{"title":"From the editor","authors":"D. Horner","doi":"10.1080/10736700.2021.2113134","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In this issue’s opening article, Oliver Meier and Maren Vieluf focus on a category of politicians that they label “nationalist populists,” some of whom have come to lead nucleararmed states. Meier and Vieluf argue that such leaders “undermine the nuclear order and increase nuclear dangers in novel, significant, and persistent ways” through their words and actions. Because their thesis has significant implications for scholarship and policy, we asked four other experts—Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan, Michael Cohen, Jacques E. C. Hymans, and Nina Tannenwald—to comment on the article. In his response, Hymans describes the article as “agenda-setting.” We think that’s a well-chosen term for an essay that launches a discussion of an important topic, rather than offering the final and definitive word on it. We look forward to seeing how that discussion transpires. Meier and Vieluf wrote before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, but their ideas take on added meaning in the wake of that event. That is equally true of other articles in this issue —for example, the piece in which Hanna Notte, Sarah Bidgood, Nikolai Sokov, Michael Duitsman, and William Potter track and analyze innovations in Russia’s strategic arsenal. Mining Russian-language sources, declassified intelligence documents, and satellite imagery, they identify the principal drivers of Russian military innovation by focusing on five novel nuclear, conventional, or dual-capable delivery systems. In their second jointly authored article to appear in this journal, Stefano Costanzi and Gregory D. Koblentz discuss flaws in current control lists for chemical-weapons agents and their precursors. These gaps were highlighted by Russia’s use of Novichok, or “A-series,” nerve agents in the poisonings of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in 2018 and Alexei Navalny in 2020. Costanzi and Koblentz propose a “family-based” approach that involves adding not just a single overlooked nerve agent and its precursors to control lists, but instead identifying groups or “families” of deadly chemicals, encompassing agents that may remain secret or that might be created in the future. David D. Palkki and Lawrence Rubin re-examine Saddam Hussein’s role in the use of chemical weapons against the Iraqi Kurdish town of Halabja in 1988. They consider whether Saddam directly ordered the attack, closely analyzing records such as transcripts of US interrogations of former senior Iraqi officials after the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Palkki and Rubin do not find unambiguous evidence of an explicit order from Saddam to carry out the attack, but they conclude that he had created a “command environment” that promoted such actions. Similar questions may arise in the context of war crimes allegedly perpetrated by the forces of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad—or, for that matter, those of Russian President Vladimir Putin in Ukraine. Returning to the nuclear realm, Thomas E. Doyle II addresses a question that may seem less theoretical than it used to: if a country used nuclear weapons in war, breaking the “nuclear taboo” that has remained in place since the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, how might the rest of the world restore nuclear restraint and preserve the taboo? The prescriptions that arise from an ethicist’s perspective may be at odds with the traditional views of military strategists.","PeriodicalId":35157,"journal":{"name":"Nonproliferation Review","volume":"28 1","pages":"1 - 2"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Nonproliferation Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/10736700.2021.2113134","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In this issue’s opening article, Oliver Meier and Maren Vieluf focus on a category of politicians that they label “nationalist populists,” some of whom have come to lead nucleararmed states. Meier and Vieluf argue that such leaders “undermine the nuclear order and increase nuclear dangers in novel, significant, and persistent ways” through their words and actions. Because their thesis has significant implications for scholarship and policy, we asked four other experts—Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan, Michael Cohen, Jacques E. C. Hymans, and Nina Tannenwald—to comment on the article. In his response, Hymans describes the article as “agenda-setting.” We think that’s a well-chosen term for an essay that launches a discussion of an important topic, rather than offering the final and definitive word on it. We look forward to seeing how that discussion transpires. Meier and Vieluf wrote before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, but their ideas take on added meaning in the wake of that event. That is equally true of other articles in this issue —for example, the piece in which Hanna Notte, Sarah Bidgood, Nikolai Sokov, Michael Duitsman, and William Potter track and analyze innovations in Russia’s strategic arsenal. Mining Russian-language sources, declassified intelligence documents, and satellite imagery, they identify the principal drivers of Russian military innovation by focusing on five novel nuclear, conventional, or dual-capable delivery systems. In their second jointly authored article to appear in this journal, Stefano Costanzi and Gregory D. Koblentz discuss flaws in current control lists for chemical-weapons agents and their precursors. These gaps were highlighted by Russia’s use of Novichok, or “A-series,” nerve agents in the poisonings of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in 2018 and Alexei Navalny in 2020. Costanzi and Koblentz propose a “family-based” approach that involves adding not just a single overlooked nerve agent and its precursors to control lists, but instead identifying groups or “families” of deadly chemicals, encompassing agents that may remain secret or that might be created in the future. David D. Palkki and Lawrence Rubin re-examine Saddam Hussein’s role in the use of chemical weapons against the Iraqi Kurdish town of Halabja in 1988. They consider whether Saddam directly ordered the attack, closely analyzing records such as transcripts of US interrogations of former senior Iraqi officials after the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Palkki and Rubin do not find unambiguous evidence of an explicit order from Saddam to carry out the attack, but they conclude that he had created a “command environment” that promoted such actions. Similar questions may arise in the context of war crimes allegedly perpetrated by the forces of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad—or, for that matter, those of Russian President Vladimir Putin in Ukraine. Returning to the nuclear realm, Thomas E. Doyle II addresses a question that may seem less theoretical than it used to: if a country used nuclear weapons in war, breaking the “nuclear taboo” that has remained in place since the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, how might the rest of the world restore nuclear restraint and preserve the taboo? The prescriptions that arise from an ethicist’s perspective may be at odds with the traditional views of military strategists.
在本期的开篇文章中,奥利弗·迈耶和玛伦·维鲁夫重点关注了一类被他们称为“民族民粹主义者”的政治家,其中一些人已经领导了拥有核武器的国家。Meier和Vieluf认为,这些领导人通过他们的言行“以新颖、显著和持久的方式破坏核秩序,增加核危险”。由于他们的论文对学术和政策有重大影响,我们邀请了另外四位专家——拉杰斯瓦里·皮莱·拉贾戈帕兰、迈克尔·科恩、雅克·e·c·海曼斯和尼娜·坦南瓦尔德——对这篇文章发表评论。在他的回应中,海曼斯将这篇文章描述为“议程设置”。我们认为,对于一篇文章来说,这个词是一个很好的选择,它引发了对一个重要话题的讨论,而不是对这个话题给出最终的、决定性的结论。我们期待着看到这一讨论如何进行。Meier和Vieluf是在俄罗斯入侵乌克兰之前写的,但他们的想法在事件发生后被赋予了额外的意义。本期的其他文章也是如此——例如,汉娜·诺特、萨拉·比古德、尼古拉·索科夫、迈克尔·杜特曼和威廉·波特追踪并分析了俄罗斯战略武器库的创新。通过挖掘俄语资源、解密的情报文件和卫星图像,他们确定了俄罗斯军事创新的主要驱动因素,重点关注五种新型核、常规或双重能力的运载系统。Stefano Costanzi和Gregory D. Koblentz在本刊发表的第二篇联合撰写的文章中讨论了目前化学武器制剂及其前体控制清单的缺陷。俄罗斯在2018年和2020年分别毒害谢尔盖和尤利娅·斯克里帕尔和阿列克谢·纳瓦尔尼的案件中使用了诺维乔克(Novichok)或“a系列”神经毒剂,凸显了这些差距。科斯坦齐和科布伦茨提出了一种“基于家族”的方法,不仅要在管制清单中增加一种被忽视的神经毒剂及其前体,而且要确定致命化学物质的群体或“家族”,包括可能保密或可能在未来制造的物质。David D. Palkki和Lawrence Rubin重新审视了萨达姆·侯赛因在1988年对伊拉克库尔德城镇哈拉布贾使用化学武器中所扮演的角色。他们仔细分析了2003年入侵伊拉克后美国对伊拉克前高级官员的审讯记录,并考虑萨达姆是否直接下令发动袭击。帕尔基和鲁宾并没有找到确凿的证据证明萨达姆下达了实施袭击的明确命令,但他们得出的结论是,他创造了一个促进此类行动的“指挥环境”。类似的问题可能出现在叙利亚总统巴沙尔·阿萨德(Bashar al- assad)的部队据称犯下的战争罪行的背景下,或者就此而言,俄罗斯总统弗拉基米尔·普京(Vladimir Putin)在乌克兰犯下的战争罪行。回到核领域,托马斯·e·道尔二世(Thomas E. Doyle II)提出了一个似乎不像以前那么理论化的问题:如果一个国家在战争中使用核武器,打破了自1945年广岛和长崎原子弹爆炸以来一直存在的“核禁忌”,那么世界其他国家如何才能恢复核克制并保持这一禁忌?从伦理学家的角度提出的处方可能与军事战略家的传统观点不一致。