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The Politics of Weapons of Mass Destruction

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Title: The Politics of Weapons of Mass Destruction


1
The Politics of Weapons of Mass Destruction
  • The Creation of a Threat

2
I. Defining the Phrase
  • What is the best way to define Weapons of Mass
    Destruction?

3
A. Origins of the Phrase
  • Origin unknown Possibly used as early as 1937
  • Increased use in 1990s. Substitute for Soviet
    threat?
  • Two connotations
  • Deadliness These weapons can cause mass
    destruction
  • Concentration A little WMD goes a long way
  • Which weapons qualify?

4
B. Recent Media Reports Unclear
  • Weapon of Mass Destruction Washington Post
    headline about the AK-47, Nov 26 2006

5
Nuclear Weapons
6
Radiological Weapons
7
Cluster Bombs
8
Daisy Cutters / MOAB
9
White Phosphorous
10
Depleted Uranium
11
Poison Gas
12
EMP Weapons (E-Bombs)
13
Napalm
14
Fuel-Air Explosives
15
Biological Weapons
16
Radiological Weapons (Dirty Bombs)
17
C. US Law Over-Inclusive
  • 1. Definition
  • (A) any destructive device as defined in section
    921 of this title
  • (B) any weapon that is designed or intended to
    cause death or serious bodily injury through the
    release, dissemination, or impact of toxic or
    poisonous chemicals, or their precursors
  • (C) any weapon involving a biological agent,
    toxin, or vector (as those terms are defined in
    section 178 of this title) or
  • (D) any weapon that is designed to release
    radiation or radioactivity at a level dangerous
    to human life

18
Section 921 says
  • The term destructive device means
  • (A) any explosive, incendiary, or poison gas
  • (i) bomb,
  • (ii) grenade,
  • (iii) rocket having a propellant charge of more
    than four ounces,
  • (iv) missile having an explosive or incendiary
    charge of more than one-quarter ounce,
  • (v) mine, or
  • (vi) device similar to any of the devices
    described in the preceding clauses
  • (B) any type of weapon (other than a shotgun)
    which will expel a projectile by the action of an
    explosive or other propellant, and which has any
    barrel with a bore of more than one-half inch in
    diameter

19
2. Recent Convictions (2008)
  • Hewitt said between March 1 and May 4, Carlock,
    Sanders and Robinson built and tested several
    pipe bombs and then placed two at the FedEx
    distribution center ... One exploded at about 2
    a.m. and broke the glass on the front door and
    set off the alarm, according to authorities. A
    second, unexploded bomb, which authorities
    believe was intended to hurt the first
    responders, was also found in the parking lot and
    detonated by bomb technicians. Both explosives
    were filled with nails.

20
2. Recent Convictions (2008)
  • A 24-year-old convert to Islam has been sentenced
    to 35 years in prison for plotting to set off
    hand grenades in a crowded shopping mall during
    the Christmas season. He had offered to trade
    stereo speakers for some grenades.

21
2. Recent Convictions (2008)
  • The teenager accused of planning to bomb his high
    school told investigators he had placed several
    pipe bombs around his family's home, but
    authorities have found no explosives, a
    prosecutor said Wednesday. Ryan Schallenberger
    may have just been bragging, state prosecutor Jay
    Hodge said. A search that included the use of a
    bomb-sniffing dog found nothing Saturday, when
    the boy was arrested after his parents discovered
    he had ordered ammonium nitrate on eBay.

22
3. Why such a broad definition and why apply it
to smaller attacks?
  • Previous penalties max 10 years for attempt to
    injure, max 20 years for attempt to kill
  • WMD offenses max life sentences

23
4. Why not just increase penalties for all
terrorism (not just WMD use) to life?
  • Prosecutors like the discretion (judges sentence
    within guidelines determined by offense)

24
5. Conclusion Legal definition of WMD is
political, not technical
  • Compare
  • Media (inconsistent, anything big looks like
    WMD)
  • Law (very broad definition to maximize
    prosecutorial discretion)
  • Is there a more logical approach?

25
C. The Logic of Weapons of Mass Destruction
  • Characteristics
  • Potential to cause mass casualties
  • Distinct from conventional weapons
  • Violate international norms
  • Logic Definition primarily revolves around
    social perception of weapons rather than weapon
    characteristics
  • Evidence What counts as WMD terrorism?

26
Examples of WMD Terrorism
  • 1984 Rajneeshee cult attacks in The Dalles,
    Oregon with Typhoid (no deaths) and Salmonella
    (750 poisoned, no deaths)
  • 1994 Aum Shinrikyo Attacks Matsumoto
    neighborhood with Sarin nerve gas, kills 7
  • 1995 Aum Shinrikyo attacks Tokyo subway with
    Sarin nerve gas, kills 12
  • 2001 Anthrax-laced letters kill five in USA
  • 2007 Three chlorine-laced bombs kill 11 in Iraq

27
NOT WMD Terrorism
  • 1824 Suspected Albanians or Wahabbis detonate
    armory in Egypt perhaps 4000 killed
  • 1978 Extremists suspected of arson of theater in
    Iran that kills 477
  • 2001 Al-Qaeda crashes four airliners into
    buildings, killing about 3000
  • 2004 Russians storm terrorist-held school in
    Beslan, leading to 366 deaths

28
D. Applying a Social Norms Definition WMD ?
WMD
  • Nuclear weapons Uniquely horrifying (see many
    specific nuke-only agreements, fear of radiation)
  • Biological weapons Potentially deadly and
    inherently indiscriminate. Again, triggers
    international horror
  • Chemical weapons Little worse than conventional
    weapons (if at all) but images and casualties
    create horror (even Hitler refuses to use gas in
    war after being gassed himself)
  • Not WMD Conventional (Cluster Bombs, MOAB,
    Fuel-Air Explosives, AK-47) or Unconventional
    but not horrific (E-Bomb)
  • Tough cases Borderline chemical weapons (White
    Phosphorous, Napalm), Radiological weapons
    (Dirty Bombs, Depleted Uranium)

29
E. Terminology
30
E. Terminology
CBW (Chemical and Biological Warfare)
31
E. Terminology
32
E. Terminology
33
E. Terminology
CBRN (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear)
34
II. The International Politics of WMD
  • Benefits of WMD Programs and associated
    problems
  • Deterrence Prevent attacks by rational
    opponents by making costs of attack exceed
    benefits
  • Problem Countries dont like being deterred
    (China vs. Taiwan, US vs. Iran). May encourage
    preventive war.
  • Problem Mutual deterrence strategies increase
    costs of war if opponent becomes irrational and
    attacks anyway.

35
2. Warfighting Winning Battles and Forcing
Surrender
  • Problem Best weapons for deterrence may not be
    best for battles.
  • Problem Best strategies for warfighting may
    prevent war termination, increasing costs of war.

36
3. Bargaining Trade WMD programs for concessions
  • Problem Reputation concerns mean negotiations
    are never strictly bilateral. Concessions
    encourage others to develop WMD.
  • Problem Trust increases negotiation success
    but WMD programs undermine trust.

37
4. Status International recognition and prestige
(i.e. the P5 and nuclear weapons)
  • Problem The P5 were the P5 before
    nuclearization. Effect mistaken for cause?
  • Problem International efforts to curb WMD are
    designed to stigmatize new proliferation.

38
B. Costs of WMD Programs
  • Resources / Opportunity Costs The money,
    talent, leadership effort, and other resources
    put into WMD might be better spent on development
    (Guns vs. Butter theories) or conventional arms.

39
2. Hostility and Arms Races
  • WMD proliferation can provoke counter-proliferatio
    n. Nuclear weapons example
  • US develops in fear of pre-emption by Germany
    Uses them to threaten USSR
  • USSR develops in fear of attack by US Uses them
    to threaten China
  • China develops in fear of attack by US (and later
    USSR) Becomes threat to India
  • India develops in fear of China Becomes threat
    to Pakistan
  • Pakistan develops in fear of India

40
3. Opprobrium and Sanctions
  • Many agreements and laws call for types of
    sanctions against those that try to acquire WMD.
  • Even absent sanctions, states face criticism for
    WMD programs. (Remember, part of the REAL
    meaning of WMD is the stigma attached to the
    weapons).

41
C. When will benefits outweigh costs?
  • When states are HIGHLY concerned with
  • Being attacked
  • Losing the resulting war
  • Having no allies or influence to save them
  • And states are NOT worried about
  • The opportunity costs (wealthy OR insulated from
    public welfare concerns)
  • Arms races (rivals already have WMD or are unable
    to acquire them)
  • Opprobrium (state is already friendless or under
    sanctions)
  • Which states meet these criteria today?

42
III. Problems of WMD
  • Which weapons are considered WMD (already
    answered!) and how are their effects similar to
    or different from those of conventional
    weapons?
  • Chemical weapons are they worse than high
    explosives?
  • Biological weapons can they accomplish missions
    which conventional weapons cannot?
  • Nuclear weapons are they just bigger bombs
    or something qualitatively different?

43
B. In what ways and why -- do international
laws and international institutions treat WMD
differently from other weapons?
  • What international laws govern WMD?
  • What are the loopholes in these laws?
  • How did these laws come about?
  • How is the nonproliferation system maintained?

44
C. How does the possession of WMD by nations or
their adversaries affect the decisions that those
nations make?
  • What doctrines govern the use of WMD?
  • What determines which doctrines a state will
    adopt?
  • Do states with WMD behave differently?
  • Are states with WMD treated differently?

45
D. When and under what circumstances are WMD
likely to be used, and what are the likely
consequences?
  • Are some states more likely than others to use
    WMD?
  • What is the likelihood of accidental or
    unauthorized use?
  • What are the effects of WMD on the battlefield,
    political negotiation, and civilians?
  • How do wars fought with WMD end?
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