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Weapons of Mass Destruction: Not an Elite Club

Byline: 

The purported reconnaissance flight by some 250 Israeli airplanes over Iran’s fledgling nuclear program reflects several ominous trends. 

  • A number of countries have jump-started nuclear programs by obtaining needed technology from Pakistan, Russia, North Korea, and China

  • The development of powerful small nuclear warheads serves as a catalyst for exportation

  • Biological and chemical weapons of mass destruction have escaped scrutiny.


 

I think almost all us would be surprised by the following list of countries that have nuclear, chemical or biological weapons, and missile delivery systems as of 2000. This list certain might not be either up to date or accurate, but it is a starting point.

STATE

NUCLEAR

CHEMICAL

BIOLOGICAL

MISSILE

Algeria 

Belarus 
 

Bulgaria 

Chile 

China 

Cuba 

Ethiopia 

Egypt 

France 

 

India 

Indonesia 
 

Iran 

Iraq 

Israel 

Kazakhstan 
 

Laos 

Libya 

Myanmar 
 

North Korea 

Pakistan 

Romania 

Russia 

Serbia 

South Africa 

South Korea 

Sudan 
 

Syria 

 

Taiwan 

Thailand 
 

Ukraine 
 

Vietnam 

United Kingdom 

United States 

 

 

Sources and Methods

  • A Chemical Weapons Atlas By E.J. Hogendoorn Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists September/October 1997 Vol. 53, No. 5 

  • Chemical and Biological Weapons: Possession and Programs Past and Present 

  • "The Specter of Biological Weapons" by Leonard A. Cole Scientific American December 1996 

  • Defense Nuclear Agency, Biological Weapons Proliferation (Ft. Detrick, Md.: US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, April 1994), page 46. 

  • Sources on Tables Listing Countries of Chemical and Biological Weapon Concern Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction: Assessing the Risks Office of Technology Assessment OTA-ISC-559, 1994 [Angola, Argentina, Brazil, Chad, Cuba, El Salvador, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Peru, and Philippines are mentioned by a few cited sources as possessing chemical weapons, but most sources do not include them as chemical weapon states, which would bring the total to 29 chemical weapons states]. 


 

More than thirty years after the passage of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) the record is mixed. The end of the Cold War gave rise to a flurry of non-proliferation and arms control initiatives in the 1990s. However, there are both persistent and new threats to peace, particularly the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction through covert and overt means in potentially serious theaters of regional conflict such as India-Pakistan or the Middle East. The development of nuclear technology by Syria, a backward, terrorist, and poor nation portends the threat of ubiquitous proliferation.

On balance, the possibility of some conflict involving weapons of mass destruction has increased because of 

  • dangerous arms racing, 

  • unsustainable levels of militarization at the cost of social and economic development

  • nuclearization by unstable or failing states

  • illicit trafficking in nuclear technology and materials

  • rising terrorism and safety lapses in weapons of mass destruction control 

A recent article in the Economist, “A hero at home, and a villain abroad” discussed the despicable actions of a Pakistani scientist, Abdul Khan. Khan provided designs for small, ingenious nuclear weapons which could be used on tiny missiles for possibly a whole host of countries—Libya, Iran, North Korea, Algeria, Saudi Arabia, and Syria. Needless to say, once China in the early 1960’s decided to share nuclear technology with Pakistan, the “genie was out of the bottle.” 

Weapons of mass destruction are a cause for concern in any context but pose real and present threats in regions that are already plagued by 

  • Volatility

  • Undemocratic governance

  • Extremist tendencies creates a sense of added urgency

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