NATO, Russia, and the Nuclear Disarmament Agenda: Reflections Post Chicago
24 Aug 2012
by Des Browne and Ian Kearns
This ELN Policy Brief by Ian Kearns and Des Browne discusses the strategic and defence realities that accompanied NATO’s Deterrence and Defence Posture Review.
The first two sections of the paper provide an overview of the context in which the Chicago Summit took place, including the strategic realities and requirements that the DDPR needed to consider. Noting the window of opportunity the DDPR offered in relation to re-thinking NATO's capability requirements the subsequent sections of the paper discuss concrete steps that could and, in the view of the authors, should have been taken to allow for a more progressive NATO nuclear policy position and a strengthening of the NATO-Russia relationship.
The paper goes on to call on Central and Eastern European states to reconsider their positions with regard to nuclear policy, and uses the hypothetical scenario of a nuclear terrorist attack on the United States to expose the ways in which nuclear threats, beyond those emanating from Russian non-strategic nuclear weapons, could threaten the core national security interests of those in the region.