LLAW’s All Things Nuclear #835, Friday, (12/20/2024)

NUCLEAR INSANITY & THE LAST DAYS OF HUMAN DEPRAVITY . . . ~ LLAW

Lloyd A. Williams-Pendergraft

Dec 20, 2024

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LLAW’s NUCLEAR WORLD NEWS TODAY AND THE RISKS & CONSEQUENCES OF TOMORROW

As you read the following article by By Janice Stein from “The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists”, keep in mind that a so-called ‘Tactical Nuclear Weapon’ as discussed concerning this incredibly dangerous issue may be as powerful and cause as much or more deaths and destruction as the USA bombing of Japan that ended WWII at a huge cost, including perhaps a quarter of a million innocent Japanese citizens who had nothing to do with that war.

It seems to be fairly obvious that Putin’s idea to defeat Ukraine and re-occupy the country is something similar, with a copy-cat approach, to that first and last time an atomic bomb has ever been used in war. But, as this article points out quite clearly, nuking Ukraine could easily backfire on Russia for several reasons, including nuclear fallout risk to Russia itself.

The whole idea of using nuclear weapons and a preventive or protective system called ‘deterrence’ is sadly an indication that our average human intelligence quotient (in general) is like constantly building better mouse traps, but refusing to provide the cheese. We are irresponsibly bankrupting the world with the costs of nuclear deterrence while acting out with our world leaders’ childish behavior tantamount to segregated groups of school kids trying to control who runs the playground.

There is only one way to a happy ending, and that is a to unite as a cooperative communal species that has always, ignorantly and erroneously, defied our laughable concept of humanitarianism in wealth, politics, family, and ethnicity with insane self-conceived racial discrimination and superiority with never-ending battles and wars all around the world collectively. This war, if it happens, will be the last one . . . ~llaw

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How impossible is the risk of nuclear escalation in Ukraine?

By Janice Stein | December 20, 2024

Ukraine started using the older, shorter-ranged US-supplied ballistic missiles, known as the Army Tactical Missile Systems, or ATACMS, in October 2023. The Biden administration has now allowed Ukraine to use long-range ATACMS to help defend its forces in the Kursk region of Russia. (Credit: US Government / John Hamilton, via DVIDS)

In the bizarre interregnum since the US presidential elections, world leaders have been calling President-elect Donald Trump in Florida before his inauguration on January 20. Some of them worry that the ongoing war between an increasingly desperate Ukraine that kills a Russian general in Moscow as it did this week and an emboldened Russia could spin out of control through miscalculation. The darkest scenario is one that culminates in escalation when Russia detonates a nuclear weapon. How likely is such a scenario in the few weeks left before inauguration day?

The likelihood of nuclear escalation cannot be estimated. The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the United States in 1945 are the only cases of the use of nuclear weapons. That strategy was deliberate, not a product of miscalculation, and can best be described as “escalate to de-escalate.” There is no case of nuclear escalation through miscalculation from conventional war to nuclear fighting. No estimate of likelihood has any validity unless there are a large enough number of cases to generate a probability distribution. Nuclear escalation occurs in a world of what Oxford University’s John Kay calls “radical uncertainty” in which historical information provides no reliable guidance.

One way to think about nuclear escalation in the context of Russia’s current war against Ukraine is to build scenarios in which Russia uses a nuclear weapon and then trace a logically compelling pathway back to the present. It then becomes possible to ask what conditions could enable such a pathway to escalation.

Tactical nuclear weapon. In one scenario that has been discussed, Russia explodes a tactical nuclear weapon to force Ukraine to end the fighting and agree to cede Crimea and the four Ukrainian provinces that Russia is currently occupying and claiming as its own. Under what conditions is it possible that Russia might adopt such a strategy? Detonating a single tactical nuclear weapon would provide very limited battlefield advantage to Russian forces, and there is some risk that the radioactive fallout could blow back and inflict harm on nearby Russian troops.

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Nor would the damage from a single tactical nuclear weapon be grave enough to so demoralize the Ukrainian public that it would buckle under the pressure. If anything, the use of a tactical nuclear weapon would likely radicalize Ukrainians who have been reluctantly moving toward grudging acceptance of a ceasefire.

Were Russia to use a tactical nuclear weapon, such a strategy might backfire. The Ukrainian public might well rally around the flag, unite behind its leader, and stiffen its resistance to ceasefire proposals that are increasingly the subject of discussion inside Ukraine.

Finally, the detonation of a single tactical nuclear weapon—however small its payload—would break the “nuclear taboo” that has held for almost eight decades. In October 2022, encouraged by the United States, Russia’s key partners—China and India—signaled their strong opposition to the use of any nuclear weapon under any circumstances. Now isolated from the West, Russian President Vladimir Putin would not want to alienate his fellow leaders of the nine BRICS countries, which include China, India, and Iran.

There is, therefore, no compelling logic that supports the use of even a single tactical nuclear weapon. What conditions could change that logic?

Russia could face a situation where its forces are being pushed back and out of Ukraine. Putin faced a version of that scenario in the autumn of 2022 when Ukraine’s armed forces were pushing the Russian army back. It was then that the CIA issued the estimate that there was a 50 percent chance that Russia would use a nuclear weapon.

After Ukrainian troops broke through and pushed Russian forces back from Kharkiv in the northeast and Kherson in the south, US intelligence overheard a conversation among senior Russian military commanders about when and how Moscow might use a tactical nuclear weapon in Ukraine. Putin was reportedly not part of these conversations. That intelligence was circulated inside the US government in mid-October. In addition, there are unconfirmed reports that Russia moved some tactical weapons out of storage and loosened operational controls that would make the use of a tactical nuclear weapon easier. It was these two developments that pushed up the US intelligence estimate that Russia might use a nuclear weapon.

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Around the same time, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, in one of his calls with US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, accused Ukraine of planning to use a “dirty bomb.” Concern among Western officials grew that Putin was preparing a false flag operation. Only a long phone call between Gen. Mark Milley, then chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Russian Gen. Valery Gerasimov, reduced the tensions. The most senior military officer from each country discussed Russia’s doctrine governing the use of nuclear weapons and reassured one another. This episode tells us that even when Russian forces were retreating in Ukraine, Putin did not break the nuclear taboo.

Russia has since significantly lowered the threshold of when it would use nuclear weapons. In November 2024, Putin signed a decree amending Russia’s nuclear doctrine in two important ways. The doctrine now declares that Russia has the right to use nuclear weapons against a non-nuclear state that attacks Russia or its allies and is supported by a nuclear power. In addition, Russia’s nuclear doctrine released in 2020 declared that Russia would use nuclear weapons in response to a conventional attack when the very existence of the state is in jeopardy. The new amendment lowers that threshold to a conventional attack that is a critical threat to Russia’s sovereignty or territory.

Putin also railed against the Biden administration’s decision in November to allow Ukraine to use US-supplied longer-range Army Tactical Missile Systems, or ATACMS, against military installations inside Russia and warned that this decision was tantamount to NATO declaring war on Russia. Moscow then launched the Oreshnik, an intermediate-range ballistic missile equipped with multiple warheads, against Ukraine. The missile can carry nuclear warheads. Despite the bellicose rhetoric and the new missile launch, Russia has not loosened operational controls on any tactical nuclear weapons nor moved any of these weapons out of storage. Instead, Gerasimov again reassured the current chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr., in a phone call that the missile launch was planned long before the announcement about the ATACMS.

The difference between now and the fall of 2022, of course, is that Russian troops are on the offensive on the battlefield and Ukrainian forces are struggling to contain Russian advances. Political and military leaders are far more likely to take risks when they fear losses than when they are making gains.

Miscalculation. What about a scenario in which Putin uses a nuclear weapon because of a technical miscalculation? Experts have long warned that miscalculation could occur if nuclear and conventional forces and their command-and-control structures are integrated. As nuclear weapons are modernized and, in some cases, become smaller, integration is becoming more frequent. However, all these scenarios deal with conventional wars between large nuclear powers that escalate to a nuclear confrontation. In Ukraine, Russia is not at war with another nuclear power. It is difficult to see how these scenarios of escalation through technical miscalculation would be relevant.

Political miscalculation, another type, can occur when a leader miscalculates the consequences of the use of a nuclear weapon to demonstrate resolve. Could Putin make this kind of miscalculation in the weeks before or shortly after President Trump is inaugurated? A scenario might go something like this.

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Conflicts tend to intensify as the parties anticipate negotiation. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, deeply alarmed by the prospect of an imposed ceasefire, tries a “Hail Mary pass” to break the stalemate on the battlefield. To do so, he decides to use almost all his drone and missile forces in a coordinated attack on the front and behind the lines in Russia. Inevitably, some of the missiles get through, causing Russian forces to retreat, even temporarily, and significant casualties among Russian civilians. Ukrainian intelligence services also assassinate two or three other key Russian generals far behind the lines to show their long reach, as they did when they brazenly killed Gen. Igor Kirilov in Moscow this week. The Russian public is furious and military bloggers stoke the fury, calling for a fierce response. An outraged Putin then gives the order to detonate a tactical nuclear weapon.

How compelling is the path toward that scenario?

It is not impossible that a desperate Zelensky could try to reverse his losing hand. Trump and his team are floating a “peace plan” that is deeply alarming to Zelensky and appears to be very favorable to Russia. It is hard to imagine that Putin would sacrifice that very large potential gain—and possibly more—in exchange for no gain on the battlefield, universal opprobrium from friends and foes alike, and the poisoning of his relationship with the new US president. Putin would have to be so outraged and so emotionally dysregulated that he would lose all self-control. The evidence we have of Putin as an ice-cold and ruthless decision-maker does not fit that profile. This scenario also ignores the multiple conventional options that Putin still has in his arsenal that could inflict far greater punishment on Ukraine.

Context matters. If nuclear escalation through technical or political miscalculation is not a grave concern in the transition period between the Biden and Trump administrations, another pattern is concerning.

From the beginning of the war in Ukraine, Putin has hinted that the use of a nuclear weapon is a live option. Before launching his full-scale invasion in February 2022, he ordered an unknown level of alert that proved to be no more than increased staffing of strategic command centers and issued veiled nuclear threats if NATO were to intervene. A few months later, Putin loosened operational controls on tactical nuclear weapons and two years later lowered the threshold of nuclear use. Even though Putin never appeared to approach a decision to use a nuclear weapon, he manipulated the threat to use nuclear weapons to deter NATO from supplying weapons to Ukraine.

This strategy failed again and again. The United States and its Western allies supplied Ukraine with increasingly more sophisticated equipment over time despite the “nuclear noise.” They judged Putin’s intentions not by what he said but by the larger context in which he was making his thinly veiled threats designed to coerce. They took him seriously only once when Russian forces were in retreat.

Context always matters, even when the threats are nuclear. Putin now has the unenviable reputation of someone who bluffs. This reputation can only encourage NATO to continue to call his bluff in the future. But one day Putin may not be bluffing. If leaders do not pay attention to context, they may well miss the “signal” that, this time, Russia is serious about using a nuclear weapon to coerce an adversary.


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(Please note that the Sunday and Saturday NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS are also added below by category, following Monday’s news posts in order to maintain continuity of nuclear news as well as for research for the overall information provided in “LLAW;s All Things Nuclear”.)

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A current Digest of major nuclear media headlines with automated links is listed below by nuclear Category (in the above listed order). If a Category heading does not appear in the daily news Digest, it means there was no news reported from this Category today. Generally, the three best articles in each Category from around the nuclear world(s) are Posted. Occasionally, if a Post is important enough, it may be listed in multiple Categories.

TODAY’s NUCLEAR WORLD’s NEWS, Friday, (12/20/2024)

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

GOP seeks ‘maximum pressure’ on Iran with nuclear clock ticking – The Hill

The Hill

Self said he would consider backing strikes on Iranian nuclear sites “depending on what we learn about the nuclear program.” … “These are all things …

NSA Sullivan: ‘positive outcome’ on Mideast ceasefire is possible before year’s end – NPR

NPR

And so that is something that we, Israel, our Arab partners and the incoming Trump administration are all going to have to think carefully about in …

NSA Sullivan: ‘positive outcome’ on Mideast ceasefire is possible before year’s end – SDPB

SDPB

… nuclear weapon? We’ve heard from voices … Mary Louise Kelly is a co-host of All Things Considered, NPR’s award-winning afternoon newsmagazine.

Nuclear Power

NEWS

Is nuclear power ‘green energy?’ – Ohio Capital Journal

Ohio Capital Journal

Last week, the Ohio General Assembly sent a bill to Gov. Mike DeWine designating nuclear power as “green energy.” This is not particularly …

Flag as irrelevant

Students take nuclear strategy ideas to the White House | Stanford Report

Stanford Report – Stanford University

Four engineering students developed proposals for supporting America’s transition to nuclear energy and presented them to the National Security …

Economics of nuclear energy is ‘very challenging’ – YouTube

YouTube

Program Director Tony Wood says the economics of nuclear energy is “very challenging”. “I don’t have a problem fundamentally with nuclear power …

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

Watts Bar Nuclear Plant earns perfect score on its emergency preparedness evaluation

YouTube

The Tennessee Valley Authority said that the rating shows how much they prioritize safety at the plant.

How Watts Bar Nuclear Plant works to keep people safe – WATE

WATE

6 News was given an inside look at the training and preparation that goes into responding to emergencies at Watts Bar Nuclear Plant.

DoE Using AI for Emergency Response, Nukes Assessment, Official Says – MeriTalk

MeriTalk

… emergencies to planning energy investments and determining the risks of nuclear weapons, the department’s new principal deputy chief information …

Nuclear War

NEWS

How impossible is the risk of nuclear escalation in Ukraine?

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

In one scenario that has been discussed, Russia explodes a tactical nuclear weapon to force Ukraine to end the fighting and agree to cede Crimea and …

Putin claims Russia is not engaged in nuclear saber-rattling – VOA News

VOA News

Speaking at the Russian defense ministry’s meeting, Putin assessed Russia’s conduct in the Ukraine war and shared insights on the nation’s nuclear …

Russia suffers ‘record daily losses’ since war began; Kremlin addresses Putin’s ‘missile duel …

Sky News

A citizen from Uzbekistan has been detained over the killing of Russian nuclear forces general Igor Kirillov, Moscow’s intelligence agency has said.

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

Putin claims Russia is not engaged in nuclear saber-rattling – VOA News

VOA News

In September, he threatened to “of course, use” nuclear weapons, in response to a “nuclear blackmailing” and threats to Russia’s “territorial …

What happens if a nuclear bomb drops on Knoxville? Simulator shows deaths and blast range

Knoxville News Sentinel

… attack on the U.S.. In a sense, U.S. nuclear weapons exist not to be used. And while nuclear threats seem to happen only far away, like on the …

Putin’s statements on nuclear threats are groundless – Head of NATO Representation Turner

Цензор.НЕТ

NATO closely monitors possible nuclear threats from Russia but does not record significant changes in its nuclear policy. … War in Syria

Yellowstone Caldera

NEWS

7 Most Underrated Yellowstone Lookalikes In America – TheTravel

TheTravel

… supervolcano” eruption), the Yellowstone Caldera may be the most famous volcano in the United States. However, it’s far from the only one, and …

Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano shows more signs of elevated unrest – AOL.com

AOL.com

“Here’s an update on the now-exploding supervolcano in Yellowstone National Park,” the man says. “Scientists for millions of years have hoped that …

Tucker nails it again. Everyone who ruined the country has moved to Jackson, Wyoming.

TexAgs

When you drive into the park, you are entering the thing. Most know Yellowstone is a volcano, but what they may hear less is if you look at Crater …

IAEA Weekly News

20 December 2024

Read the top news and updates published on IAEA.org this week.

https://www.iaea.org/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_165x110/public/cancer-mobile-units-eswatini-1140x640.jpg?itok=b3Zruke-

20 December 2024

Eswatini Finalizes Funding Framework for its First Public Radiotherapy Centre

Eswatini is taking tangible steps to prepare for its first public radiotherapy centre to enable cancer patients to be treated in-country, according to a team of international experts. Read more →

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19 December 2024

VIDEO: The IAEA’s Achievements in 2024

2024 has been a year of delivery and innovation. From Antarctica to Ukraine, from cancer care to tackling the world’s growing hunger, the IAEA successfully continued its mission to bring the benefits of the peaceful uses of nuclear science and technology to the world. Read more →

https://www.iaea.org/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_165x110/public/lisastevenshasbeenwiththeiaeaforsixyears.png?itok=21fLqbqn

18 December 2024

IAEA Profile: Be Open to Possibilities – Lisa Stevens

“I want every country to have a cancer plan and more people to know about the cancer work that the IAEA does,” says Lisa Stevens reflecting on her work at the IAEA. Read more →

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17 December 2024

New IAEA Publication on the Security of Nuclear and Other Radioactive Material in Transport

A new IAEA publication on the security of nuclear and other radioactive material in transport has been released. Read more →

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16 December 2024

How the IAEA Advises Countries on the Protection of Nuclear Sites

Keeping nuclear facilities secure from internal or external threats is of paramount importance. Read more →

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