Taming the Nuclear
Monster
by Richard Falk and David Krieger*, April
2002
Not since the
dawn of the nuclear age at the end of World War II has the danger
of nuclear war been greater. And what is as troubling, this danger
is not widely understood. Several developments account for this
most disturbing situation.
The US Government has apparently adopted
contingency plans that look for the use of nuclear weapons against
specific countries and in a wide range of circumstances. Terrorist
networks with genocidal agendas have been making strenuous efforts
to acquire nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction. The
spread of biological and chemical weapons increase political incentives
to threaten nuclear retaliation. The American push for missile
defense is likely to lead other nuclear weapons states to increase
their arsenals. India and Pakistan, hostile neighbors, continue
their conflict over Kashmir with their nuclear arsenals lurking
in the background. And, in addition, the atmosphere created by
the September 11 attacks has given rise to a good and evil worldview
that seems less inhibited with respect to nuclear weaponry.
It is against such a background that the parties
to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) will meet from April
8-19 to review progress on the treaty and, most important, on
its Article VI commitment to nuclear disarmament. The recent revelations
of the classified US Nuclear Posture Review (NPR), which was first
released in partially unclassified form in January 2002, indicated
contingency plans for the potential use of nuclear weapons against
at least seven named states. These revelations are sure to have
alarmed these governments, and hopefully awakened the international
community generally to an atmosphere of mounting risk.
Any US plans to use or threaten to use nuclear
weapons would be contrary to international law as well as to long-standing
US assurances not to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear weapons
states. It also constitutes a provocative threat to the named
states and others as well as to international peace and security
overall.
This US approach to planning nuclear weapons use,
as well as other developments that increase the risk of nuclear
war, will undoubtedly adversely affect the approach taken to non-proliferation
by all countries. It is likely to induce further nuclear proliferation
and to weaken seriously the non-proliferation regime. US policy
toward nuclear weapons use, combined with its plans to develop
and deploy missile defenses, is almost certain to encourage the
expansion of nuclear weapons programs by Russia and China as well
as the development of nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction
by other countries. It is also likely to give rise to destructive
new arms races.
The fact that the US is developing contingency
plans to use nuclear weapons is viewed by most of the world as
a dangerous expression of bad faith. In the past, nuclear weapons
have been reluctantly tolerated, but only as a deterrent against
the use of nuclear weapons by other states. The US Nuclear Posture
Review reveals that nuclear weapons are apparently being integrated
into a full spectrum of potential war fighting situations.
US policy seems to make nuclear weapons no longer
weapons of last resort, but rather instruments that may be used
in fighting wars, even against non-nuclear weapons states. Detrimental
steps have already been taken following the US lead. The UK announced
that it is also prepared to use nuclear weapons against any state
that may attack it with any weapon of mass destruction. Such an
expanded role for nuclear weapons is bound to have other destabilizing
effects.
In the post-September 11 world it is vital that
the US and other nuclear weapons states assume full responsibility
for assuring that nuclear weapons and weapons grade materials,
particularly in the former Soviet Union, do not fall into the
hands of terrorists. It is also crucial that leading nations do
their utmost diplomatically and by way of the United Nations to
defuse war-prone tensions in South Asia and the Middle East.
The most urgent challenge at this time involves
steps that should be taken to restore the restraints on this most
menacing of all weaponry. Just as it is accepted that it is essential
to establish reliable regimes of prohibition for biological and
chemical weapons, it is long overdue to give the highest priority
to establishing a comparable regime for nuclear weapons. Non-nuclear
states should insist that nuclear weapons states at least adhere
to the declared Chinese position of no-first use, thereby retaining
nuclear weapons only for nuclear deterrence purposes until they
can be eliminated altogether.
In this vein, the US and the UK should retract
their dangerous and destabilizing plans for nuclear war fighting
and, in their own interests as well as those of the rest of the
world, provide leadership toward eliminating nuclear weapons and
ending the nuclear weapons threat to humanity and all life. The
states that are parties to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
cannot afford to remain passive, but should use their leverage
to remind the world that we are all facing an unprecedented and
growing danger that nuclear weapons will be somehow used for the
first time since 1945.
*Richard Falk is professor emeritus of international
law and practice at Princeton University, and visiting distinguished
professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
David Krieger
is president of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
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