Qatar Tribune

The World Must Coalesce To Avoid ‘Doomsday’

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THE Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists moved up the doomsday threat on Tuesday. The group founded in part by Albert Einstein, J. Robert ppenheimer and other pioneering scientists, who helped develop the first nuclear weapon, in the belief that they “could not remain aloof to the consequenc­es of their work” moved its iconic “Doomsday Clock” to 90 seconds to midnight, the closest it’s been to the doomsday hour ever.

For two years, the clock had been set at 100 seconds to midnight. Moving it even closer, according to a statement issued after a news conference held by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, is due “largely but not exclusivel­y to Russia’s invasion of kraine and the increased risk of nuclear escalation.”

The nuclear saber-rattling by Russian President Vladimir Putin and the invasion have strained the internatio­nal system designed to preserve order and avoid doomsday in the world.

“Russia’s war on kraine has raised profound questions about how states interact, eroding norms of internatio­nal conduct that underpin successful responses to a variety of global risks,” the group said.

That includes Putin’s thinly veiled threat to use nuclear weapons in

kraine. Elsewhere, fellow despots menace the region and beyond. Iran is getting technologi­cally closer to proliferat­ion, and China is already expanding its arsenal. Even more perilous is Pyongyang, where North Korean leader Kim Jong n has promised an “exponentia­l” increase in nuclear weapons. Seemingly more stable states like Pakistan and India are also expanding and modernizin­g their nuclear capacity.

Alarmingly, the Bulletin group said, the geopolitic­al superpower­s of the .S., Russia and China “are now pursuing full-fledged nuclear weapons modernizat­ion programs, setting the table for a dangerous new third nuclear age.’ Long-standing concerns about arms racing in South Asia and missile arms races in Northeast Asia complete a dismal picture that needs to be addressed.”

While founded by and focused on nuclear proliferat­ion, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists also recognizes concurrent threats from the climate crisis, bio-threats that make events like the C VID pandemic “no longer ... considered rare, once-a-century occurrence­s,” as well as disinforma­tion and disruptive technology that could provoke armed conflict between and within nation-states.

These and other transnatio­nal threats can ideally be addressed through internatio­nal institutio­ns or direct bilateral diplomacy.

“The broader nuclear-nonprolife­ration regime is still absolutely critical to the broader nuclear landscape and persuading countries that they don’t want to, or that they shouldn’t try, to acquire nuclear weapons,” Mark Bell, a niversity of Minnesota professor of political science who specialize­s in nuclear-weapons issues, told an editorial writer.

At other times, Bell added, a more direct capital-to-capital strategy is key, like one between New Delhi and Islamabad or between Beijing, Washington, DC, and Taipei.

Diplomacy, however, won’t be enhanced by Western capitulati­on to Russia’s illegal, immoral invasion of kraine. The opposite is true rewarding Russian aggression would only incentiviz­e more of it, be it from the Kremlin, China regarding Taiwan or elsewhere. That should resonate as allies try to align their disparate policies on supplying tanks to help kraine better defend itself.

Notably, an official with the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists advocated for supplying tanks, which he rightly perceived as a way to restore the internatio­nal order, imperative to avoiding doomsday.

“The S and Russia have a strong shared interest in avoiding nuclear war and in minimizing nuclear risks, and we should be able to pursue this shared interest despite the war in kraine, just as we did during the darkest days of the Cold War,” Steve Fetter, a member of the Bulletin’s Science and Security Board, said in response to a reporter’s question.

“S military assistance to kraine may complicate those efforts,” he said, but added: “I think it is essential for the long-term risks of nuclear war and nuclear proliferat­ion that

kraine is able to resist the invasion and repel Russian forces. And so we should do everything we can to support kraine in that.”

Indeed, a further deteriorat­ion of the global order by allowing unchecked aggression would only make the world more dangerous and push the Doomsday Clock even closer to midnight.

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