http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/nation/1750749

As the Pentagon continues a highly visible buildup of troops and weapons in
the Persian Gulf, it is also quietly preparing for the possible use of
nuclear weapons in the potential war against Iraq, according to a report by
a defense analyst.
Although they consider such a strike unlikely, military planners have been
actively studying lists of potential targets and considering options,
including the possible use of so-called "bunker buster" nuclear weapons
against deeply buried military targets, says analyst William M. Arkin, who
writes a regular column on defense matters for the Los Angeles Times.

Military officials have been focusing their planning on the use of nuclear
arms in retaliation for a strike by the Iraqis with chemical or biological
weapons, or to pre-empt one, Arkin says.

Administration officials believe that in some circumstances, nuclear arms
may offer the only way to destroy deeply buried targets that may contain
unconventional weapons that could kill thousands. Some officials have argued
that the blast and radiation effects of such strikes would be limited.

But that is in dispute. Critics contend that a bunker-buster strike could
involve a huge radiation release and dangerous blast damage. They also say
that use of a nuclear weapon in such circumstances would encourage other
nuclear-armed countries to consider using those weapons in more kinds of
situations, and would badly undermine the half-century effort to contain the
spread of nuclear weapons.

Although it may be highly unlikely that the Bush administration would
authorize the use of such weapons in Iraq -- Arkin describes it as a
worst-case scenario -- the mere disclosure of its planning contingencies
could stiffen the opposition of France, Germany and Middle East nations to
any invasion of Iraq.

"If the United States dropped a bomb on an Arab country, it might be a
military success, but it would be a diplomatic, political and strategic
disaster," said Joseph Cirincione, director of nonproliferation studies at
the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington.

In the past year, Bush administration officials have repeatedly made clear
that they want to be better prepared to consider the nuclear option against
the threat of "weapons of mass destruction" in the hands of terrorists and
rogue nations. The current planning activities, as reported by Arkin, offer
a concrete example of their determination to follow through on this pledge.

Arkin also says that the Pentagon has changed the bureaucratic oversight of
nuclear weapons so that they are no longer treated as a special category of
arms, but grouped with conventional military options.

A White House spokesman declined comment Friday on Arkin's report, except to
say that "the United States reserves the right to defend itself and its
allies by whatever means necessary."

David J. Smith, an arms-control negotiator in the first Bush administration,
said presidents would only consider using such a weapon "in terribly ugly
situations where there are no easy ways out. If there's a threat that could
involve huge numbers of American lives, I as a citizen would want the
president to consider that option."



xponent
Not Likely Maru
rob
________________________________
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You have no right to be here.
And whether you can hear it or not,
the universe is laughing behind your back.


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