March 2007 • Volume 14 • Number 1 Table of Contents
Articles
- Small Arms and Light Weapons Trafficking: Creating an Assessment Framework from the U.S. Experience
Timothy Gildea and Glenn Pierce
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The impact of small arms and light weapons (SALW) trafficking on
civilian populations has received increasing attention from non-governmental
organizations (NGO), academic institutions, national governments and
international organizations. Within the last 10 years it has been
internationally recognized that the proliferation of SALW to areas of civil
conflict has led to what the Red Cross describes as "appalling levels of
wanton violence." Concurrent with the increased focus on the
destructiveness of SALW is the realization that present national and
international import/export regulatory systems are inadequate to meet the
challenge of controlling the proliferation of these weapons. Needed in this area
of study is more specific information and policy guidance regarding the best
methods and practices for implementing effective SALW trafficking controls. In
response to the international SALW trafficking problem, this article provides a
comprehensive framework to assess the development and operation of international
small arms control regimes. It uses the U.S. export control regime as a case
study to document, assess, and benchmark how import/export control systems can
be optimally employed to control the international SALW trade.
- Nuclear Attribution as Deterrence
Michael Miller
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Recently, post-explosion nuclear forensics, or nuclear attribution, has gained a new spotlight within the scientific and policymaking community working on nuclear weapons. Academics are beginning to ask whether post-explosion forensics might create a replacement for an international nonproliferation regime or at least offer a fallback option to deter states and individuals from selling nuclear materials. This paper examines current attribution technology from unclassified literature and finds the technology to be well developed but not foolproof, such that nuclear attribution currently provides little deterrent value. If current capabilities were publicized more thoroughly, and if the post-explosion process of assessing the evidence were internationalized, states and intermediate actors might be deterred more effectively. This paper also discusses the development of a nuclear fingerprint database; while useful, its impact on deterrence would be minimal.
- Good Cop/Bad Cop" as a Model for Nonproliferation Diplomacy toward North Korea and Iran
Curtis H. Martin
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Scholarly and popular literature in the recent past has framed
nonproliferation diplomacy toward both Iran and North Korea as an example of
"good cop/bad cop," a social-psychological strategy borrowed from
law enforcement to describe a process for forcing a confession by subjecting a
target to stressful emotional contrast. This article examines those two cases,
roughly covering the period since 2003 when the most recent attempts to deal
with the Iranian and North Korean proliferation threats began, in light of
criteria for employment of the good cop/bad cop strategy. There is some
evidence that within the framework of the six party talks with North Korea and
within the framework of the EU-3-U.S. diplomacy toward Iran, the players seeking
nonproliferation have adopted good cop/bad cop roles to that end. The article
concludes, however, that while there are similarities to the interrogation room
technique, the complexity of the international political environment as compared
to the interrogation room has prevented the states involved from successfully
adopting or effectively exploiting good and bad cop roles. Substantial and
exploitable differences of interest among them, and the availability of
alternative "escape routes" for the target state, raise serious
questions about the applicability of the good cop/bad cop strategy to these two
nonproliferation cases, and even about its applicability in future nonproliferation challenges.
[See also: a briefing event based on this article.]
- The Economics of Energy Independence for Iran
Thomas W. Wood, Matthew D. Milazzo, Barbara A. Reichmuth, and Jeffrey Bedell
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Since 1975, Iran has pursued an ambitious nuclear program with the declared
goal of long-term energy independence. While this is a worthwhile and generally
accepted national planning objective, this analysis demonstrates that
Iran's nuclear program as now structured will not achieve this goal, and
in fact may delay it by diverting capital and other resources from projects that
would address pressing current energy sector problems and contribute to ultimate
energy independence for Iran.
- Decontamination and Remediation after a Dirty Bomb Attack: Technical and Political Challenges
Jennifer C. Bulkeley
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Since September 11, 2001, the U.S. government has spent tens of billions of
dollars to improve response plans and capabilities for a potential terrorist
attack, but the emphasis on immediate response has left many long-term
environmental, political, and technological challenges unaddressed. Although
many experts predict that a radiological weapon or "dirty bomb" is a
likely weapon of choice, the United States continues to lack the technology
necessary to decontaminate a densely populated urban area under political,
financial, and temporal constraints. This article explores the likely effects of
a dirty bomb (a radiological dispersal device), then assesses past experiences
with large cleanup projects in the United States and with radiological disasters
abroad to highlight how insufficient technology and unclear bureaucratic
jurisdiction might hamper U.S. capacity to execute efficient and effective
decontamination following a radiological attack. Despite the progress made since
2001, bureaucratic organizational challenges, political disagreements,
insufficient decontamination techniques, waste management needs, and high
economic costs are likely to plague long-term recovery. By going beyond
emergency response to consider the long-term implications of a radiological
attack, pre-event dialogue between government officials, scientists, the media,
and the public--including the establishment of appropriate decontamination
techniques and long-term plans--can help limit the environmental, economic,
social, and psychological damage of a radiological attack and speed eventual recovery.
Viewpoint
- Second Thoughts About A First Strike
Nikolai Sokov
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This article critiques recent articles in
Foreign Affairs and International Security that argue the United
States could, in the foreseeable future, acquire an assured first-strike
capability vis-à-vis Russia and China thanks to technological
improvements in U.S. nuclear delivery systems and a general decline in the
numbers and capabilities of Russian nuclear forces. Notwithstanding these
articles, this analysis finds that mutual deterrence will persist regardless of
scale of possible future imbalances because deterrence is a highly flexible
phenomenon. A more pertinent question is not whether the United States will be
able, in a surprise first strike, to severely cripple Russian response
capability, but whether political stakes in any foreseeable conflict could
justify the risk of even a small retaliatory strike on the United States. This
article also assesses whether the Foreign Affairs and International
Security articles could inadvertently exacerbate an already highly charged
anti-American sentiment in Russia, possibly laying the foundation for a
revitalization and expansion of the Russian nuclear arsenal.
Reports
- The U.S. Highly Enriched Uranium Declaration: Transparency Deferred but not Denied
Steven Aftergood and Frank N. von Hippel
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In February 2006, the Department of Energy (DOE) released its historical account of U.S.
production and disposition of highly enriched uranium (HEU) through 1996. The
report was unclassified and had been completed in 2001, but it required five
years of petitions and appeals under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
before the Bush administration was forced to release it. According to the
report, in 1996 the United States had a stockpile of 741 metric tons (MT) of HEU
with an average enrichment of 84 percent. Of that stockpile, 178 tons of HEU
with an average enrichment of 62 percent had been declared excess for military
purposes. In 2005, an additional 40 tons was declared excess, and 160 tons was
put into a reserve for future use as naval-reactor fuel. An estimated 5 tons of
HEU was lost due to "normal operating losses," and there was a
residual discrepancy of about 3 tons between the number obtained by subtracting
cumulative disposition from cumulative production and the actual 1996 stockpile.
This paper discusses the value of this information, including the insights that
it provides about the feasibility of declaring additional U.S. weapons HEU
excess and the ultimate limits of verification of nuclear disarmament.
[See also: a briefing event based on this article.]
- Space Nuclear Reactors: History and Emerging Policy Issues
Nathan Voegeli
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Since the early 1950s, nuclear reactors
have been periodically advocated for use in space. Recently, there has been a
resurgence in promoting nuclear reactors as a viable and necessary component to
future space exploration. This article describes various nuclear power sources
for space use, explains the desirability of space reactors relative to other
forms of power generation, examines the history of their development and use,
and considers the difficulties presented for future engineering and production.
It demonstrates how current space policy is deficient with regard to regulating
the expected development and use of nuclear reactors in space. Because of the
extended time frame required for development and testing, a comprehensive policy
should be created to allow for the safe and publicly acceptable use of
space-based reactors. To that end, the article concludes with three
recommendations to advance space nuclear reactor policy.
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Review are the responsibility of the authors alone and do not imply the endorsement of the editors,
the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, or the Monterey Institute of International Studies.
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Copyright © 2007 by Monterey Institute of International Studies
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