The New Loose Nukes
Read more at https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/bennett-ramberg-highlights-the-vulnerability-of-nuclear-assets-in-volatile-countries#k1XmhwXMpLq8cTu4.99
LOS ANGELES – Nobody
would dispute the danger inherent in possessing nuclear assets. But that
danger becomes far more acute in a combat zone, where nuclear materials and weapons are at risk of theft, and reactors can become bombing targets. These
risks – most apparent in today’s chaos-ridden Middle East – raise
troubling questions about the security of nuclear assets in volatile
countries everywhere.
Two recent events demonstrate what is at stake. On
July 9, the militant group now known as the Islamic State captured 40
kilograms (88 pounds) of uranium compounds at Mosul University in Iraq. The
captured uranium was not weapons-grade; international inspectors
removed all sensitive material from Iraq following the 1991 Gulf War
(which is why it was absent when the United States invaded in 2003). But
what international response, if any, would have been initiated if the
cache had been highly enriched?
On the same day, Hamas launched three powerful Iranian-designed rockets from Gaza at Israel’s Dimona reactor.
Luckily, two missed the target, and Israel managed to intercept the
third. But the episode represented a serious escalation of hostilities
and served as an important reminder of the vulnerability of nuclear
reactors in warzones.
In fact, Hamas made similar attempts to attack the Dimona complex in 2012, as did Iraq in 1991, with the aim of releasing the site’s contents to inflict radiological damage on Israel’s population. (The
perpetrators appeared clueless to the fact that certain weather
conditions would have concentrated the radioactive debris in the
Palestinian-majority West Bank.)
Of course, it is
possible that these events are an aberration. After all, the only
conflict so far in which authorities have lost control of sensitive
nuclear materials was the Georgia-Abkhazia
War in the 1990s, when unknown forces seized a small amount of highly
enriched uranium from a research institute.
Likewise, though there
have been numerous attacks on nuclear reactors under construction, the
sole threat to an operating plant in a combat zone outside of Israel
occurred at the start of the fighting in ex-Yugoslavia, when Serbian
nationalists considered attacking Slovenia’s Krško power plant and sent
warplanes over the site. The plant’s operators temporarily halted
electricity generation to curb the risk of a radiation release, but
nothing came of the threat.
Indeed, whenever
nuclear assets have been least secure – during the Soviet Union’s
collapse, China’s Cultural Revolution, and the Algiers putsch (when a
group of mutinous retired generals set their sights on a nuclear device
that France was testing in the Algerian desert) – they have not been
compromised. Even in Ukraine today, despite the escalating civil
conflict, the country’s 15 nuclear power plants have remained untouched
(though even with new defensive measures taken by Ukrainian officials,
this could easily change).
It is impossible to
know whether this benign pattern will hold. But recent developments in
the Middle East suggest that there are grounds for concern in other
volatile countries, namely Pakistan, North Korea, and Iran.
Pakistan has a large nuclear weapons program and faces an expansive jihadi insurgency,
which previously attacked military bases suspected of housing nuclear
assets. Though Pakistan has not experienced a nuclear breach, and the
government insists that safeguards remain robust, the country’s
increasingly frequent and severe bouts of instability raise serious
questions about the future.
While North Korea’s nuclear arsenal is
much smaller, persistent doubts about the regime’s sustainability make
it a matter of grave concern. In the event of the regime’s collapse – a
distinct possibility – it would be difficult to prevent the diversion of
its assets, or even the use of its weapons.
For its part, Iran
seems relatively stable, at least compared to its neighbors. But it
faces an uncertain political future. If a power struggle emerges, the
large Bushehr reactor could be used as a bargaining chip.
To mitigate such
risks, the international community could maintain its traditional policy
of sitting tight and hoping that governments retain control of their
nuclear infrastructure. But the United States, for one, is no longer
satisfied with this approach. According to media reports,
it has devised a strategy for deploying Special Forces to neutralize
Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal in the event that its authorities lose
control. And some government-connected think tanks have explored the
possibility of deploying US combat forces to address nuclear risks in North Korea if the regime crumbles.
Such plans, however,
are by no means foolproof – not least owing to the difficulties of
finding concealed nuclear assets and safeguarding reactors. Moreover,
the American public’s willingness to become enmeshed in yet another
risky military venture, when boosting homeland security could suffice,
is dubious, at best.
Instead of waiting
for a major development to force hurried action, the world’s major
powers should engage in a full-throated debate to determine the best
approach to address nuclear risks in volatile countries, seeking ways to
cooperate whenever necessary. After all, even rival powers like China
and the US or India and Pakistan share an interest in preventing the
world’s most dangerous weapons from falling under the control of its
most fanatical minds.
Read more at https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/bennett-ramberg-highlights-the-vulnerability-of-nuclear-assets-in-volatile-countries#k1XmhwXMpLq8cTu4.99
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