Abstract:
This paper discusses nuclear proliferation as a cross-cutting
international security issues in contemporary. The paper
addresses four pertinent themes which include: The nature
of nuclear weapons and their effects; the global diffusion of
nuclear and ballistic missile technology; Theorizing nuclear
proliferation and non-proliferation, and; Other weapons of
mass destruction (WMD) and their impact on world politics.
Whereas nuclear itself is very useful commercially, we
argue that nuclear weapons represent mankind’s ultimate
confrontation with the natural environment that sustains us.
The purpose of these weapons is wholesale destruction on a
massive scale, which affects most forms of life. It stands as
a single human creation with such a great potential for harm.
Such is the threat to life posed by nuclear weapons that the
International Court of Justice, the world’s highest legal
authority, in its 1996 landmark ruling on the general
illegality of these weapons, stated: "The destructive power
of nuclear weapons is hard to be contained. They have the
potential to destroy all civilization and the entire ecosystem
of the planet.” There are two overwhelming threats to life on
earth as we know it. They are climate change and its
security effects. The diffusion of nuclear weapons to
additional countries might come about through indigenous
development programs, through assistance from the present
nuclear powers, or through a combination of both. This
diffusion, sometimes called the "Nth country" problem, has
been of great concern in discussions of disarmament and
U.S. nuclear assistance programs. It has been widely held
that the spread of nuclear capabilities is disadvantageous for U.S. security and that an effort to stop it should receive
highest priority in disarmament policies. It is the purpose of
this presentation to examine the validity of this proposition.
To do so it will be necessary to estimate the political and
military effects that might arise from a further diffusion of
nuclear capabilities. Such an undertaking is necessarily
fraught with great uncertainties. This paper also presents an
analysis of the contemporary debate on the begging
question, “is there a theory of nuclear proliferation?” The
theoretical debate over how nuclear proliferation should be
explained, and whether future nuclear proliferation can be
predicted or not, has been given fresh impetus since the end
of the Cold War. The debate has been particularly lively, as
the new international environment has brought new
challenges to conventional wisdom about the spread of
nuclear weapons. However, although some very important
contributions have been made, the dynamics of nuclear
proliferation remain largely a mystery. This paper does not
claim to have found the answers, but it does attempt to show
the limitations of the existing debate, and in doing so,
highlights areas which require further research. Finally the
paper interrogates the questions; “With the rapid erosion of
the prohibition on use by states of chemical weapons, and
the rise of radical non-state groups seemingly willing to
utilize whatever weapons of mass destruction they can
obtain, what can the international community do to restrain
their use? And what do advances in neuroscience portend
for the development and use of new kinds of chemical
control agents?”