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Asia Treads the Nuclear Path, Unaware That Self-Assured Destruction Would Result from Nuclear War

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2017

Owen B. Toon
Affiliation:
Owen B. Toon (toon@lasp.colorado.edu) is Professor of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
Alan Robock
Affiliation:
Alan Robock (robock@envsci.rutgers.edu) is Distinguished Professor of Environmental Sciences at Rutgers University.
Michael Mills
Affiliation:
Michael Mills (mmills@ucar.edu) is Research Scientist at the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research.
Lili Xia
Affiliation:
Lili Xia (lxia@envsci.rutgers.edu) is Postdoctoral Researcher in Environmental Sciences at Rutgers University.

Extract

Of the nine countries known to have nuclear weapons, six are located in Asia and another, the United States, borders the Pacific Ocean. Russia and China were the first Asian nations with nuclear weapons, followed by Israel, India, Pakistan, and North Korea. Most of the world's nuclear powers are reducing their arsenals or maintaining them at historic levels, but several of those in Asia—India, Pakistan, and North Korea—continue to pursue relentless and expensive programs of nuclear weapons development and production. Hopefully, the nuclear agreement reached in July 2015 between Iran, the European Union, and the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council will be a step toward eliminating nuclear weapons throughout Asia and the rest of the world. As we will discuss below, any country possessing a nuclear arsenal is on a path leading toward self-assured destruction, and is a threat to people everywhere on Earth.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 2017 
Figure 0

Figure 1. The number of nuclear warheads since World War II based on data from Kristensen and Norris (2013). Shown are the arsenals of the United States, Russia, and the world. After about 2000, Russia and the United States began to base treaties on the number of deployed strategic warheads, rather than the total number of warheads. Deployed strategic warheads are shown with symbols. In 2013, there were about 16,300 warheads in the world. About 6,200 of these were retired and ostensibly waiting to be destroyed. The United States and Russia had about 3,750 deployed strategic warheads, which are covered by treaties negotiated under the Bush and Obama administrations. Another 5,380 warheads were in storage, or considered not to be strategic, and therefore not covered in recent treaties.

Figure 1

Figure 2. The dates when various nations obtained a nuclear warhead, mainly based on when they first tested a weapon. For Israel and South Africa, the evidence for tests is controversial, so an estimate for when they had a useable weapon is given. Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine inherited weapons from the Soviet Union and transferred them to Russia in the 1990s. South Africa gave up its weapons in the 1990s. The straight lines represent one new nuclear state every five years.

Figure 2

Figure 3. The number of warheads thought to be in the arsenals of Britain, France, China, India, Pakistan, and Israel based on data from Kristensen and Norris (2013). North Korean weapons are not shown because it is uncertain that it has an arsenal of useable weapons.

Figure 3

Figure 4. The fraction of the world's current population that lives in Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zones, as recognized through UN treaties. Currently about one-third of Earth's population lives in a nuclear-free zone.

Figure 4

Table 1. Loss of agricultural productivity following a regional nuclear conflict with 100 warheads (Özdoğan et al. 2013; Xia and Robock 2013; Xia et al. 2015).

Figure 5

Figure 5. The worldwide consumption of grains and the ending stocks from 1960 until 2012. Data from Earth Policy Institute (2012).

Figure 6

Figure 6. The number of days that the ending stocks could supply world food consumption, and the surplus or deficit of food as a percentage of the ending stocks. Data from Earth Policy Institute (2012).

Figure 7

Figure 7. UN Food and Agriculture Food Price Index, based on data from Earth Policy Institute, Monthly Food Price Indexes, January 1990–January 2014, updated February 6, 2014.