Rethinking our complacency on nuclear weapons threat
Irish ExaminerMonday, December 08, 2014
by Sebastian Kurz
Nuclear weapons continue to underpin the international security policy of the most powerful states
IN 1983, three years before I
was born, a chilling television docu-drama about the consequences of a
nuclear war was broadcast around the world.
My generation has conveniently consigned such fears to history.
Indeed, with the Cold War tensions
of 1983 far in the past and the international order dramatically
changed, many people nowadays ask why these memories should concern us
at all.
But the premise of that question is both wrong and dangerous.
These weapons, which terrified
people 30 years ago, still remain in countries’ arsenals and continue to
pose a grave risk to human security and safety. Austria’s concern is
that, as long as nuclear weapons exist, the risk of their use exists,
either by accident or design. An overwhelming majority of states share
this view.
Consider
how many nuclear weapons there are: An estimated 16,300 around the
world, with 1,800 on high alert and ready for use at short notice.
Nearly 25 years after the Cold War’s end, we remain stuck with its
strategic legacy: Nuclear weapons continue to underpin the international
security policy of the world’s most powerful states.
There are too many risks — human
error, technical flaws, negligence, cyberattacks, and more — to believe
these weapons will never be used. Nor is there good reason to believe
adequate fail-safe mechanisms are in place.
The history of nuclear weapons since 1945 is studded with near-misses,
both before and after the Cuban missile crisis. On more than one
occasion, the actions of plucky individuals, applying their intelligence
against orders, saved us from catastrophe.
For example, in 1983, the Soviet
Union’s nuclear early-warning system reported, not once but twice, the
launch of US missiles. Fortunately, Stanislav Yevgrafovich Petrov of the
Soviet Air Defence Forces recognised these as false alarms, preventing a
mistaken nuclear retaliation.
It is remarkable that the world has avoided disaster thus far. Why continue to push our luck?
Since 2012, when the humanitarian
impact initiative was conceived, most countries have stepped up to
support it, owing to their anxiety and frustration at the snail-like
pace of disarmament.
Still, one might legitimately ask
whether world leaders shouldn’t first focus their attention on other
problems, such as climate change and sustainable development.
In fact, like past generations’
loading of the earth’s atmosphere with carbon, nuclear weapons represent
a legacy to overcome. But nuclear weapons, unusable and extremely
expensive to maintain, are low-hanging fruit — a risk that we can easily
grasp and eliminate.
Enticing the nuclear-weapon states
to give up their arsenals will not be easy. As long as some states
possess them, other states will be led by envy or fear to desire their
own.
But the status quo reflects
yesterday’s thinking. Acknowledgement that these Cold War relics are
outmoded security tools, indeed, that they cause insecurity, is coming
from a diverse range of voices.
Thirty years ago, The Day After
galvanised a president. The goal of next week’s Vienna conference is to
provide the public with new and updated evidence of the impact of using
nuclear weapons. The picture is even grimmer and the consequences more dire than we believed in 1983.
As long as nuclear weapons exist,
it is irresponsible not to confront the implications of their use —
implications for which there is no antidote or insurance policy. They
are not some deadly virus or long-term environmental threat. They are the poisonous fruit of a technology that we created, and that we can and must control.
Sebastian Kurz is the foreign minister of Austria and the host of the Vienna Conference on the Humanitarian Impact of Nuclear Weapons. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2014.
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