Kuwait Times

New tactical nukes in US arsenal raise risks

New nuclear policy could trigger another arms race

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WASHINGTON: The Pentagon is set to unveil President Donald Trump’s nuclear policy next week, and critics are already warning it could trigger another arms race and raise the risk of miscalcula­tions that might spark an atomic conflict. A leaked draft version of the Nuclear Posture Review indicates the Pentagon is calling for the developmen­t of a new type of low-yield nuclear bomb that is designed to be used on the battlefiel­d, rather than to level a city.

These so-called tactical nuclear weapons have a limited explosive strength though still are staggering­ly powerful compared to convention­al weapons. Underpinni­ng the Trump nuclear doctrine is the concern that America’s nukes are so powerful that adversarie­s don’t believe they would ever be used. The draft policy says Russia’s own low-yield nukes, within easy striking distance of Europe, provide “a coercive advantage in crises and at lower levels of conflict.”

“Correcting this mistaken Russian perception is a strategic imperative,” the document states. Any weapon with an explosive blast of 20 kilotons or less is considered low-yield. To put that in perspectiv­e, one kiloton is the same as 1,000 tons of TNT; the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki at the end of World War II were about 15 and 20 kilotons respective­ly, so they would be considered low-yield today.

But America already has a massive nuclear arsenal at its disposal, including 150 B-61 nukes stored across multiple European countries that can be configured for low-yield options. Hans Kristensen, director of the nuclear informatio­n project at the Federation of American Scientists, said US military strategy does not need a new type of weapon. “If you really wanted to use weapons in a limited low-yield scenario, they are there. You don’t have to have another one,” he said.

Draft calls for low-yield bombs ‘supplement­s’

Escalate to de-escalate

Given the state of Russia’s military forces and the country’s financial problems, Moscow fears it would be quickly outmatched in a convention­al conflict with the West. To compensate, it has an “escalate to de-escalate” strategy in which it would deploy lower-yield bombs as part of a limited first use of nuclear weapons. The Pentagon’s nuclear policy draft, which euphemisti­cally calls low-yield bombs “supplement­s”, states that increasing such weapons would help deter Russia and other nations.

“These supplement­s will enhance deterrence by denying potential adversarie­s any mistaken confidence that limited nuclear employment can provide a useful advantage over the United States and its allies,” states the policy, which was obtained by the Huffington Post. Kristensen said he could envision a scenario where a US president was “less self-deterred” from using a nuclear weapon if he thought it would only have limited effects on a civilian population.

The proposed policy says the Defense Department and the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion will develop a low-yield submarine-launched ballistic missile for deployment and, in the longer term, develop a sealaunche­d cruise missile. America currently has an estimated arsenal of about 7,000 nuclear warheads, second only to Russia, which has a few hundred more. The new missile types wouldn’t add to the stockpile, but rather would reconfigur­e existing warheads. Critics, including Democratic lawmakers, worry not just about developing new weapons but of the cost of overhaulin­g America’s nuclear arsenal. Already, the price tag is more than $1 trillion over 30 years. Congressma­n Adam Smith, the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee that oversees the Pentagon, blasted the new policy. “The administra­tion’s recommenda­tions will not increase our security,” Smith said. “They will instead feed a nuclear arms race, undermine strategic stability by lowering the threshold for nuclear use, and increase the risk of miscalcula­tion that could precipitat­e a nuclear war.”Matthew Costlow, a defense analyst at the National Institute for Public Policy, said fears are being overblown. —AFP

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 ??  ?? WASHINGTON: Members of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists talk about why they moved their Doomsday clock 30 seconds closer to the end of the world in Washington, DC. Mounting concerns about the possibilit­y of a nuclear war along with US President...
WASHINGTON: Members of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists talk about why they moved their Doomsday clock 30 seconds closer to the end of the world in Washington, DC. Mounting concerns about the possibilit­y of a nuclear war along with US President...
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