ID | 137971 |
Title Proper | Disarmand modernize |
Other Title Information | in terms of warhead numbers, the nuclear arms race may
be over. but massive weapons upgrades now underway challenge the entire disarmament regime |
Language | ENG |
Author | Mecklin, John |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In the early decades of the Cold War, NATO made arrangements to bury what were known as atomic demolition munitions (in essence, nuclear mines) at key points in West Germany, to be detonated if Warsaw Pact forces ever invaded. Although this plan, if enacted, might have slowed the enemy advance, it also almost certainly would have turned vast West German territories into radioactive wastelands littered with corpses and smoldering buildings—the stuff of hellish alternative-
history scenarios. The West viewed such tactical nukes—NATO fielded 7,000 to 8,000 of these shorter-
range, smaller-yield weapons for most of the Cold War—as tripwires in anticipation of the Soviet Union’s own Strangelovian plans for its thousands of tactical weapons. That is to say, the forward positioning of these nukes was a signal: If the Soviet Union invaded Europe, confrontation would escalate quickly to the nuclear realm, and the United States would intervene. |
`In' analytical Note | Foreign Policy Vol. , 211; Mar/Apr 2015: p.53-59 |
Journal Source | Foreign Policy 2015-04 |
Key Words | NATO ; NPT ; CTBT ; Nuclear Arms Race ; Soviet Union ; Cold War ; Disarmand ; Disarmament Regime |