The United States, Russia and China are now aggressively pursuing a new generation of smaller, less destructive nuclear weapons. The buildups threaten to revive a Cold War-era arms race and unsettle the balance of destructive force among nations that has kept the nuclear peace for more than a half-century.
It is, in large measure, an old dynamic playing out in new form as an economically declining Russia, a rising China and an uncertain United States resume their one-upmanship.
American officials largely blame the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin, saying his intransigence has stymied efforts to build on a 2010 arms control treaty and further shrink the arsenals of the two largest nuclear powers. Some blame the Chinese, who are looking for a technological edge to keep the United States at bay. And some blame the United States itself for speeding ahead with a nuclear “modernization” that, in the name of improving safety and reliability, risks throwing fuel on the fire.
President Obama acknowledged that danger at the end of the Nuclear Security Summit meeting in Washington early this month. He warned of the potential for “ramping up new and more deadly and more effective systems that end up leading to a whole new escalation of the arms race.”
For a president who came to office more than seven years ago talking about eventually ridding the world of nuclear weapons, it was an admission that an American policy intended to reduce the centrality of atomic arms might contribute to a second nuclear age.
One of the few veterans of the Cold War in his administration, James R. Clapper, the director of national intelligence, told the Senate Armed Services Committee during his annual global threat assessment, “We could be into another Cold War-like spiral.” Yet it is different from Mr. Clapper’s earlier years, when he was an Air Force intelligence officer weighing the risks of nuclear strikes that could level cities with weapons measured by the megaton.
Adversaries look at what the United States expects to spend on the nuclear revitalization program — estimated at up to $1 trillion over three decades — and use it to lobby for their own sophisticated weaponry.
Moscow is fielding big missiles topped by miniaturized warheads, and experts fear that it may violate the global test ban as it develops new weapons. According to Russian news reports, the Russian Navy is developing an undersea drone meant to loft a cloud of radioactive contamination from an underwater explosion that would make target cities uninhabitable.
Learn more: Race for Latest Class of Nuclear Arms Threatens to Revive Cold War
The Latest on: Nuclear weapons
via Google News
The Latest on: Nuclear weapons
- Gregoris Lambrakis and the International Peace Movement to Rid Europe of Nuclear Weaponson May 27, 2022 at 6:53 am
"Weapons of mass destruction being controlled by brains barely evolved beyond the paleolithic is not a good thing, to be sure… – James Harding, Michigan ...
- World politicians preparing for Russia’s use of tactical nuclear weapons – President of Ukraineon May 27, 2022 at 6:41 am
The relevant statement was made by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in his video address to the Foreign Policy Community of Indonesia (FPCI), an Ukrinform correspondent reports. “Russian state ...
- Podolyak: Russia uses heaviest non-nuclear weapons against Ukraineon May 27, 2022 at 2:05 am
Some partners avoid giving the necessary weapons because of fear of escalation. Escalation, really? Russia already uses the heaviest non-nuclear weapons against Ukraine, burning people alive. Maybe it ...
- Iran used classified UN records to conceal nuclear weapons work: reporton May 25, 2022 at 2:28 pm
Iran sent classified records from the United Nations atomic energy agency to top Tehran officials who used the reports to alter documents on suspected previous nuclear weapons wor ...
- The US Army only ever fired one nuclear artillery shell from its 'Atomic Annie' cannon, and this is what it looked likeon May 25, 2022 at 7:39 am
Here's what it looked like when the atomic cannon fired its one and only nuclear shot. The blast was as powerful as the one that devastated Hiroshima.
- 'Speak to us more politely': Russia warns enemies it will soon have 50 new nuclear weaponson May 24, 2022 at 9:02 am
Moscow claims it will soon have 50 new advanced nuclear missiles capable of annihilating its enemies ready for deployment in the fall, as the Kremlin seeks to show strength in ...
- U.S. should prepare for a ‘cornered, delusional’ Vladimir Putin using nuclear weapons, Mitt Romney sayson May 23, 2022 at 10:15 am
The United States and NATO should prepare for a Russian nuclear strike if a “cornered and delusional” Vladimir Putin should turn to those weapons in his country’s ongoing war in Ukraine, Utah Sen.
- Putin Using Nuclear Weapons a Possibility U.S. Must Consider: Mullenon May 22, 2022 at 10:12 am
The Russian president is "pretty well cornered and boxed in" as the Ukraine war continues, retired Admiral Mike Mullen said Sunday.
- Sen. Mitt Romney suggests 'NATO could engage' in Ukraine, 'potentially obliterating Russia's struggling military' if Putin used nuclear weaponson May 21, 2022 at 9:48 pm
The Utah senator also said the West could confront Russian-allied nations with an ultimatum: "You are either with us, or you are with Russia." ...
- The Catholic case for eliminating nuclear weaponson May 19, 2022 at 1:43 pm
Michael Krepon's new book provides a key history of the times, events, organizations and people involved in the pursuit of a peaceful approach to national and global security.
via Bing News