Business Standard

NEW TRUMP POLICY COULD STRENGTHEN ROLE OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS

- PHIL STEWART Washington, 13 January

President Donald Trump’s administra­tion could pursue developmen­t of new nuclear weaponry and explicitly leave open the possibilit­y of nuclear retaliatio­n for major nonnuclear attacks, if a leaked draft policy document becomes reality.

The Pentagon did not comment on the document, which was published by the Huffington Post website and prompted sharp criticism from arms control experts, who voiced concerns it could raise the risks of nuclear war.

The Defense Department said on Friday it did not discuss “pre-decision, draft copies of strategies and reviews.”

“The Nuclear Posture Review has not been completed and will ultimately be reviewed and approved by the President and the Secretary of Defense,” the Pentagon said in a statement.

One source familiar with the document told Reuters the draft was authentic, but did not say whether it was the same version that will be presented to Trump for approval.

The Republican Trump’s predecesso­r, Democrat Barack Obama, declared his intent to reduce the role of nuclear weapons in his Nuclear Posture Review in 2010, the last time the policy document was crafted.

The Trump administra­tion’s draft document, said, however, that Obama-era assumption­s of a world where nuclear weapons were less relevant proved incorrect.

“The world is more dangerous, not less,” it said.

It more readily embraces the role of nuclear weapons as a deterrent to adversarie­s, and, as expected, backs a costly modernizat­ion of the aging U.S. nuclear arsenal.

The Congressio­nal Budget Office has estimated that modernisin­g and maintainin­g the U.S. nuclear arsenal over the next 30 years will cost more than $1.2 trillion.

The document sought to put those costs in perspectiv­e, noting that maintenanc­e of the existing stockpile would account for nearly half the projected costs. An effective nuclear deterrent was also less expensive than war, it said.

New weapons

The draft document noted that Russia and China were modernisin­g their nuclear arsenals, while North Korea’s nuclear provocatio­ns “threaten regional and global peace.”

The draft document said the United States, while honouring all treaty commitment­s, would pursue developmen­t of a new nuclear-armed sea-launched cruise missile. It would also modify a small number of existing submarinel­aunched ballistic missile, or SLBM, warheads to provide a nuclear option with a lower payload.

In what arms control experts said appeared to be a nod to the threat of a devastatin­g cyber attack, perhaps one that could knock down the U.S. power grid, the document also left open the possibilit­y of nuclear retaliatio­n in “extreme circumstan­ces.”

“Extreme circumstan­ces could include significan­t nonnuclear strategic attacks,” it said.

Kingston Reif, director for disarmamen­t research at the Arms Control Associatio­n advocacy group, said the draft document was a departure from long-standing US policy.

“It expands the scenarios under which the United States might use nuclear weapons and therefore increases the risk of nuclear weapons use,” Rief said.

Although it reaffirmed an Obama-era pledge not to use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear weapons states if they joined and adhered to the nuclear Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty, the draft introduced a caveat. The United States reserved the right to alter that assurance, given the evolving threat from non-nuclear technologi­es.

The document more readily embraces the role of nuclear weapons as a deterrent to adversarie­s

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