Source: Carnegie
Nuclear and Non-Nuclear Options for Counterproliferation
Michael A. Levi
Full Text (PDF)
Summary
The Bush Administration's Nuclear Posture Review, leaked earlier this year,
advocates new nuclear weapons designed to destroy underground bunkers and neutralize
caches of chemical and biological weapons. A new approach to developing non-nuclear
weapons for attacking underground bunkers and chemical and biological weapons
is urgently needed. Research currently is too focused on weapons systems to
the neglect of intelligence assets, and non-nuclear weapons are not being sufficiently
explored. This new working paper compares the potential of new nuclear weapons
with that of innovative non-nuclear weapons, demonstrating that proponents of
tactical nuclear weapons have consistently overestimated their destructive potential
while underestimating the battlefield problems they would pose. The report's
comprehensive review of non-nuclear technologies will be of immense assistance
to anyone addressing weapons that might be used in a war with Iraq.
Michael A. Levi is Director of the Strategic Security Project at the Federation of American Scientists. His current research focuses on nuclear weapons development and on nuclear terrorism. He is a doctoral candidate in physics at Princeton University.
Also published by Carnegie, Deadly Arsenals: Tracking Weapons of Mass Destruction provides the most comprehensive assessment available on WMD, and charts the spread of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons and missile delivery systems. Click here to read an excerpt.
For more information on weapons of mass destruction, visit the Carnegie Endowment's Non-Proliferation Project page.
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