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November 2005 |
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Chinese Major General Zhu Chenghu told journalists last July that China is prepared to use nuclear weapons against the United States if it targets Chinese ships,
aircraft, or territory in a confrontation over Taiwan. "We Chinese will prepare ourselves for the destruction of all of the cities east of Xian. Of course the Americans will have to be
prepared that hundreds of cities will be destroyed by the Chinese," he warned. With Zhu's suicidal nuclear threats as backdrop, U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld told his military counterparts in Beijing last month that "advances in China's strategic strike capacity raise questions" about its intentions. Rumsfeld suggested that "greater clarity would generate more certainty in the region." Excellent points, Mr. Secretary. But China, of course, is not the only state to amass nuclear weapons to defend and advance its interests. Although other Chinese officials disavowed Zhu's remarks, he is not the first to suggest, officially or unofficially, that his government is "mad" enough to use massive nuclear force against conventional attacks. Since the beginning of the nuclear age, U.S. presidents have developed policies and issued statements intended to make nuclear threats appear credible and create uncertainty about when and where they might be used. As unnerving as China's estimated arsenal of 100-400 nuclear weapons and Zhu's remarks may be, Beijing's official no-first-use policy arguably makes its posture more restrained than that of the United States today. To deter other nuclear-armed states, particularly Russia, from attacking with their nuclear arms, current U.S. strategy calls for the maintenance of a massive arsenal of approximately 2,200 deployed strategic nuclear warheads on high alert through 2012 and beyond. In addition, the United States will still possess some 3,000 additional strategic warheads in storage and several hundred substrategic weapons. The Pentagon's March 2005 draft "Doctrine for Joint Nuclear Operations" also outlines a wide range of options to deal with non-nuclear scenarios. It would allow for the possible first use of nuclear weapons to help support U.S. forces or allies against conventional attacks, such as a conflict with China over Taiwan, as well as other scenarios, including pre-emptive nuclear strikes on suspected chemical or biological weapons targets in non-nuclear-weapon states. Given the absence of a hostile, well-armed nuclear adversary, U.S. conventional military dominance, and the possibility that additional states might acquire nuclear weapons, is such a
large U.S. arsenal and expansive view of the role of nuclear weapons necessary, justifiable, and sustainable? No. |
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