Ban the Bomb by ... Banning the Bomb? a Turkish Response

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Date

2017

Authors

Kibaroğlu, Mustafa

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Abstract

The golden age of deterrence has reached its end. Nuclear weapons, once a star player on the international stage, no longer enjoy a place in the limelight. To be sure, some policymakers still ascribe to nuclear weapons the same prestige that, during the Cold War, they gained because of their unmatched destructive power and the leverage they provided nuclear weapon states in the international arena. But the Cold War environment, in which nuclear weapons in the hands of two superpowers played a vital role in maintaining strategic stability, does not exist anymore. Nor is it likely to be replicated in the future – despite certain parallels between US–Soviet relations during the Cold War and present-day US–Russia relations. Meanwhile, it is painfully obvious that nuclear deterrence is useless against apocalyptic terrorist organizations motivated by religious extremism. If such a group acquired and used a nuclear weapon, there would be no “return address” toward which retaliation could be directed. And apocalyptic terrorists probably do not fear destruction in the first place. Now that the golden age of deterrence has reached its end, banning nuclear weapons has become achievable – as long as the values that policymakers ascribe to them can be undermined. Now is the time to strip away the handsome mask that hid nuclear weapons’ ugly face throughout the Cold War. It is time for the world to treat nuclear weapons just like chemical and biological weapons – those other weapons of mass destruction – as mere slaughtering weapons, undeserving of prestige. It is time to ban nuclear weapons – just as biological and chemical weapons were banned through the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention and the Chemical Weapons Convention.

Description

Keywords

Nuclear deterrence, Pakistan, China, Nuclear weapon ban treaty, Russia, Nuclear non-proliferation treaty, India, Cold war, United states, Nuclear weapons

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Citation

Kibaroglu, M., (April 13, 2017) Ban the bomb by ... banning the bomb? A Turkish response, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 73:3, 199-200, DOI: 10.1080/00963402.2017.1315107

WoS Q

Q3

Scopus Q

Q2

Source

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

Volume

73

Issue

3

Start Page

199

End Page

200