Paul
Goble
Staunton, June
16 – The war in Ukraine is changing the nuclear balance in the world in three
ways: it is leading Russia and the US to slow their cutbacks in the number of
war heads, it is causing countries thinking about giving up their nuclear
aspirations to revisit the situation, and it is allowing others with such weapons
to build more under the world’s radar screen.
As a result, the overall reduction
in the total number of nuclear warheads over the last year does not mean that
the world is moving either toward a more secure or more nuclear-free state,
according to the new yearbook of the Stockholm International Peace Research
Institute (sipri.org/yearbook/2015/downloadable-files/sipri-yearbook-2015-summary-pdf
summarized at szona.org/kak-vojna-v-ukraine-menyaet-yadernyj-balans-v-mire/).
At
the start of 2015, SIPRI says, the nine nuclear powers in the world – the US,
Russia, the UK, France, China, India, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea – had 15850
warheads, approximately 500 fewer than the year before. Most of that reduction
came from drawdowns by the US and Russia, who between them have more than 93
percent of all such weapons.
But
as a result of tensions over the war in Ukraine, “both sides have slowed the
rate of reduction of their nuclear warheads” with Russia cutting its arsenal
from 8,000 to 7500 last year, and the US reducing its from 7300 to 7260. While
Russia’s cuts were less, German security expert Oliver Meier says, “Russia is
again devoting great importance to nuclear weapons” – especially those it might
use in Europe.
Russian
leader Vladimir Putin has declared that he “does not exclude” the possibility
of using nuclear weapons, and both Moscow and Washington have moved in
directions that may change the location of their strategic and tactic nuclear
arsenals, with Russia putting such weapons in Crimea and NATO shifting its in
Europe.
A
second way in which the Ukrainian crisis is affecting the nuclear balance in
the world is the lesson Ukraine offers to countries pursuing or thinking about
pursuing their own nuclear weapons programs.
“In 1994,” Giorgio Francescini says in the SIPRI report, “Ukraine was
the third largest nuclear power in the world. Then it gave up its arms to
Moscow and look what that has led to.”
Most
immediately, the SIPRI report concludes, in the words of the Deutsche Welle
summary, “the example of Ukraine may influence the outcome of talks on Iran’s
nuclear program.”
And
the third impact of events in Ukraine on the nuclear balance is that
international attention to that conflict has distracted attention from other
parts of the world and allowed countries there to pursue nuclear programs that
the major powers might otherwise have been able to block.
SIPRI
points to the growth in the number of nuclear warheads among the three Asian
powers: China, India, and Pakistan.
While there has been a drawdown in nuclear weapons elsewhere over the
last year, China has increased its arsenal from 250 to 260 warheads, leading India
and Pakistan to increase their stocks of highly enriched uranium.
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