We've had a lot of talk in these forums about how nuclear proliferation isn't cause for grave concern because no leader in his right mind would ever escalate to a nuclear war and any leader not in his right mind who might would find himself promptly removed from power by high level government aparatiks when he seemed about to do so.
I wonder if the real danger of nuclear proliferation might be an accidental launch or a result of standing orders and miscommunication. For instance I've heard that in the cuban missle crisis the Soviet commander on the island, General Pliyev in charge of the missles in Cuba had standing orders to launch them if an invasion began which threatend the missles. In that case nuclear war would have begun without any real calculation to launch the missles by the top leadership on either side.
So does the risk of an accidental or otherwise unplanned nuclear war substantially increase as nuclear proliferation increases or has the uneventful history of decades of tens of thousands of deployed nuclear weapons shown that the addition of a few dozen or even hundreds of nuclear weapons would have little impact on the likelihood of nuclear launches? Is it appropriate to assume that the two cold war super powers kept much more reliable control of their arsenals than the new nuclear powers are likely to manage? Is the risk of unplanned nuclear war influenced more by the number of nuclear weapons or more by the number of independant organizations in control of such weapons?
I think the answers to these questions is critical to determining if nuclear proliferation is really a threat to world peace.
I wonder if the real danger of nuclear proliferation might be an accidental launch or a result of standing orders and miscommunication. For instance I've heard that in the cuban missle crisis the Soviet commander on the island, General Pliyev in charge of the missles in Cuba had standing orders to launch them if an invasion began which threatend the missles. In that case nuclear war would have begun without any real calculation to launch the missles by the top leadership on either side.
So does the risk of an accidental or otherwise unplanned nuclear war substantially increase as nuclear proliferation increases or has the uneventful history of decades of tens of thousands of deployed nuclear weapons shown that the addition of a few dozen or even hundreds of nuclear weapons would have little impact on the likelihood of nuclear launches? Is it appropriate to assume that the two cold war super powers kept much more reliable control of their arsenals than the new nuclear powers are likely to manage? Is the risk of unplanned nuclear war influenced more by the number of nuclear weapons or more by the number of independant organizations in control of such weapons?
I think the answers to these questions is critical to determining if nuclear proliferation is really a threat to world peace.
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