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The John Batchelor Show

WHEN IRAN POSSESSES NSNW NUKES: 1/4: Tactical Nuclear Weapons and NATO by Tom Nichols (Author), Douglas Stuart, Jeff McCausland (Author),

The John Batchelor Show

John Batchelor

News, Arts, Books, Society & Culture

4.52.8K Ratings

🗓️ 14 April 2024

⏱️ 12 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

WHEN IRAN POSSESSES NSNW NUKES: 1/4: Tactical Nuclear Weapons and NATO by Tom Nichols (Author), Douglas Stuart, Jeff McCausland (Author),

https://www.amazon.com/Tactical-Nuclear-Weapons-NATO-Nichols/dp/1479181951

The role and future of tactical nuclear weapons in Europe are subjects that sometimes surprise even experts in international security, primarily because it is so often disconcerting to remember that these weapons still exist. Many years ago, an American journalist wryly noted that the future of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was “a subject that drives the dagger of boredom deep, deep into the heart”— a dismissive quip which would have remained true right up until the moment World War III broke out. The same goes for tactical nuclear weapons: compared to the momentous issues that the East and West have tackled since the end of the Cold War, the scattering of hundreds (or in the Russian case, thousands) of battlefield weapons throughout Europe seems to be almost an afterthought, a detail left behind that should be easy to tidy up. Such complacency is unwise. Tactical nuclear weapons (or NSNWs, “non-strategic nuclear weapons”) still exist because NATO and Russia have not fully resolved their fears about how a nuclear war might arise, or how it might be fought. They represent, as Russian analyst Nikolai Sokov once wrote, “the longest deadlock” in the history of arms control. Washington and Moscow, despite the challenges to the “reset” of their relations, point to reductions in strategic arms as a great achievement, but strategic agreements also reveal the deep ambiguity toward nuclear weapons as felt by the former superpower rivals. The numbers in the 2010 New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START) are lower than at any point in history, but they are based on leaving each side a reliable ability to destroy up to 300 urban targets each. Inflicting this incredible amount of destruction is, on its face, a step no sane national leader would take. But it is here that tactical weapons were meant to play their dangerous role, for they would be the arms that provided the indispensable bridge from peace to nuclear war. Thus, the structures of Cold War nuclear doctrines on both sides remain in place, only on a smaller scale.

MARCH 22, 1955 NEVADA TEST RANGE

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is CBS I on the world with John Bachelor.

0:10.0

Here's John Bachelor.

0:12.0

Tactical nuclear weapons, much in the new Here's John Bachelor.

0:12.5

Tactical nuclear weapons.

0:14.3

Much in the news, these last 18 months for war in Ukraine,

0:18.5

tactical nuclear weapons have an important history.

0:21.8

Where we are today often is regarded as unknown territory.

0:26.5

When it comes to tactical nukes we've been here before and we can look to a future where

0:31.1

we can manage tactical nuclear weapons.

0:34.4

However, right now there's a book that was published in 2012

0:38.0

that is both Pression and helpful to understand

0:41.2

what was and what he is. I welcome Colonel Jeff McCausen, CBS News, my colleague

0:46.5

at CBS News. He is also Diamond Six, Leadership and Strategy, and Professor, visiting professor at Dickinson College.

0:56.0

But right now he's one of the authors and editors of tactical nuclear weapons and NATO.

1:01.0

Jeff, a very good evening to you.

1:03.1

Thank you for this.

1:03.8

I begin with a history of tactical nuclear weapons,

1:06.8

and my quick definition is low-yield short range.

1:11.4

It gets more technical than that. However, that's enough for this question.

1:16.6

In 1949, Omar Bradley, a distinguished general who is one of the major figures of the Second War regarded the tactical nuclear

1:26.0

weapon in the US arsenal as stabilizing. He believes that it was for to favors the defense. Stabilizing is not a word that we would

1:35.8

associate with nuclear weapons anywhere in the world. What was the mindset

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