470 likes | 808 Views
The Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction. Today’s overview. History of WMD - Chemical, Bio, Nuke International Treaties Nuclear Weapons Today North Korea, Iraq, Pakistan Iran?. World War I. Chemical. Non-living First use in Western World - Peloponnesian War
E N D
Today’s overview • History of WMD - Chemical, Bio, Nuke • International Treaties • Nuclear Weapons Today • North Korea, Iraq, Pakistan • Iran?
Chemical • Non-living • First use in Western World - Peloponnesian War • Rediscovered in Renaissance
Chemical - Modern uses • Iraq-Iran War • “Is military research hazardous to veteran’s health?” (1994) US Senate • Japan - Aum Shinrikyo • Russian forces - Moscow theater hostages
Chemical Stockpiles Units in Metric Tons Source:Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons December 2006 implementation report, Report of the OCPW on the Implementation of the Convention of the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on their Destruction in 2005.
Biological • Living organisms • Anthrax • Cold War focused on retaliation • A Poor Nation’s WMD • Iraq • Nearly impossible to detect • Dual-use technologies
The Biological Threat • H5N1/Bird Flu • 1918 “Spanish Lady”
International Treaties • 1899 Hague Conference • Navy Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan - "the inventiveness of Americans should not be restricted in the development of new weapons." • 1925 Geneva Protocol • Bans chemical & biological weapons • Nothing on production, storage, or transfer • 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention
Chemical Weapons Convention Bans: * Developing, producing, acquiring, stockpiling, or retaining chemical weapons. * The direct or indirect transfer of chemical weapons. * Chemical weapons use or military preparation for use. * Assisting, encouraging, or inducing other states to engage in CWC-prohibited activity. * The use of riot control agents “as a method of warfare.” • Didn’t ratify/sign: Bahamas, Congo, Dominican Republic, Guinea-Bissau, Israel, Myanmar, Angola, North Korea, Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon, Somalia, Syria
Biological Weapons Treaties • 1972 Biological Weapons Convention • 158 states • Bans creation & storage, but not usage • Also applies to private parties • Reviews in early 1990s, US says “not in national interest” before 9/11. • 2003: National mechanisms for security • 2004: Enhancing international response to disease/outbreaks • 2004: strengthens detection & capabilities • 2005: codes of conduct for scientists
Nuclear Weapons • First known nuclear test was done in New Mexico on July 16th 1945 • How many tests to date? • US bombs Hiroshima & Nagasaki • USSR tests weapon in 1949 • Hydrogen bomb • Only countries to test weapons: US, Russia, UK, France, India, China, Pakistan, and North Korea (possibly South Africa). • Deterrence?
NPT • 1963 Partial Test Ban Treaty • Prohibits all above ground testing • 1968 Non-Proliferation Treaty • Except: India, Israel, Pakistan, North Korea • Non-proflieration, Disarmament, Peaceful Use • IAEA
The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty 1968 • Ratified by 188 states • Atoms for Peace • IAEA – dual mission of prevention & promotion • The Fissile Bank - Failure • Goal of disarmament - Failure • The “Big Five” (haves) v. “have-nots”
Giving up nukes • South America - Treaty of Tlatelolco (‘67) • Weapons-Free Zone • Gave up programs: Argentina & Brazil • Nobel Prizes to creators of treaty • South Africa • Relinquishes weapons after apartheid
Loose Nukes • Cold War “Near Misses” • Deterrence and Balance of Power • The Former Soviet Union: Nunn/Luger • A “Dirty Bomb” • Military Utility of Nuclear Weapons • Regime Security • AQ Khan and the Black Market
Chemical & Biological Weapons • Easier to make • Easier to deploy • Harder to detect • Harder to fix blame • Can be used in an asymmetrical context • Therefore, harder to deter
WMD - Case Studies North Korea, Iraq, Pakistan & Iran
Nuclear State of the World: N. Korea • Withdrew from NNPT in 1985 • Clinton Agreement • The North Korean “Detonation” on Oct. 9th 2006 • Bush Agreement
N. Korea - Potential Disaster • -Formidable Threat: 1.2 million soldiers, 100,000 elite forces, one of the world’s largest chemical and biological weapons arsenals. • -Deployment of weapons of mass destruction: Believed to have around 10 nuclear warheads, the likelihood of their use increases with greater regime instability.
Potential Disaster (con’t) • -Refugee Crisis: South Koreans and Chinese fear an influx of refugees more than NK missiles. • -“Mother of all relief operations”: The US could be presented with the greatest stabilization effort since WWII, and have to coordinate operations with the Chinese PLA.
Potential Disaster (cont’d) • -Regime Collapse: “collapse of the chain of command of the KFR could be more dangerous than the preservation of it, particularly when one considers control over WMD.” -Colonel Maxwell, who explains: • a.) We might have to fight the remnants of the military while conducting relief efforts. • b.) The elites of the military structure may form the basis of an insurgency in North Korea.
Kim Jung Il’s & Kim Jong Un’s Objectives • 1: Control the Military –particularly the elites who can control the forces under them. • 2: Split the alliance between South Korea and the U.S. Support in SK for US intervention has dwindled, and many may rally to nationalist calls for the US not to interfere. • 3: Manipulate the South Korean left. • -by inflicting sufficient damage to press them to seek a negotiated settlement. • -provoke American attacks to cause them to place blame on the US for the violence.
Today: NKorea orders UN nuclear inspectors from plant • VIENNA, Austria - N. Korea barred U.N. nuclear inspectors from its main plutonium reprocessing plant Wednesday and within a week plans to reactivate the facility that once provided the fissile material for its atomic test explosion, a senior U.N. nuclear inspector said. The North ordered the removal of the U.N. seals and surveillance equipment from the Yongbyon plant, a sign it is making good on threats to restart a nuclear program that allowed it to conduct a test explosion two years ago. But the North's moves could be motivated by strategy as well. It could use the year it would take to restart the North's sole reprocessing plant to wrest further concessions from the U.S. and other nations seeking to strip it of its atomic program. Coming amid reports that that their leader suffered a stroke, the nuclear reversal has fueled worries about a breakdown of international attempts to coax the North out of its confrontational isolation with most of the rest of the world. • The accord hit a snag in mid-August when the U.S. refused to remove North Korea from its list of states that sponsor terrorism until the North accepts a plan to verify a declaration of its nuclear programs that it submitted earlier.
Reunification • Regional BOP • Centers on China • Threat to Japan? • Cost to South Korea • Kim Jong Un?
Iraq • Uses poison gas in Iran-Iraq War, also against Kurds • Iraq in the 90’s. 1991: Gulf War ends, UN weapons inspectors begin work in the Iraq. 1992-94: Iraq largely disarmed of WMD’s, while retaining some research and development capabilities 1995-96: Saddam’s remaining WMD programs wind down. Period of weakened internal security and political turmoil. High-level officials defect. 1998: Saddam kicks out weapons inspectors, arousing international suspicion.
What we thought (Pollock • Iraq continues WMD programs in defiance of sanctions. • Iraq will have a nuke w/i a decade or 1 year if it can acquire fissile materiel from abroad. • Iraq has invested heavily in missile tech • Iraq has renewed production of chemical agents and it researching weaponization of bio agents
What we now know to be true! • Iraq had preserved some nuclear technology, but had not restarted its nuclear program. • No chemical weapons or bio weapons were produced, but some research was carried out and 1 bio lab was maintained clandestinely. • Saddam was most aggressive in pursuit of ballistic missile technology.
Overselling the case • Correcting intelligence problems
AQ Khan “provided the country—single handedly, it was widely believed—with an arsenal of nuclear weapons (Langewiesche, 2005).”
AQ Khan • Background • Spread technology to: • Iran, Libya, and North Korea • Transfer to non-state actors? • Pakistani & US Reaction