Inside the Arms Control Association
November 2022
The Prospect of Nuclear Armageddon
On September 21, Russian President Vladimir Putin issued another round of thinly-veiled nuclear threats in the context of his ongoing military assault on the people of Ukraine. On October 6, President Biden called the “prospect of Armageddon'' the highest since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis. The President is justifiably alarmed and people in the United States and around the globe are far more aware and concerned about the risk of nuclear war. In response, our Arms Control Association team has been working overtime.
In the face of global criticism, Putin has, for now, dialed down his threat to use short-range, tactical nuclear weapons against Ukraine. But because the ongoing war poses escalation risks between Russian and U.S./NATO forces, we will continue to push hard – through public and private channels – for mutual restraint, renewed U.S. and Russian nuclear risk arms reduction dialogue, and a more robust international effort to condemn any and all types of nuclear weapons threats.
On October 11, we organized a virtual briefing on Putin’s latest nuclear threats with former Undersecretary of State Rose Gottemoeller, Hans Kristensen of the Federation of American Scientists, and myself on “What’s at Stake and What Can Be Done to Walk Back from the Brink?” You can view the briefing at [link removed].
This week, ACA’s partner project, the Physicists Coalition for Nuclear Threat Reduction, launched a campaign inviting scientists from around the world to endorse a statement “Condemning All Threats to Use Nuclear Weapons.” The Statement is available at [link removed]
To prevent catastrophe, we will continue to work with partner organizations and networks to call on global leaders to speak out against Putin’s flirtations with nuclear weapons use, and we will continue to underscore why everyone loses, especially Russia, if Putin breaks the 77-year-long taboo against using nuclear weapons. As I said in a recent MSNBC interview (see below), we need to do so now, not after the fact.
As always, we thank you for your support and interest. And if you find our information, resources, and work of value, please consider becoming a member or by making a donation.
Onward,
Daryl G. Kimball
Executive Director
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Deep Cuts Commissioners Explore U.S.-Russian Nuclear Arms Control Options
Meeting in Istanbul in September and in Washington in October, members of the U.S.-German-Russian independent Commission on Deep Nuclear Cuts and the Young Deep Cuts Commission exchanged ideas and proposals for how U.S. and Russian negotiators could follow up the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, if and when the two sides resume talks on a new nuclear arms control framework agreement. Since 2013, the Arms Control Association has served as the lead U.S. partner for the project, which is supported with funding from the German Federal Foreign Office.
ACA also continues to engage with senior officials from both governments on these issues. For more details, see our latest Issue Brief by Senior Policy Analyst Shannon Bugos “Toward a New Nuclear Arms Control Framework Arrangement” at [link removed].
ACA also continues to press for the resumption of negotiations on a new nuclear arms control framework as President Biden first proposed at ACA’s June 2 Annual Meeting and again on August 1 at the NPT Review Conference. On Nov. 9, the State Department confirmed that Russian and U.S. officials will hold the first Bilateral Consultative Commission meeting under New START since the war in Ukraine.
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ACA Responds to U.S. Nuclear Posture Review
After a seven-month delay, the Pentagon released its public version of the classified Nuclear Posture Review (NPR), updating U.S. nuclear weapons policy. As Daryl Kimball noted in The New York Times, the NPR sends “a muddled message,” about the role of nuclear weapons in U.S. defense strategy and foreign policy at a time when the United States should more clearly de-emphasize the salience of nuclear weapons and the threat of nuclear weapons use.
Our preliminary analysis of the NPR also highlights that the document appropriately and smartly "places renewed emphasis on nuclear arms control, nuclear nonproliferation, and risk reduction.” Look for more coverage on the NPR in the December issue of Arms Control Today.
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Is It Time for a "Plan B" to Address Iran’s Accelerating Nuclear Program?
As Russia creates chaos, North Korea tests more ballistic missiles, and U.S. relations with China remain strained, efforts to negotiate a return to U.S. and Iranian compliance with the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action are faltering. Get the latest analysis from our Director for Nonproliferation Policy Director, Kelsey Davenport in our latest Issue Brief, online at [link removed]
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Team ACA at Carnegie Nuclear Policy Conference
The Arms Control Association policy team and several members of the Board of Directors were actively engaged in the 2022 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Nuclear Policy Conference in Washington, D.C. held in October.
“The threats and risks of escalation to the nuclear level are very real, and must be met with utmost seriousness,” Shannon Bugos says in a Carnegie Nuclear Policy Conference video short, available online at [link removed]
ACA Board Member Amb. Laura Kennedy moderated the keynote session with Amb. Gustavo Zlauvinen, president of the 2022 NPT Review Conference. Watch her interview with him at [link removed]
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CWC Coalition Wins Renewed Support; Looking for Coordinator
The Chemical Weapons Convention Coalition, which is based at the Arms Control Association, has received another two years of project support from Global Affairs Canada and the German Federal Foreign Office. The Coalition brings together independent experts and NGOs from around the world looking to advance progress toward the elimination of all chemical weapons, strengthening the taboo against CW use.
Sadly, accomplished CWC Coalition program coordinator, Leanne Quinn is moving on to work with the U.S. Department of State, and we are now accepting applications for the position. Details are available on our website at [link removed].
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ACA Policy Internship Application Deadline
ACA has had fabulous interns who have gone on to make great contributions to the field. For example, Leanne Quinn was an ACA intern in 2019 who we later hired in 2021 as the coordinator for the CWC Coalition. Monica Montgomery, an ACA intern in 2018, is now a policy analyst at the Center for Arms Control and Nonproliferation. You can read her feature article, “The U.S. Defense Budget and Russia’s War on Ukraine” in the November issue of Arms Control Today ([link removed]).
ACA is now accepting applications for two part-time paid spring internships - a nuclear policy research internship and an arms trade policy research internship. Both internships begin in Jan. 2023 and end in April 2023. The arms trade policy research intern will work remotely and the nuclear policy intern may work remotely, in the ACA office, or in a hybrid combination of remote and in-office work.
Please see the details for both internships at [link removed]. And please help us spread the word.
Your contributions to ACA help us further develop our internship program and train the next generation of arms controllers. We are grateful for your generosity.
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ACA In the News
• Senior policy analyst Shannon Bugos commented on Russia’s history as a nuclear weapon state in “The Risk of Nuclear War is Now a Daily Issue for the Biden Administration” from TIME, Nov. 4.
• Vox quoted Executive Director Daryl Kimball in “North Korean missile launches may mean new nuclear tests,” saying “we are in the middle of an escalatory cycle” in the Korean peninsula “that both sides need to step back from,” Nov. 5.
• Kimball made comments on the Nuclear Posture Review in "Pentagon’s Strategy Says China and Russia Pose Very Different Challenges," from The New York Times, Oct. 27.
• Senior fellow Jeff Abramson noted Saudi Arabia has been a major purchaser of U.S. military equipment for decades in “Senator raises alarm Saudis could share US defense technology with Russia,'' from The Guardian, Oct. 17.
• Senior visiting fellow Michael Klare wrote “Could the Fight Over Taiwan Trigger Nuclear War?,” for The Nation, saying “Ukraine isn’t the only place on the planet where a nuclear conflagration could erupt in the near future,” Oct. 13.
• Newsweek quoted research associate Gabriela Iveliz Rosa Hernández in “Biden’s Air Defense Pledge to Ukraine May Not be Realistic,” saying the U.S. government has given weapons to Ukraine that are “relevant for the current fight,” Oct. 11.
• PolitiFact cited Bugos in “Are we closer to nuclear Armageddon than any time since 1962, as Biden suggested?”, who said President Biden’s words convey the current nuclear threat “is very serious,” Oct. 10.
• Kimball spoke with MSNBC correspondent Katy Tur saying Biden’s message to President Putin is don’t use a nuclear weapon because “no one can win a nuclear war,” Oct. 7.
• Policy director Kelsey Davenport credited the Biden administration for continuing to support reviving the JCPOA deal, while also backing Iranian demonstrators in The National, “Iran protests complicate Biden’s push for a nuclear deal,” Oct. 4.
• “In Putin’s Nuclear Brinkmanship, Weapons Leave Room For Warning,” Kimball told Bloomberg that Russia’s tactical nuclear weapons “are not tiny nukes” and “could be worse than anything we’ve seen since Hiroshima,” Oct. 3.
• The Washington Post quoted Kimball saying “the consequences of even a so-called ‘limited nuclear war’ would be absolutely catastrophic,” in “U.S. has sent private warnings to Russia against using a nuclear weapon,” Sept. 22.
• Colombian news channel NTN24 spoke with Rosa Hernández regarding Putin’s announcement to mobilize additional Russian soldiers to fight in Ukraine, Sept. 22.
• Kimball was cited in ABC’s “GOP lawmakers seek to codify Trump’s Iran sanctions amid ongoing nuclear talks”, calling for a return to the Iran nuclear deal, Sept. 21.
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