
NUCLEAR WEAPONS STATES
Page 2
Other known nuclear power
India has never been a member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty. It tested a "peaceful nuclear device", as
it was described by the Indian government, in 1974 ("Smiling
Buddha"), the first test developed after the creation
of the NPT, and created new questions about how civilian nuclear
technology could be diverted secretly to weapons purposes
(dual-use technology). It appears to have been primarily motivated
as a deterrent against China. It tested weaponized nuclear
warheads in 1998 ("Operation Shakti"), including
a thermonuclear device (though whether the latter was fully
successful is a matter of some contention). In July 2005,
it was officially recognized by the United States as a "a
responsible state with advanced nuclear technology" and
agreed to full nuclear cooperation between the two nations.
This is seen as a tacit entry into the nuclear club of the
above nations. In March 2006, a civil nuclear cooperation
deal was signed between President George W Bush and Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh. This deal, ratified by United States
Congress and United States Senate in December 2006 would pave
the path for the United States and other members of the Nuclear
Suppliers Group to sell civilian nuclear technology to India.
The country is currently thought to have had a stockpile of
around 40-50 warheads.

INDIA'S MOST IMPRESSIVE
AGNI-11 MISSILE AT 2004 REPUBLIC DAY PARADE- ANTONIO
MILENA/ABr: |
Pakistan is not a member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty. Pakistan covertly developed nuclear weapons over many
decades, beginning in the late 1970s. Pakistan first delved
into nuclear power after the establishment of its first nuclear
power plant near Karachi with equipment and materials supplied
mainly by western nations in the early 1970s. After the detonation
of a nuclear bomb by India, the country started its own nuclear
weapons development program and established secret, mostly
underground, nuclear facilities near the capital Islamabad.
It is believed that Pakistan already had nuclear weapons capability
by the end of the 1980s. However, this was to remain speculative
until 1998 when Pakistan conducted its first nuclear tests
at the Chagai Hills, in reply to the Nuclear tests conducted
by India a few days before.
North Korea was a member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty, but announced a withdrawal on January 10, 2003 and
did so that April. In February 2005 they claimed to possess
functional nuclear weapons, though their lack of a test at
the time led many experts to doubt the claim. However, in
October 2006, North Korea stated that due to growing intimidation
by the USA, it would conduct a nuclear test to confirm its
nuclear status. North Korea reported a successful nuclear
test on October 9, 2006. Most U.S. intelligence officials
believe that North Korea did, in fact, test a nuclear device
due to radioactive isotopes detected by U.S. aircraft; however,
most agree that the test was probably only partially successful,
having less than a kiloton in yield.
On October 5, 1986, the British newspaper The
Sunday Times ran Mordechai Vanunu's story on its front page
under the headline: "Revealed the secrets of Israel's
nuclear arsenal.
Israel - Israel is not a member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty and refuses to officially confirm or deny having a
nuclear arsenal, or to having developed nuclear weapons, or
even to having a nuclear weapons program. Although Israel
claims that the Negev Nuclear Research Center near Dimona
is a "research reactor," no scientific reports based
on work done there have ever been published. Extensive information
about the program in Dimona was also disclosed by technician
Mordechai Vanunu in 1986. Imagery analysts can identify weapon
bunkers, mobile missile launchers, and launch sites in satellite
photographs. It is believed to possess nuclear weapons by
the International Atomic Energy Agency, though unlike Iran,
has never been referred to the United Nations Security Council.
Israel is suspected to have tested a nuclear weapon along
with South Africa in 1979, but this has never been confirmed.
According to the Natural Resources Defense Council and the
Federation of American Scientists, Israel possesses around
75-200 weapons.
Nazi Germany - During World War II, Nazi Germany researched
possibilities to develop a nuclear weapon; however, for multiple
reasons subject to some controversy, the project was not nearing
completion at the end of the war. The research site was sabotaged
by British spies and Norwegian partisans, which slowed down
their research. Historian Rainer Karlsch, in his 2005 book
Hitlers Bombe, has suggested that the Nazis may have tested
some sort of "atom bomb" in Thuringia in the last
year of the war; it may have been a radiological weapon (rather
than a fission weapon), though little reliable evidence of
this has surfaced. Some of the German scientists involved
also claimed to have sabotaged or falsely reported failures
due to personal moral disagreement with Nuclear bomb development.
Germany - While Germany is a signatory of the NPT, it has
the means to equip itself rapidly with nuclear weapons. It
has an advanced nuclear industry capable of manufacturing
reactors, enriching uranium, fuel fabrication, and fuel reprocessing
and it operates 19 power reactors producing one third of its
total electrical needs. On the other hand, Germany has since
1945 made no serious attempts of acquiring or developing its
own strategic delivery systems. Considerable numbers of nuclear
weapons have been stationed both in East and West Germany
during the Cold War, starting as early as 1955. Under the
nuclear sharing scheme, West German soldiers would in theory
have been authorized to use nuclear weapons provided by the
US in event of a massive Warsaw Pact attack. Several dozen
such weapons reputedly remain on bases in western Germany.
Since 1998, Germany has adopted a policy of eliminating nuclear
power, although slow progress had been made. On January
26, 2006, the former defence minister, Rupert Scholz, said
that Germany may need to build its own nuclear weapons to
counter terrorist threats. The Treaty on the Final Settlement
with Respect to Germany also specified that Germany wouldn't
acquire nuclear weapons.
Japan - Japan makes extensive use of nuclear energy in nuclear
reactors, generating a significant percentage of the electricity
in Japan. Japan has the third largest nuclear energy production
after the U.S. and France, and plans to produce over 40% of
its electricity using nuclear power by 2010. Significant amounts
of plutonium are created as a by-product of the energy production,
and Japan had 4.7 tons of plutonium in December 1995. Japan
also has its own centrifuge-based uranium enrichment program,
which could also be used to create highly enriched uranium
suitable for bombs. Experts believe Japan has the technology,
raw materials, and the capital to produce nuclear weapons
within one year if necessary, and some analysts consider it
a "de facto" nuclear state for this reason. Japan
has been quietly reconsidering its nuclear status because
of the ongoing crisis over North Korean nuclear weapons.
Source: WIKIPEDIA
Home Page
|