US CONSIDERS WITHDRAWING ITS LAST TACTICAL NUCLEAR WEAPONS FROM EUROPE
PanARMENIAN.Net
02.04.2010 17:37 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ President Obama will rewrite America's policy on
nuclear weapons next week, heralding further reductions in the US
stockpile and giving a pledge not to develop new systems.
The Obama Administration has come under pressure from arms control
analysts to redefine the circumstances in which the US might consider
using nuclear weapons, and to state beyond doubt that the justification
for keeping them is purely as a deterrent.
Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association in
Washington, said that if Mr Obama redefined nuclear arms as purely
weapons of deterrence, it would "eliminate the number of potential
targets the US military think they need to hit". It would also reduce
the number of nuclear weapons the US believes it needs, he said,
which could bring the total well below the 1,550 strategic warheads
agreed under the new Start treaty announced last week.
In reviewing its nuclear arsenal, the US is considering withdrawing
from Europe its last tactical nuclear weapons - 200 B61 gravity
bombs - which are based in Belgium, Turkey, Italy, Germany and the
Netherlands; all members of Nato. Under a longstanding agreement,
the air forces of these countries would be expected to fly their own
bombers carrying the American B61 bombs in the event of a conflict
in which the US had approved the use of nuclear weapons.
A decision on this is not expected to be included in the revised
nuclear posture, as it is a matter for discussion within Nato,
which is developing an updated strategic concept. However, several
countries say they want the nuclear gravity bombs to be withdrawn
because there is no longer any justification for keeping them in
Europe, The Times reported.
PanARMENIAN.Net
02.04.2010 17:37 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ President Obama will rewrite America's policy on
nuclear weapons next week, heralding further reductions in the US
stockpile and giving a pledge not to develop new systems.
The Obama Administration has come under pressure from arms control
analysts to redefine the circumstances in which the US might consider
using nuclear weapons, and to state beyond doubt that the justification
for keeping them is purely as a deterrent.
Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association in
Washington, said that if Mr Obama redefined nuclear arms as purely
weapons of deterrence, it would "eliminate the number of potential
targets the US military think they need to hit". It would also reduce
the number of nuclear weapons the US believes it needs, he said,
which could bring the total well below the 1,550 strategic warheads
agreed under the new Start treaty announced last week.
In reviewing its nuclear arsenal, the US is considering withdrawing
from Europe its last tactical nuclear weapons - 200 B61 gravity
bombs - which are based in Belgium, Turkey, Italy, Germany and the
Netherlands; all members of Nato. Under a longstanding agreement,
the air forces of these countries would be expected to fly their own
bombers carrying the American B61 bombs in the event of a conflict
in which the US had approved the use of nuclear weapons.
A decision on this is not expected to be included in the revised
nuclear posture, as it is a matter for discussion within Nato,
which is developing an updated strategic concept. However, several
countries say they want the nuclear gravity bombs to be withdrawn
because there is no longer any justification for keeping them in
Europe, The Times reported.