Monthly Archives: April 2012

IDSA Nuclear History Project

A few weeks back, the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses posted a promising “collection of documents”:http://idsa.in/npihp/document.html about India’s nuclear program. I haven’t gone through all of them yet, but take a look.

“This 1964 speech”:http://idsa.in/npihp/documents/IDSA-HBP-24101964.pdf by Homi Bhabha is pretty interesting…he discussed deterrence concepts and the feasibility of developing a small nuclear arsenal.

Iran: Breakout or Quit?

Obama administration officials occasionally talk about the quality of US intelligence on Iran’s nuclear program. For example, there was “this”:http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/us-sees-intelligence-surge-as-boost-to-confidence/2012/04/07/gIQAlCha2S_story.html _WP_ piece from the weekend. And National Security Adviser Tom Donilon “told”:http://iipdigital.usembassy.gov/st/english/texttrans/2011/11/20111122144640su0.8725789.html#axzz1rmyDrryb a Brookings audience in November that the United States

bq. will work aggressively to detect any new nuclear-related efforts by Iran. We will expose them and force Iran to place them under international inspections, just as we did when *we exposed the Qom enrichment facility,* thus denying Iran the option of using the facility to secretly produce enriched uranium.

Anyway, the 2009 outing of the Fordow facility and the apparently-significant probability that future such facilities will be discovered indicates to me that Iran is being faced with a tough decision. Clearly, Iran has preferred to pursue sketchy nuclear activities in secret, but now that avenue may well be closed to them, at least past a certain point.

I suppose the above facts could make make the breakout option a bit more attractive, but not much; Iran would still be painting a target on itself, were it to go that route.

Could be why Iran, if the US intel community is to be believed, hasn’t restarted its weapons program.

Attacks on Peaceful Nuclear Facilities

This is a complex subject that I don’t know enough about. But it’s still probably a good time to mention some statements from the international community regarding attacks on peaceful nuclear facilities.

One of the more salient is paragraph 75 of the 2010 NPT RevCon final document:

bq. The Conference considers that attacks or threats of attack on *nuclear facilities devoted to peaceful purposes* jeopardize nuclear safety, have dangerous political, economic and environmental implications and raise serious concerns regarding the application of international law on the use of force in such cases, which could warrant appropriate action in accordance with the provisions of the Charter of the United Nations. The Conference notes that a majority of States parties have suggested a legally binding instrument be considered in this regard.

Notably, the 2000 RevCon “final document”:http://www.un.org/disarmament/WMD/Nuclear/2000-NPT/pdf/FD-Part1and2.pdf said much the same thing.

It’s also worth mentioning IAEA “GC (XXXIV)/RES/533”:http://www.iaea.org/About/Policy/GC/GC34/GC34Resolutions/English/gc34res-533_en.pdf, which the IAEA General Conference adopted in 1990. The resolution stated that

bq. an armed attack or a threat of armed attack on a *safeguarded nuclear facility, in operation or under construction*, would create a situation in which the United Nations Security Council would have to act immediately in accordance with the provisions of the United Nations Charter;

I find the distinction between a “safeguarded nuclear facility” in the IAEA resolution and “nuclear facilities devoted to peaceful purposes” in the RevCon documents to be an interesting one. I need to learn more about the history there…

USFG and Israeli Nuclear Weapons – 1997 Edition

Sort of.

You may recall that Rose Gottemoeller caused a bit of a stir at the 2009 NPT PrepComm when she “included”:http://www.un.org/disarmament/WMD/Nuclear/NPT2010Prepcom/PrepCom2009/statements/2009/05May2009/05May2009AMSpeaker-4-USA.pdf Israel on the list of countries which the United States would like to sign the NPT.

Well, I thought of that speech when I read the 1997 version of the Congressionally-mandated “_Report to Congress:
Update on Progress Toward Regional Nonproliferation in South Asia_”:http://www.fas.org/irp/threat/970615-dos-nonpro.htm and ran across this:

bq. The U.S. continues to urge India and Pakistan to refrain from conducting a nuclear test, and we continue to monitor the situation in both countries carefully. We have argued that a test would not enhance the security of either country, and would set back *global disarmament efforts, particularly now that all five nuclear weapons states and Israel have signed the CTBT.*

Now, that statement does not _say_ that Israel has nuclear weapons, but there aren’t many other reasons I can think of for including Israel in that list.

Illicit Trafficking and Organizational Wizardry

Reuters had a “good story”:http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/03/28/usa-iran-smuggling-idUSL2E8ERODR20120328 the other day about Iranian efforts to acquire materials for its enrichment and missile programs.

It also contained a section called “bureaucratic overlap” which mentions the recent creation of the “E2C2”:http://www.ice.gov/export-enforcement-coordination-center/ and illustrates an aspect of the day-to-day life of export control investigations:

bq. Arms smuggling cases are primarily conducted undercover and agencies often find themselves bumping into each other. In one recent case, an official said, the new export center discovered that *one group of undercover agents was trying to buy arms from another group of U.S. agents*.

I’m sure there’s a good joke here somewhere…