Chapter 21
Nuclear proliferation
By Sheena Chestnut
Greitens
Introduction
Nuclear weapons
technology and its spread
Theoretical debates
about nuclear proliferation
Evolution of
non-proliferation efforts
Conclusion
Reader's Guide
This chapter examines the enduring
importance of nuclear proliferation and non-proliferation efforts in world
politics since 1945. The chapter begins by explaining some of the technical
aspects of nuclear weapons technology, and describes the spread of this
technology over time. It then considers major theoretical debates about
nuclear proliferation, including why states want nuclear weapons and what
effect they have on patterns of international conflict and cooperation. The
chapter next looks at the evolution of various attempts by the international
community to control or limit the spread of nuclear weapons. Throughout, it
examines how globalization has shaped the global landscape of nuclear
proliferation, and how it is likely to shape the issue in the years to come.
Introduction
The spread of nuclear weapons technology
continues to be an important issue in a globalized world. The United States’
explosion of the world’s first atomic bomb in a New Mexico desert in 1945
marked the beginning of the ‘Atomic Age’, and nuclear weapons were used for the
first and only time against the Japanese populations of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
at the end of the Second World War in August 1945. These events demonstrated
the extraordinary destructive power of nuclear weapons, a fact that has had
long-term consequences for international peace and security.
Since then, basic nuclear technology that
can be used for either civil or military purposes has diffused widely across
the globe. Nuclear weapons themselves have spread
much more gradually, with four additional
nuclear powers by 1965, and only nine today. At the same time, the absolute
number of nuclear weapons in existence has declined, as the United States and
Russia have sought to reduce the number of nuclear weapons in their arsenals.
Globalization and the end of the cold war
have introduced new and complex challenges related to nuclear proliferation.
These include the growth of nuclear energy, the challenges of loose nuclear
weapons and nuclear terrorism, the problmes of nuclear strategy outside the
superpower/bipolar context, and continued debate over nuclear weapons
programmes in Israel, Iran, and North Korea. As proliferation challenges have
evolved, so have international efforts to address them.
Nuclear
weapons technology and its spread
Since 1945, civil and military nuclear
technology has spread across the globe. Nuclear weapons, however, have been
much slower to spread. By 1965, four countries in addition to the United
States had tested nuclear weapons: the Soviet Union (Russia), Britain, France,
and China. These five were recognized as nuclear weapons states under the 1968
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), and are also the five permanent members
of the United Nations (UN) Security Council. Only nine countries are thought to
possess nuclear weapons today: the five nuclear weapons states, plus India,
Pakistan, North Korea, and Israel. Several other states have developed or
inherited nuclear weapons arsenals, but have chosen to relinquish them.
Technical basics:
what is a nuclear programme?
Nuclear technology is dual-use, meaning
that it can be used either to generate energy in a nuclear reactor, or to make
a nuclear weapon. A nuclear reactor uses nuclear chain reactions in a
sustained, controlled process to generate power in the form of heat. A nuclear
weapon, on the other hand, seeks to create a large explosion using one of two
methods: fission or fusion. The earliest nuclear weapons were fission weapons,
which split atoms in a chain reaction to release large amounts of energy. By
the mid-1950s, however, both the United States and Soviet Union had also
developed
thermonuclear weapons, which use a
combination of fission and a method called fusion, which compresses and heats
hydrogen atoms so that they combine, or fuse, to generate energy.
Developing a nuclear weapon from scratch
requires an array of sophisticated technologies arranged in complex
organizational patterns. This is one reason why the creation of a full nuclear
programme is difficult, and has been achieved only by a handful of states
willing to devote the attention and resources needed.
One of the most difficult steps in making
a nuclear weapon is obtaining weapons-grade fissile material. The two major
kinds of fissile material used in the making of nuclear weapons are plutonium
and uranium. Making a nuclear weapon from uranium requires Uranium-235 (U-235),
which is a very small fraction of the uranium found in nature (around 0.7 per
cent). U-235 must therefore be separated from the non-fissile isotope U-238
through a process called enrichment. Once the uranium has been enriched to 20
per cent or more of U-235, it is called highly enriched uranium (HEU), and
above 90 per cent is considered weapons- grade uranium. Plutonium, on the other
hand, is created by humans as a by-product of reactor processes, and must then
be reprocessed, or chemically separated from the non-fissile material in spent
fuel, in order to be used in a nuclear warhead.
Once this weapons-grade fissile material
has been obtained, it must still be weaponized, or made
into a warhead that can be delivered to
its intended target. Uranium and plutonium can both be used to make
implosion-type bombs, in which explosives around a mass of fissile material
implode the fissile material to reach critical mass and start the nuclear
reaction. Uranium, however, can also be used to make a gun-type bomb, in which
one piece of uranium is fired into another to
achieve critical mass.
Because of their explosive capacity,
nuclear weapons are considered weapons of mass destruction (WMD), along with
chemical, biological, and radiological weapons, sometimes abbreviated together
as CBRN. The explosive yield of nuclear weapons is measured in kilo- tons
(thousands of tons) of TNT equivalent, or in megatons (millions of tons).
Fission nuclear weapons, the kind of weapon dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
can release energy equivalent to tens of thousands of tons of TNT; the
destructive capacity of the fusion or thermonuclear weapons developed later
reached as much as several megatons. Nuclear weapons release their energy, and
can therefore cause damage, in three different ways: a blast; thermal radiation
(heat); and nuclear radiation. Nuclear weapons also cause an electromagnetic
pulse that can disrupt the operation of electronic equipment, as well as fires
that create further damage (Eden 2006).
Globalization has heightened concern that
a nonstate actor such as a terrorist organization or criminal group might try
to acquire a nuclear weapon or radiological material—the kind that could be
used in a so-called ‘dirty bomb’ (Allison 2005). Because of the complexity of
establishing a full nuclear programme, these actors are generally expected to
acquire a nuclear weapon by stealing one or purchasing it on the black market,
rather than developing it themselves. Concern about nuclear theft has been
particularly acute since the dissolution of the Soviet Union—the only time that
a state with a nuclear arsenal experienced political disintegration. Command
and control arrangements over those weapons became questionable. In response,
the United States and the international community launched a series of efforts
to secure nuclear materials in the countries of the former Soviet Union. More
recently, the discovery of the global proliferation network run by Pakistani
scientist A.Q. Khan raises concerns that in a globalized world states will not
be able to control the diffusion of nuclear materials, technology, and knowledge.
Nuclear proliferation
since 1945
During the cold war, the superpowers built
large arsenals of nuclear weapons, with widely ranging yields and a
number of different delivery vehicles.
Some of the weapons were smaller, tactical nuclear weapons, which are
generally intended for use against targets on the battlefield and so are
delivered by methods like aircraft, artillery, or short-range ballistic or
cruise missiles. Others were strategic nuclear weapons, typically with larger
yields, delivered by means such as long-range bombers, land-based
intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), or submarine-launched ballistic
missiles (SLBMs). Starting in the 1970s, some of these missiles carried multiple
independently targetable re-entry vehicles (MIRVs), which meant that a single
missile could carry multiple warheads that could strike different targets.
Thinking about nuclear weapons during the
cold war focused primarily on the bipolar competition between the United States
and the Soviet Union. The main question was how to prevent conventional or
nuclear war between the superpowers. A huge body of literature examined nuclear
deterrence—the question of ‘how nuclear weapons could be used to prevent an
opponent from taking an undesirable action’ (Walton 2013:198). Thomas Schelling
(1980) famously discussed deterrence as ‘the threat that leaves something to
chance’—the idea that if there was even a small risk that conventional attack
would cause an opponent to escalate to nuclear conflict in response, that risk
would deter the conventional attack.
More concretely, the United States and its
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), allies feared that the Soviet Union
would take advantage of its conventional military superiority to invade Western
Europe; they relied on the threat of nuclear retaliation to prevent it from
doing so. To deter the Soviet Union, the United States and its allies used two
different nuclear targeting strategies. In a counterforce strategy, American
nuclear weapons targeted the Soviet Union’s nuclear and conventional military
assets. In a countervalue strategy, the assets threatened with nuclear
retaliation were targets of industrial or social value, typically cities with
large populations. The USSR’s nuclear strategy during the cold war evolved as
well, as the Soviet arsenal grew in size and the country’s leaders considered
the utility of nuclear weapons for deterrence and war-fighting purposes.
The United States also developed what was
known as extended deterrence—the threat of nuclear response in order to deter
an attack on one of its allies. This, however, created a dilemma: if an attack
on an American ally led the US to retaliate with nuclear weapons against the
opponent’s home territory, that opponent might itself retaliate by using
nuclear weapons against American soil. Was the US really willing to trade New
York for Paris, or Los Angeles for Berlin?
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