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Arms and Disarmament

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Title: Arms and Disarmament


1
Arms and Disarmament
2
  • The conventional logic underpinning normal
    practices of states and of non-state forces
    resorting to use of force to achieve political
    aims
  • Peace is not always good, war is not always bad
  • Just war and unjust peace
  • Weapons are neutral, what matters is who uses
    them and for what purpose
  • You cant obtain and secure peace and justice
    without resort to violence as the final argument
  • Use of force in politics will always be with us
  • The best we can do is limit it

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  • The antimilitarist position
  • The destructiveness of modern warfare
  • Weapons of mass destruction
  • In wars, most casualties are now civilian
  • Use of force both by states and by non-state
    forces - is often politically counterproductive
  • If we address root causes of conflict and work
    for just solutions by political means, weapons
    may not have to be used
  • Peace works - if it is based on justice

5
  • To make the world more peaceful, it is necessary
    to change the existing social conditions which
    breed conflict and violence
  • How to change it? A spectrum of proposed
    solutions
  • Facilitate replacement of authoritarian regimes
    by democracies
  • Promote social and economic development to
    eliminate poverty and suffering
  • Strive for equality and social justice
  • Replace capitalism with some form of socialism

6
  • While recognizing the need to address the root
    causes of conflict, antimilitarism focuses on the
    means of political struggle
  • Arms buildups themselves make war more likely
  • The incidence of warfare can be reduced if states
    cut their armaments to a minimum

7
  • The idea of disarmament
  • Traditional compelling a defeated state to
    disarm
  • In the 20th century a new international practice
    - mutual arms control and disarmament by
    international treaties
  • Natural reaction to the Era of Global Conflict,
    which threatens the very existence of humanity
  • Limit the scale of wars
  • Respond to public antiwar sentiment
  • Opposition to arms buildups dates back to late
    19th century

8
  • Lord Welby, British Secretary of the Treasury,
    March 1914
  • We are in the hands of an organization of
    crooks. They are politicians, generals,
    manufacturers of armaments and journalists. All
    of them are anxious for unlimited expenditure,
    and go on inventing scares to terrify the
    public.
  • Sir Edward Grey, British Foreign Secretary
  • Great armaments lead inevitably to war.
  • Quotes from David Cortright. Peace A History of
    Movements and Ideas. Cambridge University Press,
    2008, p.98

9
  • After WWI
  • Covenant of the League of Nations, Article 8
  • The maintenance of peace requires the reduction
    of national armaments to the lowest point
    consistent with national safety.
  • 1922 the Five Power Naval Limitation Treaty,
    extended and Conferences of 1922 and 1930
  • A historic precedent was set
  • World Disarmament Conference of 1932 no
    success, buildup of international tensions, new
    wars

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  • After WWII
  • Demobilization everywhere strong desire for
    peace
  • Creation of the United Nations Organization
  • The Cold War generated a new arms race

12
1945 Start of the Nuclear Age
13
Hiroshima, Aug. 6, 1945
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Robert Oppenheimer, father of the atomic bomb
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Soviet physicist Igor Kurchatov
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Young Andrei Sakharov played a key role in the
Soviet nuclear weapons program
19
Polish-born Joseph Rotblat, a Holocaust refugee,
worked in the Manhattan Project until he found
out that the bomb was needed against the Soviets,
not the Germans. He quit in protest.
20
Nuclear weapons stockpiles
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1960 The biggest nuclear bomb ever built
Tsar-bomba, Big Ivan, Koozkas Mother
(from old Russian proverb, much liked by
Khrushchev Well show you Koozkas mother!
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October 1961 The worlds biggest H-bomb tested
at Novaya Zemlya Island, the Arctic, explosive
power 57 mt
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Gen. Curtis B. LeMay, Chief of the Strategic Air
Command, advocated all-out nuclear war to destroy
Soviet Union and Red China
28
  • Late 1950s birth of the international movement
    for nuclear disarmament
  • First diplomatic moves toward arms limitation
  • 1961 US and Russian diplomats design a joint
    proposal for general and complete disarmament
  • 1961 The Antarctic Treaty is signed banning the
    use of Antarctica for military purposes. See the
    full text
  • http//www.nuclearfiles.org/menu/library/treaties/
    antarctic/trty_antarctic_1961-06-23.htm

29
  • 1962 The Cuban Missile Crisis jolts 3 nuclear
    weapons states into joint measures to reduce the
    nuclear threat
  • 1963 The first arms control treaty signed in
    Moscow. The Partial Test Ban Treaty banning
    nuclear tests on the ground, in atmosphere and in
    outer space. Underground tests remain legal. See
    the full text http//www.nuclearfiles.org/menu/li
    brary/treaties/partial-test-ban/trty_partial-test-
    ban_1963-10-10.htm

30
  • 1967 The Outer Space Treaty limits the use of
    outer space for military purposes -
    http//www.nuclearfiles.org/menu/library/treaties/
    weapons-in-space/trty_weapons-in-space_1967-10-10.
    htm
  • 1970 The Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. States
    without nuclear weapons agree not to acquire them
    in exchange for the commitment of nuclear-armed
    states to move towards full nuclear disarmament
    http//www.nuclearfiles.org/menu/library/treaties/
    non-proliferation-treaty/index.htm
  • 1972 The Seabed Treaty prohibiting the
    emplacement of weapons of mass destruction on the
    seabed - http//www.nuclearfiles.org/menu/library/
    treaties/seabed/trty_seabed_1972-05-18.htm

31
  • 1972 US and USSR sign SALT-I agreements (the
    ABM Treaty and the Interim Agreement on Strategic
    Offensive Weapons). Ban on ballistic missile
    defenses and limitation of offensive nuclear
    arsenals http//www.fas.org/nuke/control/abmt/te
    xt/abm2.htm
  • http//www.nuclearfiles.org/menu/library/treaties/
    usa-ussr/trty_us-ussr_interim-agreement-icbms_1972
    -05-26.htm

32
  • 1979 US and USSR sign the SALT-II Treaty to
    strengthen and finalize the provisions of SALT-I.
    But the US Senate refuses to ratify the document.
    http//www.fas.org/nuke/control/salt2/index.html

33
  • 1987 US and USSR sign the Intermediate Nuclear
    Forces Treaty banning all all nuclear-armed
    ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles
    with ranges between 500 and 5,500 kilometers
    (about 300 to 3400 miles) and their
    infrastructure. The INF Treaty was the first
    nuclear arms control agreement to actually reduce
    nuclear arms, rather than establish ceilings that
    could not be exceeded. Under its provisions,
    about 2,700 nuclear weapons were destroyed.
    http//www.fas.org/nuke/control/inf/index.html

34
  • 1991 US and USSR sign the Strategic Arms
    Reductions Treaty (START-I), which leads to the
    reduction of the two sides strategic arsenals by
    30-40. The Treaty expires in December 2009.
  • http//www.fas.org/nuke/control/start1/index.html

35
  • 1993 US and Russia sign the second Strategic
    Arms Reductions Treaty (START-II), providing for
    further reductions in strategic offensive
    arsenals down to 3000-3500 warheads. The
    Russian Parliament ratified the Treaty with a
    condition that the ABM Treaty of 1972 banning
    ballistic missile defenses must remain in force.
    In 2002, after President George Bush declared
    that the US was pulling out of the ABM Treaty in
    order to clear the way for the deployment of US
    ballistic missile defense systems, Russia
    withdrew from START-II.
  • http//www.fas.org/nuke/control/start1/index.html

36
  • 2002 US and Russia sign the Moscow Treaty on
    Strategic Offensive Reductions (SORT), which will
    reduce the numbers of operationally deployed
    strategic offensive weapons of the two sides to
    1700-2200 by the year 2012. The Treaty is
    currently in force. http//www.fas.org/nuke/contro
    l/sort/fs-sort.html

37
  • April 2009 Presidents Obama and Medvedev
    declared that the US and Russia will move toward
    complete elimination of nuclear weapons.
    Negotiations on a new US-Russian treaty to
    further reduce their strategic nuclear arms are
    in progress. http//www.carnegieendowment.org/publ
    ications/index.cfm?faviewid24254

38
  • The Nuclear Weapons Archive http//nuclearweapona
    rchive.org/

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http//www.worldpublicopinion.org/pipa/articles/in
ternational_security_bt/444.php?nididpnt444
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