March 2008 • Volume 15 • Number 1 Table of Contents
Ambassador Thomas Graham Jr. • Ivan Oelrich • Marylia Kelley • Pavel Podvig • Matt Martin • Robert S. Norris and Hans M. Kristensen
Articles
- Paranoid, Potbellied Stalinist Gets Nuclear Weapons: How The U.S. Print Media Cover North Korea
Hugh Gusterson
- View/Hide Abstract
Mainstream American
print media coverage of North Korea's nuclear weapons program has been
deeply flawed, a reality that skews policy debates and confuses public
perceptions. Even simple factual descriptions of the parties' obligations
under the 1994 Agreed Framework have often been inconsistent and partial,
informing readers about North Korea's obligations more than U.S.
obligations, and rarely acknowledging U.S. failures. The media repeated
allegations about an illicit North Korean uranium enrichment program based
largely on anonymous sources, who made what seem now to have been misleading
statements. Journalists rely for comment on administration officials or members
of Washington think tanks, while making little effort to gather opinions from
academics, those on the left (as opposed to centrist liberals), or experts in
Southeast Asia. Journalists also frequently present Kim Jong Il in ways that
erase the Korean perspective on U.S.-Korean relations. Accurate, nuanced
coverage of events on the Korean Peninsula is vital in producing an informed
public and a policy-making process that is judicious, supple, and intelligent.
This article concludes with various ways in which the media could better report
on North Korea.
[See also: a briefing event based on this article.]
- Identity Politics and Nuclear Disarmament: The Case of Ukraine
Christopher Stevens
- View/Hide Abstract
Policy makers and scholars have drawn improper lessons from the
Ukrainian case of disarmament. Employing a content analysis of Ukrainian and
Russian news sources, as well as a series of interviews with Ukrainian officials
conducted by the author, this paper argues that Ukraine did not surrender its
nuclear arsenal because it received compensation or faced financial and
technical hurdles in securing effective command and control over the weapons.
Instead, Ukraine surrendered its nuclear weapons due to a lack of demand for
them. The historical interactions between Ukrainians and Russians led the
majority of Ukrainian leaders to reject a conception of the Ukrainian national
identity that cognitively perceived Russia as a security threat. Only with a
proper understanding of this case study can the international community
understand how the nonproliferation norm succeeded.
- Wake Up, Stop Dreaming: Reassessing Japan's Processing Program
Masafumi Takubo
- View/Hide Abstract
Japan's reprocessing program is proceeding at full speed, despite
concerns about its effects on international efforts to control nuclear
proliferation. Testing of the Rokkasho Reprocessing Plant using actual spent
fuel started on March 31, 2006, and the goal for commercial operation is
February 2008. If started, Rokkasho will be the first commercial-scale
reprocessing plant in a non-nuclear weapon state, capable of separating 8 metric
tons (MT) of plutonium per year. If this occurs, under current plans the total
amount of plutonium possessed by Japan will grow from about 45 MT to about 80 MT
by 2011, close to the same amount of separated plutonium manufactured for the
U.S. nuclear weapons program. This paper discusses the history of efforts to
build and operate Rokkasho and whether there is any prospect for a change of
direction. It argues that Rokkasho should not open before a dialogue among
stakeholders can be held on alternative means of managing spent fuel, such
as interim dry cask storage.
Viewpoint
- Surmounting the Obstacles to Implementing UN Security Council Resolution 1540
Monika Heupel
- View/Hide Abstract
UN Security Council Resolution 1540, which
binds all states to implement generic nonproliferation obligations, has been
hampered in its effectiveness by serious delays and problems in implementing its
obligations. Getting nations to carry out its requirements depends on applying a
division of labor strategy to the problem. Such a strategy would be based on the
Security Council's 1540 Committee and other participants—such as
international and regional organizations, regimes, state actors, and
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)—all working together to maximize their
competences toward applying the resolution. To create and maintain momentum,
those involved must improve their efforts to address the various challenges to
such implementation. The Security Council should strengthen the structural
foundation of the 1540 Committee, and the 1540 Committee should act as a
clearinghouse for assistance with implementing the resolution. Those bodies that
provide assistance should make more help available to more states and cooperate
closely with the 1540 Committee. NGOs and regional organizations should pressure
advanced states to fulfill the resolution's requirements with the
necessary urgency, and individual states and international organizations should
explore ways to accommodate frequently articulated grievances that dilute the
legitimacy of Resolution 1540.
Book Reviews
- The Iran Threat: President Ahmadinejad and the Coming Nuclear Crisis, by Alireza Jafarzadeh, and Iran's Nuclear Ambitions, by Shahram Chubin
Reviewed by Barbara Slavin
- View/Hide Abstract
Two Iran-born authors present divergent estimates of the threat posed by Iran's
accelerating nuclear program and recommend starkly different solutions.
- Failed Diplomacy: How North Korea Got the Bomb, by Charles Pritchard
Reviewed by Kenneth Quinones
- View/Hide Abstract
Failed Diplomacy, by Ambassador Charles L. "Jack"
Pritchard, begins in the middle of the two-decade effort to end North
Korea's quest for a nuclear arsenal. Unfortunately ignoring the complex
story of the Clinton administration's diplomacy, to which Pritchard
contributed at the National Security Council and at the Department of State, he
concentrates on the Bush administration's efforts since 2001, declaring
that the six-party talks have failed. Pritchard focuses on his short tenure in
the Bush administration as U.S. special envoy for negotiations with North Korea,
and on administration infighting over how best to deal with Pyongyang. Denied
access to classified documents, Pritchard relies on personal recollection, media
reports, and some academic studies, limiting his narrative's depth. Given
that the talks and diplomatic efforts continue, his judgment that the six-party
talks have failed, like the book, seems premature. Readers will gain from the
book, but should bring to it restrained expectations.
- The Arsenals of Folly: The Making of the Arms Race, by Richard Rhodes
Reviewed by Karthika Sasikumar
- View/Hide Abstract
Richard Rhodes,
renowned historian of the nuclear arsenal, has written a meticulously detailed
account of the last days of the Cold War. He reveals the mechanisms of
persuasion and influence—cloaked in an aura of hard-headed realism and
technological savvy—that orchestrated the arms race, and left thousands of
nuclear warheads in the stockpiles of the nuclear weapon states. Rhodes
describes the evolution of nuclear doctrine in the United States and the Soviet
Union up to the early 1980s. However, the subtitle of the book is somewhat
misleading because two-thirds of the book is devoted to the unmaking of the
race. Cold War history still holds many lessons for us, and this book provides a
refreshing change from the triumphalist narrative in which the United States won
the Cold War by gritting its teeth and outspending the Soviet Union in military
technology. Instead, Rhodes argues that the arms race was unnecessarily
prolonged by U.S. presidents who were captive to (neo)-conservative
ideologues.
Statements of fact and opinion expressed in The Nonproliferation
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.
The Nonproliferation Review ISSN 1073-6700
Copyright © 2008 by Monterey Institute of International Studies
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