUSSIAN MILITARY OFFICERS stared wide-eyed at the glowing image on their radar screens: an incoming missile on course to hit Moscow in 15 minutes. They were tracking a rocket about the size of a U.S. submarine-launched Trident that seemed to be streaking in from the Norwegian Sea. There had been no particular tension between Russia and the U.S. on Jan. 25,1995. Still, the officers knew that if this were a surprise attack, the first American missile to be fired would probably be from a submarine, aimed to detonate over Russia and generate an electromagnetic storm that would fry the country's electronic circuitry. The radar crew flashed a warning of the possible nuclear attack to an underground control center south of Moscow.
Duty officers inside that bunker went by the book, relaying the warning up the line. One buzz went to the three nuclear code briefcases assigned to President Boris Yeltsin and his top two military officials. On each briefcase a small light beside the handle blinked on. The officer carrying Yeltsin's case rushed to the President and flipped it open. On an electronic map inside, they saw a bright dot over the Norwegian Sea. Beneath the map was a row of buttons offering a menu of attack options on targets in the U.S.
On military bases across Russia, red lights flashed and klaxons blared, alerting the troops in charge of the country's strategic nuclear weapons to get ready to use them. Yeltsin and his military commanders, linked by phone, waited to hear whether an attack had been confirmed. About 12 minutes after the mystery missile soared onto the radar screens, military analysts could see that it was not heading for Russian territory. It turned out to be a Norwegian scientific rocket sent aloft to observe the aurora borealis. The Norwegians had dutifully notified the Russian embassy in Oslo, but the word was never relayed to the military. For a while says Sergei Yushenkov, a member of the Russian parliament's defense Committee "the world was on the brink of nuclear war."
It may still be near the brink, despite the end of the cold war and the dismantling of thousands of warheads, because the people and the machines that control Russia's nuclear arsenal are being neglected. Like the rest of the armed forces, the soldiers in the Strategic Nuclear Forces (SNF) are largely unpaid, unfed and unhappy. The delicate computer networks at the heart of the nuclear force are not being maintained properly and the safeguards that prevent accidental or unauthorized launches are fraying.
Bill Clinton likes to point out that Russian missiles are no longer aimed at targets in the U.S. It is true that both sides agreed in 1994 to switch the missiles away from their cold war assignments, but it isn't true that this step moved the world a safe distance back from Armageddon. The missiles' computer memories retain those targets, and they can be restored very quickly. "It is just a matter of a couple of minutes," says a Defense Ministry official in Moscow. And if a missile is launched without a selected target --even if by accident-- it reverts to the original one.
Despite arms-control agreements that have reduced the numbers, Russia still has an estimated 1,300 strategic missiles with more than 6,000 warheads, and they are on hair-trigger alert. The country's retaliatory policy is to launch on warning, meaning its war plans call for the launching of a retaliatory salvo of thermonuclear missiles if Moscow receives confirmed warning that Russia is under attack, but before it has suffered any damage. Moscow has even updated its military doctrine and now claims the right-as the U.S. has done for decades -- to be the first to use nukes when it believes it must. "We will choose the means," says Security Council secretary Ivan Rybkin, "including nuclear weapons."