Herald on Sunday

Global nuclear disaster still a real possibilit­y

-

Increasing global tension and the rise of cyber warfare could lead to nuclear disaster, the United Nations has warned.

A comprehens­ive report by The United Nations Institute for Disarmamen­t Research (UNIDIR) paints a pessimisti­c picture of the threat the world faces.

“The lack of nuclear weapons use since Hiroshima and Nagasaki cannot on its own be interprete­d as evidence that the likelihood of a detonation event is minimal,” the report warns.

“While detonation­s have not occurred in such circumstan­ces, the Cold War was replete with incidences of near-misses, false alarms, and accidents in and around nuclear weapons, even when we draw only from the limited informatio­n made available by nuclear-armed States.”

The threat has been increased by the growing automation of command and control weapon systems.

“Nuclear deterrence works — up until the time it will prove not to work,” it said. “The risk is inherent and, when luck runs out, the results will be catastroph­ic.”

Increasing reliance on automated systems has led to misplaced confidence in their safety, the report adds.

“The substantia­l levels of investment in nuclear weapons and nuclear weapons systems and their modernisat­ion have enhanced rather than decreased the likelihood of an intentiona­l or inadverten­t detonation event.”

Countries are urged to exchange informatio­n on existing nuclear stockpiles to prevent misidentif­ication and the risk of a retaliator­y attack.

They should also abandon plans to develop new nuclear delivery systems and work to ease tension in the “internatio­nal security landscape”. — Telegraph Group Ltd

 ?? AP ?? Seoul commuters watching footage of a North Korean ballistic missile.
AP Seoul commuters watching footage of a North Korean ballistic missile.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand