FWS Topics: Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War (Part 1)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi1hhmhBF_inNyxo_MMk88ueGjmSXNVTZS8IXgosy_haDVicnw0qwMi_Q2asRV9yuAcEjrqC1AQSQAL4fmijAaDt3PUN8Pia4feTLI1ecQ428l_wP5n4pm39A9nlBLBtaiZtcJ1pKY_LYA/s640/nuclear_bomb_expo_01.jpg)
The Power of the Modern Nuclear Weapons and the Effect of Nuclear War
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhr4OL_prJaVfpB_-kKEbY_qD_RwPlFsxP01MOAiiioRftSrShS5qxdzhhX3w1yIOn50jH1Sn8oXMrUIUAs__xDS_kCnD9Hwz6wcy_xIUKyiOpwFCH8n3uOcSMGFEbwUv5cYJ2oeXJN5mA/s400/8f96f9b03e2ccf50945648b087a0b7e3.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgEy7lY-zQofej2ntF9Md0oCtX20iEMOrGXpT0pYq-6boysuxi75xt-dLh-DEBc507opemL3gkqbE2q-2hm_sh_P2763hlE0QFZ8U5GSvGrNXrFAIbb9t4i7eFslKKtOc6GFsDsela69xk/s400/536d12223ab082bb411b96f53f2def07.jpg)
Added to the nuclear fallout is that all of that material thrown into the atmosphere coupled with massive out-of-control fires could alter the weather patterns of the globe causing an nuclear winter and long-term temperature alternations that would hamper recovery efforts. Computer models suggest that smoke and soot would remain in the atmosphere for years. All of this adds up to continued death and crumbling on the foundations of civilization. Some have also concluded that there would bean greater risk of earthquakes as well resulting from an all out nuclear exchange.
One of the most discussed and debated effects of a full scale nuclear exchange is that the bulk of life on planet Earth would be destroyed. Would nuclear war led to the end of life as we know it? Yes. Nuclear war would alter everyone's lives in every way from economic, social, political, ecological, and biological. Those not directly killed by the strike, would be faced with a very different world and society, but there would be certainly survivors. The unknown portion of the equation is how many survivors there would be in the aftermath and how severe the nuclear winter/famine would be (some estimates place the nuclear winter at lasting 20 years).
Best guess? In 1979, during one of apex in nuclear arsenal inventories, an US government department estimated that about 35% to 77% of the US population would be killed outright by the nuclear exchange combined with the secondary effects. In the former Soviet Union, the number would be lower, due to less major urban population centers (20% to 40%). Given the reduction of the nuclear stockpile, it is likely effect of nuclear would be less than those grim statistics, however, the long-term effects of the nuclear winter, society breakdown, and the nuclear famine are unknown on the total survivor population or their level of society.
In a 2003 report by the Physicians for Social Responsibility estimated that if just 300 nuclear warheads hit the United States that about 75-100 million Americans would die in the first 30 minutes alone with all elements of our modern society wiped out the moment the bombs exploded. This complete breakdown of services and basic care needs would cause secondary causalities resulting from lack of food, medical care, and radiation sickness for weeks after the nuclear holocaust. The report goes to detail the horror of an post-nuclear holocaust world that will keep you up at night with figures of infant mortality, low-yield farming, and the death of species on a scale not seen in thousands of years. The lucky might be the dead that fell in the white flash.
The Current Status of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War
At best count, there are about 15,000 nuclear weapons in the world with the Russia and the United States have the lion share of the nuclear weapons with about 6,970 verse 7,300 receptivity. The actually deployed nuclear devices is 1.796 for Russian and 1,367 for the USA. Lower down on the number count is France, the United Kingdom, and China with about 200 a piece roughly. The other two nation-states with nuclear arsenals pointed at one another is Pakistan and India with about 100 each. The lowest number of nuclear weapons is North Korea with anywhere between 3 to 10 atomic or hydrogen weapons. It is unknown the number of nuclear weapons possessed by Israel...which unofficial figures hovered around 80.What is unknown about every member of the Nuclear Club is how many are produced per year by each state. It is likely that Russia, Pakistan, India, Israel and North Korea are still involved in production of nuclear weapons. Regarding the possibility of an nuclear exchange, the risk is greater than at any other point since the fall of the Soviet Union given the chilly relations between the two superpowers along with the war in Syria. It is unknown how the Trump presidency will effect conditions and the possibility of nuclear Armageddon. The failing relations between the US and Russia are not the only nuclear hot spot. Pakistan and India always seem on tension and then there is situations with North Korea and Iran.
Atomic Weapons
For the record, "atomic" and "hydrogen" weapons are all nuclear weapons. The first nuclear weapon constructed by most of the Nuclear Club members is the atomic bomb. The term “atomic bomb” has been thrown around in the public imagination since 1945; however what is an atomic bomb? The more correct term associated with these WMD is “fission bomb" and there are two ways to generate the fearsome power: gun method and implosion method. The first atomic bomb used in the history of warfare, "Little Boy", was an gun-method atomic bomb. In the second method, the bomb uses the splitting of an neutron nuclei followed by the chain reaction of other splitting nuclei to force a massive explosion using the implosion method.
This was the type of atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki and used in the Trinity atomic test. The US and the USSR both used atomic bombs up until the 1960's with some of the smaller atomic devices, like the US W54 and the Russian RA-115 compact atomic devices being used until the late 1970's. Why are atomic weapons no longer used by the Nuclear Club in most cases? They are under-powered when compared to modern nuclear weapons with yields of thermonuclear weapons. The two atomic bombs dropped on Japan were 13 to 21 kilotons of yield, while the first United States H-bomb was 10.4 megatons of yield with more modern nuclear weapon be variable and more compact.
Thermonuclear (Hydrogen) Weapons
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjiVXk9y61UNVb6ACJbH9byWvurIazcqwfcJ81M9ssN8Gc5VRJ1PnAFx3oa9ZLdhC1VpyCjdaDQpluPLpyaZlY0SYCyvWtdBLhLxtTiyElGztKlnzIpw-40NvBXdI5d2T5Oh7WHGycEVrM/s400/Hydrogen_Bomb_1952_3528913b.jpg)
Neutron Weapons
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgCUCnMMq-gWytYt_zHi0Ek-iRDYwUztfje2A3sIIcAQVvfFyA86WUIhkm0Tv8P-z9EVHCrOS1Rotb85Cvsa8b8LxfU2e5J2jFErO8f5eYyhkUDoMdD2QVYHJ9lfNxg7qZG4Bf067gBSz4/s400/921130-halloween_skulls_190.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjxnlzvjgW5ojcAZlBEXKKnB0MS5dMwMUDy9uvnT2k7mPmDSWPMwyhz_BkA8paRxI1L8Qtx7jqDzwL5W2k3sVzmHbTjiwJPKqI8RlRuGR2ERDSa77zjRm4s3TbqO-aW0cErXld9grOLNOo/s400/images+%25282%2529.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiVMyKFNCagT2iMCFywow50FYa3HnyKB9SsS0qyPiEejTu4Ai7mFRaS-djHSUEx_hfhR6tC8L958s8U5Pe9hKPG4LdBXfqw1ax-QUb5LVZYKtNtu3E6XSjteFTLe-j4XRkpwnaUI0xJCks/s400/yemen-security.jpg)
Cobalt "Salted" Bomb
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjk3Guc0DYoZ8gF63UrjWZ6TRSb2qWHEvXog1_50EAXPwIDR6xtykOSh3gdQ-d1DY0u_nY_CnL0Oemm-oj6fRmzdn8pv48LZsvsQkTbrKkw_c-mI6LmzB9HpI_nI5DuImZowj_hM6o8Nl0/s320/SaltShaker.jpg)
Nuclear Weapon Blast Yields
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgAIJq1-DDmyd66XEDxmUDikPGbgI84DUotS1Z8vsPLRlOkAGwLe33Vj3VUxes8-2Ae9YU8EQxfXeV9TuiGNTB9xJxBmjZK2AIJzoDvzSkUk8AJVOCMAXVXqfFU4EYOSkzp-nSxiRggerw/s400/hbomb-763752big.jpg)
The Nuclear Weapon Generations
First Generation
These are the original atomic (fission) based nuclear weapons. These are the gateway technology for most nuclear armed nations to move onward towards the second generation of nuclear weapons, which is fusion-based nuclear weapons AKA the H-Bomb.
Second Generation
These are the beginning of fusion based nuclear weapons, so-called Hydrogen bombs that are fusion weapons triggered by fission reactions and they represent a major shift in the lethality of nuclear weaponry to the degree that any massive exchange of second generation thermonuclear weapons could result in global environment change
Third Generation
This is our current state of nuclear weapons with smaller devices coupled with control over the explosive yield of the nuclear weapon.
Fourth Generation
Current thermonuclear weapons rely on the Edward Teller and Stanislaw Ulam design of a fission explosive trigger causing a fusion explosion. Fourth generation nuclear weapons theoretically would be a pure fusion bomb with the need for an initial fission trigger explosion. The advantage of pure fusion weapons is the lack of nasty radioactive fallout associated with the fission trigger bomb. These clean nukes could be more compact as well. Some believe that another type of trigger could be used like lasers, antimatter, and chemicals, but fourth generation nukes are still beyond our technological understanding.
First Strike Capability vs. Second Strike Capability vs. Decapitation Strike
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj0QyzMeY6Zuxq7q1T6zj5TDIE3koNDIxPPyzWw1mmXWeeWgzVjVpKpP6J8C8ylAh8JPpp-ESuu1_ypzK99J7sekDNKesbEAl9buJMVClHIAJoj2Urjtb-v4dja88AY2e1Af0eNQxQcvHE/s400/flot1.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjEGiJdYdtVaIP_Bhe8GBoyYUV0y1DNT28cKNSMVExpk4ZV5fhI7x5f-Y_Um-W5KzYpP483OtP54qZa4CN6SMDnBHQxa2HIzWCo8Ds9MvmAGywAfRCbe8AcOKYJ9tFWXQb-F_5zgvI35f4/s400/AF-P-O-577-11-WI-00001_ColorPLXAerial1.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEin9vd5yzClbdYxLEZVmFz0Ug1LSp1qiD13a3ANMppZT7bNMBGZ9JhrNxJ51EYUQ5WU9OVzKSt5OEQji2eyG3NFfKfWaWtGziNcdjhL62t0hVwL1YNQaOOp2Pit5TLnBjVBS7SIdwhw4mw/s400/2761033400000578-3031041-image-a-32_1428523703419.jpg)
The Nuclear Club of Nine
At present at the latter end of 2016 there are eight confirmed nations with nuclear weapons and one, Israel, is widely assumed to possess them as well. In addition to the Nuclear Club of 9, there are nations that "host" nuclear weapons owned and constructed by members of the nine. In Europe, there are five nations (Germany, Italy, Turkey, the Netherlands, and Belgium) that share these weapons of mass destruction. This is also true in North America, with Canada hosting/sharing United States nukes. For awhile after the breakup of the Soviet Union, there were several now independent nations that possessed some of the old USSR nuclear weapons. All are either destroyed or transferred back to Russia for a fee. The primary goal of the present Nuclear Club of Nine has been to prevent nuclear proliferation which failed with North Korea and the jury is still out with Iran.
The United States
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhm2-JFlM-JoEwaMJPNyZ95aa70v9vbKGI2Nga1YHMGqbfzotQdVt-bdxFuxD25a5jQoqB1089Qj-4xQPUrdCXZZ26w5Ni_s7oRcuBnfti52ckjUtB0vFQJ9A04IY61Cr2noSPYODHTqnw/s400/TrinityColorLargeRestored.jpg)
Russia
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgHsvGb2TtXAWqecyqI8EG_ACX4D6BcLDeCspj9Buv7f7Zp8Xm0O6p1sQdUEBIHyhX9k1BhQIAmL9p0ddjZRA_BG3XfT7hM7HWUDohXUBbIdR0i3ze4DhdPSyhEuPLrit7I6dAIxZztlrI/s400/Joe_one.jpg)
France
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjzul0hS1oS_T1IZpDgJznx62xlXsr2dq46ECHKw1itF-VyZU5U92Lq-dgT7AcvVjC_53Rf_chWIFKjB0OGT7iaDoi6Ds2p_7DaA7xZ2dHaB0ytXj5wXJIG5iNprrindHlAPf7O4TIyI4Y/s400/5cfbbc5fa82da7930a8764a2ed7ba983.jpg)
United Kingdom
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgu1bfsYe6_62QeEsyPI9tynDtFuAryBIcbEp53WU_IQ2a-_73ivfuUI6zmrRTMa30LmdGBby2lOAZsCbsBXNgENaakXVothQzqHUnbILgP8yRf91V8uEY7KHGXrrxfumHKz3qMnCqQvQg/s400/Op_hurricane.jpg)
India
In 1974, India became a member of the nuclear club and the second Asian country to do so. The weapon program has been undergoing since 1944 and its first thermonuclear bomb test called "Smiling Buddha" due to it being detonated on the Buddha's birthday was conducted in the Thar desert Indian army base located in the state of Rajasthan. While some might believe that India developed the nuclear bomb due to their long-standing enemy Pakistan, but it was an nuclear armed Red China that pushed India into nuclear development and the 1962 Indian defeat in the border conflict. The nuclear dick measuring contest between China and India was a result of which nation would control the destiny of Asia. India, like its nuclear armed neighbor China, possesses nuclear capability on land, sea, and air with work processing on ICBM/MIRV technology. At present, the Indian nuclear stockpile sits at around between 100-120 various nuclear armaments with short range and long range missile technology.Pakistan
After the crushing loss to India in their 1971 war, Pakistan began to lay the groundwork for a military nuclear program in winter of 1972, but was slowed due to internal political issues as well as trouble gathering needed supplies and equipment causing Pakistan to only achieve nuclear status towards the end of the 1990's. In May of 1998, Pakistan joined the nuclear club via an five underground atomic tests at the same time one kilometer under the Koh Kambaran mountain in the Ras Koh Hills that lays in a isolated, dry portion of western Pakistan. The tests were collectively called Chagai-I. The possible reason behind the use of five smaller atomic devices was due to Pakistan wanting smaller tactical nuclear weapons not massive city killers.
The stockpile of Pakistan is estimated to be at around 70-90 warheads divided among air, land, and sea applications. The majority of land-based systems are medium range (2500kms) nuclear missiles fired from trucks all the way to micro-nukes, like the US “Davey Crockett”. Air application is via the familiar fighter-based delivery system with a nuclear tipped cruise missile system with a limited range of less than 400 kilometers. Naval based nuclear applications range from nuclear sea mines, missiles, along with development of a nuclear-powered and armed submarine in response to India's own.
Israel
One of the most mysterious, elusive, and interesting nuclear programs is Israel. While most can safely assume that Israel possess a nuclear arsenal, nearly everything else is unknown about it. The number, type (atomic or hydrogen), range, or even manufacturing capability of their rumored nuclear program is a mystery. We do not even know if Israel has ever even tested one of their purported nuclear weapon or the location of that testing site. It is also unknown how Israel developed their rumored nuclear technology. Some believe that France or the United States aided in the development of their bomb program. Some, like my father, assumed that the United States gave Israel the bulk of their nuclear knowledge or even a bomb. Others say that Israel developed their nuclear capability completely in-house. Rumor say that each of Israeli nuclear bombs are stamped with the phase "never again" in Hebrew. The assumed Israeli nuclear weapon program has been a political football in international diplomatic circles, and there was fear of nuclear retaliation if Iraq had launched chemical weapon strikes on Israel during the 1st Gulf War.
North Korea
One of the most interesting and confusing nuclear possessing nations is North Korea. There is some debate about the true power, size, and ability of the North Korean nuclear program with the first "nuclear" test in 2006 being described as being “sub-nuclear”. This testing site was conducted in an underground facility in the far north of the country. Since that original test, their weapons program has tested atomic and hydrogen devices four separate times along with corresponding rocketry program that works to develop range, capability, and reliability.
While intelligence agencies estimates place the North Korean nuclear program with less than 10 bombs, it is actually unknown how many bombs they have ready or their production rate since the hermit kingdom is not in an sharing mood with the UN or IAEA. Unlike other members of the Nuclear Club, North Korea often rattles their nuclear sabers to remind the world that they exist and they will destroy the United States and/or South Korea. These threats and the unstable nature of the hermit kingdom have caused the US to develop an Alaskan based missile interceptor program. It is likely if the North Koreans decided to launch a nuclear missile at Japan, South Korea, or the US; there would be several hours of advanced notice and interception is more likely. If or when the North Koreans launched their nukes, it would be the death sentence for the entire regime. Such is the peril with nuclear weapons.
One of the most interesting and confusing nuclear possessing nations is North Korea. There is some debate about the true power, size, and ability of the North Korean nuclear program with the first "nuclear" test in 2006 being described as being “sub-nuclear”. This testing site was conducted in an underground facility in the far north of the country. Since that original test, their weapons program has tested atomic and hydrogen devices four separate times along with corresponding rocketry program that works to develop range, capability, and reliability.
While intelligence agencies estimates place the North Korean nuclear program with less than 10 bombs, it is actually unknown how many bombs they have ready or their production rate since the hermit kingdom is not in an sharing mood with the UN or IAEA. Unlike other members of the Nuclear Club, North Korea often rattles their nuclear sabers to remind the world that they exist and they will destroy the United States and/or South Korea. These threats and the unstable nature of the hermit kingdom have caused the US to develop an Alaskan based missile interceptor program. It is likely if the North Koreans decided to launch a nuclear missile at Japan, South Korea, or the US; there would be several hours of advanced notice and interception is more likely. If or when the North Koreans launched their nukes, it would be the death sentence for the entire regime. Such is the peril with nuclear weapons.
China
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhf1Is6eqBQW23EUSSi8TBe2E21tMClHztlVt_82r8MfG8fksariHK8X8SIiQ_CndgCJ1swzclasfLaqgkuVFxsABzb0Rgj99J08KGlhpb8ui0s4XW0Iaex85NAj92EnkflddxLvE0Bh74/s400/download.jpg)
Abandoned or Rumored Nuclear Programs
The 3rd Reich (1939-1945)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhwY31IOhFVXVU1pIIDZchAQDRLA0Ln26IWowgen1LkLjQMkVukkRyACFw0SQrYzawbnqjJEpCg-8jdVy3XfJdShu5Su16i63kNPscyxZcXK2T0hE-o6pnXLsEbu-_nv87qgc8LCqveh0E/s400/BN-GE206_bkrvSe_J_20141226102917.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgb32sN0votMKq0IuTIh55qzP6gAc-diHUlwo18r8yUGz4lO88JyVNnzycY7sTWKw01uwMZ7WjYQ41KyqULcwBbFtkn2dNwbN6SA_uFF2UgMr88AxBcRzry0GjiBU7zzp2U1EU7JYGMUOc/s400/ShowImage.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhppS40uJuAgDkIj7ba_i7P33dWKLuubJnpZ_5BWJnbfCkCP1kAMvKRxIic_ceKDqhKpUsSfM995cDC5kzFGzfsDN5SEzk4aebUlPTVeUcYLlisXcenrHIv5ku_yrVgPICtfF_1BkcdURE/s320/244BCE0D00000578-2888975-image-m-32_1419772385876.jpg)
These claims of a Nazi nuclear bomb are much the claims of those that say that the Nazis escaped to their Arctic base and where the US evicted them during Operation HIGHJUMP. Or the story switches to the escaping Nazis fleeing to their lunar base on the dark side or even through the veils of time via the "Die Glocken" time pod program. Most of the theories rely on the Nazis having access to reverse engineered UFO technology. If the Nazis did indeed recover an crashed UFO in 1936 or 1937 in the Black Forest, why did they not developed nuclear weapons from that alien technology?
Imperial Japan (1941-1945)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg8y0uoLGRDarftGrriAFP4PQbuOvdL24ckV-GOFxun1jb7jCROdGdjwzYU0rgnPCBvcCqNVMQckq6W2PNZ1S7jzs0-CYVc4qQPF6DO4W_gzr0wAbvLyxnG0VVWzsUQ91Ka4f7U2etJXV0/s320/WWII-Japanese-Warrior-Soldiers-and-Rising-Sun-Flag.jpg)
South Africa (1967-1991)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhN93OO-5jTdsSRniJa7tx6X5JicQTfPjiPLz_kLpHfWN7Mrm1mWAtY59SHEQxntTm3JYwXfH6ksv8Mf4x4SVlyLhaWjDBjZpQFj-zJq1jmv7BeukH_pLwR6mO9vj2dQNn_KmRghyuICXY/s400/South_African_nuclear_bomb_casings.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj0zT1uKfdRQYbMTAWhNVMl013kpezhvDbcbQz4F9uoe-Q9HGWwN75bqM7s5mFBgDvYwVgVuOfZeDdKJLC91_zlY3lZouUxatO0v-RpCMFo8_1GEpSGLF-cu9rqU6aIqoUOP2TJizX_xKw/s400/4_Vela+satellite.jpg)
Argentina and Brazil (1970's-1980's
South America is a continent without the specter of nuclear weapons, but it was nearly not that way. After the 1976 Argentine military coup, the military junta government began an nuclear weapons program. Odd, I know. Even odder was that Brazil and Argentina cooperated on a more or less a joint nuclear program that was a direct reaction to the Carter administration attempt to block nuclear proliferation in South America. While American Intelligence pointed to both nations be closer than they really were to a full scale nuclear program, the return of civilian governments to civilian leaderships preventing any further development. This was fortunate, due to the fact that if both possessed nuclear weapon programs, it could have led to an South American arms race. Both nations developed nuclear reactors for power generation, and it is believed that Brazil continued a secret nuclear weapon program throughout the 1980's.Iran (Current?)
In 1957, the Iranian nuclear program began with the original aim of developing nuclear energy under the “atoms for peace” program and the battle over if that that is their true intention is playing on the world stage in recent history. Iran does have a major investment in its nuclear in terms of economics, mining, and construction that dates back to when the Shah planning on 20 nuclear reactors with western assistance. That ended during the 1979 Islamic Revolution and the era of mistrust by the America government and much of the international community.
In 1992, the CIA warned of the Iranian government capability to produce nuclear weapons and fears of a nuclear standoff between Israel and Iran emergence along with Iran allowing nuclear technology to fall into the hands of terrorist organizations. It was believed by global intelligence services that Iran was within one year of the ability to produce nuclear weapons with their enrichment capabilities. Reports stated that Iran had been hiring nuclear experts from Russia and South Africa to help with their program and there were intel reports of nuclear materials being obtained via Russian mob connections.
This fear and distrusted of a nuclear armed Iran fueled international sanctions that has cost the Iranian economy billions and may have been the primary trigger of Iran dismantling their nuclear program. If the international community had not forced a halt on their nuclear program with inspectors, it is likely that Israeli military would have intervened as they did with Iraq in 1988. Given the heated debate surrounding the Iranian nuclear program, there have been Iranian government accusations of the west murdering five nuclear scientists and cyberwarfare attacks on Iranian equipment all intended to disturb the nuclear program. Whatever the truth is, this is certain, the Iranian nuclear program is a glowing hot spot for the world and it is likely to determine the future of halting nuclear proliferation.
In 1957, the Iranian nuclear program began with the original aim of developing nuclear energy under the “atoms for peace” program and the battle over if that that is their true intention is playing on the world stage in recent history. Iran does have a major investment in its nuclear in terms of economics, mining, and construction that dates back to when the Shah planning on 20 nuclear reactors with western assistance. That ended during the 1979 Islamic Revolution and the era of mistrust by the America government and much of the international community.
In 1992, the CIA warned of the Iranian government capability to produce nuclear weapons and fears of a nuclear standoff between Israel and Iran emergence along with Iran allowing nuclear technology to fall into the hands of terrorist organizations. It was believed by global intelligence services that Iran was within one year of the ability to produce nuclear weapons with their enrichment capabilities. Reports stated that Iran had been hiring nuclear experts from Russia and South Africa to help with their program and there were intel reports of nuclear materials being obtained via Russian mob connections.
This fear and distrusted of a nuclear armed Iran fueled international sanctions that has cost the Iranian economy billions and may have been the primary trigger of Iran dismantling their nuclear program. If the international community had not forced a halt on their nuclear program with inspectors, it is likely that Israeli military would have intervened as they did with Iraq in 1988. Given the heated debate surrounding the Iranian nuclear program, there have been Iranian government accusations of the west murdering five nuclear scientists and cyberwarfare attacks on Iranian equipment all intended to disturb the nuclear program. Whatever the truth is, this is certain, the Iranian nuclear program is a glowing hot spot for the world and it is likely to determine the future of halting nuclear proliferation.
Iraq (1980's-1991)
At one time, Iraq was heavily pursuing weapons of mass destruction and up until the 1st Gulf War, the Baathist state was classified "weapons developing state". They did achieve chemical weapons which were used on the Kurds in the Halabja attack of 1988 and throughout the Iran-Iraq War. The dream of Saddam Hussein’s regime was to possess nuclear weapons and this was the nightmare for Israel. So much so, that Israel launched Operation OPERA in 1981 to take out Iraq’s nuclear reactor. With this attack, Israeli intelligence believed that they had delayed the Iraqi nuclear program by a decade or more.
However, the Baathist government responded with ramping up their nuclear program. From a post-mortem 1992 IAEA assessment on the Iraqi nuclear program if the stars had aligned properly, Hussein was about 6 to 24 months for a workable device. It is certain that he did not possess a working device or else he would have most likely used it against Israel or the Coalition Forces. The full scope and progress of the Iraqi nuclear program was not known by the international community until after the 1st Gulf War. With this knowledge, the UN set about dismantling the Iraqi nuclear program. This is the only nuclear weapons program forcible halted by the international community. In 2003, much was made about "intelligence" provided by former Iraqi citizen Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi (AKA “Curveball”) pointing to a restarted WMD program under the nose of the international community. This evidence was used by the US and British governments to construct an case against the Baathist government leading to the 2003 invasion of Iraq. After the successful invasion, no evidence of WMD was found other than some missed pre-1991 stock nor the restarted nuclear program claimed by Curveball.
At one time, Iraq was heavily pursuing weapons of mass destruction and up until the 1st Gulf War, the Baathist state was classified "weapons developing state". They did achieve chemical weapons which were used on the Kurds in the Halabja attack of 1988 and throughout the Iran-Iraq War. The dream of Saddam Hussein’s regime was to possess nuclear weapons and this was the nightmare for Israel. So much so, that Israel launched Operation OPERA in 1981 to take out Iraq’s nuclear reactor. With this attack, Israeli intelligence believed that they had delayed the Iraqi nuclear program by a decade or more.
However, the Baathist government responded with ramping up their nuclear program. From a post-mortem 1992 IAEA assessment on the Iraqi nuclear program if the stars had aligned properly, Hussein was about 6 to 24 months for a workable device. It is certain that he did not possess a working device or else he would have most likely used it against Israel or the Coalition Forces. The full scope and progress of the Iraqi nuclear program was not known by the international community until after the 1st Gulf War. With this knowledge, the UN set about dismantling the Iraqi nuclear program. This is the only nuclear weapons program forcible halted by the international community. In 2003, much was made about "intelligence" provided by former Iraqi citizen Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi (AKA “Curveball”) pointing to a restarted WMD program under the nose of the international community. This evidence was used by the US and British governments to construct an case against the Baathist government leading to the 2003 invasion of Iraq. After the successful invasion, no evidence of WMD was found other than some missed pre-1991 stock nor the restarted nuclear program claimed by Curveball.
Libya (1980's-2003)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEglvC5NHDRdhy2hfHqi5GzFrJ1eNWUAvsYckUt1joeANT1x-ErCvE74LIwy3jPbk2y3t-Vxf-jrh-TWAhXZFDQpbLy6zdaOmzv6rLES0KK7fRNOtXw0kvEvDQeRgky4V0cYGAVZF-sMoqw/s400/maxresdefault+%252839%2529.jpg)
Syria (1980's-2007?)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKdj2pvZzej9-6tfLNO_J36q4ep8OKSqaGs8CQ6uo3bAl_DHJfouHvP5dwks23u3Mgm7_PEE0DtaBAKJ8Oj6suv2zDj6jvF0ulpyAIRLi2QB4WwZD-MNTqD6GiqsxOqqbQwQ3zFLcW7gI/s400/AP071024069123.jpg)
Sweden (1945-1972)
Oddly, Sweden was very invested in developing the atomic bomb just after the 2nd World War and this program was ramped up when the Soviet Union achieved the bomb in 1949. Throughout the 1950’s and 1960’s, the Swedish government worked on a nuclear weapons program as well as a nuclear power reactor. This was the coldest portion of the Cold War, and it appeared that war in Europe could erupt into a “hot war” between NATO and the Warsaw Pact and the government still favored the continuation of their “defensive” nuclear program. However, by the time of the 1960’s, Sweden had to make a choice: develop the bomb or abandon it. The United States, the Swedish public, and some of the Swedish government did not support a nuclear armed Sweden
causing the dismantling of the project by 1972.
South Korea (1970-1975?)
causing the dismantling of the project by 1972.
South Korea (1970-1975?)
With the North Korea nuclear weapons program and testing being headline news for years, I often wondered why their sworn enemies to the South did not develop their own nuclear weapons program as a deterrent? During the 1970’s, South Korea did explore the possible of developing their own nuclear weapon program. The existence of the program became public knowledge when the South Korean prime minister announced the program at a press conference in 1975. With pressure from the US, France did not give the South Korean government reprocessors and it was believed that was the end of the story. Not so, it seems. There two separate enhancement “research” tests in 1982 and 2000. The IAEA investigated these research experiments due to South Korea being a signer to the non-proliferation treaty. At present, while South Korea possess the ability, but not the national will to develop nuclear arms. It is likely that any progress towards nuclear weapons by the South Korean government would cause North Korea to go crazy and they do not need any help with that.
Switzerland (1946-1988)
The most shocking abandoned nuclear weapons program that I discovered during the research phase was that my genetic homeland was involved in this most dangerous game. To most of us, the Swiss are an isolationist nation that is known for banking, chocolate, the Alps, and Ricola cough drops. The idea that the Swiss government felt the need to endeavor on the development of nuclear weapons says something about the time. Given Switzerland’s status as being an mountain nation of neutrality and banking, it is surprising that for the bulk of the Cold War, Switzerland was exploring the possibility of building their own nuclear bomb to be delivered via jet fighters. The event that really set the wheels into motion was the Soviet Invasion of Hungary in 1956 providing the situation and scenario to have nukes as a deterrent and counter-invasion weapon. The original goal of the Swiss nuclear program was to develop 50 nukes at a range from 60-120 kilotons with a large phase II nuclear weapons program to ramp even larger bombs. Underground testing sites were chosen inside Switzerland and it looked likely that Switzerland would join the nuclear club. What stopped the Swiss nuclear weapons program? The general public was against it and funding issues prevented forward development. By 1988, with the Cold War coming to an end, the Swiss abandon the program.
The most shocking abandoned nuclear weapons program that I discovered during the research phase was that my genetic homeland was involved in this most dangerous game. To most of us, the Swiss are an isolationist nation that is known for banking, chocolate, the Alps, and Ricola cough drops. The idea that the Swiss government felt the need to endeavor on the development of nuclear weapons says something about the time. Given Switzerland’s status as being an mountain nation of neutrality and banking, it is surprising that for the bulk of the Cold War, Switzerland was exploring the possibility of building their own nuclear bomb to be delivered via jet fighters. The event that really set the wheels into motion was the Soviet Invasion of Hungary in 1956 providing the situation and scenario to have nukes as a deterrent and counter-invasion weapon. The original goal of the Swiss nuclear program was to develop 50 nukes at a range from 60-120 kilotons with a large phase II nuclear weapons program to ramp even larger bombs. Underground testing sites were chosen inside Switzerland and it looked likely that Switzerland would join the nuclear club. What stopped the Swiss nuclear weapons program? The general public was against it and funding issues prevented forward development. By 1988, with the Cold War coming to an end, the Swiss abandon the program.
Taiwan (1970's-1995)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjVaeiNIlBmZDMaD3Es5oP4-qg6w2NPmnOzNVqKdxrU4jFdWbiWLEBxyxlsC3OSqajuLB_OI9bUDTShi71fqfRZxv9NUr7Qqhk91uaYS8xMQNgpNsCOSlBDF_5MM0HOa2x5Zwp7vdRfK5g/s400/6879468-taiwan-pictures.jpg)
Algeria (1991)
The first atomic bomb test by France was conducted in 1963 the Algerian part of the Sahara desert and it seems that the now independent nation has turned its attention to developing a nuclear arms program. The case concerning Algeria’s rumored and suspected nuclear weapons development program highlights the question of civilian nuclear power development verse concerns of those programs’ being used for a nuclear weapons program. This is also the case with Iran and Myanmar. In 1991, there was a leak to the American press of a suspected Algerian nuclear reactor bought from China being also used for nuclear weapons development. The Washington Times published a story that linked Chinese help to the nascent Algerian nuclear weapons program at the nuclear reactor site of Es Salam. Based on the leaked information, there was an international stink over the possibility of Algeria working on an atomic bomb, and the IAEA responded with an inspection. Around this time, Algeria fell into civil war and general disorder and seemingly took their nuclear arms aspirations with them. Currently, Algeria is attempting, with international help, to restart their nuclear power efforts.
Saudi Arabia (Current?)
Close ally of the United States and one of the richest nations in the Middle East could have a deadly dark secret. Rumors have flown around recently that Saudi Arabia may possess nuclear weapons…as many as seven. These were not developed domestically rather acquired on the international market. Some say Britain or Iran were the sources for the nukes, but it has not been confirmed. Video has been floating around the internet on YouTube and various underground media sources that Saudi Arabia has used tactical nuclear or neutron weapons in their military actions in Yemen. Time will tell if Saudi Arabia is one of the only two nuclear-armed states in the Middle East.
Myanmar (Current?)
In the nation former known as Burma, there has been an effort to acquire civilian nuclear power and possibly WMD. Intelligence rumors have pointed to relationships with Russia or even North Korea to be an avenue for Myanmar to gain nuclear knowledge and technology. Some high level officers that have fled Myanmar have produced some evidence to corroborate the intel reports of a ongoing nuclear program with assistance from North Korea. The US has not put a great deal of stock into the rumors.
Next Time on FWS...
In the second installment of the three part Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War series, we will be discussing the military role of nuclear weapons and the military's role in the post-nuclear war world, the political and diplomatic effect of nuclear weapons. We will also be discussing the argument for and against the dropping of atomic bombs on Japan, if nuclear war is winnable, and if the nuclear weapon could be outdated at some point.
Close ally of the United States and one of the richest nations in the Middle East could have a deadly dark secret. Rumors have flown around recently that Saudi Arabia may possess nuclear weapons…as many as seven. These were not developed domestically rather acquired on the international market. Some say Britain or Iran were the sources for the nukes, but it has not been confirmed. Video has been floating around the internet on YouTube and various underground media sources that Saudi Arabia has used tactical nuclear or neutron weapons in their military actions in Yemen. Time will tell if Saudi Arabia is one of the only two nuclear-armed states in the Middle East.
Myanmar (Current?)
In the nation former known as Burma, there has been an effort to acquire civilian nuclear power and possibly WMD. Intelligence rumors have pointed to relationships with Russia or even North Korea to be an avenue for Myanmar to gain nuclear knowledge and technology. Some high level officers that have fled Myanmar have produced some evidence to corroborate the intel reports of a ongoing nuclear program with assistance from North Korea. The US has not put a great deal of stock into the rumors.
Next Time on FWS...
In the second installment of the three part Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War series, we will be discussing the military role of nuclear weapons and the military's role in the post-nuclear war world, the political and diplomatic effect of nuclear weapons. We will also be discussing the argument for and against the dropping of atomic bombs on Japan, if nuclear war is winnable, and if the nuclear weapon could be outdated at some point.
Jika Anda menyukai Artikel di blog ini, Silahkan
klik disini untuk berlangganan gratis via email, Anda akan mendapat kiriman artikel setiap ada artikel yang terbit di Gun