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U.S. Nukes Plan Viewed as Provocative
WASHINGTON - The announcement earlier this month that the United States will pursue the design and construction of new nuclear weapons has not been warmly embraced by the rest of the world.
In fact, most people outside the country view the move as more evidence of a policy favouring unilateralism and the pursuit of absolute military superiority, according to a report written last December but just released Wednesday on global perceptions of U.S. nuclear policy.
The report, commissioned by the Pentagon's Defence Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA), used focus groups and written and oral interviews with participants in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Africa and Latin America to assess international feelings toward the plan for a new generation of nuclear warheads.
It found that China and Russia, in particular, are watching the scope of U.S. missile deployments with concern that Washington might be attempting to move away from a deterrence posture through more effective defences.
Under the new Reliable Replacement Warhead (RRW) programme, older nuclear warheads currently maintained under the Stockpile Stewardship Programme will be replaced by simpler weapons meant to be more reliable, easier to manufacture and more robust than current models. They would reportedly be ready for production by 2012.
The decision to upgrade the U.S. nuclear arsenal is being opposed by some members of the U.S. Congress, who believe it sends a message that Washington is pursuing first strike capabilities instead of a policy of détente and arms reduction, as was the case during the Cold War.
"The whole name of the reliable replacement warhead is insidious since it suggests the current weapons are not reliable," Stephen Schwartz, editor of the Nonproliferation Review at the Centre for Nonproliferation Studies, told IPS.
The Union of Concerned Scientists says that the plan to update the U.S. nuclear arsenal is unnecessary because the current arsenal's reliability is not degrading. Changing the design of nuclear warheads is expensive and dangerous, the group argues, and political pressure within the United States could lead to the testing of new nuclear weapons before they replace existing weapons.
The new warheads are based on a design that was detonated in underground tests during the 1980s.
Although part of the George W. Bush administration's rationale for the RRW is a need to have a more flexible arsenal to engage and deter so-called "rogue states", such as North Korea and Iran, the DTRA report concludes that Russia and China's future decisions about their nuclear arsenals will be dependent on "their perceptions of U.S. strategic intent, plans, and commitments."
The departure from a policy of nuclear deterrence has also caused concern in Japan and Turkey, where U.S. commitments of extended deterrence are seen as essential security guarantees. The new policies have led both countries to question the credibility of a U.S. nuclear guarantee, says the report.
Focus groups and written responses from U.S. allies and friends "oppose U.S. development of new, tailored, low-yield nuclear weapons as unnecessary, potentially dangerous, politically divisive, and adversely impacting non-proliferation," says the report.
While the DTRA's report is one of the first to address the geo-strategic effect the new weapons will have on non-proliferation and global stability, there are also concerns here that the new weapons will eventually require potentially dangerous testing.
The U.S. Senate has not ratified the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), which bars nuclear weapons tests, and some fear that the Bush administration's plan to develop new nuclear weapons could seriously undermine the possibility of a Senate ratification of the treaty.
"A number of people have raised the point that even if the scientists are confident the weapon will work, many military leaders will be a bit sceptical and demand actual proof," warned Schwartz.
There are no current plans to test the new weapons, but the development of new warheads does make some countries doubt the United States and other nuclear weapons powers' commitment to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which includes disarmament obligations such as ratification of the CTBT.
The U.S. government, in the past, has implied that the development of more reliable nuclear warheads will allow it to reduce its total number of nuclear warheads and comply with reductions required in the NPT.
"[But] if you're looking at this from the outside (of the U.S.) you'll see the U.S. has 10,000 nuclear weapons and is going to build more," said Schwartz.
The DTRA study concludes that the message from U.S. allies to Washington is "that a greater U.S. readiness to engage on nuclear disarmament issues would pay off in increased support from other third parties in pursuing U.S. non-proliferation objectives."
"Building these new warheads will restart the Cold War cycle of designing and producing new nuclear weapons. Instead, the United States needs a thorough review of its outdated nuclear weapons policy, under which it keeps thousands of warheads on high-alert status. Rather than building new nuclear weapons, the United States should be looking for ways to reduce its reliance on them," said Dr. Robert Nelson, a senior scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists, in a statement.
On Mar. 18, a panel composed of retired nuclear weapons laboratory directors and former defence and energy department officials also weighed in on the debate, recommending that "any decision to proceed with RRW must be coupled with a transparent administration policy on nuclear weapons, including comments concerning stockpile size, nuclear testing and nonproliferation." The panel's full report is expected next month.
Copyright ©2007 Inter Press Service

8 Comments so far
Show AllThe recently relased DOE proposal called GNEP, supposedly a plan designed to reduce nuclear waste and generate "clean" power is likely a bait and switch scam whose real purpose is to manufacture the plutonium for these new weapons. Read Dr. Jack Dresser's summary of this as it was pitched at a public hearing in the heart of Nukeland, Pasco Washington:
see: http://www.squadron13.com/JackDresser/GNEPreview.htm
Visiting the Belly of the Beast - GNEP Review
I will not be able to attend the meeting in Hood River, but you certainly have my support.
The NPT is, in fact, a treaty which this country has signed, and according to our constitution, it is the law of the land. The bush/cheney crime family has not ever seen a treaty or constitution that they will abide by. They have broken all of the treaties that interfere with what they want to do, so we should not be surprised at this development of new nukes. I have already contacted my congresswoman and both senators to inform them of my feelings about this matter.
Both bush and cheney need to be hauled before the International Court for war crimes.
Herbert Wells was prescient about our current situation and our struggles to stop unfettered power when he wrote The War of Worlds. In the Wells' story the demise the Martian lonely superpower came from totally unexpected quarters the asymmetrical assault of Earth bacteria. It will be utmost irony on the part of future historians to attribute demise of the United States, which started so well in 1776, to complete lack of common sense and poor imagination among her political leaders on the eve of coming catastrophe.
He, who had reasons to complain, cannot complain for he is already beyond any complaining. And he, who is able to complain, has therefore no reason to complain.
The corporate media leaves out key facts--such as the treaties the US ignores as kittyladyoregon points out above. She mentions the NPT which is so critical to the subject of the article. Because the nuclear weapons issue is now focused on Iran via US bullying and the UNSC engaging in sanctions against Iran, two key facts of the NPT treaty are critical. First the fact of Article VI which applies to the US:
Article VI
"Each of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a treaty on general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international control."
The US, with its new plans for nuclear weapons in the coming decades, is in complete and utter violation of the NPT for failing to pursue disarmament.
And the second key fact is Article IV which applies to Iran, a state that has no nuclear weapons:
Article IV
"1. Nothing in this Treaty shall be interpreted as affecting the inalienable right of all the Parties to the Treaty to develop research, production and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes without discrimination and in conformity with Articles I and II of this Treaty.
2. All the Parties to the Treaty undertake to facilitate, and have the right to participate in, the fullest possible exchange of equipment, materials and scientific and technological information for the peaceful uses of nuclear energy. Parties to the Treaty in a position to do so shall also co-operate in contributing alone or together with other States or international organizations to the further development of the applications of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes, especially in the territories of non-nuclear-weapon States Party to the Treaty, with due consideration for the needs of the developing areas of the world."
According the IAEA, Iran has not been found to be in violation of Article IV, therefore it is in compliance.
These two articles are carefully and conspicuously omitted from the corporate media. Why? Because they show the actual policy of the US with regard to Iran: bullying hypocrisy. Thus the conclusion of the article stated at the beginning: "most people outside the country" favor the view that the US is engaged in "unilateralism and the pursuit of absolute military superiority."
It is up to US citizens to change our nuclear hypocrisy and abide by our own treaties in accordance with Justice Kennedy's admonition in Hamden v. Rumsfled: ratified treaties are "binding federal law."
Iran's president was absolutely right when he declared that the UN and other international organizations are in the pocket of the USA. Under the NPT the United States is obligated to gradually reduce its nuclear arsenal. Not only the US has failed to do that, but it has also produced min-nukes, and now plans to produce a new, more effective generation of nukes. Each of these acts is clear violation of the NPT. Where is this Mr Al-Boradei, the head of the NPT organization to refer the US file to the UN Security Council, as he has done so with Iran that has neither a nuclear weapon nor is producing one?
Essie's summary is good as is the question posed.
Sadly, the solution is in the simple-but-not-easy category:
The US could--as the Green Party Platform advocates and most Americans want--abandon the UNSC veto power for the five major winners of WWII. *And* the US could advocate these reforms: expand the Security Council to include more permanent nations or groups of nations (like the Muslim OIC nations, India, South America, etc.), *and* give the veto to the General Assembly via a double-majority (member states and majority (or supermajority) of the world population), *and* give the ICJ or the ICC courts jurisdiction over both the General Assembly and the UNSC in terms of making sure treaties and the Charter are followed.
The US could lead the way on this. But the status-quo, power-loving, corporate, militarist Congress and the President won't touch what the American majority want--a fair international system of governance.
If we were to rework the system so no one nation could hijack the UNSC, then the UN would be fair.
Some of these ideas and others too are contained in Ben Ferencz's (former chief prosecutor at Nuremberg) book "Global Survival." See his website at http://www.benferencz.org.
See this review on his website for his 12 recommendations.
http://www.benferencz.org/books/gsreview.html
Maybe it's time China, Russia, Europe, Iran and others embargoed and levied sanctions against these criminals. Sounds to me that their nuclear aspirations are not intended for peaceful purposes. What hypocrites!
Impeach the Bush oligarchy!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk1vEuhBuEU
Ve can vin a nuclear var! Ve vill prevail!
Heil Bush! Sieg Cheney! Dem FUhrers for LIFE!