Nuclear Weapons Flashcards

1
Q

Learning objectives

A
  • Understand concerns about nuclear threats
    • Consider reasons for acquiring nuclear weapons
    • Examine history of arms control efforts
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2
Q

Nuclear threats

A
  • A lot of major people are making nuclear threats
    • Putin said don’t ‘they’ realize that ‘we’ have weapons that could reach their territory, they are risking nuclear war
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3
Q

What is a nuclear weapon

A
  • Explosive device that derives its destructive force from nuclear reaction
    • A modern thermonuclear weapon, weighing a little more than 1000 kg can produce an explosion comparable to the detonation of more than 1 billion kg of conventional high explosives
    • Efficient killing machine
    • Unlike any other conventional threat
    • Have to think carefully about
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4
Q

Nuclear and Near-Nuclear Weapon States, 2023

A
  • 9 known countries that have nuclear weapons, 2 countries have a lot of nuclear weapons 4400 nuclear weapons for Russia, 3300 nuclear weapons for the US
    • Broken nuclear barrier
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5
Q

Motivations for building nuclear weapons

A
  • Deterrence–trying to make them think twice, scare them so they don’t do what they are planning on doing, through fear
    • Intimidation–Putin said that he could make the war much more unpleasant by using nuclear weapons
    • Prestige–lots of countries think that possessing a nuclear weapon helps show that they are of higher status than everybody else
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6
Q

Policy of Massive Retaliation

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  • 1954: US secretary of State John Foster Dulles announces that the United States will protect its allies through the “deterrent of massive retaliatory power.”
    • Supposed to keep soviets in check
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7
Q

Emergence of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD)

A
  • By the. Mid- 1960s, unilateral deterrence gave way to “mutual deterrence,” a situation of strategic stalemate.
    • Focus on “second strike” capabilities. Enough in arsenal to survive whatever you hit is with, and regardless on if we die, we will put that second strike on you
    • In order to have a situation of MAD, your nuclear arsenal has to withstand the first nuclear strike from your opponent and deliver an equally destructive second strike
    • This is why one might be interested in building up nuclear weapons for themselves
    • Its bad to have only a first strike capability as : you don’t have the deterrence, and you also have a threat to other rivals–the other side knows that you only have one shot, and they know they just have to strike first–first strike will destroy their capacity to strike back
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8
Q

Arms control treaties have lapsed

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  • New START treaty is last nuclear arms control agreement between US and Russia. It is set to expire in 2026.
    • Russia withdrew from the Comprehensive test ban treaty
    • US tested nuclear weapon in 2023 after Russia withdrawals from CTBT.
    • Suggested that we may be in for a new wave of nuclear weapons
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9
Q

Horizontal proliferation continues

A
  • North Korea, Pakistan, India increasing their arsenals
    • Iran pursuing nuclear weapon
    • Japan is the only non-nuclear weapon state in possession of a full nuclear fuel cycle and has advanced WMD-relevant industries
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