---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: john hallam <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, 24 May 2017 16:16:42 +1000
Subject: Nuclear conflict risk: Why the bomb is back


Nuclear conflict risk: Why the bomb is back
Jonathan Marcus
<http://www.bbc.com/news/correspondents/jonathanmarcus>Diplomatic
correspondent

   - 5 May 2017

   - From the sectionWorld <http://www.bbc.com/news/world>


   http://www.bbc.com/news/world-39818276


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[image: Filming on the set of Dr Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop
Worrying and Love the Bomb on 14 March 1963]Image copyrightEXPRESS/GETTYImage
captionThe film Dr Strangelove satirised fears of a nuclear conflict
between the US and the former Soviet Union

The film Dr Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the
Bomb - to give it its full title - remains a comedy classic. Starring Peter
Sellers in multiple roles and directed by Stanley Kubrick, it illustrated
the way in which the US and the then Soviet Union might unintentionally
drift into all-out nuclear war. Back in 1964, when it was first released,
it was a very dark comedy indeed. Audiences then lived under the very real
shadow of the Cold War nuclear arms race.

Mindful of the dangers, over the years, an elaborate series of arms control
and arms reduction agreements were concluded between the two superpowers to
try to manage their nuclear rivalry.

But with the Cold War over, nuclear arsenals were scaled down. The nature
of international conflict seemed to change; no longer rivalry between great
powers but bitter local wars where countries disintegrated into chaos or
terrorist groups sought to capitalise on ungoverned space to mount their
nihilist campaigns.

But now there are those who fear that the nuclear spectre is becoming all
too real again. The US non-governmental organisation Global Zero certainly
thinks so. It has brought respected former officials and military men
together to campaign for the abolition of nuclear weapons.

It is launching a new initiative on Friday in Vienna to establish what it
calls the Nuclear Crisis Group, which it hopes will serve as a kind of
shadow-Security Council to deal with potential nuclear flashpoints.
Image captionTensions have risen over North Korea's nuclear programme

As Global Zero Executive Director Derek Johnson told me, "from Ukraine and
the Korean Peninsula, to south Asia and the South China Sea and Taiwan, all
of the nuclear-armed states and their allies are tangled up in conflicts
and crises that could go nuclear at any moment."

"It's true," he notes, "that each of these crises has been simmering for a
long time, but they're all heating up." The world, he argues, "has never
been faced with so many nuclear flashpoints simultaneously".

The growing tensions between the US and North Korea are clearly very much
on Global Zero's minds. "The election of Donald Trump," says Johnson, "has
injected an alarming new level of incoherence and volatility into a
uniquely perilous moment in human history."

   - How might Donald Trump do a deal with North Korea?
   <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-39632152>
   - What can the outside world do about North Korea?
   <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-39216803>
   - North Korea's nuclear programme: How advanced is it?
   <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-11813699>

The message of Global Zero is that mankind is "simply not equipped to
manage existential risks indefinitely". The new Nuclear Crisis Group will
monitor potential flash-points; seek to publish reports to educate and keep
these issues in the public eye, while also engaging in behind the scenes
diplomacy to try to influence the main players.

The NCG is co-chaired by the respected US diplomats and ambassadors Richard
Burt and Thomas Pickering, and by a former general, James E Cartwright. It
describes itself as embracing "a cadre of seasoned diplomats, political and
military leaders and national security experts from key countries,
including China, India, Japan, Pakistan, Poland, Russia, South Korea and
the United States".
A nuclear race?

The NCG and its sponsoring organization - Global Zero - are clearly part of
a nuclear disarmament lobby that in many ways feels that it has been pushed
to the sidelines. While it would be wrong to speak of a new Cold War,
relations between Russia and the US are clearly at a very low-ebb.

But their relative positions and capabilities have changed. Russia -
despite its military adventure in Syria - is a shadow of the former Soviet
Union.
Image captionPresident Putin is seeking to modernise Russia's nuclear
arsenal

Nonetheless Moscow's Syria intervention illustrates that Russia cannot
simply be ignored and the deepening tensions come at a time when both
Washington and Moscow are seeking to modernise their nuclear arsenals.

Indeed Russia's military doctrine places a growing importance on its
nuclear arsenal, not least because of the imbalance of conventional forces
between it and the West. Donald Trump's own approach to nuclear weapons is
unclear - he has spoken in muscular terms about expanding the US nuclear
arsenal and has been sceptical about the value of one of the key Cold War
arms reduction treaties.

Indeed arms control is having a hard time generally. Russia is widely
regarded in the West as having breached the Intermediate Range Nuclear
Forces (INF) Treaty, an agreement that for the first time abolished a whole
category of nuclear weapons.

   - Trump's lack of clarity may prove catastrophic
   <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-39568261>
   - US raises stakes over Iran nuclear dea
   <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-39649686>l

Image captionUncertainty over Mr Trump's policy towards Iran has
contributed to the tensions

New conventional long-range strike systems look set to complicate the
balance of threat and deterrence. And the demise of Saddam Hussein's regime
in Iraq and that of Colonel Gaddafi in Libya seem to have sent a clear
signal to the North Korean leadership that you renounce weapons of mass
destruction at your peril.

Uncertainty about the Trump administration's attitude to the nuclear deal
with Iran that has, at least, constrained its nuclear development for a
period, adds another element of tension.

So nuclear disarmament according to Global Zero should be very much back on
the agenda. The developing crisis over North Korea's nuclear programme
simply provides added urgency.

There is of course no equivalence between the regime of Kim Jong Un and the
Trump administration.

But the combination of an erratic and unpredictable North Korean leadership
with an inexperienced president who seems fascinated with the military is a
dangerous one. The possibility of a confrontation between two-nuclear armed
countries suddenly seems more real now than it has for decades.

Maybe Dr Strangelove would be worth re-viewing.





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