Tomorrow at 8.15am, a minute's silence will reverberate around the world. The people of Japan will commemorate the victims of the first atomic bomb, which was dropped by an American B-29 on Hiroshima on 6 August 1945.
Half a world away, in Tehran, the new hard man of Iranian politics,
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, will take the oath of office before the
country's parliament. His presidency heralds a new era of uncertainty in
Iran's fraught relations with the West over its nuclear ambitions.
In Beijing, urgent talks on curbing North Korea's nuclear weapons program
are close to collapse. And in Pakistan, efforts are still being made to roll
up the world's biggest nuclear proliferation scandal. Sixty years after
Hiroshima, whose single bomb killed 237,062 people, a new nuclear arms race
has begun.
A crisis is deepening with Iran over its suspected nuclear weapons
activities. Tehran is threatening to resume uranium conversion next week,
prompting an emergency meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency
which could result in Iran being referred to the UN Security Council for
possible sanctions.
At the six-party talks in Beijing, North Korea is refusing to abandon a
nuclear weapons program that could lead to another mushroom cloud over
Asia.
International investigators are struggling to wrap up the lucrative black
market that spread a web of proliferation across at least two continents
thanks to the greed of one man: the father of Pakistan's nuclear bomb.
The scientist A Q Khan, who sold nuclear secrets to Iran, Libya, and
possibly others, is now under house arrest.
Al-Qa'ida has still not been vanquished in its hideouts, while there are
still fears that the terrorists could be working on the production of a "
dirty" bomb that would spread radiation and panic in major cities.
In the light of the war on Iraq, which did not have nuclear weapons,
second-tier nations have judged that North Korea was spared invasion because
of its nuclear deterrent, and drawn their own strategic conclusions.
International attempts to renew a global pact banning the proliferation of
nuclear weapons have foundered. In short, the system of safeguards aimed at
preventing a repeat of the horrors of Hiroshima is in disarray.
The review of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) by 189 states
collapsed two months ago amid recriminations and accusations that the
nuclear five had no intention of living up to their treaty commitments to
pursue nuclear disarmament.
All signs are that the treaty intended to protect the world from nuclear
peril is dead. Pyongyang has pulled out, boasting that it now has nuclear
weapons, and other members such as Iran, Egypt and South Korea have been
caught cheating.
But the regime had already been seriously undermined by states that remained
outside the NPT and became nuclear powers: Israel, India and Pakistan. The
NPT review at the UN in the spring provided a timely opportunity to tighten
nuclear safeguards. Instead, the month-long conference turned into a bitter
slanging match in which the US administration ignored its own record and
turned up the heat on Iran and North Korea.
At the heart of the four-decades-old NPT is a "grand bargain". The
five nuclear powers - US, Britain, France, Russia and China - agreed to work
towards nuclear disarmament. In return, the non-nuclear states gave up any
ambition to develop nuclear weapons; they agreed to open up all their
facilities to inspection; and in return they were guaranteed the benefits of
peaceful nuclear technology.
The big five have always been open to the charge of hypocrisy. Behind the
rhetoric of disarmament, they have tried everything in their power to
prevent second-tier powers from obtaining nuclear arms, while clinging on to
their own nuclear arsenals despite strategic cuts. Both the US and Britain
are upgrading: the Bush administration is developing nuclear "bunker
busters" that can strike deep underground, while Britain has ordered a
new generation of Trident missiles.
With the NPT seriously weakened, the challenge now is to keep the genie in
the bottle, as regional rivalries in the Middle East and Asia risk going
nuclear.
For the Bush administration, openly hostile to a UN solution, the answer has
been talk or bomb: negotiate with states that already have a weapon (such as
North Korea), or to take preemptive strikes against those that do not (such
as Iraq). US officials say acting outside the treaty has produced results:
it brought Libya back into the fold in 2003, when Colonel Muammar Gaddafi
decided to scrap his weapons of mass destruction.
Yet this approach contains the risk of opening the path to nuclear
blackmail, which is how North Korea has coaxed the West into compensating
the hermit state in return for concessions on its nuclear program
As with Iran, negotiations have stalled on the North Korean insistence that
it has the right to a civilian program, if it renounces nuclear weapons.
Iran, an NPT member which insists on its treaty right to pursue nuclear
power, has been infuriated by US co-operation with India, a non-member of
the NPT, which blasted its way into the nuclear "club" in
tit-for-tat tests with Pakistan in 1998.
In a world no longer guided by a universally accepted regime, countries are
weighing the nuclear option. Arab states consider nuclear-armed Israel, and
are drawing their own conclusions. Iran is hemmed in by hostile neighbors
such as Israel and Pakistan. A nuclear test by North Korea could prompt
Taiwan and Japan to follow down that road.
Preoccupied with Iraq, the US has decided to follow a diplomatic route in
dealing with Iran. But if the Security Council fails to reach agreement on
punishment for Tehran's infringement, the military option would loom again.
Israel has made no secret of its intention to halt militarily the Iranian
nuclear weapons program, as it did when it struck Iraq's Osiraq reactor in
1981, delaying but not ending Saddam Hussein's nuclear quest. But if Israel
did strike, the Iranians could hit back anywhere in the region. Its nuclear
program would go underground, and the hand of the hardliners in Tehran
would be reinforced. As one expert put it, an Israeli attack would be "
a free pass for the mullahs".
The question now is whether nuclear deterrence works. The threat of American
nuclear attack, albeit veiled, did not deter Saddam Hussein from invading
Kuwait. On the other hand, North Korea's boasting of a nuclear arsenal saved
it from invasion. And nuclear weapons have not - yet - been used on the
battlefield.
Today, the "official" nuclear powers could annihilate the world
many times over. And 40 other countries have the know-how to join their
club. Sixty years after Hiroshima, who can say with confidence: "Never
again"?
Never again?
60 years since the first use of a nuclear weapon in war. 160,000
people died when the bomb was dropped at 8.15am on Hiroshima, with another
77,062 dying later.
$27bn is spent each year by the US on nuclear weapons and related
programs
11, 000 active, deliverable nuclear weapons in the world. The US has
6,390, Russia 3,242 and Britain 200
15,654 sq miles, total land area used by US nuclear weapons bases and
facilities
4 other states known or thought to have nuclear weapons: India,
Israel, Pakistan, North Korea
5 acknowledged nuclear states: China, France, Russia, United Kingdom,
United States
1 number of islands vaporized by nuclear testing: Elugelab,
Micronesia, 1952
16 in length of 'Davy Crockett', the smallest nuclear weapon ever
produced
40 states with technical ability to make nuclear weapons, including
Egypt and South Korea
30,000 Kazakh conscripts served at Semipalatinsk, the Soviet test
site. There were 456 tests conducted between 1945 and 1991 at the site
100 maximum number of those Kazakh conscripts still alive today
200 estimated number of nuclear weapons possessed by Israel
0 estimated number of nuclear weapons possessed by all the Arab states
100,000 people were members of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
in 1984
150 estimated number of nuclear weapons possessed by India
75 estimated number of nuclear weapons possessed by Pakistan
40, 000 people are currently members of CND
900 years is the time it will take for radioactive elements in
Pripyat, near Chernobyl, to decay to safe levels following the disaster 19
years ago
© 2005 Independent News & Media (UK) Ltd.
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