Secretary of
Defense Mark Esper oversaw a tabletop war game exercise two weeks ago where Russian military forces
used a “tactical” nuclear weapon against NATO territory during a conflict in
Europe, prompting the US to launch a
retaliatory nuclear strike. The exercise prompted a flurry of reactions from
Russia and US allies alike.
Russian politicians expressed anger at the exercise and accused the Pentagon of “reckless nuclear fear-mongering”, The Moscow Times reported. Members of the Russian Defense Committee argued that American actions were intended to intimidate European populations and justify the presence of American bases as security guarantors for their allies.
Democratic lawmakers in
American have also criticized the action, likening the Trump administration’s
decision to add new nuclear weapons to their arsenal as akin to the Cold War
nuclear arms race. To be fair, it is a sharp turnabout from the Obama administration’s
attempts to stabilize and preserve our arsenal without driving the development
of new nuclear weapons.
The Defense Department
defended its actions as a necessary response to Russian buildup of nuclear
weapons – though this reasoning does not assuage fears of a new arms race. The disparity
between Russian and American capabilities recently led the Trump administration
to develop
and deploy the first new US nuclear weapon in
decades, a submarine-launched low yield weapon
known as the W76-II.
The weapon arguably promotes deterrence by demonstrating American retaliation
capabilities. However, European allies are concerned
that the weapon would merely lower the threshold of nuclear weapons use and
encourage their deployment.
As the recent strategic plays
exemplify, American military strategy is still fundamentally dependent on escalatory
doctrine. Though nuclear policy has at times diverged into deterrence, and there
is significant support for disarmament, it will require a fundamental shift of
American military policy to comprehensively. Though its urgency has faded in
recent decades, the perennial question of balancing nuclear power remains
pertinent today.
1 comment:
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