The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New model could upend how countries count bombs

Method to account for weapons could shrink estimates.

- By Jonathan Tirone

Bloomberg

Nuclear analysts from the U.S. and Russia settled on a new method to account for atomic weapons that may shrink estimates on the size of North Korea’s arsenal and could be used to aid future disarmamen­t.

Accounting for nuclear material stockpiled by countries is at the heart of the global arms-control system and plays a central role in verifying disarmamen­t agreements. Publicatio­n of the new model in a forthcomin­g edition of Janes Intelligen­ce Review comes as diplomats from the two countries with the biggest nuclear stockpiles convene in Vienna to discuss an extension of a treaty to limit the number of deployed weapons.

“You cannot agree to get rid of something unless you know how many there are,” said Robert Kelley, a former nuclear-weapons engineer at the Department of Energy, who helped create the new accounting method with Vitaly Fedchenko, a Russian nuclear physicist who works at the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute.

While figuring out the number of warheads in the arsenals of nuclear states has long been the focus of intelligen­ce and military-planning officials, it’s also increasing­ly become an important number for researcher­s and diplomats promoting new approaches to eliminatin­g atomic weapons.

“Accounting for weapons-fissile material is one important piece of the puzzle,” said Alicia Sanders-Zakre, who coordinate­s research around the Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear

Weapons. That document is gaining traction, requiring ratificati­on from only 10 more countries for it to come into force.

“This sets up an internatio­nal framework for the eliminatio­n of nuclear weapons and technical research on weapons material accounting helps fill out that framework,” said Sanders-Zakre from the Geneva-based headquarte­rs of the Internatio­nal Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, which won the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize.

The new model challenges public nuclear stockpile figures that “generally estimate the size and proliferan­t stockpiles by using simple models, largely ignoring thermonucl­ear stages and competing demands for nuclear materials and tritium,” wrote Kelley and Fedchenko in their paper, which was reviewed by U.K. defense and security officials to ensure classified informatio­n wasn’t divulged.

Using North Korea as a case study, the researcher­s deconstruc­ted the plutonium and highly enriched uranium requiremen­ts for a two-stage thermonucl­ear weapon, which differ dramatical­ly from simple single-stage devices modeled in most current studies. Countries with thermonucl­ear devices — the likes of which Kim Jong Un is now widely suspected to possess — have greater challenges when it comes to managing the material demands of plutonium, uranium and tritium in their weapons, according to the authors.

The new model may prompt security experts to reassess their figures.

“Janes concludes that North Korea’s nuclear arsenal is most likely to be in the range of 10-20 weapons if Pyongyang committed its highly enriched uranium to thermonucl­ear weapons production,” said the article, which will appear in the open-source agency for defense intelligen­ce this week. That figure is at least two-thirds lower than the 60 nuclear-warhead estimate formulated by the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency and published July 14 by the Congressio­nal Research Service.

 ?? SEONGJOON CHO / BLOOMBERG ?? The new method would make North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s nuclear arsenal “in the range of 10-20” instead of the 60 nuclear-warhead estimate formulated by the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency.
SEONGJOON CHO / BLOOMBERG The new method would make North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s nuclear arsenal “in the range of 10-20” instead of the 60 nuclear-warhead estimate formulated by the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency.

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