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Nukes Are "The Only Peacekeeping Weapons the World Has Ever Known," Says Waltz

An anonymous reader writes "Famed academic Kenneth Waltz for years has argued that more nukes around the world create peace. Why? Because the more nukes are around, the more people are afraid to start a war with a nuclear-armed state. Peace seems assured with a gun to the world's head. In a recent interview, he argues that Iran gaining nuclear weapons would be a good thing. He points out that 'President Obama and a number of others have advocated the abolition of nuclear weapons and many have accepted this as both a desirable and a realistic goal. Even entertaining the goal and contemplating the end seems rather strange. On one hand the world has known war since time immemorial, right through August 1945. Since then, there have been no wars among the major states of the world. War has been relegated to peripheral states (and, of course, wars within them). Nuclear weapons are the only peacekeeping weapons that the world has ever known. It would be strange for me to advocate for their abolition, as they have made wars all but impossible.'"

707 comments

  1. Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...someone screws up.

    1. Re:Inevitably... by GameboyRMH · · Score: 5, Informative

      Luckily that never happens and nukes are only launched after extensive consideration.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    2. Re:Inevitably... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Also, Waltz seems to be making the assumption that nuke prices and availability are going to magically remain stuck at 'moderately competent nation state run by pragmatic and slightly pessimistic people' indefinitely...

      That(along with the desire to have feeble little countries that can't say no to their betters' proxy wars, and a mutual desire to spend less on maintaining ICBMs) is really what bolsters the enthusiasm for arms control even among countries that already have lots and lots of nukes. Up to a point, the availability of nuclear arms can reduce conflict, or at least relocate it to countries nobody loves very much; but their broad availability could get unpleasant.

    3. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm not worried about someone screwing up.

      I'm worried about the one nation who figures out how to prematurely detonate a nuke from orbit.

      Imagine the world's nuclear stockpile becoming a liability overnight.

    4. Re:Inevitably... by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This just pushed wars underground.

      This is what creates FARC, AL Qaeda and KLA, etc.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    5. Re:Inevitably... by linear+a · · Score: 1

      They are easy to get rid of you know....

    6. Re:Inevitably... by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      [President Hathaway goes to push a huge red button; all the advisors shout for him not to]
      Advisor Cole: That button launches all of our nuclear missiles!
      President Hathaway: Well, then which button gets me a latte?!
      Advisor Wedgie: Err, that would be the other one, sir.
      [The camera zips back to show an identical button next to the first one; the President pushes it and serves himself a cup of coffee]
      President Hathaway: What idiot designed this thing? [Stares at his advisors accusingly]
      Advisor Wedgie: You did, sir.
      President Hathaway: Fair enough. Wilson, fire somebody!
      Wilson: Yes, sir, Mr. President.

    7. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And how many people have they really killed?
      More have died in the retarded wars against ideology than they killed. All we have to fear is fear itself. Because apparently when we piss ourselves, we end up doing lethally stupid things.

    8. Re:Inevitably... by Chewbacon · · Score: 4, Informative

      Working in healthcare, I've come across some sick fucks. Some are born that way, some just wake up that way one morning. Any one person's behavior doesn't surprise me anymore. Regardless of how one ends up going ape shit, eventually one of them will have a nuclear weapon at their disposal.

      --
      Chewbacon
      The Bible is like Wikipedia: written by a bunch of people and verifiable by questionable sources.
    9. Re:Inevitably... by shentino · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Nukes are easy for YOU to get rid of.

      Making sure everyone ELSE gets rid of THEIRS is the hard part.

    10. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Follow the thread. In this scenario, making sure everyone else gets rid of theirs is pretty simple.

    11. Re:Inevitably... by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      I'm not worried about someone screwing up.

      I'm worried about the one nation who figures out how to prematurely detonate a nuke from orbit.

      Imagine the world's nuclear stockpile becoming a liability overnight.

      I'm worried about aliens with tractor beams.

      So there.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    12. Re:Inevitably... by mhajicek · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't think they'd do all that much if detonated in their silos. There's a reason they're set to detonate at an altitude over the target. And if you're worried about fallout, you should be aware that there have already been over 1000 nuclear detonations, the majority of which took place in the SW united states.

    13. Re:Inevitably... by non0score · · Score: 1

      Exactly. The mutual destruction endgame prevention scenario only applies to nations or groups of people with something to lose. Not everyone/group who have the means to get a nuke has something to lose....

    14. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reminds me of what happened whenever a nation had lost all cities in the Amiga game Nuclear War. All the remaining stockpile of said nation would be launched at random targets. So if you were unlucky, that final barrage may wipe out your remaining ones and effectively blow up the planet.

    15. Re:Inevitably... by AugstWest · · Score: 2

      Yeah, by writing this article in the first place.

      I mean, what does "peace" mean?

      Does it mean that a government with nukes can abuse the crap out of its own people because outside forces dare not intercede for fear of starting a nuclear war?

    16. Re:Inevitably... by AaronLS · · Score: 0

      Reminds me of a story where some nuclear weapons were armed accidentally during routine transportation across the US, luckily it didn't get worse than that.

      This reminds me of the "Everyone should have guns, and then we'd all be safer." Maybe in the extremely rare circumstances where someone has gone postal would some gun toting by-standard be able to stop them. However, IMO there would be a much greater occurrence of "I'm really angry and have lost all sense of judgement, oh and BTW I have a gun to shoot you with, as well as any by-standard who tries to stop me." or "I have gotten really drunk and thought you called me a name so I will shoot you because in my inebriated state that seems like the appropriate response." This is how a game over poker turned into a homicide in the wild west. People make mistakes and poor judgement. When you introduce guns or nuclear weapons into the equation, the consequences of their mistakes or poor judgement increases proportionally with the power of the weapon which they use.

      I am not a proponent of gun controls, but I am definitely against every person in the world toting a firearm at all times of the day, and in the same respect I am very much against everyone having nuclear weapons, as well as any country having enough nuclear weapons to wipe out civilization. Not only is it dangerous, but it costs a huge amount of money just to manage, track, and secure the stockpile of nukes. It's wasteful.

    17. Re:Inevitably... by icebike · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Don't forget that nukes are, for the most part concentrated in the hands of nations that value human life, or at least
      their own lives. Once that is changed, and the whacko religious states that see death as a pathway to virgins get
      ahold of nukes and a deliver vehicle all bets are off.

      AL Qaeda are symbolic pikers compared to religious zealots bent on ridding the world of something they
      perceive as evil and willing to sacrifice themselves and their own citizens to do so.

      In a world where everyone has weaponry of Mutually Assured Destruction, what means are left to maintain any order?
      One could argue it just gives anyone a free hand to do anything short of launching to anyone else.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    18. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      War is Peace.

      "Nothing can possibly go wrong" - Fuckushima and government "officials"

      Keyword: degrade

    19. Re:Inevitably... by oldmac31310 · · Score: 0

      'By-standard' eh? Not a word. You want 'bystander'.

      --
      http://www.acetonestudio.com
    20. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This reminds me of the "Everyone should have guns, and then we'd all be safer."

      "Safer" means relative to dying by the tens of millions in the next Holocaust or Stalinist regime because We The People collectively decided that the police and military should be the only people allowed to carry guns.

      Read some history. Think it through.

    21. Re:Inevitably... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Total death count of ALL of those terror organisations over age after WW2 is still but a tiny fraction of WW2 losses.

      World now has several times the population it had during WW2.

      Are you sure you want to argue mathematics and victims numbers on slashdot? People here tend to know math better then average. If WW3 happens then nukes or not, we're looking at nine digits victim count.

    22. Re:Inevitably... by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Value human life?

      USA == Drone Warfare, Phosphorus Bombardment of Civilian Populations, Depleted Uranium, Prevetor of Land Mine Ban, Napalm Villages, Only Use of Atom Bomb, Moro Massacre, etc.

      Al Qaeda? A useful instrument of CIA operations.

      Obama? Best president the CIA ever placed - better than Bush Sr.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    23. Re:Inevitably... by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      Or in the hands of whacko religious states that see starting a war by making up false accusations about non existing weapons as a means to gain oil, profit for the weapon industry and re-election.

      And isn't sending soldiers to war also sacrificing citizens? Maybe with the difference that it's not certain they will die, but they're sent, knowing they could die and if they return, they'll probably be fucked up mentally so they commit suicide.

      In war there is no them or us.
      In the end it only knows losers.
      The only way to win is not to play.

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.
    24. Re:Inevitably... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Once that is changed, and the whacko religious states that see death as a pathway to virgins get
      ahold of nukes and a deliver vehicle all bets are off.

      You don't give those guys enough credit. Ever notice how guys like Bin Laden are not on the front lines or strapping on suicide vests? They are fighting a war, and the grunts are expendable. Getting their entire organization or country wiped out is not something they want.

      If any highly religious country is likely to start a nuclear war it is Israel.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    25. Re:Inevitably... by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Yes, Pakistan, China, and Russia all value human life very highly.

      Why do you feel the need to invade other countries? "Maintain order" is bullshit. War is chaos, the opposite of order.

    26. Re:Inevitably... by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Right, because it is so simple for a crazy person to set off a nuke, much less transport one without detection. Yes, a world locked in unending war between major states is certainly a superior option to the slim to none possibility of a crazy person with a nuke.

    27. Re:Inevitably... by tmosley · · Score: 1

      But everything to gain. You think Israel would roll in with tanks, planes, and armored bulldozers if Palestine had a nuke?

      Nukes are the great equalizers. There was a time when bandits could victimize the same village over and over, taking food and valuables, raping women, stealing children, etc. But the rifle put an end to all that. Now you might have a few thugs break in, but it is unlikely that they will do so over and over, and in the same place. Eventually, their victims will get wise and they will meet a hail of gunfire next time they try to come in.

    28. Re:Inevitably... by tmosley · · Score: 1

      History doesn't really seem to back that up. Civil war seems just as likely in stable, non-nuclear nations as it does in nuclear ones. Pakistan is probably the closest nuclear power to having a civil war. I guess we will see.

      Also, you don't need nukes for no-one to interfere in your intra-border genocide. No-one ever did anything about that before nukes either. Unless there was something to gain by doing so. You know, same as today.

    29. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget that nukes are, for the most part concentrated in the hands of nations that value human life

      bahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!!!!

       

      or at least their own lives

       
      ...which unfortunately only includes politicians and corporate execs and major shareholders, and doesn't extend to the lives of regular citizens

      the US and USSR/Russia are the most brutal and repressive regime states the world has ever seen. the US as a "beacon of freedom" is farce and merely part of the brainwashing propaganda

      the only plausible reason the US doesn't want the rest of the world to have nukes is so that it can rule with its own nuclear fist

      anyone who thinks otherwise is a brainwahsed sheep

    30. Re:Inevitably... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      That frankly is irrelevant to the discussion. The very idea of "getting rid off" nuclear weapons is flawed.
      Put it in Slashdot terms information wants to be free. You can not undo the knowledge of how to make them. I f the major powers get ride of their large arsenals then small arsenals become even more powerful.
      Let's say that Russia, China, France, the UK, and the US get rid of our weapons. Then having say just five or ten bombs makes you the single most powerful nation on earth or gives you a huge advantage. So do you think that Iran, North Korea, Israel, Syria, India, Pakistan, and or Venezuela will all pass up that chance? I do not think so. So in the end what will the major powers getting rid of nuclear weapons do? It will make it more desirable and IMHO more likely that a whack attack will get and use one not less likely.
      What I like to point out to people is that out of pocket calculators, color tv, transistor radios, and nuclear weapons that nuclear weapons are the lowest tech.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    31. Re:Inevitably... by lennier · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Read some history. Think it through.

      Yeah, about that. Weren't the Blackshirts and Brownshirts actually citizens' militias who weren't part of the police and military after all? And in, eg, Syria today, aren't the Shabiha also quasi-civilian militias?

      But all the members of these regimes are all safer because such militias exist, I'm sure.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    32. Re:Inevitably... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Until the crazy's form a nation

    33. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May I remind you that, so far, the only nuclear attacks in history have been carried out by a state that "values human lives" according to you.

    34. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US, China, Russians, and all the other major powers realize the consequences of starting a nuclear war with each other. And they have proved over time they are capable of securing their nuclear weapons and never threatening anyone with a nuclear attack. Even when the powers that be are talking about what options are on the metaphorical table during a military response they never even mention nuclear weapons. The big problem in the middle east and South Asia is not about countries like Iran, Pakistan, or even N. Korea possessing nuclear weapons. These countries also understand the likely consequences of launching a nuclear attack. The problem is that these countries have never exhibited any proof that they wouldn't provide a nuclear weapon to one of their 3rd party proxies. If they provided a small back pack nuclear weapon to a 3rd party they would most likely believe they would be safe from retaliation. However, nuclear weapon radioactive signatures can eventually be traced back to the source. But that would take a some time and there would also be no missile trace to identify the perpetrator. Would the country who suffered a single nuclear attack retaliate with nukes 6 months to a year later? Most likely not which effectively helps ensure the source country isn't nuked in response. Nuclear weapons are the last defense against invasion for the major powers but if the late Saddam Hussein, Assad, Gaddafi, or any other similar leaders had a nuclear deterrent they could do anything they want to their citizens without fear of military interference from foreign countries.

    35. Re:Inevitably... by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In the end frankly it won't matter whether we have 'em or they have 'em because as the resources run dry there WILL be more wars, only for dwindling supplies instead of beliefs. We simply haven't been able to come up with anything even close to replacing the fossil fuels, not to mention as populations increase, especially in the third world where things are unstable as fuck, well shit IS gonna happen and adding more nukes to the mix would NOT be a good thing.

      The reason peace lasted so long between the USA and USSR was because we were frankly mirror images of each other. Both countries had plenty of resources, both countries had largely secular rulers and belief systems, both saw that the other was an even match for them and that MAD insured that even the winner would be seriously fucked up.

      All that shit goes right out the window when you have hundreds of millions that believe WWIII will bring back their spiritual leader that will magically lay the enemy to waste and give them control of the planet. When you are dealing with THAT level of batshit frankly pointing out MAD would insure their homes glowed in the dark wouldn't do jack because they'd just argue right up until impact that their redeemer would turn the bombs into rainbows. Trying to put East/West ideology into that context is not only retarded but dangerous, because even Stalin wasn't keen on starting wars that he had no chance of winning.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    36. Re:Inevitably... by rtb61 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You really don't get it do you. Nukes are the weapon that most effectively targets leadership, the idiots pushing the buttons, the shit heads hiding in bunkers while every else does the fighting and dying. Every knew that wars would come to an end as soon as they created a missile that targeted the 'other guys' leadership from the top down. They are not so eager to fight when it is their worthless narcissistic arses on the line, then it's all let's negotiate and give peace a chance.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    37. Re:Inevitably... by matunos · · Score: 1

      The flaw in the logic that a truly whacko religious state that sees death as a pathway to virgins (assuming that's a good thing) would just kill themselves.

      But the leaders of such a state rarely actually believe that. bin Laden was perfectly happy to send impressionable youths to their suicide-murder deaths while he was watching porn with his (non-virginal) wives at his hideouts.

      Now, if someone like bin Laden got their hands on a nuclear weapon, I don't doubt he or she'd use it. They are non-state actors who are not easily targetable (though in the long run it's a poor calculation for them too, as bin Laden learned). I doubt the Ayatollah of Iran would make the same calculation. If it was clear that there was no way to carry out a nuclear strike that wouldn't be traced back to him, the Ayatollah is not going to carry one out. They are survivors, and turning their country into glass is not a very good survival strategy for them.

      I am not a proponent of nuclear proliferation, but the key is to make sure that where there is proliferation, the weapons remain in the hands of the state leadership. As long as they have something to lose (their power base, which they spent considerable time in achieving and maintaining), they are much less likely to trigger a nuclear exchange.

      I am much less worried about a rogue state directly engaging in a nuclear strike than I am about nuclear states miscalculating and backing themselves into corners they cannot get out of. For instance, had Kennedy ordered an invasion of Cuba during the Cuban missile crisis as some advised, it would have most likely led to some level of nuclear war. Instead, the administration made it clear to the Soviets what the stakes were: it wasn't just Cuba that would be annihilated in a counter-attack, it was Russia. With those stakes established, the rational heads prevailed. Khrushchev realized it wasn't in his or the USSR's interested to rest their fate in the hands of a Cuban revolutionary leader of a tiny client state.

    38. Re:Inevitably... by matunos · · Score: 1

      Most of those sick fucks you see in healthcare, however, don't have the means to take over a state and get access to its nuclear arsenal. They tend to self-destruct long before that point. And those who do get that far still have to maintain enough of a hold on power to override the objections of more rational subordinates.

      I wouldn't want to bet the survival of the species on it, but the closer an insane leader got to launching a preemptive nuclear attack, the closer they would get to being ignored, overthrown, and/or assassinated.

    39. Re:Inevitably... by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You should read a bit of history, not even that far back, about how international relations worked in the 19th century. Or, in general, at any time between the start of the dark ages in the 8-9th century to into the 20th century.

      Why do people feel the need to invade other countries ? Simple, historically the first and foremost reason has been because the invader believes they can win and do whatever they want, from annexing a tiny stroke of land to "this is what we do, this is how we live" mongol armies, to muslims massacring entire populations. More often than not, they were right that they could attack without consequences. Tactically speaking, wars are most often over before they even begin, since one thing is for absolutely sure : when it comes to war, nobody's interested in a fair fight.

      But that's not why the west wages wars, at least not in the last 50-60 years. The west makes war to protect trade relations. Those wars are comparatively tiny, and the invader retreats without replacing the current population as most historical wars did.

      Oh and by far the scariest weapon is not an atom bomb, which is really kind of pathetic, barely matching the death toll of a single bombing run, but the simple and humble knife. Several muslim empires have killed more then 200 million people each using only the simple and humble knife, and a quite dull badly made brittle knife at that. No other state or weapon has come anywhere close to those piles of corpses.

      The real problem politicians have with an atom bomb is that it's near unstoppable : your hopes of protecting any location from an atomic bomb are small at best, and so you cannot protect your own ass. If you have a nuke, which is the size of a large woman's purse and the weight of 5 bricks of orange juice, it is trivial to kill, say Obama or whoever follows him, or Kim Il Sung for that matter. Just bring it near any public appearance of the guy and ...

      They will have the same problems with automated sniper robots, for example.

    40. Re:Inevitably... by davester666 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, they haven't killed many, but we've let them affect the everyday lives of millions if not billions of people around the world. Just because they've killed maybe 10,000 people [to be generous].

      It's kind of like being bitten by a mosquito, and you decide you must never again be bitten by a mosquito, so you put on a suit of armor, but with holes so you see, hear, eat, and touch things without taking it off, while you work on exterminating all mosquito's on Earth.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    41. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget that nukes are, for the most part concentrated in the hands of nations that value human life,

      Yeah, like the US in IRAQ, Israel Casting Lead at women and children in Gaza, Russia in Chechnya, China in Tibet ...

      The weapon of mass destruction owning countries have almost without exception shown the same level of evil as all previous empires.

    42. Re:Inevitably... by Jeremi · · Score: 2

      Until the crazy's form a nation

      The likelihood of crazy people having their act together enough to form a nation with nuclear capability (or to take over a nation that already owns nukes, and then figure out how to use them) is pretty slim.

      I think one problem with American media is they like to portray Muslim leaders as irrational. This makes for good propaganda ("why shouldn't we invade Iraq, it's being led by a madman anyway"), but in reality those leaders are quite rational, but they are playing by the political/sociological rules of their own culture, which is very different from American culture, and that is why their words and actions seem odd to Americans. (Which is not to say that their actions are moral or justified, only that they are not raving suicidal lunatics and therefore are unlikely to sacrifice their own lives or their homeland in a pointless nuclear exchange)

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    43. Re:Inevitably... by gdy · · Score: 1

      whacko religious states

      You mean like Iran/Persia which has never started a war in about a century? As opposed to peace-loving enlightened America?

    44. Re:Inevitably... by StormyWeather · · Score: 1

      But the chances are high a crazy person will gain control of a country that already has nukes. Or someone will develop a true brain disorder that drives them insane after they come to power.

    45. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The wars being waged now are over supplies, not beliefs. The beliefs are the rallying call of the warmongers.

    46. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget that nukes are, for the most part concentrated in the hands of nations that value human life, or at least
      their own lives. Once that is changed, and the whacko religious states that see death as a pathway to virgins get
      ahold of nukes and a deliver vehicle all bets are off.

      AL Qaeda are symbolic pikers compared to religious zealots bent on ridding the world of something they
      perceive as evil and willing to sacrifice themselves and their own citizens to do so.

      In a world where everyone has weaponry of Mutually Assured Destruction, what means are left to maintain any order?
      One could argue it just gives anyone a free hand to do anything short of launching to anyone else.

      The argument falls apart because America is largely Christian and also believes in a better life after death. They are only as crazy as our propagandist make them. After 911 they offered help and we gave them the finger. Oh and the 'axis of evil' was a tip off that puppet strings of war were being pulled... Guess who

    47. Re:Inevitably... by Christopher_T. · · Score: 1

      It doesn't really push wars underground. It's a cold thing to say, but I'd rather lose the WTC than all of Lower Manhattan. And we've had ideological/religious rebellions, brush fire wars and small-scale and larger scale banditry under one banner or another for all of our history. But the war on (some) terrorists, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, the wars in Africa aren't going to end civilization as we know it. Thank John von Neuman for creating the game theory that proved nuclear war was, on a national level, the ultimate zero-sum game. And, with the Soviet Union no longer existing and sponsoring terrorists and "wars of national liberation", the world despite what you see in the news, is becoming a more peaceful place.

    48. Re:Inevitably... by Somebody+is+Grar · · Score: 0

      I think the point was that no one really has. Like you, however, I am concerned about non-geographic entities (e.g., Al-Qaeda, FARC, etc.) getting nuclear weapons, and am worried, if not surprised, that our government has not announced any kind of policy other than a belligerent "we'll give as good as we get" rant from Bush Jr. Some kind of notice has to be served on the governments of the states where these non-national groups operate that they are the ones who will suffer if such a thing were ever to happen. A start would be to put Al Qaeda on notice that the first nuclear target would be Mecca. Hopefully, that would give them pause. If not, it might at least prompt the Saudis to rein in the Wahabis and Salafis based on their soil.

      --
      Grar II
    49. Re:Inevitably... by samboneym · · Score: 1

      Comments like this make me wish mods could go higher than 5. Bravo sir.

    50. Re:Inevitably... by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      You should read a bit of history...Several muslim empires have killed more then 200 million people each using only the simple and humble knife...

      Since you're lecturing on history... have a source?

      Seriously, we didn't go much above 200 million until the industrial revolution. I have trouble believing that "several empires" killed off the entire global population with knives.

      If you have a nuke, which is the size of a large woman's purse and the weight of 5 bricks of orange juice, it is trivial to...

      They'd pause time and fly away on their unicorns before your purse-sized nuclear weapon was detonated. At least, that's what would happen in neocon fantasy land.

      The "suitcase sized" nuke is basically the world's largest duffle bag and quite heavy. Even if they *could* be made purse-sized and lightweight, it'd be ridiculous to use them for targeted assassinations. If you can get that close, just use conventional explosives. And if you can't get close but are willing to use nukes, just use a normal-sized one.

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    51. Re:Inevitably... by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      But the chances are high a crazy person will gain control of a country that already has nukes. Or someone will develop a true brain disorder that drives them insane after they come to power.

      Fortunately, launching a nuke is not (yet) a one-person job. Hypothetical Crazy Leader would still need to convince the military (or whichever organization is in charge of maintaining and operating the nuclear weapons) that he was sane, or they'd likely refuse the order to launch.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    52. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was born some time after the A Bomb was was twice dropped on Japan. There has not been a day in my life where there hasn't been a war somewhere on the planet (often more than one at the same time). When I grew up, It was called by 'western powers' as the 'cold war', however, if you lived in Africa, Asia or Central and South America these were bloody wars, none of whom were prevented by the existence of the nuclear bomb.

    53. Re:Inevitably... by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Muslim leaders are not irrational at all, but there is definitely a suicide-prone bent to their extremists. Every religion has extremists, of course, but most of them are not suicidal as a rule.

      Do not believe it can be so difficult to create an organized nation that can become extremist. In WWII, the Japanese had that sort of extremism at the command of the Emperor. Hirohito could well have let his country be massively invaded and fought to the end and the Japanese of that time period would have put up that kind of fight. While he was not in full control of the war machine personally, he was about the only person who could have stopped the war and surrendered. They were a nation state that could have, in theory, had the resources to build a nuclear bomb in a later age where the physics were better understood outside of a smaller cadre of top scientists working in a US lab. It certainly didn't take the Soviets long to replicate the trick.

    54. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, we didn't go much above 200 million until the industrial revolution. I have trouble believing that "several empires" killed off the entire global population with knives.

      Euhm the province of Rome under Caesar had more than 1 million inhabitants alone (and the city of Rome more than half a million). By the time the dark ages arrived, nearly a millenium later, it is generally believed the world had ~ 600 million living humans. So there's plenty of people.

      There's another problem with your counterargument : please keep in mind that it's not like these genocides occured in one day. The start of islam was a massacre of ~10.000 people, mostly Jews at first then mostly muslims later, but that took at least 30 years to actually happen, and was essentially a series of attacks on small tribes of a few hundred people at first, and twice a little over a thousand people near the end. These genocides comitted by for example the muslim mughals in India took half a millenium to complete, it's just that every few months or so they'd commit another massacre of a few thousand people, and several loosely affiliated "kingdoms", all mughal, would do this. Same story in Spain with the Moors, the total death toll of their genocides numbered in the millions, but this was the result of a few hundred people at most every few weeks, and they kept doing that for centuries. They probably did not even kill for racist or religious reasons, it's just the way muslims fight, and it was codified into the religion after the fact : they "raid". They have no internal logistics, they don't feed or clothe or even arm their troops. These armies simply plunder food, horses, animals and so on while they advance. So halting the killing was essentially the end of their way of life (and keep in mind that most of these people in India were 20th generation plunderers/massacrers/raiders at one point), and being defeated even once was a disaster for them, leading to massive collapses due to a complete lack of alternative supply routes. Same story with the Mongol invasions. The total death toll must have numbered in the tens of millions at least, but this happened because Mongols were essentially organised thieves, who had a cultural habit/rule/religion/whatever you want to call it of killing everyone they stole from. Everytime they ran out of meat or horses, which happened every few years, they'd attack a village they considered vulnerable, killing everyone and stealing their animals, and sometimes a few women. So every 1-2 years or so they'd kill a few hundred. Only there were about a hundred groups following that principle, and they kept on doing this for over 3 centuries.

      That's historical massacres for you. They're not like 9/11 where everything happened in 2 hours, or even like the holocaust where everything happened in 2-3 years, with the vast majority of it in less than one year. These massacres took centuries and did not significanly lower total human population, for the same reason cat attacks don't usually lower mouse populations : there's a sort of balance. They're more like the Soviet massacres, except for the central control part : they were long protracted affairs that affected lots of people over the course of decades or centuries.

      If you do it the Roman way (because they're -probably- really the state that started what eventually became the massive muslim massacres), you can kill 200 million people in a population of 10 million. You'd just take 40 generations to do it. And the total population can still rise.

      The "suitcase sized" nuke is basically the world's largest duffle bag and quite heavy. Even if they *could* be made purse-sized and lightweight, it'd be ridiculous to use them for targeted assassinations. If you can get that close, just use conventional explosives. And if you can't get close but are willing to use nukes, just use a normal-sized one.

      Conventional explosives are all but useless in the open air and have a range of, at best, 10 meter

    55. Re:Inevitably... by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      Not sure if you're just AC or OP as AC? Either way, I suppose I'll take the bait.

      ...a massacre of ~10.000 people, mostly Jews at first then mostly muslims later, but that took at least 30 years to actually happen, and was essentially a series of attacks on small tribes of a few hundred people at first, and twice a little over a thousand people near the end. These genocides comitted by for example the muslim mughals in India took half a millenium to complete, it's just that every few months or so they'd commit another massacre of a few thousand people, and several loosely affiliated "kingdoms", all mughal, would do this.

      Very loaded words. You're essentially lumping all violence committed by all members of all sects of Islam and calling it one giant unprecedented massacre. Do you have *any* sources that give real evidence that Muslims were significantly more violent than other groups during these periods?

      Same story in Spain with the Moors, the total death toll of their genocides numbered in the millions, but this was the result of a few hundred people at most every few weeks, and they kept doing that for centuries.

      Al-Andalus was pretty damned tolerant (and prosperous). Of course, if you call "a few hundred" deaths from ALL forms of violence every few weeks a genocide, you'd agree that the war on drugs is a giant freaking genocide+massacre+holocaust, right?

      They probably did not even kill for racist or religious reasons, it's just the way muslims fight, and it was codified into the religion after the fact : they "raid". They have no internal logistics, they don't feed or clothe or even arm their troops. These armies simply plunder food, horses, animals and so on while they advance.

      ... well I guess if you define "Muslim" as uncivilized, haphazard warrior groups that didn't care about logistics, then yes. I seem to recall plenty of Muslim groups being rather different, though. The Ottomans, for example. As for pillaging, that's pretty standard in warfare. Yes, they killed and pilfered to the best of their abilities in war, just like every other society.

      ...These massacres took centuries and did not significanly lower total human population, for the same reason cat attacks don't usually lower mouse populations : there's a sort of balance.

      We finally agree! The "massacres" were such a low percentage of the population that they didn't have a significant impact. In other words, routine violence in an anarchic system, relatively balanced because both sides inflicted and absorbed damage.

      I've read a physics dissertation claiming that by using 60% polonium 40% uranium you could create a very small nuclear weapon that weighed less than 2 kg with close to 5 kiloton yield. Obviously that has not been tried, and of course this would be bloody hard to make.

      That's still my point. "Purse-sized" nukes have not actually been developed. Even if they can be made in theory, actors that would need to use a tiny nuke for assassinations will lack the capability for some time to come.

      (on rockets) You have to prevent their lauch or it's game over. In practice these rockets will be able to destroy any city-block sized region, and it is still considered all but impossible to protect even tiny areas like, say the white house, the pentagon or the capitol from getting hit. On the other hand, they would see the rockets coming, and would probably have effective evacuation measures in place. But you can still see the problem, right ?

      I can't really see a "problem". At least not back to GGP?'s point. There is no reason to believe mini-nukes are a credible threat from any but the most advanced states. These states know the consequences and know they will not be able to remain anonymous. If I were a major power, and I *really* wanted to assassinate POTUS, I would have better, less costly methods ava

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    56. Re:Inevitably... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Extreme religion does funny things to people's heads. We can't rule out anything.

    57. Re:Inevitably... by KingBenny · · Score: 1

      i thought they were the main reason for overpopulation and there you have it, the homo sapiens is obviously too primitive to understand impact on a global ecosystem and the need to implement birth control before things get out of hand. Primitive cultures have one tool to prevent an area from getting overcrowded : war. Now there's nukes and no one dares, but the population problem still persists because the culture (global) is still as primitive. Apes with sticks -> apes with guns -> apes with nukes ... global mexican standoff

      --
      Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?
    58. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "All that shit goes right out the window when you have hundreds of millions that believe WWIII will bring back their spiritual leader [wikipedia.org] that will magically lay the enemy to waste and give them control of the planet. When you are dealing with THAT level of batshit frankly pointing out MAD would insure their homes glowed in the dark wouldn't do jack because they'd just argue right up until impact that their redeemer would turn the bombs into rainbows. "

      Good comment. My thoughts as well...

    59. Re:Inevitably... by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      Yeah, they haven't killed many, but we've let them affect the everyday lives of millions if not billions of people around the world. Just because they've killed maybe 10,000 people [to be generous].

      The proxy armies of Al Quaeda (mostly from some country called "America" ; who fell for their politician's lies and have since been led around by the nose by Al Quaeda) have killed many more people than Al Quaeda themselves. When the proxy wars (Yemen, Afghanistan, Iraq) are added up, the body count is more likely approaching a million.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    60. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...a massacre of ~10.000 people, mostly Jews at first then mostly muslims later, but that took at least 30 years to actually happen, and was essentially a series of attacks on small tribes of a few hundred people at first, and twice a little over a thousand people near the end. These genocides comitted by for example the muslim mughals in India took half a millenium to complete, it's just that every few months or so they'd commit another massacre of a few thousand people, and several loosely affiliated "kingdoms", all mughal, would do this.

      Very loaded words. You're essentially lumping all violence committed by all members of all sects of Islam and calling it one giant unprecedented massacre. Do you have *any* sources that give real evidence that Muslims were significantly more violent than other groups during these periods?

      Euhm this were massacres comitted under the direct orders from the founder of the religion, and it is repeated over and over again in their holy book that they're proud of these. These acts are more islamic than the term "islam" (originally used to be "mohammeddan").

      Same story in Spain with the Moors, the total death toll of their genocides numbered in the millions, but this was the result of a few hundred people at most every few weeks, and they kept doing that for centuries.

      Al-Andalus was pretty damned tolerant (and prosperous). Of course, if you call "a few hundred" deaths from ALL forms of violence every few weeks a genocide, you'd agree that the war on drugs is a giant freaking genocide+massacre+holocaust, right?

      No. The attacks in al-andalus were armies massacring villages to the last man, maybe leaving some women alive as slaves. There were a few bigger religious genocides later on too (the granada/toledo massacres, at the height of their "tolerance"). And yes, the muslims used Jews to administer the logistics of this (before they started massacring them), which is why this country has somehow managed to court the term tolerant. I seriously doubt you would want to be on the receiving end of their tolerance in practice though.

      They probably did not even kill for racist or religious reasons, it's just the way muslims fight, and it was codified into the religion after the fact : they "raid". They have no internal logistics, they don't feed or clothe or even arm their troops. These armies simply plunder food, horses, animals and so on while they advance.

      ... well I guess if you define "Muslim" as uncivilized, haphazard warrior groups that didn't care about logistics, then yes. I seem to recall plenty of Muslim groups being rather different, though. The Ottomans, for example. As for pillaging, that's pretty standard in warfare. Yes, they killed and pilfered to the best of their abilities in war, just like every other society.

      No I don't. I define muslim as what the original group of muslims was, because that's what every muslim kid gets taught is ideal moral behavior. It is a different culture that doesn't match ours, and so obviously many of it's components and values, including religious and ethnic genocide, paedophilia, racist stealing (stealing is allowed as long as the victim is not muslim or "protected" by a muslim state), raiding, piracy, and so on.

      What you're confused about it the non-generality of Christian values. Christianity is a pretty unique religion in quite a few ways, and it's values have grown to be near universal. That doesn't mean they are somehow shared between other religions. There *are* other religions that don't, for example, include religious genocide, but they're few and far between. Protecting the weak as a value is also relatively unique as a value, for example. Most religions, like islam, simply make the weak the slaves of the strong. Equality, another value of Christianity (even if not exactly well-applied at times) is almost unique. In

    61. Re:Inevitably... by jonadab · · Score: 1

      That's not the same kind of war.

      Prior to the mid-twentieth century, wars were frequently fought between opposing powers and even superpowers, with one or more of the top five or so most powerful nations in the world on each side of the conflict. This kind of war is devastating not just to the individual countries involved but to the entire world, not just economically but in other ways as well. Conscription was taken for granted as necessary for the survival of any free state. Entire generations were decimated and their educations cut short. Huge amounts of infrastructure were destroyed.

      There are *very* few fifty-year periods in history when this sort of thing didn't happen. Assyria versus Egypt. Assyria versus Elam. Babylon versus Assyria. Babylon versus Egypt. Persia versus Media. Persia versus Assyria. Persia versus Greece. Greece versus any major power (of the day) that you care to name, including each other (the Seleucids versus the Ptolemies especially). Rome versus Greece. Rome versus Carthage. Civil war within the Roman empire. Rome versus Parthia. Rome versus Sassanid Persia. Western Rome versus the Byzantine Empire. Internal civil war within the Western Roman empire. The Byzantine Empire versus Sassanid Persia. Western Rome versus several of the most powerful groups of their former subjects (the Franks, the Gauls, the Hunns, etc.). The Byzantines versus the Caliphate. Western Rome (what was left of it) versus the Caliphate. The Mongols versus any major power of the day you care to name. The Holy Roman Empire versus any European power of the day you care to name. France versus Prussia. Spain versus Portugal. Spain versus England. England versus France. France versus Germany. France versus England. Several Revolutions in the British Empire. Revolution in France. France versus the rest of Europe. England versus the United States in The Stupidest War Ever. The Ottomans versus Russia, France, and England. Germany versus Everybody. Germany versus Everybody, Take 2.

      And then suddenly it stopped -- mostly. The second half of the twentieth century (assuming you don't count the almost-entirely-non-military "Cold War" as a war -- I think there were a couple of military aircraft shot down) is one of those rare periods where none of the world's major powers were in active combat against one another -- at least, not directly. There have been conflicts between some of the major powers and one another's loosely-allied quasi-puppet associates, but since about 1950 the major powers have all avoided directly fighting one another.

      It's not perfect world peace, obviously. But it's an improvement.

      Perfect world peace can of course only be achieved through a single worldwide absolutely tyrannical militarily-enforced dictatorship. Which would be great, if the dictator were [long list of characteristics that are uncommon among humans in general, several of which are ridiculously uncommon among dictators in particular].

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    62. Re:Inevitably... by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1

      These are still the macroeconomic superpowers - that created and acted through large states in the past, and now joust through their proxies.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    63. Re:Inevitably... by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      You Islamophobia is pretty abhorrent, just as well white people never did anything bad.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    64. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's cute. Arabs could pass for white people if they merely changed clothes (and 99% of them are in suits except on their wedding day these days anyway). Iranians/Iraqi are effectively indistinguishable from Europeans without genetic tests (and those would produce a large error rate). These are the ones responsible for most of the massacres (because the mughal muslims were even more white than arabs). Their prophet was even whiter than they were, except for a "large black spot" in his face which is referred to as the evil eye. A majority of muslims is whiter than Spaniards.

      Which means you're a moron, unable to tell a book from a skin color.

      This of course makes the racism at the airport based on looks argument even more stupid than it is : if these guys "look muslim", it's only because they want to emphasize that fact, or (mostly) in the case of women, because they're forced to. Both are very bad. And about racism based on identity cards, well, they do the same to me because I'm "Russian", which is incidentally not what it says on my passport, so you'll just have to live with that as far as I'm concerned.

      It's kinda sad to see how the racism card keeps getting dumber and dumber. We're talking about a religion here, and you're mostly illustrating that you have trouble keeping a book separate from skin color, and I bet you don't even feel stupid about it. But your remark illustrates the intelligence level present in most "racism" discussions have.

      As far as I'm concerned facts are not racist, including in the cases where they talk about the difference between people of different ethnicities. Saying that islam is based on military conquest and massacres is about racist as saying women have breasts is sexist. Of course lots of things are based on massacres and still have a good reputation, like the French revolution for example. But that doesn't mean that of all historical genocidal ideologies islam is by far the most constant cause of genocides is anything but a fact.

      And before you say it, that makes the question whether islam is inherently genocidal a very easy question, with a very inconvenient answer.

    65. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think one problem with American media is they like to portray Muslim leaders as irrational.

      Not just you guys. Everybody not living within USA borders is either a communist or a terrorist.
      Haven't you heard that Europe is the cause why the USA is doing so bad economically.
      We won't even cut back on exports to help the good old US of Capitalists, fucking commies we are ;)

    66. Re:Inevitably... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I mean, what does "peace" mean?

      Does it mean that a government with nukes can abuse the crap out of its own people because outside forces dare not intercede for fear of starting a nuclear war?

      Oh really? My my, what a good Samaritan! What happens if said government is a superpower even without nukes? You don't remember recent history? There are other forms of help that don't include military engagement.

      IMHO, people unable to overthrow their government on their own don't even deserve help. Today expectations of certain intervention fuels half baked, premature and domestically under-supported rebellions, and if you provoke or simulate atrocities against civilians - instant victory! Ergo: because of the promise of foreign intervention, you win by letting your own innocents die horribly. It has become a pattern, it is rubber-stamped all over the globe.

    67. Re:Inevitably... by adonoman · · Score: 1

      All that shit goes right out the window when you have hundreds of millions that believe WWIII will bring back their spiritual leader that will magically lay the enemy to waste and give them control of the planet.

      Unfortunately for the world, there is also a good number of batshit crazy Christians who believe the same thing.

    68. Re:Inevitably... by Jesrad · · Score: 1

      Weren't the Blackshirts [wikipedia.org] and Brownshirts [wikipedia.org] actually citizens' militias who weren't part of the police and military after all?

      Actually, no. They were paramilitary forces comprised of volunteers, and only used the name "militia" without actually trying to uphold law and order (which normally is the point of forming a militia). They were about as civilian as any form of organized crime can be, including terrorist organizations. Were they distinct from the state ? Yes, but that did not make them part of civil society either.

      --
      Maybe we deserve this world ?
    69. Re:Inevitably... by AaronLS · · Score: 1

      There's a big difference between carrying a gun around at all times in your waist band, and having guns in your home should you need to defend your rights if/when the time comes.

    70. Re:Inevitably... by AaronLS · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I'm sure everyone completely misunderstood what was meant due to my misuse of a hyphen. I'll be sure to edit it before it goes to press.

    71. Re:Inevitably... by Frangible · · Score: 1

      Nuclear deterrence only works when you have nuclear weapons.

    72. Re:Inevitably... by bogjobber · · Score: 1

      Oh and by far the scariest weapon is not an atom bomb, which is really kind of pathetic, barely matching the death toll of a single bombing run, but the simple and humble knife. Several muslim empires have killed more then 200 million people each using only the simple and humble knife, and a quite dull badly made brittle knife at that. No other state or weapon has come anywhere close to those piles of corpses.

      I'm a little bit more afraid of someone setting off a rogue a-bomb in Manhattan than I am of waking up to find a bunch of Abassids with dull knives beating on my door. I'm pretty sure that's not just me.

    73. Re:Inevitably... by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      He did say "or at least value their own."

  2. One small caveat by GameboyRMH · · Score: 5, Insightful

    His assumption requires that all the wielders of nuclear weapons are sane.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    1. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine Caligula with nukes.

    2. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His assumption requires that all the wielders of nuclear weapons are sane.

      EXACTLY what I was thinking. Re: Iran

    3. Re:One small caveat by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Interesting

      His assumption requires that all the wielders of nuclear weapons are sane.

      Even when they are, war still finds a way.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    4. Re:One small caveat by MasaMuneCyrus · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think the assumption is that, despite the religious fanaticism and/or grandiose visions of world conquest of some leaders, those in possession of nuclear weapons are actually motivated by self-interest and self-preservation.

    5. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it doesn't. This is an historical look at the Nuke which clearly shows that warbetween states with nukes has been nonexistent. Your point is on target that it may not always be that way. In my opinion, you are arguing witha point that the author did not make.

      -- MyLongNickName

    6. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Define sane.

    7. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      He also assumes that all nuclear states are politically stable. Civil war and government breakdown in a nuclear state could lead to some very undersirables (ie terrorists and criminals) getting hold of nuclear weapons. At that point all bets are off in term of if they will use them or not.

    8. Re:One small caveat by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Not only that - it assumes that no one fucks up. Nuclear war was avoided for two reasons: both the USSR and the US were rational actors, and on both sides there were people who would rather die in a nuclear attack than press the button that started the nuclear war.

      If every nation in the world has nukes - some more, some less - it is guaranteed that some nutjob will think that it is better to kill your enemy and be incinerated yourself than to tolerate the affronts for one more second.

      There is a reason we don't build buildings by balancing them on a single pole, or that we don't.... wait, so that's one of the few examples left where we do not try to exploit some very small stable region in a chaotic system to extract some maximum profit out of it. Let's just not add one more major system that is just barely stable, and where instability results in humanity starting over.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    9. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He should see Fog of War with Robert McNamara, and quote:

      "Rationality will not save us. I want to say, and this is very important: at the end we lucked out. It was luck that prevented nuclear war. We came that close to nuclear war at the end. Rational individuals: Kennedy was rational; Khrushchev was rational; Castro was rational. Rational individuals came that close to total destruction of their societies. And that danger exists today."

    10. Re:One small caveat by Rakshasa-sensei · · Score: 1

      Why Iran?

      Do you have anything to support your supposition that they're willing to go through... Not mutual, but uni-directional self-destruction in order to lop a couple of nukes at western cities?

    11. Re:One small caveat by Snarfangel · · Score: 3, Funny

      We can prove this scientifically.

      First, assume a spherical dictator. For example, Kim Jong-un.

      --
      This tagline is copyrighted material. Please send $10 for an affordable replacement.
    12. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad belongs to a radical sect that believes that by starting a war (presumably a nuclear war) with Israel that it will cause the return of the "Hidden Imam" -- their equivalent of the second coming of Christ. If someone were to act rationally, yes nuclear weapons definitely serve as a deterrent but for better or worse, religion isn't always rational. Many of Jim Jones' followers knew that their drink was laced with cyanide but they still drank the Kool Aid.

    13. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, the opposite of unsane?

    14. Re:One small caveat by Jiro · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Also, he assumes that the problem is that someone wants to start a war with a nuclear-armed state, rather than the nuclear-armed state starting a war with someone else.If Iran nukes Israel, it won't be because Israel started it.

    15. Re:One small caveat by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the assumption is that war is intrinsically undesirable. Clearly, it serves an important purpose, or we would have set it aside long ago. I'd say the purpose of war is to destroy a state that has become a liability to the human race, and it's past time.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    16. Re:One small caveat by Nadaka · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How about the statements of the leaders of the country, both the puppet president and the Clerical Council?

      Never underestimate the suicidal tendencies of someone who is part of an apocalyptic death cult like fundamentalist Islam or fundamentalist Christianity.

    17. Re:One small caveat by NonUniqueNickname · · Score: 1

      Sanity is in the eye of the beholder. At the very least it requires that wielders be State agents, which isn't granted either.

    18. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If every nation in the world has nukes - some more, some less - it is guaranteed that some nutjob will think that it is better to kill your enemy and be incinerated yourself than to tolerate the affronts for one more second.

      Reportedly Che Guevarra, during the Cuban crisis, had this exact opinion. He wasn't crazy, he just had the idea that it if he was going down, might as well take his enemy down also.

      I've personally taken the exact same strategy while playing Rise of Nations.

    19. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This.

      What's that? Everyone can have a gun to defend themselves?
      Oh, why, it only caused the country to have some of the highest gun crime IN THE WORLD.

      Weapons are weapons, they will get used by someone, eventually.
      America is a large simulation of what would happen if the whole world had nukes, someone would slip up and cause a catastrophe.

    20. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the state makes all it's decisions based on religion, you don't need any other support.

    21. Re:One small caveat by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

      And that false positives never happen. From my understanding, back during the cold war a weather satellite was mistaken for a launched nuke and a retaliatory strike was recommended.

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    22. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Fanatical Religeous Zeal.

      By offing the "infidels" they go to the good place. Last time I checked, they would be one of the few places with nukes run by Islamic Law.

    23. Re:One small caveat by Schmorgluck · · Score: 1

      Sanity doesn't seem to be the main property of the current Iranian government. The optimist in me hopes that, if Iran gets nuclear weapons, its people will be bolder than ever to overthrow the regime before it does something stupid.

      --
      There's nothing like $HOME
    24. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you have proof of any of this, as opposed to the idea that he is mostly a political creature playing to the national sentiments of the Iranian people? And, do you have any proof (or even strong evidence) that it would be his finger on the trigger if Iran were to develop and deploy nuclear weapons?

    25. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or that if we allow nuclear weapon proliferation the weapons will always be in the hands of people who have something to loose in a nuclear war.

    26. Re:One small caveat by ackthpt · · Score: 2

      He should see Fog of War with Robert McNamara, and quote:

      "Rationality will not save us. I want to say, and this is very important: at the end we lucked out. It was luck that prevented nuclear war. We came that close to nuclear war at the end. Rational individuals: Kennedy was rational; Khrushchev was rational; Castro was rational. Rational individuals came that close to total destruction of their societies. And that danger exists today."

      That's a heck of a movie. Frightening the prospect Cutis LeMay advocated just nuking the heck out of Cuba and being done with it, never mind the fallout blowing around the Caribbean, Gulf and ultimately Northern Hemisphere.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    27. Re:One small caveat by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      Claims that Iran could do Israel serious harm are still dubious, but if it did launch any kind of a nuclear attack on Israel, all tacit support for Iran from China and Russia would evaporate instantly, and Israel's allies would be given pretty much instantaneous approval to bomb Iran back to the Stone Age. Let's remember for all Iran's big numbers of armed forces members, most are poorly equipped Basij "weekend warriors". They're navy, air force and major military installations are highly vulnerable to attack, and you can be damned sure that both Israel and US have detailed co-operative plans in place to basically render the Iranian military utterly impotent within a few days (there were hints of this when an Iranian general mumbled on about closing the Strait of Hormuz).

      At the end of the day, no matter how powerful the Ayatollahs may be, they only rule because the Iranian Army remains loyal to them. If the Ayatollahs were to indeed go mad and order actual attacks on Israel, I can only assume the Generals would step in, overthrow the Ayatollahs and end any such plans, if for no other reason than they will not sacrifice their power, latent or active, for any mad ideal.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    28. Re:One small caveat by Schmorgluck · · Score: 1

      Oh, after glancing at the original article, I realize that what I just said is close to the point Kenneth Waltz makes. Well, I'm wary of his theory, just like I'm wary of my own optimism.

      --
      There's nothing like $HOME
    29. Re:One small caveat by jmorris42 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      > How about the statements of the leaders of the country, both the puppet president and the Clerical Council?

      Nope, you are gonna get flamed for saying that. It is unacceptable to take the stated positions of madmen seriously.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    30. Re:One small caveat by Nadaka · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yea, and a lot of people didn't take Mein Kampf seriously either.

    31. Re:One small caveat by crazyjj · · Score: 1, Troll

      Never underestimate the suicidal tendencies of someone who is part of an apocalyptic death cult like fundamentalist Islam or fundamentalist Christianity.

      You can also add Israel, and certainly its more radical Zionist factions, to that list. When an entire culture celebrates the mass suicide at Masada like it's a great thing, and has nukes (courtesy of the good old US of A), and it surrounded by states it stays at war with, and continues to build provocative settlements in regions they know damn well that they stole--well, that's a pretty bad formula for bad shit going down in the future. Anytime you have the potential for someone thinking that God wants them to nuke their enemies into non-existence rather than concede a fight, that's bad news.

      --
      What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
    32. Re:One small caveat by na1led · · Score: 1

      Yea, what about hiroshima and nagasaki, was that just Beta Testing?

      --
      -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
    33. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to wonder why they haven't pulled the trigger yet then. They've had WMDs in the form of biological and chemical weapons, as well as the ability to deliver those weapons, for decades now. Yet the only major war they've been a part of in the last 30 years was started by their neighbor, Saddam Hussein (with the approval and backing of the US gov't at the time).

      If they're a suicidal death cult, why have they held back from trying to "wipe Israel off the map" for the last 20-30 years?

    34. Re:One small caveat by Sparticus789 · · Score: 1

      Then how do you explain Switzerland, #4 on the guns per capita list?

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    35. Re:One small caveat by CubicleZombie · · Score: 3, Informative

      I see your little jab there against Christianity, but I've met lots of scary fundamentalist Christians and none of them would strap a bomb to his/her chest and run into a crowded market. The concept of Mutually Assured Destruction would pretty much keep them in check.

      --
      :wq
    36. Re:One small caveat by Nutria · · Score: 3, Informative

      A counter-quote: "You make your own luck."

      Not only were Kennedy, Khrushchev and Castro rational, but also Stanislav Petrov and the dozens of other people over the decades who didn't panic (much):
      http://www.skeptically.org/onwars/id7.html
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanislav_Petrov

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    37. Re:One small caveat by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1, Troll

      stole?

      who owned the land before? and before? and before?

      this idea of owning land - and it always being the same person or group - I'd like more info on that. your newsletter, subscribe me please!

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    38. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which statements? Care to quote them here?

    39. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He also assumes that all nuclear states are politically stable. Civil war and government breakdown in a nuclear state could lead to some very undersirables (ie terrorists and criminals) getting hold of nuclear weapons. At that point all bets are off in term of if they will use them or not.

      Like India and Pakistan ?
      They have actually gone to war on a couple of occasions, and its a miracle it didn't end up nuclear.
      Hell Pakistan is a hotbead of terrorism and what do you know, they are in bed with the US.

      You want a world without nukes ? Lets start with dismantling the thousands of warheads the US, Russia, France, the UK and China have. Lets talk the talk and walk the walk. Otherwise its pure bullshit. and it makes the author's point of view valid. Countries that have nuclear weapons are not invaded. Attacked ? Yes, invaded ? No.

    40. Re:One small caveat by HyperQuantum · · Score: 1

      Yup.

      This reminds me of a scene from The Matrix Revolutions, where a whole group of people have their gun pointed at the head of someone else. If someone pulls the trigger, everyone will do the same and everyone will die. So you have a similar situation where a bunch of countries threaten each other with being able to wipe each other of the planet with a simple push of a button. So nobody makes a move, right? Wrong.

      In the movie, Trinity says "How about this? You give me Neo or we all die, right here, right now". And because of that threat she got what she wanted. Now imagine if there is one country with nuclear weapons that is crazy/obsessed enough to make the same threat: either it gets what it wants from the rest of the world, or it doesn't and the red button is pushed.

      Of course, they wouldn't pull such a stunt to get some triviality from the other countries, like money. It must be something really big, something they value so much that they would risk elimination of their own country and potentially the rest of the world in order to get it. One example I could think of, is a nutty religious country that would want to impose their views/values on everyone else. They would risk it because it would be their ultimate road to salvation: if it succeeds, victory! If it fails, well, they still did what their deity wanted and they can expect a glorious afterlife.

      (And that's why over-analysing things will make you a pessimist...)

      --
      I am not really here right now.
    41. Re:One small caveat by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      There is, in general terms, only one reason to start a war or oppress people - greed.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    42. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      What has Iran done in particular that is 'insane'? I'm not saying I like Iran or want to live there, but that's a far cry from saying that Iran is insane and flying off the handle.

    43. Re:One small caveat by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      but - some people are brought up to think that dying for their religion will guarantee them a place in 'heaven'.

      you simply cannot reason with that mentality.

      this is what makes it NOT equivalent. because, well, its not. the motivations behind the players are entirely significant, here.

      let us not forget this. you cannot strike up a deal with a madman or people who are trained to prefer death over the POS life they currently have.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    44. Re:One small caveat by nine-times · · Score: 1

      This is an excellent response. Thank you.

      I was sitting here thinking about the concept, and feeling uncomfortable with it for reasons I couldn't quite put my finger on. Your post cleared it up for me. If there's anything we should stop taking for granted, it's that people always act out of "rational self-interest". Or at the very least, we should stop assuming what another person's "rational self-interest" is-- someone may decide that their "rational self-interest" lies more in the eradication of their enemy than their own self-preservation.

      Even beyond that, it's not unthinkable for people to get caught up in an escalating situation and to fail to find other options. Someone misjudges a situation, one person tries to call the other's bluff, and the next thing you know, things have spun out of control. You never know what someone is going to do when they feel helpless and trapped.

    45. Re:One small caveat by war4peace · · Score: 1

      "But what does this button do?"
      Frankly, I think it's a huge temptation to press the doom button to pretty much anyone out there. One must be strong enough to not do it, and there's where a lot of personal factors intervene, such as education, civic spirit, religious strength and reasons, etc.
      I'd personally be more comfortable with the "no button to press on" option.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    46. Re:One small caveat by mbkennel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The most radical Zionist factions in Israel are not in control of the government and believe throroughly in not dying, roughly "We're not dead yet, nyah nyah nyah!" even if they are aggressive colonizers. They don't have an apocalyptic religious ideology.

      The mass suicide as Masada was in response to military conquest and siege. They were about to be slaughtered by the Roman army anyway.

      I don't really see any parallel.

      A really serious problem though with Iran is the same as North Korea, once Iran gets nukes, its people will never be free of its crazy tyranny, and I think that's a real motivation for the leadership.

    47. Re:One small caveat by JigJag · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I'd say the purpose of war is to destroy a state that has become a liability to the human race, and it's past time.

      sounds like the US to me. Mod me troll if you want, but take a serious good look at what the US have done to the world in the last 10 years. Exercise to the reader: list the wars the US started, the casualty they incurred and the suffering it brought during that time frame alone.

      JigJag

      --
      "The hallmark of humanity is the ability to move beyond sensory inputs" - Mary Helen Immordino-Yang
    48. Re:One small caveat by mbkennel · · Score: 2

      "If they're a suicidal death cult, why have they held back from trying to "wipe Israel off the map" for the last 20-30 years?"

      Uh, suicide bombers aren't in it for the suicide, they're in it for the bombing.

      And if they had WMD's then why are they getting nukes? (because in reality especially chemical weapons are far less powerful and biological weapons are very unreliable).

      Most likely, when they get nukes they will start up with nonnuclear war through Hezbollah.

    49. Re:One small caveat by localman57 · · Score: 2

      Well, there's this one guy who owns five of them. That skews the average...

    50. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [citation needed]

    51. Re:One small caveat by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      Bring it, motherfucker.

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    52. Re:One small caveat by Fallingcow · · Score: 2

      It's a common phenomenon in board games. Players who no longer have a chance of winning may accept a worse or earlier loss in order to play "kingmaker" and give their favored adversary the victory over another who may otherwise have had the win locked up. Risk is especially notorious for this, since one can usual tell when one's position is hopeless before every avenue of suicidal but devastating attack has been cut off.

      It's one of the ways that too much player interaction in a game can make it worse, especially in games that feature slow decline and ultimate elimination of players well before the resolution, and it's one of the things that just about every game strives to avoid—even Risk, in pretty much every edition/rule set other than classic.

    53. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what is your source that the Iranian leadership believes this?

    54. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      George Dubya Bush is sane. GOD BLESS AMER1CA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! hallelujah

    55. Re:One small caveat by Krishnoid · · Score: 1

      The concept of Mutually Assured Destruction would pretty much keep them in check.

      Are you sure about that? Not life-or-death, but at least one official is prepared to terminate a school voucher program over this.

      The voucher program, called Act 2, passed, opening the door for god knows how many non-Valarie Hodge's-religion schools that might interfere with her vision of America as a sort of Christian Saudi Arabia. At least one public school district has already filed suit in an attempt to keep the voucher program from being enacted.

    56. Re:One small caveat by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Bring it, motherfucker.

      Be patient. We will.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    57. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your comment made me think about certain leader which wasn't exactly that sane at all and had the "red button" for 8 years without any problems. OTOH, maybe someone gave him the wrong launch codes in case he went rich texan http://simpsons.wikia.com/wiki/Rich_Texan

    58. Re:One small caveat by Jeng · · Score: 2

      Those who tend to rise to power in religious circles are rarely concerned with religion and usually more concerned with power.

      It's only the peons who blow themselves up.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    59. Re:One small caveat by sconeu · · Score: 1

      You're joking, but yes.

      Before Hiroshima and Nagasaki, exactly ONE nuke had been exploded (Trinity). Everyone was ignorant of the aftereffects such as fallout. They thought that the nuke was just a really REALLY REALLY big boom, but that was it.

      Post-Hiroshima/Nagasaki, the true effects of the Bomb became clear.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    60. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      Don't wait too long, pussy. I need a new bitch. What's your dress size?

    61. Re:One small caveat by wierd_w · · Score: 4, Insightful

      you clearly werent in Kansas during the 90s, when the suicide bombers blowing up abortion clinics were all the rage.

      There was a clear and present vandetta against Dr Tiller. It only stopped when they shot him in the face.

      Look it up.

      Fundies are more scary-dangerous than you realize.

    62. Re:One small caveat by peragrin · · Score: 1

      Basically yea. If you build a new toy it has to be field tested.

      Hiroshima and Nagasaki are the examples of "small" nuclear warheads. They are why no one but crazy people want a nuclear scale conflict. Some one has to do something stupid so others learn from their mistakes.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    63. Re:One small caveat by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      I think the assumption is that war is intrinsically undesirable. Clearly, it serves an important purpose, or we would have set it aside long ago. I'd say the purpose of war is to destroy a state that has become a liability to the human race, and it's past time.

      Actually, war is mostly about getting something your nation needs, like land or natural resources. This has been the same for centuries.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    64. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called a "Mexican standoff."

    65. Re:One small caveat by paiute · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've met lots of scary fundamentalist Christians and none of them would strap a bomb to his/her chest and run into a crowded market.

      Yes, now they wouldn't, because they are part of the ruling class. Wait for the day when they reside in someplace where an Islamic army is the occupier.

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    66. Re:One small caveat by slowLearner · · Score: 1

      It is probable they non of your FCF's have been persicuted quite as thoroughly as the Palestiniens and therefore may not be quite as desperate as the unfortunate people who blow themselves and their victims to oblivion.
      Obvious disclaimer about never condone violence etc.

    67. Re:One small caveat by na1led · · Score: 1

      If someone is crazy enough to blow themselves up, I'm sure they won't mind blowing up the rest of us!

      --
      -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
    68. Re:One small caveat by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      You noted that religion is a weapon better than a nuke?

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    69. Re:One small caveat by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Looks like the cowards are all horned up today...

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    70. Re:One small caveat by slowLearner · · Score: 1

      Hell Pakistan is a hotbead of terrorism and what do you know, they are in bed with the US.

      The government, yes, the people not so much!

    71. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "And if they had WMD's then why are they getting nukes?"

      Probably because other countries are constantly threatening to invade them and nukes are a better deterrent.

      Or, who knows, maybe they are telling the truth about wanting to building a fully self-sufficient domestic civilian nuclear power infrastructure that avoids reliance on technology and fuel from the countries that are constantly threatening to invade them.

      But if you're mainly interested in just murdering lots of people, chemical weapons work just fine, and are A LOT cheaper / easier to produce. Heck, *conventional* weapons are cheaper / easier still.

      The whole "Iran only wants nukes so it can murder-suicide Israel" angle doesn't make any sense given the country's history. They could've launched several thousand missiles into the heart of Israel and caused massive casualties any time in the past few decades. They have not. They're demonstrably not irrational actors when it comes to military action. There's no reason to believe having nukes will suddenly change that.

    72. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read the Koran. To Iran, killing anyone who doesn't convert is self preservation.

    73. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nukes power weren't exactly known and it was, yes in fact, beta testing.

    74. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Horned up? It figures a limp wrist faggot like you would have something phallic to tall about.

    75. Re:One small caveat by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      Well, virtually anything related to religion? After the revolution?

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    76. Re:One small caveat by shentino · · Score: 1

      Nukes prevents wars in the same way that taking a hostage will prevent a shoot-out with the police.

    77. Re:One small caveat by grantspassalan · · Score: 2

      People that subscribe to a religion that exhorts them to kill anyone that does not obey their particular prophet, don't mind killing themselves flying airplanes into buildings. They think that their god will reward them richly for murdering as many infidels as possible. If people like that have nukes (and they are working hard at getting them), they will take a whole city and wipe it out. Instead of casualties in the thousands, there would be casualties in the millions from the actions of these religiously crazed people. People that declare publicly over and over and over and over that a certain other group of people should be wiped from the map, will do exactly that or at least attempt to if they had the means to carry out their evil threats.

      --
      A sufficiently advanced simulation is indistinguishable from reality.
    78. Re:One small caveat by Ash+Vince · · Score: 0

      Also, he assumes that the problem is that someone wants to start a war with a nuclear-armed state, rather than the nuclear-armed state starting a war with someone else.If Iran nukes Israel, it won't be because Israel started it.

      What makes you say that?

      Israel has plenty of history of attacking it neighbours. It also has a growing fanatical religious movement that have strong power base within the country and happen to believe that large chunks of the land under Iran was given to the Israelites by god a few thousand years ago.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_Israel

      That is not say say Iran is great place to live, but just to say that both sides have religious fanatics who might start a war because they think they have gods blessing or something. Personally I would rather that neither Israel or Iran got their hands on nuclear weapons until they have acknowledged the other sides right to exist (I know Israel is widely suspected of already having them).

      We in the west hear far more about the nut jobs in Iran since Israel is our ally, but make no mistake that Israel has its fair share too. I would certainly not consider one of them managing to cease power outside the realms of possibility.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    79. Re:One small caveat by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      I think that when you are advanced far along enough to get a nuclear bomb, you kind of realize that you don't want to die. It's like North Korea. They're a bunch of idiots who are letting their people starve to death. But they have the nuclear bomb, and they're not going to nuke anybody soon because the leadership wants to live. It's the same thing with Iran. The leadership doesn't want to die, so even if they got nukes, they wouldn't use them.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    80. Re:One small caveat by geekmux · · Score: 1

      His assumption requires that all the wielders of nuclear weapons are sane.

      Exactly. Putting a gun in everyone's hands never guaranteed someone wouldn't pull the trigger eventually. Sanity merely affirms the reason not to, but is certainly not guaranteed.

      And given the fallout the globe would have to deal with even with one nuclear device going off (which would make Hiroshima look like a firecracker by comparison), I don't think we can afford even one detonation, physically or politically. Of course, some will argue this is the reason it's an effective deterrent, but I still don't feel at ease relying on the sanity of every leader to continue to not find a reason to mash the "fuck it" button one day.

      Personally, I think this is a bit of a false dichotomy presented here. I suppose that not even a single leader of a country has ever been responsible for keeping the peace since 1945? It's all been because of the silent killers in the ground? Somehow, I don't think so.

    81. Re:One small caveat by grantspassalan · · Score: 1

      "Nope, you are gonna get flamed for saying that. It is unacceptable to take the stated positions of madmen seriously"

        I guess you never read the ramblings of a madman named Hitler called “Mein Kampf”. He pretty much wrote out what he was going to do if he ever had the power to do that. A lot of bloodshed could have been averted if the stated positions of this madman had been taken seriously.

      --
      A sufficiently advanced simulation is indistinguishable from reality.
    82. Re:One small caveat by jklovanc · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      even if they are aggressive colonizers.

      A colonist is someone who goes some place where they have never been. Jews have been continually in Israel since before the time of King David and most of their holy sites are in Israel. So no, Israelis are not colonist. As for aggressive, of the many wars involving Israel the only one they started was 1976 when Egypt and Jordan were massing for an attack (after expelling UN monitors). If anyone is an aggressor it is the Arabs.

      One interesting thing to note is that everyone notes the Palestinians who can not return to their land in Israel because they were on the wrong side of the border when the War of Independence ended (a war started by the Arabs to wipe out Israel). There are also a large number if Jews who can not return to their land in Palestine for the same reasons but they never seem to be mentioned.

    83. Re:One small caveat by mrsquid0 · · Score: 1

      Guns are very heavily regulated in Switzerland.

      --
      Just because you are paranoid does not mean that no-one is out to get you.
    84. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You argument doesn't hold up. There are plenty of places where the Islamic army rules and Christians are oppressed, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Malaysia, etc but you still don't see Christians strapping on bombs in those places.

    85. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but - some people are brought up to think that dying for their religion will guarantee them a place in 'heaven'.

      you simply cannot reason with that mentality.

      this is what makes it NOT equivalent. because, well, its not. the motivations behind the players are entirely significant, here.

      let us not forget this. you cannot strike up a deal with a madman or people who are trained to prefer death over the POS life they currently have.

      I doubt much of that applies to those in power in Iran or anywhere else. Since they are in power, they have pretty comfortable lives that they likely don't want to jeopardize. Even if a few are mad or suicidal, the rest probably won't let the few jeopardize their positions.

    86. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      its people will never be free of its crazy tyranny

      This isn't true. The Soviet Union broke up and had nukes. Iraq used chemical weapons (easier to apply than a nuke) and they still fought. Now, if a country's leadership decides that nuking itself is a better option than losing power, then all bets are off. A lot of things will have to fall into place for that to happen. Not impossible though!

    87. Re:One small caveat by Ash+Vince · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A really serious problem though with Iran is the same as North Korea, once Iran gets nukes, its people will never be free of its crazy tyranny, and I think that's a real motivation for the leadership.

      I think you misunderstand why the Kims are still in power.

      It is not because the have nukes as they were in power for decades before they had them. Nukes only stop someone else invading, using them to prevent your own population rising up and overthrowing you has certain inherent problems to do with the fact that you kill yourself in the process. The reason the Kim's are in power still is because China has spent the last 3 decades supplying them with weapons in order to have a nice comfy buffer zone between them and South Korea (ie: the US).

      In the last Korean war the US basically overran the entire Korean peninsula before China felt threatened and sent its troops in to drive them back. It was a proxy war between China and the US. China then viewed North Korea in kind of the same way that Russia view most eastern block countries in the 60's in that they were scared of the US invading them in the name of fighting the evils of communism.

      Let's remember that we in the west did fight an awful lot of wars in the name of driving back communists where it was our troops fighting against local people who simply did not want us to pick their leaders for them. This has left many scars in peoples minds, and made many countries scared of us even now.

      As to nowadays I think the Chinese are utterly embarrassed by their southern neighbour but not quite willing to give up their buffer zone and risk the country uniting under a government more friendly to the west.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    88. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So...you would prefer that the demand-making country, in your hypothetical scenario, be the *only* country with nuclear weapons?

      Because you can't prevent them from building nuclear weapons. Disarming yourself in return for a promise that they disarm themselves is no guarantee that they will actually do so. In fact, it is basically a guarantee that they will threaten you with their nuclear weapons as soon as you get rid of yours.

      A promise from a politician can never be trusted, especially when that promise is "I will throw away my most powerful bargaining tool."

    89. Re:One small caveat by Penguinisto · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Protip: They weren't suicide bombers.

      A suicide bomber doesn't mind dying while they blow other people up.

      The whole abortion clinic bombing thing reduced down to a few crazy-asses who liked using bombs, which, curiously, doesn't require religion as an excuse.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    90. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're joking, right? The ayatollahs are peaceful little angels in comparison to the people that run Israel. Israel has already shown that it's perfectly willing to send its planes to surprise attack neighboring countries, but Iran certainly has never done that. Israel is a nuclear-armed rogue state that will use religion to justify nuclear first strike sooner or later and expects to get away with it because of its favored status with the US. No other nation in the world has that expectation, therefore they will not strike first.

    91. Re:One small caveat by Penguinisto · · Score: 2

      We do have setups exactly as you describe (Christians living under Islamic regimes). Curiously, there seems to be a lack of Christian suicide bombers in Iraq, Iran, Turkey, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Syria...

      Can you point some out for us, perhaps?

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    92. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see how strapping a bomb onto your body makes a speck of difference. For example, the IRA mostly did remote or timed detonations. I don't see how these are any less scary. They still justify the original comment that applied to violent fundamentalist crazies regardless of their particular choice of religion.

    93. Re:One small caveat by jklovanc · · Score: 2

      Care to cite any Kansas suicide bombers? According to this article there has been none. In all bombings the perpetrator threw or set the bomb and left.

      The main method of murder of abortion clinic employees has been guns and not bombs.

    94. Re:One small caveat by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      That's stupid. The only thing lobbing a few missiles at Israel would do is to piss off the Israelis and give them a good excuse to bomb everything they can get at.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    95. Re:One small caveat by Lord+Apathy · · Score: 1

      US policy on nuclear attacks has been and still is, as far as I know, total nuclear retaliation. This includes attacks on US soil and her allies. So if North Korea as to attack South Korea or Iran was to attack Israel with nuclear weapon(s) basically there would be a smoking hole where ether states where the next day.

      The reason MADD worked in the cold war is because the leadership of both countries was not bats ass insane. There was a lot of big talk but both countries knew when they where going to go to far.

      Most likely if some islamic country did get a nuke and set it off through some terrorist group. There is a real good possibility that the attacked nation might just decide to forget that middle east is actually a bunch of individual nation states and decide to "glass" the whole area.

      I would make it clear though that to all these islamic nut jobs that if you do get a nuclear weapon and one does go off in my country. The two primary holy sites of islam would cease to exist. Don't know what I would do about that nut ball in NK. Maybe take all the smurf out back and shoot them.

      --

      Supporting World Peace Through Nuclear Pacification

    96. Re:One small caveat by Sparticus789 · · Score: 1

      If by regulated, you mean that every member of the militia age 18-30 is required by law to have their service rifle/pistol in their home, then you are correct.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    97. Re:One small caveat by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      While Xianity does tend to outlaw blatant suicide, it does nothing to curtail killing other people for the cause or dying for the cause.

      Mutual Assured Destruction would just get them to heaven quicker.

      The fact that "the other guy did it" would solve the whole "suicide being a sin" thing.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    98. Re:One small caveat by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      LeMay ran what used to be the Strategic Air Command. One very harsh motherfucker to work under, if rumors circulating around the USAF as late as the 1980's (when I enlisted) are to be believed. His idea of responding to varying nuclear incidents was to launch everything, and full-throttle nuke the unholy shit out of everyone who ever pissed the United States off. Only when someone leaked that fact to Kennedy was LeMay ordered to come up with something more graduated.

      You ought to look him up sometime... all by himself he is a very solid counterpoint to the original article, and in a big way.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    99. Re:One small caveat by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Quite. Most of the highly violent Islamic nonsense occurs in Islamic countries where the Muslims have been the ruling parties for centuries.

      The equivalent would be Catholics in St. Louis starting a deadly riot over Mrs Gates statements on birth control.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    100. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Initiating a nuclear war is exactly the same as strapping a bomb to your chest.

    101. Re:One small caveat by fatphil · · Score: 1

      > Take a serious good look at what the US have done to the world in the last 10 years

      What tosh!

      50 years, at least. Arguably 110+ (e.g. Philippines, Puerto Rico, Cuba)

      I can't think of any decade where the US hasn't fucked over some other country, either from without (war) or within (CIA+puppets).

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
    102. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really buy everything the republicans tell you, huh? If anything, the Iranian regime is more rational than what we have here in the US. As a persistent theocracy they are able to have stable long-term plans not interrupted every few of years by the control flipping between opposing political parties, and they are able to put smart people in charge of things as opposed to popular ones. Those people in charge are further able to work without being distracted by publicity. It's no doubt an awful system to live under if you're not one of the elite, but it is a system geared exclusively toward assuring the survival of the regime through rationally calculated actions. Israel, North Korea, Pakistan, India are all more likely to start a nuclear war than Iran. So is the USA for that matter.

    103. Re:One small caveat by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      I actually do put Bush II in the same league as Iran's current president.

      Troll harder next time.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    104. Re:One small caveat by Tom · · Score: 1

      I wanted to write something like that, but you made the point much better than I could've. Exactly that is the problem. As long as everyone is rational, MAD works. But it only takes one madman or religious fanatic and you have a real danger of a cascading catastrophic system failure.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    105. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come on, at least include "hate", and "survival" !

    106. Re:One small caveat by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Certain Israeli factions would love for Iran (or Syria or pretty much anybody else they're having hissy fits with) to strike first. It gives them a big moral advantage.

      Unless Iran gets to the point of having enough weapons to significantly degrade the Israeli military it's just a bluff. The problem then is determining when enough is enough. Just like N. Korea. One or two unreliable weapons isn't a huge existential threat. A couple of dozen could well be.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    107. Re:One small caveat by jgtg32a · · Score: 1

      Field testing.

    108. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't be so sure.

      They've already convinced themselves that treating arabs like Untermenschen, starting a bit of Warsaw ghetto destruction every time someone fires enough fire-crackers at Israel to make a nuisance of themselves, incinerating civilians with white phosphorus in the process while believing you're superior to your victims for "mythological" reasons, are all okay things to do because they don't wear black uniforms.

      I wouldn't be surprised at all if they thought the use of nuclear weapons would be OK too, if the Iranians were looking alarmingly close to actually put their grubby mitts on such weapons.

    109. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A few, sure. How about a few thousand? It's not like the Iranians don't have the capability to launch *literally thousands of missiles* at Israel if they wanted to. If they are just a bunch of crazies who are willing to face annihilation in order to murder Israelis en masse then they would've done so by now. You don't need nukes to rain hellfire down on a nation the size of New Jersey, especially when nearly half the total population is located in around a dozen cities or so.

    110. Re:One small caveat by jklovanc · · Score: 3, Interesting

      According to this map from the article you cited I think you man Iraq and not Iran.

      If you actually followed some of the links from the article you cited you would fined this. The idea that Zionist want parts of Iraq in a conspiracy theory.

      growing fanatical religious movement that have strong power base within the country

      Care to cite something that supports this statement. All I can fined is a reference to a political party that merged with a larger one on 1976. By the way, a single professor, Hillel Weiss, does not make a "strong power base".

      I know Israel is widely suspected of already having them

      There is quit a but of evidence that takes the possibility of Israel having nuclear weapons far beyond "suspected". It is generally accepted that they have them but have not officially admitted to it because they do not want to open the conversation as to what they want them for.

      The only connection between Israel and Iran is Iran's desire to "remove Israel from the pages of history". Israel has no desire to Iranian lands.

    111. Re:One small caveat by ACE209 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for your concise summary of US foreign politics.

      --
      "we are all atheists about most of the gods that societies have ever believed in. Some of us just go one god further."
    112. Re:One small caveat by Riceballsan · · Score: 1

      I'd say that is far from accurate, Bin Laden would never have had the ties and budget if some countries didn't have the religious extremism to support his attack, they clearly had the expectations that Allah would protect them from the impending fallback caused by directly attacking the united states. If one of these middle eastern theocracies got their hands on nukes, I can pretty much be certain their view of self preservation, is drastically lower than one might expect. Honestly I think even parts of the united states want a nuclear war. There are christian fundimentalists who believe that WW3 is the last thing that needs to start before Jesus comes back and saves them all, it is highly probable that that was a small part of Dubya's motivation in picking a fight with Iraq.

    113. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note tho that greed do not need to be on the side of the instigator. It could come as a act of desperation by those under the thumb of greed from those they attack.

    114. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hello Mr American Jingoist.

      In case you've missed a couple of things, I'll spell them out.

      1. Contrary to your belief, the Iranians are not stupid. They may be nuts, but they are by no means stupid.
      2. May I remind you that they held off your old friend Saddam, whom you and the rest of the western world armed to the teeth with basically just sticks and stones. They know how to defend themselves.
      3. The Iranians are not blind. They have seen how the US and their allies wages war from front row, center in Iraq and Afghanistan. I have no doubt the Russians have sold them significantly newer stuff than the old SA-2, in quantity. In fact I would bet Iran, at least in sensitive areas, is so full of SAMs and AAA that you couldn't throw a baseball there without getting it shredded.

      Conclusion: Could Iran be defeated by a bombardment? Maybe, but it would be a very, very different proposition from what happened in Iraq.

    115. Re:One small caveat by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      Not only that - it assumes that no one fucks up.

      It also assumes noone loses. The nuclear risks of the USSR disintegrating are varied and considerable. And the same applies to Pakistan.

    116. Re:One small caveat by macromorgan · · Score: 1

      I assume you aren't talking about literal fallout, considering bombs such as Tsar Bomba have been tested...

    117. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Not only that - it assumes that no one fucks up. Nuclear war was avoided for two reasons: both the USSR and the US were rational actors..."

      Although both side were paranoid about the other side. Comments by former Soviets politcos and generals in the past decade or so show that the Russians seriously were at times terrified of the US. They thought that many in the US were whacka-dos.

      Some, General Curtis Lemay was a whackado. Ronald Reagan we-begin-bombing-Russia-now may have appeared to be a whackado, although history has been spun and he appears to have thought nuclear weapons horrible and immoral.

      Bluffing in poker is one thing. Bluffing with nukes...

    118. Re:One small caveat by PraiseBob · · Score: 0

      A colonist is someone who goes some place where they have never been. Jews have been continually in Israel since before the time of King David and most of their holy sites are in Israel.

      So... my family lived in an area hundreds of years ago, but moved away, and then a few generations ago several immigrants moved into an area that is now a neighboring village.

      Therefore, it is completely fair to bulldoze that neighboring village of immigrant descendants, and build my own new house there?

    119. Re:One small caveat by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      Whoosh!

      Guess the Internet does need a sarcasm tag.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    120. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummmm

      I think you might want to go back and look GamboyRMH's statement one more time.

      There is an inherent assumption in the desire to build something capable of destroying 10,000 - 200,000 people at the push of a button, and sanity has no part in it.

    121. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see your little jab there against Christianity, but I've met lots of scary fundamentalist Christians and none of them would strap a bomb to his/her chest and run into a crowded market.

      Have you met all fundamentalist Christians? It only takes a small percentage of them to make a lot of dead people.

      Have you met any fundamentalist Christians who were threatened? Everyone is nice when they are in power. The existence of an abortion clinic in kansas was enough to motivate bombing in the 1990s. The idea that blacks could vote motivated many murders in the 1960s.

      The concept of Mutually Assured Destruction would pretty much keep them in check.

      No, it will push the weaker side to commit terrorist acts. By hiding in a civilian population, they will make the more powerful force pay in any way they can.

    122. Re:One small caveat by Alioth · · Score: 1

      One bomb isn't that bad from a global perspective. Don't forget that during the era of atmospheric testing, almost a THOUSAND (not just one) warheads were detonated, many in the multi-megaton range (including the 57Mt Tzar Bomba), many of them ground bursts (which cause a great deal more fallout).

      A regional conflict with many devices, even small ones Nagasaki-sized going off, is a different matter. Unlike atmospheric testing which was done in uninhabited areas, a war tends to be done where people live. Simulations done only a few years ago to update our understanding of the nuclear winter effect showed that the original nuclear winter theory from the 1980s was likely optimistic. A regional conflict with the exchange of a total of 50 warheads of 20Kt each is likely to cause a decade-long nuclear autumn, in its first years reducing the growing season in the US midwest by around 60 days. While not a society-ending event, this will cause some years of misery even in the richest nations. The poorest nations of course will face famine with the rich nations being entirely unable to help them because they are too busy with their own food shortages.

      A global nuclear war on the other hand - well, nuclear winter is actually a misnomer, more like nuclear year long night. The simulations showed that in the aftermath of a 3000Mt exchange, daylight conditons at mid-day in the northern hemisphere would be no brighter than a moonlit night. For months.

    123. Re:One small caveat by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      A really serious problem though with Iran is the same as North Korea, once Iran gets nukes, its people will never be free of its crazy tyranny, and I think that's a real motivation for the leadership.

      If the Soviet Union's vast nuclear arsenal couldn't protect it from internal dissatisfaction, I doubt any nuclear arsenal Iran or North Korea will come up with will do much better. Nuclear weapons are about the least useful tools for domestic counterinsurgency imaginable.

    124. Re:One small caveat by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      I don't exactly see where I'm being a jingoist here. I don't imagine the US contemplates any kind of occupation of Iran. I doubt it ever did, and even if at some point during the Neo-con reign it was thought they could march tens of thousands of US troops into Iran to "bring democracy", it most certainly was dumped as any kind of a plan after the US got bogged down battling the insurgency in Iraq.

      We've seen what an air-only campaign can do with the NATO bombings of Serbia and Libya. If you're primary interest is not occupation, but simply to render the opponent impotent, that is a whole different ballgame. The US and its allies have such an overwhelming advantage in air and naval capabilities to Iran that it would be like stomping on a bug. Iran's big armed forces numbers don't come from its professional soldiers, it comes from the Basij, who are lightly armed, and a rifle doesn't do you much good when you're being nailed by bombs dropped for 40,000 feet or by missiles being launched from destroyers hundreds of miles away in the Persian Gulf.

      There were dark hints dropped about the kind of campaign that would be waged when that big mouthed Iranian general talked about closing the Strait of Hormuz. First of all it was pointed out that closing the Strait would have serious consequences for the Russian navy and for trade between China and Europe, so almost immediately any voice on the UN Security Council that might vote no to beating the living shit of Iran would be removed (in other words, make moves against one of the most important trade routes on the planet will lose you all your friends). Then hints here and there were dropped about how attacks on the Iranian Navy and its airforce would probably render Iran's ability to protect its airspace null and void in a few days, and after that it would simply be a manner of blowing anything up that vaguely looked like a military installation (including barracks, depots, etc.) Sure, maybe the nuclear program would likely survive, as it has been hardened, but considering the country would be a shambles, without the Army to back up the regime, what good would it do them? Further attacks by these fictitious nuclear weapons would likely lead to direct attacks against centers of power like Qom and Tehran, and you would likely see a revolution of some form or another in very short order.

      Now what would you suppose the Iranian military leadership would do if some lunatic was to become Supreme Leader? Do you think they would sit by and let this fellow set Iran on a path to devastation? I don't think so. Ultimately, at some point, the guys actually possessing the real power are rational actors, and not religious fanatics. Frankly, I don't even really believe Khamenei is a religious fanatic either (by all accounts he's a theological lightweight), and there have been odd little signs here and there when Ahmadinejad has been particularly absurd on the international stage that the Supreme Leader won't let things go that far.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    125. Re:One small caveat by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      The ultimatum may prove to be a powerful bargaining chip, Even if you can't win, you may be able to extract concessions from a more powerful party by making them lose as well. Therefore, it's totally rational and sane to make your opponents think you are insane. Iran is totally playing the western media in this regard.

    126. Re:One small caveat by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      You think Israel doesn't have nukes?

    127. Re:One small caveat by Roachie · · Score: 1

      Dr. Freud, please call your office, Dr. Freud...

      --
      This sig is not paradoxical or ironic.
    128. Re:One small caveat by jklovanc · · Score: 1

      You really need to understand what actually happened a little better.
      1. Only some of the Jews left Israel. There always have been Jews in Israel so the "my family lived in an area hundreds of years ago, but moved away" should actually be "some my family lived in an area hundreds of years ago, but moved away"
      2. Palestine was created when the Ottoman empire was dissolved after WW1.
      3. The British partitioned Palestine into the Palestinian territories and Israeli territories.
      4. Palestinian were left on their lands by Israeli authorities.
      5. When the Arab League attacked the Israeli territories many Palestinian left their homes and went to neighbouring countries.
      6. The same thing happened with many Jewish families in Palestinian territories.
      7. After the armistice Jews who fled Palestinian lands and Palestinian who fled Israeli lands were not allowed to return.
      As far as I know there was no bulldozing of occupied Arab towns to make way for Jewish settlers. If you have references I would like to see them. As far as I know most Jews settled in unoccupied areas or areas abandoned by Arabs.

    129. Re:One small caveat by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      No they don't.

      If you take a hostage the police can shoot you and the hostage without all the police dieing as well.

      Nukes are the "everybody dies" option, a hostage is not.

      So currently religious belief is the flaw - if one side thinks they can win even though everyone dies the game is up. In the future there might be other flaws - if one side thinks that can survive in space or underground while they clean up the mess, etc - those can all remove the mutual part...

    130. Re:One small caveat by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      And lust for power. Greed and lust for power are the only two reasons to start a war. Plus a superiority complex. Greed, lust for power and a superiority complex are the only.....wait among the reasons for war are gre__....I'll come in again.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    131. Re:One small caveat by quasius · · Score: 1

      And by "they" you mean 1 guy acting alone who was near-universally denounced for his murder. Nice try.

    132. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Weathermen, on the other hand, didn't kill anyone. This is subtly different from the wars of terror waged by christians through the ages.

      A few crazies broke from the group and killed some guards, but they were no longer members.

    133. Re:One small caveat by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Very effectively for 67 years?

    134. Re:One small caveat by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Wait, wait, you are saying that the 1000+ devices set off in the 50's and 60's between didn't cause so much as a nuclear cool front, but 50 small devices would?

    135. Re:One small caveat by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Words speak louder than actions? Iran hasn't started a war in more than a hundred years. It's started something like one or two in the last 500.

    136. Re:One small caveat by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Set it in Ireland and make it the British PM's statement relating to Irish sovereignty, and you have a more realistic scenario. But even the Brits didn't wall up the Irish and starve them to death. Only the Germans and the Jews have gone that far. At least the Germans were made to pay for their barbarism.

    137. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      We've seen what an air-only campaign can do with the NATO bombings of Serbia and Libya[...]

      like stomping on a bug. Iran's big armed forces numbers don't come from its professional soldiers, it comes from the Basij, who are lightly armed, and a rifle doesn't do you much good when you're being nailed by bombs dropped for 40,000 feet or by missiles being launched from destroyers hundreds of miles away in the Persian Gulf[..]

      That's what I was getting at with the jingoism-jab. "Ra ra we're so superior, ra ra." Have you given up on thinking altogether? While at it, you might as well stop ranting about "big mouthed generals" etc, since none of that addresses what I said.

      1. The Iranians are not stupid.
      2. They know what to expect if the US attacks, they have seen plenty of how it's implemented from a very close range. You're completely deluded if you think they haven't taken any steps to protect themselves. In fact, think this is a rather large part of the explanation for why the Israelis haven't already bombed everything even remotely related to the Iranian nuclear program. Or do you really seriously believe that "American Air-power" really is unstoppable?

      Libya and Serbia are no good matches either, Libya having old equipment, poor training and organization, and finally, their defenses were never expected or designed to handle an attack of that magnitude. Serbia, while certainly not being a walk in the park, essentially had little depth in their defense and also similarly, was not sufficiently armed or prepared to meet an attack on that scale, although more lacking in quantity than quality. Flying around for miles and miles, in airspace controlled by hostiles who can reasonably be expected to have -- they would have been raving mad if they hadn't -- prepared for exactly that kind of scenario for decades will be quite different.

      Now, I'm not saying the Iranians really, absolutely and definitely could stop a serious attack, but there's good chance it could turn into a very, very expensive adventure. Arrogance is ill advised.

    138. Re:One small caveat by tmosley · · Score: 1

      So I have a right to all of Ireland, and can wall up the people there in a ghetto because they are the wrong religion?

      Awesome. I'll see you guys later, imma go commit some holy genocide up in this motha.

    139. Re:One small caveat by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Viewed through the prism of propaganda of enemy nations, ALL nations are lead by the insane.

    140. Re:One small caveat by tmosley · · Score: 1

      No they aren't. Gun ownership is a guaranteed right, and all males join the militia and are issued an automatic assault rifle to keep at home until the end of their service, at which point the weapon is switched to semi-automatic, and they get to keep it. Ammunition is distributed for free.

      You should you aren't thinking of Sweden?

    141. Re:One small caveat by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Really? Bush II started two wars. How many has Ammy started?

    142. Re:One small caveat by artor3 · · Score: 1

      The flaw in that assumption is that it contains the underlying assumption that self-preservation will always lead rulers to not use nukes.

      Look at Qaddafi in Libya. Look at Saddam in Iraq. Heck, look back to the ruling class in the French Revolution. When an oppressive autocracy falls, the leaders usually end up dead at the hands of their former subjects. If you are such a leader, and you believe that your fall is inevitable, might you not consider nuking the rebels?

      It's not so outlandish. Dictators have employed mass mutilation, rape-as-a-weapon, chemical weapons, and even genocide in the past. Can we be so sure that such people would draw the line at nuclear weapons?

      And even if nuking the rebels draws unwanted international attention, the dictator would still be better off, since the International Criminal Court does not employ capital punishment. Life in prison beats the heck out of being torn limb from limb by an angry mob.

    143. Re:One small caveat by Provocateur · · Score: 1

      China's southern neighbor? I haven't seen Chinese movies where fugitives head south of the border. Wouldn't that be the ocean?

      --
      WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
    144. Re:One small caveat by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      China's southern neighbor? I haven't seen Chinese movies where fugitives head south of the border. Wouldn't that be the ocean?

      Being that korea has water to the west, south, and east what neighbour would you suggest I call them :)

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    145. Re:One small caveat by vivian · · Score: 1

      Small arms are definitely up there with weapons of mass destruction.. If you want to kill off a lot of civilians in a country, just flood the place with cheap guns/ammo, and the population will do it to themselves.
      look at the death rate in the US from guns (31224 in 2007 in a population of aprox 300 M compared to say, the UK .(47 in 2007, in a population of 60M)

      South Africa is by far the worst though, at about 71 deaths per 100000 per year, with that country flooded with illegal guns.
      How many did that most successful (or at any rate the most notorious) terrorist attack 9/11 kill? just under 3000?

      I'm not saying you shouldn't have a right to have arms, but the social cost definitely has to be weighed up and should be put into perspective.
      Likewise, the social changes put in place to prevent damage to society from terrorist attacks should be commensurate with social changes put in place to prevent damage from other threats like lax gun control, unsafe vehicles and roads, lack of affordable medical access, and unhealthy food - all of which kill a hell of a lot of people each year.

    146. Re:One small caveat by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      growing fanatical religious movement that have strong power base within the country

      Care to cite something that supports this statement

      For me I was always supicious of the fact that a member of their own intelligence agency was too close to the assination of Yitzhak Rabin in the 90's. It was just too convenient for the Likud party in terms of the timing. If the Oslo accords had born fruit in terms of a few years of cessation of rocket attacks then the vast majority of the Israely public would have accepted a much smalled homeland in return for peace with their Arab neighbours.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avishai_Raviv

      Sorry about me not knowing where the Euphrates is btw, I was always crap at geography. I did follow the links you mention though and still came to the same conclusion: I cannot discount religious fantical nutters coming to power in Isreal just like have in Iran. I would not trust the vatican as a nuclear state either though just to be fair.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    147. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure about that. If Iran gets armed, I could easily see Israel attempting a disarming strike on it (i.e. trying to destroy its nukes) - and if it's unsuccessful, Iran would quite likely nuke Israel in retaliation.

    148. Re:One small caveat by Schmorgluck · · Score: 1

      Ahmadinejad is prown to spout random insane shit, which makes the sanity of Iran's government rather questionable.

      --
      There's nothing like $HOME
    149. Re:One small caveat by Evtim · · Score: 1

      Hilarious!

      Preamble: After the wall collapsed, the criminals in Eastern Europe got rich while the physics professors became taxi drivers.

      Joke: A group of newly enriched criminals wanted to bet heavily on horse racing. One of them suggested that they can hire one of those impoverished eggheads to calculate the odds. So they did and bet all the money on the horse that the physicists pointed out. The horse finished last. Screaming bloody murder the criminals go back to the nerd. "What did you do, asshole, you are dead!". "The calculations are sound", shrieks the physicists, "I just had to make a few assumptions". "What assumptions". "Well, I did them for spherical horse in vacuum!"

    150. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Instead of strapping bombs to their chest these good Christians strap them to airplanes and drop on those evil non-Christians, while waiting for the rapture.

    151. Re:One small caveat by dryeo · · Score: 1

      War of 1812, General Hull stated that Canadians were welcome to the land of the free but if they were allied with Indians, then they will be annihilated. (thus we burnt down Washington just to prove to Jefferson that Americans couldn't just walk into Canada and the Indians were very eager to ally with us as they knew what America meant by freedom)
      Of course the main motivation of the Revolution was the evil tyrant King stating that all his subjects were equal and theft of land was wrong. (note that King George III had about the same power as Elizabeth II has yet he got all the blame)

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    152. Re:One small caveat by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I'd say the purpose of war is to destroy a state that has become a liability to the human race, and it's past time.

      That's mostly correct, with the important caveat that both sides hold to that purpose - they just disagree about which one of them became a liability.

    153. Re:One small caveat by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Not even the government, actually. Or rather, the government is quite schizophrenic, since their officer corps and ISI are both full of islamists, even at higher levels.

    154. Re:One small caveat by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Not only that - it assumes that no one fucks up. Nuclear war was avoided for two reasons: both the USSR and the US were rational actors, and on both sides there were people who would rather die in a nuclear attack than press the button that started the nuclear war.

      Actually only the USSR were close to rational. The USA put nukes on the USSR's borders (Turkey at least) so the USSR put nukes on the USA's borders and the Americans went nuts, almost starting WWIII. The Russians were sane enough to back down rather then destroy the world. America could never understand that putting nukes on your enemies borders was nuts and freaking out about tit for tat was even more nuts.
      I've always felt more threatened by America then any other country. They voted in Reagan (and later GWB) and made him a saint when he was a religious nut who was prepared to destroy civilization if he didn't get his way.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    155. Re:One small caveat by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Not only that - it assumes that no one fucks up. Nuclear war was avoided for two reasons: both the USSR and the US were rational actors

      I would actually correct that a little: it wasn't that they were rational actors so much so as they were both societies where people, for the most part, lived their life without poverty and fear. This is not quite true of the last years under Stalin, which is why I'm personally very glad that he died before MAD was achieved (he was the kind of guy who might just be willing to play a risky game if he thought his chances of winning it were good - and judging by his WW2 track record, he wasn't good at guessing chances). After Stalin, USSR really ramped down its ideology - all the "world revolution" BS, with the attached focus on military and internal repression - and focused more on rebuilding itself and raising the quality of life substantially, which is what it largely achieved by early 60s. And when you have people who have a decent job with a stable income, food on the table every day, their kids go to school and are healthy, so they don't really have much to worry and can just get on with their lives - well, they tend to not be very keen on war, especially the kind that can directly inflict harm upon themselves and break their bubble of peace and calm. And even though Soviet leaders were not directly responsible to the people, they also carried the same overall attitude - from Khrutschev on, they weren't revolutionaries anymore, just dictators in a relatively well-off country who also wanted to live a calm life.

      This, by the way, is why things are very different with radical Islam (and I don't mean Iranian Shia here, I mean the real kind - Salafi fanatics, like al-Qaeda). When you have millions common people who believe that the highest gift they can receive from their God is martyrdom, they won't hesitate for a moment to launch a nuke, even if they will be nuked tenfold in response. This is also why Pakistan is the single most dangerous state in existence today - it has nukes and delivery facilities, and it is a highly unstable state that has a high likelihood of collapsing to Islamist insurgency rooted in the Tribal Areas of AfPak.

    156. Re:One small caveat by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1

      Right. Uh-huh. Because Iran, a nation run by religious nut jobs, will detonate a nuclear weapon on their own holy land.

      (in case you didn't know, like the last fellow that I had to tell this to, Jerusalem is also a holy site in Islam, it's where Mohammed ascended to heaven)

      Think rationally about this. If Iran nukes Israel, what's going to happen? Iran won't be around much longer...they will piss off three major religions (Jews, Christians, and Muslims). Either Israel, or the US will end up making Iran a hole in the ground, with the fervent support of the entire international community.

      If Israel nukes Iran, what's going to happen? International outrage, and then...nothing. The US will use their veto at the UN Security Council to prevent any action from being taken against Israel. And even if Iran did retaliate in some manner, see the previous paragraph.

      Those who say Iran is a danger to Israel have fallen for propaganda designed to thrust the US into another war for profit. Make no mistake, Iran is a shitty country, but if you want to destroy them the least you could do is, you know, come up with legitimate reasons for destroying them.

      --
      :(){ :|:& };:
    157. Re:One small caveat by blindseer · · Score: 1

      A high level of "gun crime" in a nation with a high level of gun ownership is a surprise to you? That's like being surprised about the high level of automobile accidents in a nation with a high level of automobile ownership. Yes, weapons are weapons and yet you equate gun ownership with "gun crime" instead of all crime.

      The claim made in the article is that possession of nuclear weapons reduces all war, not just nuclear war. What has happened in the USA is that places with high gun ownership rates has seen a reduction in all violent crimes. Property crimes are higher in places of high gun ownership but total crimes are lower. My theory is that thieves are more likely to steal from an unoccupied home if there is a high probability that the home owners are also gun owners but thieves do not fear an unarmed homeowner and therefore do not wait for a home to be unoccupied.

      This same theory carried over to wars between nations. When the stakes have risen in a full scale war with nuclear weapons a nation will be more reluctant to participate in it. Instead they will be more sneaky and instead participate in small scale skirmishes where the risks of deadly retaliation is less.

      Go look again at the rates of gun ownership and crime but this time take off your "gun crime" blinders and look at total crime rates. Again, this same blindness can be applied to the ownership of nuclear weapons. Certainly the risk of nuclear war is zero if we had no nuclear weapons but we cannot un-invent the nuclear bomb just as we cannot un-invent the firearm. We are all safer because of nuclear weapons and firearms since we are much more capable of killing those that would try to kill us.

      When the aggressor has the advantage, be it from a firearm or a nuclear weapon, the risk of the one with the advantage is low. When both sides are equally armed the risks taken on by the aggressor becomes much higher.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    158. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Small difference though is we are in their country killing and bombing. Change the scenario to them in our country and you might see believers willing to die for there cause. Though I doubt direct suicide I imagine more than a few willing to sacrifice there lives for our nation.

    159. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Let's remember that we in the west did fight an awful lot of wars in the name of driving back communists where it was our troops fighting against local people who simply did not want us to pick their leaders for them. This has left many scars in peoples minds, and made many countries scared of us even now."

      That.. I think it's still the same old fundamentally. Supreme warlord Bush said yeah there's no shit about WMD but they need a regime change.

    160. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look at Qaddafi in Libya.

      Qaddafi?

    161. Re:One small caveat by JigJag · · Score: 1

      Bring it, motherfucker.

      And how exactly would you say your comment didn't perfectly illustrate my point?

      JigJag

      --
      "The hallmark of humanity is the ability to move beyond sensory inputs" - Mary Helen Immordino-Yang
    162. Re:One small caveat by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      Shut up, pissant.

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    163. Re:One small caveat by JigJag · · Score: 1

      Do you understand that every time you react that way, it only supports what I was saying?
      That if you wanted to prove me wrong, you would maybe take my comment and highlight its flaws, for instance saying something like "sure, but you are forgetting the instances where the US has _helped_ others?" and then go on a list of, maybe, humanitarian actions and such, even maybe brandishing your ever popular "without us, Europe would be a (pick one: Nazi/Communist/Fascist) dictatorship today", or the less used "if it wasn't for our contributions to science and technology, you wouldn't have a computer to type on or the Internet to post your raving nonsense". At least it would spark some sort of dialogue where, maybe, one or both parties would actually learn something.

      Come on, try it, let's have an informative post out of this.

      --
      "The hallmark of humanity is the ability to move beyond sensory inputs" - Mary Helen Immordino-Yang
    164. Re:One small caveat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to this map [wikipedia.org] from the article you cited I think you [meant] Iraq and not Iran.

      If you actually followed some of the links from the article you cited you would [find] this [wikipedia.org]. The idea that Zionist want parts of Iraq in a conspiracy theory.

      growing fanatical religious movement that have strong power base within the country

      Care to cite something that supports this statement? All I can [find] is a reference to a political party [wikipedia.org] that merged with a larger one on 1976. By the way, a single professor, Hillel Weiss, does not make a "strong power base".

      I know Israel is widely suspected of already having them

      There is [quite] a [bit] of evidence [wikipedia.org] that takes the possibility of Israel having nuclear weapons far beyond "suspected". It is generally accepted that they have them but have not officially admitted to it because they do not want to open the conversation as to what they want them for.

      The only connection between Israel and Iran is Iran's desire to "remove Israel from the pages of history". Israel has no desire to Iranian lands.

      --

      I strongly suggest proofreading your work..

  3. Correction by ackthpt · · Score: 1

    Preventing large scale conflict between Russia, China, India, Pakistan, Western Europe, United States.

    Meanwhile, we've had almost non-stop wars, revolutions, invasions and a few instances of genocide since Nagasaki & Hiroshima

    I don't think it's working...

    Now sharks with lasers, that might do the trick...

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Correction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meanwhile, we've had almost non-stop wars, revolutions, invasions and a few instances of genocide since Nagasaki & Hiroshima

      And in a history awash in world wars (protip: World War I was not the first world-encompassing war), we've had precisely zero global conflicts since.

      You can cry up tiny sparks all you want - frankly, I agree that they're terrible events regardless of scale - but pointing to genocide in the ass end of nowhere and crying about nuclear deterrent not working makes no sense whatsoever.

    2. Re:Correction by Baloroth · · Score: 1

      It's a matter of scale. Nukes can prevent full-scale war between the countries that hold them. It cannot prevent smaller wars and genocides, just as it cannot prevent gang-wars or serial murderers. There is a minimum threshold before nuclear weapons would even be considered (i.e. an amount beyond which the use or threat to use a nuclear weapon is less than the damage that would be caused by not using one).

      --
      "None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license." --John Milton
    3. Re:Correction by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      nonsense, the superpowers fought massive proxy wars with millions of casualties. The superpowers bully and wage war against smaller states. Nuclear weapons, enabling warfare, genocide, theft of resources.

    4. Re:Correction by Pope · · Score: 1

      "Since then, there have been no wars among the major states of the world. War has been relegated to peripheral states (and, of course, wars within them). Nuclear weapons are the only peacekeeping weapons that the world has ever known. It would be strange for me to advocate for their abolition, as they have made wars all but impossible."

      Fucking LOL. Typical academic. "Wars are impossible, as far as my own narrow definition of a war goes!"

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    5. Re:Correction by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      Did you read it? No, just jump to your stupid post completed ignoring the fact that he mentions between smaller states and within those states.

      He is correct in his assertion.

      Yet nuclear powers did, via proxy. Also, smaller states have been at war with nuclear armed states. The risk of being labeled The Next Nation To Use Nukes To Kill People has had more, IMHO, to do with the reluctance to actually employ them. Nukes were considered for use in North Korea and North Vietnam, but saner minds prevented that.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    6. Re:Correction by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, we've had almost non-stop wars, revolutions, invasions and a few instances of genocide since Nagasaki & Hiroshima

      And in a history awash in world wars (protip: World War I was not the first world-encompassing war), we've had precisely zero global conflicts since.

      You can cry up tiny sparks all you want - frankly, I agree that they're terrible events regardless of scale - but pointing to genocide in the ass end of nowhere and crying about nuclear deterrent not working makes no sense whatsoever.

      Serbia/Bosnia/Kosovo, while US and Russia argued about it, eventually NATO stepping in (largely with a push from the US)

      Such an ugly event right in the middle of Europe, not some backwater of Africa.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    7. Re:Correction by Jeng · · Score: 1

      If there is a nuclear exchange between the world superpowers then there will not be a winner and it is even hard to call such an event a war, more of a cataclysm, or a man made extinction level event.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    8. Re:Correction by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      There has been no war between the major world power primarily because there has been no profit incentive to do so. There is nothing that could be gained that would have justified the cost. However, there have been innumerable profit motivations for the world powers to engage in skirmishes with the third-world either directly or by proxy. Consequently, nearly every major power has been either aiding or directly engaged in these activities.

      Could it be argued that nukes have eliminated the profit motivation for direct conflict between the major world powers? Sure. Would a nuclear armed world eliminate or even reduce the remainder of wars fought around the world? Doubtful. Much of the remainder, are either not profit motivated or stand to lose very little by engaging in nuclear war. In some cases, the gamble may even be justified by the potential of success in seriously harming the world powers such as the U.S..

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    9. Re:Correction by tsotha · · Score: 1

      Actually, the world since 1945 is the most peaceful it's ever been. Ever. Warfare has been the constant state of man since the first guy picked up a rock.

    10. Re:Correction by tsotha · · Score: 1

      McArthur told Truman he could win the Korean war by attacking southern China with only 40 nukes, and was waiting for the okay to proceed.

    11. Re:Correction by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      I'd say things are more extreme.

      Nukes prevent full scale war (not only between countries that hold them), but they increase the pressure of governments over their own citizens. The mere existence of nukes is enough to discorage foreign intervention, and the organization needed to keep them is an anti-democratic force.

    12. Re:Correction by Fallus+Shempus · · Score: 1

      67 years is not long enough; this article assumes our current global political systems are permanent and stable, they are not.

      At some point the world will face dwindling resources through either over population, global warming, running out of fossil fuels or some other such catastrophe, this cannot be avoided.

      At that point all bets are off; think of it like tectonic plates; pressure builds if the areas around the plates are weak (Germany 1938) a quake will happen quickly, if they are not so strong the pressure will continue increasing and nothing you can do will prevent a bigger quake.

      This does not just affect small states, over a long enough period under the right pressures, which could be caused by various factors, the good ol' USA would use it's nuclear arsenal.

    13. Re:Correction by Fallus+Shempus · · Score: 1

      ...if they are stronger the pressure will continue increasing and nothing you can do will prevent a bigger quake.

      Where's edit when you need it, oh yeah, same place I left 'read before submitting'
      ,br>

    14. Re:Correction by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Millions of casualties is a reduction of 1-2 orders of magnitude from the pre-atomic era.

    15. Re:Correction by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Could it be argued that nukes have eliminated the profit motivation for direct conflict between the major world powers? Sure. Would a nuclear armed world eliminate or even reduce the remainder of wars fought around the world? Doubtful.

      What nukes did, was create huge swaths of territory where people do not directly experience war, for several generations. This is a genuine first - historically, we've had major wars, the kind where a foreign army would march into the capital (and the ensuing devastation), pretty much every other generation - so practically every living person would have personally being affected by one, or had a close relative that was (either as a civilian on an occupied territory, or as a conscripted soldier).

      Yes, it's still not perfect since it doesn't cover the entire globe. But in areas which it does cover, it lets the society progress at an unprecedented speed.

    16. Re:Correction by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      irrelevant, it is not peace, it is enabling war

  4. Maybe if we eliminated by Nursie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Kings, emperors, priests, dictators and all other types of power-seeking politicians, who drag a country to war seemingly over little more than a bad case of butthurt, maybe then we could have some sort of peace without the MAD.

    1. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      Kings, emperors, priests, dictators and all other types of power-seeking politicians, who drag a country to war seemingly over little more than a bad case of butthurt, maybe then we could have some sort of peace without the MAD.

      What have you against Alfred E. Neuman?

      Problem is, leaders often look perfectly sane, outright popular while they are running around building up support (or the people are so busy with trying not to starve they have little time or energy for politics), but once in position of power it goes to their heads and they get all messianic about themselves.

      Keeping a regular rotation of leaders, particularly of alternating views, may seem inefficient, but it often proves to be a stablizing factor.

      The world where all leaders were wise and caring, which was promised to me by 1970's television cartoons, has yet to materialize.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    2. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except when you get rid of the people in power, you just get others who will replace them.

    3. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's elect our leaders by a lottery, every adult is a candidate whether they like it or not, including criminals etc... (to prevent those in power from excluding individuals or groups of people by crininalizing them) and only excluding those who have been "elected" before.

      After office they all stand trial. Then they go to prison (if they were corrupt) or they get enough money to live comfortably (so they don't need to be corrupt in the first place).

      I think this is close to Aristotle's idea of democracy.

    4. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by Schmorgluck · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Even the most well-meaning person, if put in a position of power, can end up riding a tiger they are unable to tame, and get used to the tiger. In other words, power corrupts. Someone with absolute power could just shoot the tiger, but absolute power corrupts absolutely. So yeah, a rotation of leaders with limited power is probably the optimal solution.

      --
      There's nothing like $HOME
    5. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by newcastlejon · · Score: 1

      I think this is close to Aristotle's idea of democracy.

      Quite.

      It is accepted as democratic when public offices are allocated by lot; and as oligarchic when they are filled by election. - Aristotle

      --
      If God forks the Universe every time you roll a die, he'd better have a damned good memory.
    6. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by localman57 · · Score: 1

      This is why George Washington is my favorite president. To have that sort of power, and to set a precident of giving it up is amazing.

    7. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by Jeng · · Score: 1

      I like the stand trial portion since that is something that most people do not include when talking about ideas such as this.

      Without the stand trial portion then the newbie politicians will just be temporary puppets of corporate interests.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    8. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not a trial, but an election. If, by popular vote, people don't think their lives are better than they were (or at least a wash) before that person took over, the ex-leader in question is put in solitary confinement for the rest of his/her life and given only bread and water. Once a week they will be trotted out so that people could hurl rotten fruit at them. If the people believe they are as well or better off than before, the ex-leader is set up in such a way that they will always be able to live a comfortable middle class life (depending on the standard of living). If they raise the middle class standard of living, their lives will be better.

      That person has to abide by all laws that they pass, and has to be a part of any program that a normal middle class American would be eligible for. That goes for all of the country's leaders. They will be paid no more than average middle class citizens and be given tickets for commercial transportation (paid for by the government). Until their term is over, they will be unable to touch any of the assets they held prior to gaining office. They will be given stewards to take care of their estate while serving. If they are sent to jail, their estate is forfeit and the money of the sell of the property (minus enough to keep their spouse living a middle class life) is divided among the people that the person led in the form of a tax break. So if a governor forfeits his/her estate, that money would be split among all of the people of the state. A Representative's estate would go only to the people in their region. The president's estate would be split among all of the people.

      If a leader is found doing something illegal, they are tried. Any crime they commit has the penalty of death while in office. Any corporation found attempting to bribe a leader is to be dissolved, and its assets sold to the highest bidder at auction.

      MAYBE that would stem a tiny bit of the corruption in this country.

    9. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by Jeng · · Score: 1

      MAYBE that would stem a tiny bit of the corruption in this country.

      You have some interesting ideas, but your punishments are too extreme and could easily be applied to people who did their best. You would imprison people for making the ethically correct, but unpopular decisions.

      That person has to abide by all laws that they pass, and has to be a part of any program that a normal middle class American would be eligible for. That goes for all of the country's leaders. They will be paid no more than average middle class citizens and be given tickets for commercial transportation (paid for by the government). Until their term is over, they will be unable to touch any of the assets they held prior to gaining office. They will be given stewards to take care of their estate while serving.

      Might I suggest instead is to house them in government dormitories modeled after military dormitories.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    10. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by steelfood · · Score: 1

      more than a bad case of butthurt

      If someone raped or tried to rape you from behind, I imagine you'd have some beef with that person.

      And I honestly don't think you'd take it gladly, or even lying down.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    11. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by Raenex · · Score: 1

      Maybe if we eliminated Kings, emperors, priests, dictators and all other types of power-seeking politicians

      Oh sure, just "eliminate" your undesirable class of people, and the resulting leaders will result in happy-fun-times. Or maybe not. See Pol Pot, Lenin/Stalin, Mao, etc. To advocate eliminating these people, you yourself are a "power-seeking politician".

    12. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a firm believer that 'did their best' isn't good enough if they tank a bunch of crap, but I see your point. I'll have to work on that to find a better way. Perhaps 5 years of imprisonment with monthly rotten fruit. I still hold that any crime committed should be dealt with swiftly and harshly once it is determined that the crime was committed. They should be held to a higher standard.

      I do like the government dormitories idea a lot. Treat them like others serving the country. Give them a small (I was in the military, I know how much the average soldier makes) stipend, provide clothing, food, and living accommodations. For those with families, give them 'base housing' type quarters in times of peace and barracks in time of war on foreign soil so that they won't go to war lightly.

      I may just write a book.

    13. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by Punctuated_Equilibri · · Score: 1

      This is +5 insightful? Who determines who gets eliminated, you? Would you eliminate Abraham Lincoln, because he was a politician who took the country to war? What do you think, when the bad guys come into the room you know because there is ominous background music? Oh wait, that's on television.

      --
      In group behavior: 'because they're evil/morons/sheep/crazy' is not 'insightful' it's 'oversimplified'
    14. Re:Maybe if we eliminated by Schmorgluck · · Score: 1

      You may want to read up about Cincinnatus. He was made a dictator by the Roman senate because there was an issue that required that kind of power to be fixed. And once the the problem was fixed, once he saved the Roman Republic, he handed the power he got back to the Senate, and went back to cultivate his own lands.

      But as a fan of George Washington, you proably know that already.

      And maybe you will find that the Society of the Cincinnati has outlived its usefulness.

      I am French, and a big fan of La Fayette, who ended up a member of said society (and an adopted son to George Washington), was a key personality in the French Revolution, and maybe, maybe, was the one person who could have prevented Napoleon from inventing modern dictatorship. The main reason he didn't was a lack of personal ambition. He finally conspired against Napoleon, but it was too late.

      Napoleon never got to imprison him because he was too popular.

      As a side note, La Fayette is one of the main reasons why I consider the USA and France as Sister republics, born of similar principles. And one day will come when La Fayette's cinders will have to be transfered to the Panthéon. And when this day comes (and it WILL come), the POTUS will be a mandatory guest, since La Fayette is a hero of the Independance War.

      --
      There's nothing like $HOME
  5. Kind of an obnoxious sentiment by TorrentFox · · Score: 1

    Or quite possibly after two world wars, people simply got so fed up with annihilating each other that they made an actual effort to avoid it for once?

    1. Re:Kind of an obnoxious sentiment by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      You're as insane as the OP. There is no 'world peace,' there's a different political atmosphere. Rather than fighting other countries, the politicians realized they can all live comfortably in power by oppressing their own people and helping each other oppress their own people. Instead of trying to rule the world, they're trying to keep knives out of their backs and grudgingly working together to make sure they're not deposed out of their own kingdom ever.

    2. Re:Kind of an obnoxious sentiment by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      Or quite possibly after two world wars, people simply got so fed up with annihilating each other that they made an actual effort to avoid it for once?

      Throttling the country, or region, where it all erupted had quite a bit to do with it. Cold War did lead to a long, uneasy peace, even if some poor innocent people had to pay for it with their lives being crush beneath a few soviet tanks.

      Meanwhile, smaller and very bloody conflicts still were (and are) waged, ironically the invasion of Iraq, was on the assumption someone had nukes and was hiding them. Crazy man, crazy.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    3. Re:Kind of an obnoxious sentiment by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Except that seems highly unlikely, give the fact that this also involves people who ahd nothing to do with either WW, and we we don't have a generation who really remembers them.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    4. Re:Kind of an obnoxious sentiment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Democracies don't go to war with one another. At least not volatile, hot, deadly wars. The theory is that when the politicians on both sides serve at the will of the people, even if two countries really hate each other the politicians won't be able to start a war. The people, on average, won't support it because they know what it means in terms of life (and economic) loss in their own country. The people will vote into power those that will negotiate endlessly and perhaps engage in trade wars, they won't let a true warmonger stay in power. The country that starts a real war is always an undemocratic country where a crazy few can lead the country into an action the populace doesn't at all support.

      Hence the whole US long term foreign policy about reforming irresponsible states into democracies. If you can get the whole world operating like that, then reducing stockpiles and standing armies becomes realistic.

    5. Re:Kind of an obnoxious sentiment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're as insane as the OP.

      Translation:

      I'm a smug Slashdotter. I'm way smarter than you and everybody else. Admire me while I prance around! Why won't you admire me? Why?

    6. Re:Kind of an obnoxious sentiment by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      The long term strategy isn't democracy so much as it is increasing interdependence. The reason, in part, that we had major conflicts like WWI and WWII was because we had these powerful nations who could fund and supply their military machines from their various global possessions and allies. It was no less than Winston Churchill who believed that Europe must unite in a closer political and economic union; in particular France and Germany, because when you become heavily interconnected socially, politically and economically the very idea of open conflict becomes more difficult to conceive.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    7. Re:Kind of an obnoxious sentiment by idontgno · · Score: 1

      Everyone, our illustrious Kenneth Waltz included, seems to be forgetting one critical thing: The Cold War wasn't a peace. Millions died in regional conflicts fueled by the opposing ideologies of the major Cold War combatants. Many of these were purely proxy fights (client nation A fights client nation B), but a couple of the biggest (Korea, Viet Nam, Afghanistan) involved actual forces of one of the "Big Three".

      It's probable that the threat of escalation prevented direct opposition between, say the Soviets and NATO; even the brinkman-like diplomacy surrounding some proxy wars raised the specter of head-to-head confrontation and often served as a wake-up and cool-down call.

      So, maybe Waltz has a point: rational nuclear-armed opponents have ample reason to avoid directly confronting each other. But they still do skirmish, sometimes; and no one the post-World-War-II era the "Cold Peace", because it never was peaceful.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
  6. The Main Problem by loteck · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The main problem is that the first time there is an exception to this trend of peace, it could conceivably be the last exception for everyone, period.

    1. Re:The Main Problem by coastwalker · · Score: 1

      Nuclear technology is verifyable and in a reasonably stable world it is possible to enforce a ban. So we should. Bioweapons and cyberwarfare isnt verifyable so we should be working on that.

      --
      Facts are history now plebs have politics for religion on social media.
    2. Re:The Main Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right, that's why we should go for complete disarmament. We're kinda short on resources now so maybe we should wait till after we win the War on Drugs.

    3. Re:The Main Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's too unlikely to even be worth a talking point. Even if there were an exception, it would likely be a one-off scenario. One or two, or at worst a handful, of nukes would be lobbed, and one or two cities rendered uninhabitable for a hundred years or whatever. And it would put the genie back in the bottle for another century or two at the least.

      The real problem is lone crazy idealists with nukes. They won't trigger wars, but nuclear terrorism is a big problem. It's again a one or two cities per incident sort of thing, but it can just keep happening repeatedly. I'm not talking about NK/Iran acting as states, I'm talking about what happens when irresponsible and/or unstable states start leaking nukes to small terrorist groups, even accidentally. As human technological progress continues to advance, the mountain one must climb to reliably manufacture nukes shrinks, and so it may eventually even be in the grasp of a well-funded terrorist organization to manufacture nukes with a little help from such a leaky state.

      I buy the argument that we shouldn't disarm modern responsible states, and by that I mean a state with some real semblance of a democratic process. They're arguably the only legitimate states anyways, the rest are just fiefdoms at the whim of a ruling few who might turn crazy at any point. The way to avoid war in general and nuclear doomsday specifically is to go ahead and arm the responsible states, and try to bring the irresponsible ones up to the level of a rudimentary functional democracy (because we can't actually stop them from developing nukes in the long run).

    4. Re:The Main Problem by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      "I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones."

      --Einstein

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    5. Re:The Main Problem by jklovanc · · Score: 1

      possible to enforce a ban

      We can't eve enforce a ban in a small country like North Korea how would we do that to a much larger country? I believe it would take a war to do it.

  7. The problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is with a lot of nukes around, it is easier for a splinter group to steal one and create havoc. Granted the major superpowers serve as a deterrent against mass nuclear warfare, but what are we going to do when crazy religious group #432 obtains a nuclear weapon they stole from a superpower?

  8. Obligatory Simpsons quote by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 4, Funny

    Lisa, I want to buy your rock...

    1. Re:Obligatory Simpsons quote by geekoid · · Score: 1

      His argument isn't specious. It's supported by a lot of evidences.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Obligatory Simpsons quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His argument isn't specious. It's supported by a lot of evidences.

      Sixty odd years with lots of wars, but no major ones isn't much evidence. Worse, maybe it just reduced the frequency of major wars. If they still happen at all, they'll be so devastating we won't ever have this debate again.

    3. Re:Obligatory Simpsons quote by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      There were no tigers before the rock, compared with WW1 and WW2 before nuclear weapons.

      Sure we don't have a parallel universe with which to run controlled experiments. However, if A did occur before B and A has not occured after B there is more evidence that B had some influence than if A did not occur before B and also did not occur after B.

  9. Oh my by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess he means that warmongers like US can wage illegal wars without any danger for them if the 'enemy' has no nuclear weapons.

    1. Re:Oh my by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or he means that warmongering cultures like Islam and the IRA can wage illegal wars on unarmed civilians without any danger because the enemy would never use their nuclear weapons.

  10. ...Until there is a war between major states. EOC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    EOC - End Of Comment

  11. false by demonbug · · Score: 1

    Gandhi's threats of NUCLEAR WEAPONS never kept me from going to war with him, so clearly this premise is false.

  12. Wrong by Sparticus789 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The 2.25 million people that died in the Korean War, and the ~ 2 million people that died in the Vietnam War would beg to differ.

    --
    sudo make me a sandwich
    1. Re:Wrong by amicusNYCL · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's exactly what he said, wars have been relegated to "peripheral states", not major states. Proxy wars between major states inside a third-party country is not the same thing as a direct war between the two major states.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    2. Re:Wrong by gl4ss · · Score: 0

      The 2.25 million people that died in the Korean War, and the ~ 2 million people that died in the Vietnam War would beg to differ.

      those are proxy wars, "conflicts" - if they were real wars then there would have been bombing of the chinese supplying factories, sinking of the ships bringing supplies from USA and so forth. those weren't "World at War" times - neither supplying side was going all in those wars. You could argue that as such they were rather pointless wars though(many south koreans might disagree).

      WW I and II are WW's for a reason - and this has been the most stable time in regards of world nations fighting each other since.. since ever, probably. there's other reasons than just the nukes though too - like photography and free journalism, which made people care about vietnam. this affects general mood of population, the attitudes of people towards the looming war prior to ww I were almost comical in a grotesque way - even to extend that a normal guy reading those pre-war accounts would think along the lines of "fucking idiots" when reading those, from any side which were going to enter the war.

      war also stopped being good business after ww1.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    3. Re:Wrong by Sparticus789 · · Score: 1

      Proxy wars between major states inside a third-party country is not the same thing as a direct war between the two major states.

      Proxy war or not, millions of people still died.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    4. Re:Wrong by Shatrat · · Score: 2

      The whole point of the interview is that they wouldn't have died if both sides of those conflicts had had nukes. Put the pedantry on pause and RTFA.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    5. Re:Wrong by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      The 2.25 million people that died in the Korean War, and the ~ 2 million people that died in the Vietnam War would beg to differ.

      Too true.

      But compared to 73 million in eight years (averaging over nine million per year for about half a generation) some people believe that's a substantial improvement.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    6. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In WWII 4 million people died as well. That is, the allies inflicted around 4 million casualties on the civilians among the axis powers. Add in civilian deaths perpetrated by Germany, Italy, and Japan, and the military dead, and the total is more then SEVENTY million. WWII lasted 6 years. The vietnam war lasted 20 years. So yea, I think that counts as pretty serious reduction.

    7. Re:Wrong by Sparticus789 · · Score: 2

      The whole point of the interview is that they wouldn't have died if both sides of those conflicts had had nukes. Put the pedantry on pause and RTFA.

      On the Korean War, that is true. On the Vietnam war, while the Vietnamese did not have Nukes, their proxy war masters did. RTF history books.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    8. Re:Wrong by Cl1mh4224rd · · Score: 1

      Proxy war or not, millions of people still died.

      "Since nuclear weapons were invented no one has died in any war, ever" isn't his argument, though.

      --
      People will pass up steak once a week, for crap every day.
    9. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so in other words, its all good as long as it's not us?

    10. Re:Wrong by DrVomact · · Score: 1

      The 2.25 million people that died in the Korean War, and the ~ 2 million people that died in the Vietnam War would beg to differ.

      Too true.

      But compared to 73 million in eight years (averaging over nine million per year for about half a generation) some people believe that's a substantial improvement.

      Yes, I get the impression that most of the commentators on this topic don't have a sense of proportion about the scale of destructiveness of the two world wars (which can reasonably be argued to be a single war with a 20 year time-out—so you should really add in the casualties of World War I). They also don't seem to understand that the destructiveness of war with conventional weapons has increased geometrically (if that's the right word) as the industrialized nation-states of the world grew in power. In the future, historians will look back at the first half of the 20th Century and shudder.

      We are both too far from that time of war, and too close to it. The younger generations are ignorant of what happened because they don't much care about history. If they think about them at all, the young think that the World Wars are indeed "ancient history", and do not concern themselves with just how disastrous the scale of destruction was. (I'm willing to bet that many people, when pressed about how many people were killed in World War II, will say "Uh...6 million?".) On the other hand, those of us who do take an interest in history have not yet had time to see the full impact of the wars, and measure them dispassionately. I happen to believe that the World Wars put an end to what has sometimes been called "Western Civilization", or what might be called the European-model nation-states. This is very clear in Europe now: borders are dissolving, nationalism has evaporated, and national currencies abandoned. These aren't necessarily all bad changes, but they are very significant indeed. I do not see the ultimate outcome, but I don't think it's going to be all good either. As usual, the U.S. lags a few decades behind Europe in catching up with developments.

      These views aren't original to me, any more than the view of nuclear weapons as an anti-war measure are unique to Kenneth Waltz. I first encountered both views—that nuclear weapons tend to prevent wars between states that do possess them, and that the nation-state model has become obsolete—in the writings of the Israeli historian Martin van Creveld. Take a look at his paper Through A Glass Darkly" for a quick summary of van Creveld's views. His book, Nuclear Proliferation and the Future of Conflict addresses the issue under discussion in a more comprehensive way.

      I would have thought that the deterrent effect of nuclear weapons on aggression is fairly obvious. After three wars in a few decades, India and Pakistan have not had a single war ever since both sides came into possession of nuclear weapons. How many nuclear powers has the United States attacked? Indeed, it looks as though the U.S. attack on Iraq taught the Iranians much about the importance of nuclear weapons. (A lesson that Israel was quick to grasp, and grasped much sooner.)

      I think that nuclear weapons don't deter war because they are so very destructive, but because they are so obviously and so quickly destructive. Both world wars were the result of miscalculation. Had the opposing sides known the true cost of these wars, they would have done anything they could to avoid them. This was especially true of World War I. It was supposed to be "over by Christmas"; the old in-and-out of traditional European wars that is ended by some border readjustments and modest reparation payments. Instead, the European powers experienced destruction and economic ruin on an unpr

      --
      Great men are almost always bad men--Lord Acton's Corollary
    11. Re:Wrong by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      That's exactly what he said, wars have been relegated to "peripheral states", not major states. Proxy wars between major states inside a third-party country is not the same thing as a direct war between the two major states.

      Yeah.

      For one thing, they are a lot worse for the civilian population of the third-party country.

      But any effect nuclear weapons have of redirecting major power war to the territory of non-nuclear states isn't the same thing as preventing war. (And, its not an effect that's seen between nuclear powers that lack convenient third-party proxy battlegrounds, like India and Pakistan.)

      Since proliferation means that the convenient third-party proxy battlegrounds dry up for those competing nuclear powers that currently have such available, it still increases, rather than constrains, the prospects for direct major-power war.

    12. Re:Wrong by tmosley · · Score: 1

      And the proxy masters didn't care about their citizens. If the Vietnamese had had nukes, there never would have been a war. Why is this hard to understand? Proxy wars exist so that major powers can fight without global annihilation. If EVERYONE had nukes, then there could be no wars, proxy or otherwise. World peace follows immediately.

    13. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The claim never was "nukes totally eliminate war"

    14. Re:Wrong by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      I agree with essentially all your points.

      I went with just WWII because it's on my horizon (I'm a boomer with a dad who fought in it shortly before my birth), it was adequate to make the point, and including the hiatus would have complicated finding the numbers.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  13. Wars are impossible? by psydeshow · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If nuclear weapons have made war so unlikely, then why does the USA spend so much time and money fighting wars?

    1. Re:Wars are impossible? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Because enough of the money they spend on the wars is going to someone with deep enough pockets to influence government policy.

    2. Re:Wars are impossible? by 0racle · · Score: 1

      But they fight them 'over there.' If you're in one of the countries that isn't 'over there' things are pretty good. That seems like the only thing the article author cares about. As long as the fighting is 'over there' he's not put out, it's like there is no war at all and nuclear weapons are a good thing.

      Out of sight, out of mind and that is the way it should stay.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    3. Re:Wars are impossible? by Moses48 · · Score: 2

      His whole argument is to let the "over there" states get nukes also and we can no longer fight on their turf at risk of being nuked ourselves.

    4. Re:Wars are impossible? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      We're dicks! We're reckless, arrogant, stupid dicks. And the Film Actors Guild are pussies. And Kim Jong Il is an asshole. Pussies don't like dicks, because pussies get fucked by dicks. But dicks also fuck assholes: assholes that just want to shit on everything. Pussies may think they can deal with assholes their way. But the only thing that can fuck an asshole is a dick, with some balls. The problem with dicks is: they fuck too much or fuck when it isn't appropriate - and it takes a pussy to show them that. But sometimes, pussies can be so full of shit that they become assholes themselves... because pussies are an inch and half away from ass holes. I don't know much about this crazy, crazy world, but I do know this: If you don't let us fuck this asshole, we're going to have our dicks and pussies all covered in shit!

    5. Re:Wars are impossible? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As more countries acquire nukes the rest of the world will run out of "over there"s to fight in.

    6. Re:Wars are impossible? by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      As the article points out: the remaining wars are fought against nations that don't have nukes.

    7. Re:Wars are impossible? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The USA doesn't fight wars, it does police actions in foolish attempts at nation building. Were the US fighting all out wars, civilian casualties and destruction of property would not even be an issue, much like the first and second world wars. The cost has been high precisely because the US was not willing to fight wars.

    8. Re:Wars are impossible? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because those poor bastards don't have enough nukes to keep the peace. We wouldn't invade them if they did.

    9. Re:Wars are impossible? by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      why does the USA spend so much time and money fighting wars?

      You're not really asking why Sean Connery's character robbed the train, are you?

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  14. Sigh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "This is an historical look..."

    You expect us to take you seriously?

  15. Heard this one before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a rehash of the old phrase "Peace through superior firepower." It always sounds a bit Orwellian, but the statistics do potentially bear it out. Two little nagging problems with this are Hiroshima/Nagasaki, which weren't very peaceful as about 135,000 people died in two flashes of light.

    1. Re:Heard this one before by Nadaka · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How is that a problem? The use of nuclear weapons ended the war and saved the tens of millions of lives that would have been lost in a ground invasion of the major Japanese islands.

    2. Re:Heard this one before by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 2

      ...Two little nagging problems with this are Hiroshima/Nagasaki, which weren't very peaceful as about 135,000 people died in two flashes of light.

      I will remind you that the war in the Pacific was killing that many people per month, so if the bombings hastened the end of the war by as little as 5 weeks, they saved as many lives as they took. (Not even accounting for those who would die by starvation due to the fact that the Japanese had drafted all the farmers into the war effort.)

      With or without nuclear weapons, the war was brutal.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    3. Re:Heard this one before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Asymmetric warfare. The 135,000 lives were mostly civilian. Pearl Harbor was an attack on a U.S. Navy base with relatively few deaths. The same disproportionate response happened after 9/11... Over 100,000 civilians in Iraq have died since the U.S. invasion, even though Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11. Sure, you could say all is well and fine unless you're one of those civilians, but what if you were one of those civilians? You wouldn't be debating the finer points of war with me right now, would you?

    4. Re:Heard this one before by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      No.

      There was not a choice of nuking Hiroshima and Nagasaki and doing nothing.

      There was a choice of nuking Hiroshima and Nagasaki ending the war or an invasion ending the war.

      Nuking Hiroshima and Nagasaki was the correct and humane decision.

      Ending the war before an invasion of the main islands saved millions of civilian lives.

      If you were one of the millions who would have killed themselves or been killed during the invasion, you wouldn't be debating the finer points of war with me right now, would you?

    5. Re:Heard this one before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Japanese government at the time was already opening diplomatic channels for a surrender, so that argument doesn't make sense. Some people argue that the bomb was dropped to impress Stalin to keep him out of Japan, but that doesn't explain the second one. I think the bomb was dropped mainly because we happened to have it and we weren't going to let what possibly was the only opportunity to test it slip away. Some people must have been very proud that the second bomb worked slightly better.

    6. Re:Heard this one before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We could debate this all day. I choose not to. Have a nice day.

    7. Re:Heard this one before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With or without nuclear weapons, the war was brutal.

      Another aspect of this was that US bombing of Japanese cities such as Tokyo with conventional bombs was already causing more deaths than the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. If you condemn the nuclear bombs, you have to condemn the Allied strategy in general.

    8. Re:Heard this one before by aminorex · · Score: 1

      tens of millions of unicorns farting rainbows, you mean

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    9. Re:Heard this one before by HArchH · · Score: 1

      Total War; the only moral kind of war there is.

  16. Ozzy thought of that decades ago by proslack · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Nothing new. "If that's the only thing that's stopping war then thank God for the bomb" ---Ozzy

    --


    Floating in the black seas of infinity without a paddle.
    1. Re:Ozzy thought of that decades ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah misquote , it's Ozzy, he probably meant "bong".

  17. problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Iran gets nuclear weapons, everyone else around them will, too. I don't think the current Iranian regime will use them unprovoked, but....

    Most of those states in the middle east are unstable. Dictatorships are always unstable (Democracies are unstable too, but they have a release valve built in, that allow the regime to change without violence). Even the Saudi regime will eventually be changed out. When they do, who will replace them? Will it be someone as crazy as Pol Pot? When an old regime is being kicked out, will they launch the nuclear weapons in a fit of rage and revenge? Will they do a scorched earth scenario, like the president in Babylon 5?

    Finally, in a technical sense this guy is wrong. Nuclear weapons are NOT the only peacekeeping weapon the world has ever known, or to even be called that. For example, there's a reason the Colt single-action got the name Peacemaker.

  18. World peace could be a nightmare by 0olong · · Score: 1

    Let's assume for argument's sake that nukes really do give these assurances, then not only would they prevent war between nation states, they'd likewise within those nations protect the powerful few and their military from ever being truly accountable to their own populace. All hail our permanent overlords.

    1. Re:World peace could be a nightmare by grantspassalan · · Score: 1

      Except that the overlords in each nation, once they were overlords over their own people, would want to be overlords over each other. That process would continue until there was only one overlord over the whole world. During that process, it is unfortunately not at all unlikely that some crazy overlord somewhere would use nuclear weapons to try and prevent some other overlord to lord it over them.

      --
      A sufficiently advanced simulation is indistinguishable from reality.
  19. Ultimate Time Bomb by whisper_jeff · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sorry to be blunt but anyone who thinks this is a moron.

    The lack of wars involving countries possessing nuclear weapons does not demonstrate that it is a good peacekeeping measure. It demonstrates that it's a good _TEMPORARY_ peacekeeping measure. The problem is, eventually, at some point, someone will push the button. And the button has drastic results that will instantly eradicate any concept of "peace" in an instant as well as plunging the planet into the stone age. Just because a weapon _temporarily_ prevents violence does not mean it will _permanently_ prevent it. We are, in the end, human. We will, eventually, fight. Someone will sling insults and then, eventually, someone will throw a punch. The problem is the punch will wipe out an entire city and be followed by hundreds of other punches.

    Anyone who thinks nuclear weapons are a peacekeeping tool is an idiot. They are the ultimate ticking time bomb. They are a temporary solution to a permanent problem.

    To be blunt.

    1. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by Grave · · Score: 1

      The non-use of nuclear weapons is a temporary solution to the problem. The use of nuclear weapons is a permanent solution.

    2. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by Mullen · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, if I can be blunt, what you state are the words of a simpleton.

      The fact is, there are nuclear weapons in the world. They are here and they are not leaving until something more powerful comes along and to decry their existence is pointless and left for debating by simpletons who live in a dream world.

      Permeant peace is an unachievable dream since every State has their own goals and many of those goals go against another States goals. In a sense, nuclear weapons create a temporary peace that is very very very long. Creating a balance where if one nuclear actor strikes another, they will strike back with nuclear weapons. This creates a very balanced, and I will admit, frightening peace.

      Iran and North Korea, with all of their bluster, are never going to strike their nuclear neighbors since the neighbors will strike back with nuclear weapons. The balance being; anything they have to gain will be lost in the mushroom clouds that soon form over their own cities. Their leaders might be crazy, but they know the day they strike with nuclear weapons, is the last day they are in power and power is all they care about.

      --
      Linux O Muerte!
    3. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by LateArthurDent · · Score: 1

      Anyone who thinks nuclear weapons are a peacekeeping tool is an idiot. They are the ultimate ticking time bomb.

      Being the ultimate ticking time bomb is what makes it such a good peacekeeping tool.

      Frankly, if we as a species can't handle the responsibility, we don't deserve to survive. I see no benefit in preserving a species that doesn't have the self-control necessary to protect itself.

      I tend to think we do have it, and I think we've proven that over the years, but if it turns out I'm wrong, it's a self-correcting problem.

    4. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      Their leaders might be crazy, but they know the day they strike with nuclear weapons, is the last day they are in power and power is all they care about.

      Bingo.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    5. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i too will be blunt. everybody on slashdot is a big ahole!

    6. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by mrjatsun · · Score: 2

      > Their leaders might be crazy, but they know the day they strike with nuclear weapons,
      > is the last day they are in power and power is all they care about.

      Yes, and what if they are about to removed from power, e.g. uprising? What's to stop them from having the
      mentality of "if I can't have, no one will".

    7. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... It demonstrates that it's a good _TEMPORARY_ peacekeeping measure. ... Anyone who thinks nuclear weapons are a peacekeeping tool is an idiot. ...

      To be blunt.

      To be "blunt", you contradicted your own "point" (rimshot).

    8. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Permeant peace is an unachievable dream since every State has their own goals and many of those goals go against another States goals.

      along with all the other succesful predictions

    9. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      General "Buck" Turgidson: General Ripper called Strategic Air Command headquarters shortly after he issued the go code. I have a portion of the transcript of that conversation if you'd like me to to read it.
      President Merkin Muffley: Read it!
      General "Buck" Turgidson: Ahem... The Duty Officer asked General Ripper to confirm the fact that he *had* issued the go code, and he said, uh, "Yes gentlemen, they are on their way in, and no one can bring them back. For the sake of our country, and our way of life, I suggest you get the rest of SAC in after them. Otherwise, we will be totally destroyed by Red retaliation. Uh, my boys will give you the best kind of start, 1400 megatons worth, and you sure as hell won't stop them now, uhuh. Uh, so let's get going, there's no other choice. God willing, we will prevail, in peace and freedom from fear, and in true health, through the purity and essence of our natural... fluids. God bless you all" and he hung up.
      [beat]
      General "Buck" Turgidson: Uh, we're, still trying to figure out the meaning of that last phrase, sir.
      President Merkin Muffley: There's nothing to figure out, General Turgidson. This man is obviously a psychotic.
      General "Buck" Turgidson: We-he-ell, uh, I'd like to hold off judgement on a thing like that, sir, until all the facts are in.
      President Merkin Muffley: General Turgidson! When you instituted the human reliability tests, you *assured* me there was *no* possibility of such a thing *ever* occurring!
      General "Buck" Turgidson: Well, I, uh, don't think it's quite fair to condemn a whole program because of a single slip-up, sir.

    10. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      It demonstrates that it's a good _TEMPORARY_ peacekeeping measure. The problem is, eventually, at some point, someone will push the button.

      I agree. Also, let's not forget. We're constantly redefining what a nuke is. We're developing tactical nukes and bunker-busting nukes. And we're even using depleted Uranium in our ordinances.

      Some of us are so eager to push that button, we're constantly redefining the boundaries of what's possible with nuclear technology and what's possible ethically.

    11. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      They are here and they are not leaving until something more powerful comes along and to decry their existence is pointless

      The Obomb: ending war though HOPE and CHANGE

    12. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Their leaders might be crazy, but they know the day they strike with nuclear weapons,
      > is the last day they are in power and power is all they care about.

      Yes, and what if they are about to removed from power, e.g. uprising? What's to stop them from having the
      mentality of "if I can't have, no one will".

      ^ exactly

    13. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by grantspassalan · · Score: 1

      "The fact is, there are nuclear weapons in the world. They are here and they are not leaving until something more powerful comes along..."

      Just before Jesus Christ was murdered, his followers came to him one day and asked him about this “return” of his to rule over the Earth. He told them many things. Among them he said that there would come a time so terrible, such as has never been on Earth nor will never be again and if that time were not cut short by God, no life would remain on earth.

      There are thousands of nuclear weapons stored in the arsenals of the various nations. If only a small fraction of those were exploded in a global war, the radiation released could indeed threaten all life forms on the planet. Fortunately, humanity is not in charge of their own destiny, even though many have that delusion. Someone, namely God, the one who put us here on this Earth, will intervene and prevent us foolish human beings from destroying ourselves and His planet. He has given us thousands of years to learn how to govern ourselves. We have accomplished nothing but strife and war, killing each other individually and nationally. He promised to return and personally govern, because we have clearly failed.

      --
      A sufficiently advanced simulation is indistinguishable from reality.
    14. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, if I can be blunt, what you state are the words of a simpleton.

      The fact is, there are nuclear weapons in the world. They are here and they are not leaving until something more powerful comes along and to decry their existence is pointless and left for debating by simpletons who live in a dream world.

      ((Irrelevant ranting removed))

      You completely failed to address the grandparent's point.

      You seem to be arguing that we can't get rid of nuclear weapons. Grandparent did not say that it was possible. He said they do not guarantee peace. He is right, and nothing you said even tries to refutes it.

      Please read the text you are trying to argue with before replying.

    15. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by artor3 · · Score: 1

      Interesting that you call someone else a simpleton, and yet are so utterly convinced that no one would ever use a nuke. Speaking in such absolute terms seems very, well, simple. When we're talking about events that would kills tens of millions, it's very important to pay attention to the difference between "extremely unlikely" and "never gonna happen".

    16. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What uprising? Those who are in power are there because of power.

    17. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by downhole · · Score: 1

      This always drives me nuts... why do people think that depleted uranium weapons have anything to do with nuclear technology? The whole point of it is that most of the fissionable stuff has been removed from it. They use it in cannon shells because it's better at penetrating conventional armor than other materials due to its density and self-sharpening and pyrophoric properties. It's probably not a great idea to eat it or breathe vapors of it, just like most of the other stuff they use in cannon shells, but it isn't significantly radioactive (hell, it's used for radiation SHIELDING) and has nothing to do with nuclear explosions (it is used in bombs, mostly as dead weight).

      --
      I don't reply to ACs
    18. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And here's a perfect example of the existence of non-rational people. It's a very short trip from "god will save us" to "we need to use our nukes so god will save us".

    19. Re:Ultimate Time Bomb by grantspassalan · · Score: 1

      This is indeed a perfect example that there are a lot of a irrational people in this world. The trouble is that the rational, thinking ones have not been able to save humanity either in all this time we've had on this planet. At every level, there have been murder and strife, at family level, tribal and international wars. So there is no one left except for God to save us humans from ourselves. This is what the God who created time said will happen before time will be no more.

      --
      A sufficiently advanced simulation is indistinguishable from reality.
  20. Misses a key point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This may all work just fine with applied to cold war era US and USSR, none of which was a theocracy.

  21. I'm trying to imagine by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

    Florida, or Texas 'stand your ground' laws with nukes.

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    1. Re:I'm trying to imagine by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      What do you mean, "imagine". Second Amendment doesn't limit the kinds of arms it applies to, so nukes are covered as well. A society with a nuke in every backyard is a polite society! ~

  22. I tried this on a micro-scale once... by UltimaBuddy · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... and everyone got all uptight about me handing out guns indiscriminately to known & repeat violent offenders.

    Why can't they see that I'm trying to keep them safe?

    1. Re:I tried this on a micro-scale once... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give one gun to the head of household of each family. Nations aren't run by boys with out of control aggression, they are run by old men.

    2. Re:I tried this on a micro-scale once... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, so *everyone* in your world seems to enjoy being repeatedly beaten by violent offenders.

    3. Re:I tried this on a micro-scale once... by a_hanso · · Score: 1

      A funny but slightly flawed analogy. Guns generally do not assure mutual destruction.

      Most people who shoot first, do so with the (correct) belief that if they hit the other guy, his ability to retaliate effectively will be close to zero. This is not the case with nuclear armed states. At least in the case of the USA and Russia, nuclear facilities seem to be built with the express purpose of retaliation, not first strike.

    4. Re:I tried this on a micro-scale once... by blindseer · · Score: 1

      Attorney General Eric Holder? Is that you?

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
  23. Ponder This by MightyMartian · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In May, 1945 as Germany collapsed completely, the Soviets had over six million troops in Eastern Europe. War planners in Britain and the US had already been planning for WWIII. To my mind, one of things that stopped the Red Army in its tracks and ended any possibility of trying to take advantage of the numerical superiority in that theater was the attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The unconditional surrender of the Japanese to the Americans after those attacks also meant that the Soviets only managed to grab the Kuril Islands, and never made it as far as the Japanese main islands (there are some who theorize one of the reasons that Truman gave the go ahead was to convince the Japanese to surrender quickly before the Soviets could start moving south from the Kurils).

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    1. Re:Ponder This by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 3, Informative

      (there are some who theorize one of the reasons that Truman gave the go ahead was to convince the Japanese to surrender quickly before the Soviets could start moving south from the Kurils).

      Which is nonsense. The USSR didn't even attack Japan until August 18, which was after both the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings.

      Truman making the decision to drop the atomic bombs to prevent the Soviets from grabbing more than Kurils when the Soviets didn't have the Kurils till after the bombs were dropped would be an amazing example of prescience....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    2. Re:Ponder This by Shatrat · · Score: 2

      Would it have taken Nostradamus to figure out that the USSR would do the same thing to Japan that they did to Eastern Europe if given the chance?

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    3. Re:Ponder This by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As far as I remember, the Russians had agreed to attack Japan shortly after the surrender of Germany, so no prescience was involved ... just a bit of memory ;-)

    4. Re:Ponder This by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the GP's point still stands despite that little detail, though. Truman would have been aware of the impending Soviet attack on Japan. And it was Truman's policy of containment without bringing us into direct conflict with the Soviets that we followed throughout the entire Cold War. He wouldn't have wanted them to have half or all of Japan like they had half of Europe.

    5. Re:Ponder This by Svartormr · · Score: 2

      At the Tehran and Yalta Conferences Stalin agreed to wage war on Japan within 3 months after the war ending in Europe. And the U.S.S.R. did so to the day on August 9, 1945.

      Althought there may have been thoughs about limiting Soviet opportunities for expansion, dropping the bombs on Japan was the alternative to amphibious invasion by the United States, Britain, and the other allies. From Wikipedia's article on Operation Downfall:

      Japan's geography made this invasion plan quite obvious to the Japanese as well; they were able to predict the Allied invasion plans accurately and thus adjust their defensive plan, Operation Ketsug, accordingly. The Japanese planned an all-out defense of Kysh, with little left in reserve for any subsequent defense operations. Casualty predictions varied widely but were extremely high for both sides: depending on the degree to which Japanese civilians resisted the invasion, estimates ran into the millions for Allied casualties[1] and several times that number for total Japanese casualties.

    6. Re:Ponder This by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On slashdot, yes. Past behaviour, or history, shall provide no insight into future behaviour.

    7. Re:Ponder This by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Would it have taken Nostradamus to figure out that the USSR would do the same thing to Japan that they did to Eastern Europe if given the chance?

      Well, since the USSR didn't have much interest in waging war on Japan, and waited as long as permitted by their agreement with the other Allies to do so, it was a pretty good guess that they weren't going to do much there without the Western Allies twisting their arms.

    8. Re:Ponder This by jklovanc · · Score: 1

      After the fall of Germany Russia was shipping massive numbers troops to Kamchatka and attacked Japanese holdings in China with 1.2 Million troops the same day the Nagasaki bomb was dropped. Do you really think the US was blind to the massive transfer of troops and the mobilization by Russian troops in Easter Asia? It is quite easy to project what a couple of million battle hardened troops from the Germany campaign could do if left to run free in Asia for a few months. One reason to drop the bomb was to avoid having Korea and most of China in Russian hands and having to partition Japan itself.

    9. Re:Ponder This by imikem · · Score: 1

      Have a source for that late date? My recollection is that the Soviets began attacking Japanese occupied Manchuria on August 8, the day before the Nagasaki bombing.

      In any case, multiple reasons can be found for the decision, and waiting on Stalin's "help" wouldn't have been a great idea.

      --
      Perscriptio in manibus tabellariorum est.
  24. Flawless logic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (with fingers in his ears) "NYAH NYAH NYAH NYAH, I can't hear those people dieing in iraq"

  25. Winning strategy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Convince everybody to get rid of their weapons, but keep yours.

  26. Iran by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The main problem is that Iran won't use nuclear weapons in their own right. They'll use them via a proxy like Hezbollah. So it doesn't quite fit into the scenario he is describing.

    1. Re:Iran by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      The main problem is that Iran won't use nuclear weapons in their own right. They'll use them via a proxy like Hezbollah. So it doesn't quite fit into the scenario he is describing.

      Standard neocon justification: "sure, history doesn't back my claim, but this time is different because _____".

      Prove it. Prove that Iran is stupid enough to not know that any use of nuclear weapons or dirty bombs by their proxies won't be traced back to them. Or at least show me some game theory where other states won't respond in a way that would be sufficient deterrence.

      Iran has, throughout all previous interactions, been a very rational and intelligent actor. You need to either demonstrate that they aren't or give a very strong case for deterrence being somehow broken.

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    2. Re:Iran by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Do you think e.g. Israel will not be aware of it, and will care enough to make the difference?

  27. Several problems by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

    First, MAD assumes that nobody involved is, er, mad. If a true loony got their hands on a nuke, they might set it off to get their 72 virgins.

    Second, there's the risk that Iran might think they could blow Israel first and destroy their ability to strike back.

    Third, there's the danger of a miscalculation. Given how close Iran & Israel are, there's not much time to verify that that flock of geese overhead really is a flock of geese.

    Maybe none of those scenarios would happen if Iran got the bomb. But having the bomb doesn't guarantee stability either, even if it has diminished war so far. It just takes one exception.

    --
    Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    1. Re:Several problems by thereitis · · Score: 1

      Thought exercise: Two leaders in a room each have hand grenades and a dozen countrymen. Either leader can choose to detonate their hand grenades, but they know they will kill most or all of the people in the room by doing so. One leader continually beats and otherwise abuses the other leader's people, escalating in atrocity and brazenness as time goes on. At what point will the other leader decide enough is enough and detonate one or more grenades?

      My point: MAD has its limits, and you don't necessarily have to be crazy to want to use a nuke even if the other side also has them, too.

    2. Re:Several problems by domatic · · Score: 1

      Israel keeps at least two of their Dolphin class subs on patrol in the Mediterranean sea at all times. These boats are commonly believed to be nuclear armed. If true, then Israel can Second Strike Iran or anyone else who thinks blowing up Tel Aviv is a good idea.

    3. Re:Several problems by Roachie · · Score: 1

      Ladies and gentlemen, I give you NUTS - MADs itchy-trigger-fingered little brother.

      --
      This sig is not paradoxical or ironic.
  28. The citizens of Hiroshima are not convinced. by BForrester · · Score: 2, Informative

    The citizens of Nagasaki second the argument.

  29. Fewer, but more destructive by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Right. There is a plausible argument that nuclear weapons may have decreased the frequency of large-scale war. (That argument could be challenged [the data set is only 67 years, which may not be statistically significant] but it's a defensible proposition). However, nuclear weapons increase the destructiveness of large-scale war. So it is not at all obvious that decreasing the frequency but increasing the severity of war is a good result.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I don't know why people enjoy extrapolating data when they only have two samples.
      "Hey, WWI and WWII occurred almost within the same decade... WWIII should had happened long time ago! Therefore, we won't have WWIII!

      Awesome conjecture.

    2. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by dubyrunning · · Score: 2
      I don't think it's at all certain that quick and devastating nuclear strikes would amount to more dead than the conventional wars which nuclear weapons have made impossible. Approximately 60 million people were killed in World war II, or about 2.5% of the world population. "Only" approximately 150,000-246,000 of those dead were killed by atomic weapons.

      If WWII is any indication, if a war were to break out with a nuclear-armed state, it would end abruptly. The bombed state(s) would either surrender in the face of certain destruction after the first bomb or two fell, or their military capacity would be so devastated by the strikes that they would be unable to mount an effective campaign.

      Couple the brevity of a nuclear war with the higher number of potential combatants and civilians that would be killed in a conventional shooting/firebombing war, and the proportionally higher power of conventional weapons than in WWII, and it's not at all clear that nuclear weapons would increase the overall destructiveness of a major war.

      It is clear, however, that major powers are loath to start a potential WWIII because of nuclear weapons, thus saving tens or hundreds of millions of lives. That's what the Cold War was about.

    3. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So it is not at all obvious that decreasing the frequency but increasing the severity of war is a good result.

      And if you blow up 10 times as much stuff but only 1/10th as often, the nuclear version doesn't leave unexploded stuff around for decades after. So yep, it'll take a long time to collect enough data to make a fair comparison ;-)

    4. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by evilRhino · · Score: 1

      There are other models you could use. For example, in the US, the second amendment allows private citizens to arm themselves and we have more guns per capita than other countries as a result. Because of the proliferation of arms in the US, we should have correspondingly low crime rates, since armament is a deterrence.

    5. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by SilentStaid · · Score: 1

      I thought it was about Rocky and Drago, a scrappy underdog hockey team, Patrick Swayze's guerilla warfare outfit, Tom Clancy's career and a few CoD:MW games. Damn you pop culture! You failed me again.

    6. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by Meeni · · Score: 1

      That is true and great, but lets consider the other option: complete, voluntary disposal of all weapons. This is not credible either. The famous Oppenheimer quote summarizes: "the physicists have known sin; and this is a knowledge which they cannot lose."

      You can never stop having nuclear arsenal, just in case the other has secretly built one. First strike advantage is overwhelming, if second strike is to take 2 years.

    7. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by Mike_EE_U_of_I · · Score: 1

      ... However, nuclear weapons increase the destructiveness of large-scale war...

      You may very well be correct. However. the only experimental data to date, shows the opposite. The bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were less lethal than the fire bombings of other Japanese cities. Furthermore, the fire bombings did not get the Japanese to give up. The nukes did. Total destruction was far less with nukes than the part of the war without them.

    8. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      And yet you have way more people in prison than the rest of the world. Indicating either that your crime rate isn't low or the rest of the world is really bad at catching criminals.

      Or maybe you mean low crime rates for a certain class of crimes, in which case you should restrict the claim.

    9. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by tmosley · · Score: 1

      If you are going to make statements about the statistical significance of 67 years worth of data, please find out how many other 67 year periods of peace there have been.

      Might also run the numbers with consideration of the fact that non-nuclear nations continue to have wars and suffer invasions at the hands of nuclear armed nations, something which belies any argument that nuclear armed nations just happen to be more "civilized".

    10. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Determine the rate of victimization of people who open carry to answer that question. The US deterrent doesn't prevent wars between small, strategically unimportant countries.

    11. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      If you decrease the frequency to zero it is a great result. Frankly I am not sure that nuclear weapons as we have them today would increase the severity. Decrease the duration yes but have you seen pictures and seen what the body count of WWI and WWII was? An all out conventional war between the US and Russia and or China or any combination would be absolutely devastating. If they duked it out over Europe and there where no nuclear weapons I am thinking that there would be very little left in an all out take no quarter war like WWII with modern weapons. Imagine what would be left of Warsaw after a 100 B1 or B2 bomber raid? "Yes we do not have that many but without nuclear weapons would would probably have a 1000 and yes I am assuming Russia occupied Warsaw.
      Or what would be left Munich after 100 Blackjack raid? Maybe even using FAEs?
      Yea it gets pretty ugly no matter if you use Nuclear weapons or not. Not to mention that without Nukes Chemical and Biologicals might be in wide spread use.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    12. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      All repeat after me: correlation isn't causality.
      I don't think we have any proof that the nuclear threat and not, say, the shock after WWII paired with specific geopolitical circumstances has been what kept large-scale war at bay. If something similar to this is the case, then nuclear proliferation is very, very dangerous, because the balances of power will enevitably shift - *are* shifting this very moment* - out of equilibrium, and boom goes the powder storage, this time nuclear.

    13. Re:Fewer, but more destructive by bratwiz · · Score: 1

      The theory assumes rational actors at the switch. When you try to apply the rule to guns and rednecks you're missing that 'rational' part.

  30. game theory - rational players by cslewis2007 · · Score: 2

    I think the fatal flaw in the dogma of MAD is that it is predicated on the notion that the actors act rationally and share the same root common values. I don't think that's the case with Iran or other countries with unstable, immature, leaders.

    1. Re:game theory - rational players by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the fatal flaw in the dogma of MAD is that it is predicated on the notion that the actors act rationally and share the same root common values. I don't think that's the case with Iran or other countries with unstable, immature, leaders.

      Most of us do share the value of self-preservation, which is the only value essential to MAD.

    2. Re:game theory - rational players by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      It's a nice assertion, but I don't think anybody has made a sufficient case that Iran, as a state, has been irrational or unintelligent. I'd argue that they pursue WMD precisely because they understand the underlying logic so well and they seek its protection. I think they understand the lessons of Iraq, Libya, and North Korea very well.

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    3. Re:game theory - rational players by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      India wouldn't hesitate to give an entire nation another spin on the wheel of life if action called for it. So from that PoV, I'd say you're correct.

    4. Re:game theory - rational players by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1

      Iran is run by religious nutjobs. Yes?

      Israel contains land that Muslims consider holy. Yes? (in case you doubt me, Mohammed is said to have ascended to heaven in Jerusalem)

      Do you really think Iran would bomb land that their people consider holy? If I were you, I'd be much more worried about India and Pakistan, or an Israeli nuclear first strike against Iran Iran knows if they do shit to Israel, the US will come down on them hard. Iran also knows that if Israel does shit to Iran, the US will use their Security Council veto to stop Israel from suffering any repercussions, aside from "international outrage".

      But with India and Pakistan, there is no world superpower that sits behind either of them, with the power to wipe the other out.

      There are just so many reasons that Iran is NOT going to nuke anyone that I have a hard time taking people who say such things seriously.

      --
      :(){ :|:& };:
  31. proxy wars by PancakeMan · · Score: 2

    This "peripheral state" idea strikes me as naive. Was, say, the Vietnam war just between North and South Vietnam? Wasn't it a war, staged in Vietnam, between bigger (nuclear) powers?

    1. Re:proxy wars by tsotha · · Score: 1

      No, because the great powers never came into direct conflict. There were something like two million deaths in Vietnam, but 70 million died in WW II. Wars between great powers are a whole different beast than little proxy wars.

  32. All it takes is one Joker (Batman reference) by davidwr · · Score: 2

    The North Korean leaders are as close as we have today to a "Joker with the bomb."

    But imagine if anyone or any organization with a few million dollars could get the materials to build a bomb big enough to kill almost everyone within a quarter-mile radius and severely injure almost everyone within a half-mile radius.

    It would only be a matter of time - years or less - before some idiot who didn't care if he or even humanity lived or not used one.

    Heck, he'd probably try to make it look like some other country was behind it just to start a real war.

    No, a world with large numbers of countries or worse, non-governments or individuals with the bomb is NOT a safe place to be, at least not if there's any real chance someone will use one just for kicks.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  33. No wars... right... by gman003 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So the Vietnam War, the Korean War, the Dominican Republic wars, the Arab-Israeli and Yom Kippur wars, the Soviet and American invasions of Afghanistan, two Persian Gulf wars, the Falklands War, the Invasion of Grenada, the Serbia-Bosnia war, and too many more to list... those are just what, "police actions"? Some of them you can discard as "non-major countries", but too many of them had major, nuclear-armed powers on at least one side.

    In fact, you could argue that nukes have produced *more* wars. Just look at Wikipedia. They obviously don't have a single page listing every war that ever was, but they've got it broken up by dates:
    List of wars before 1000
    List of wars 1000–1499
    List of wars 1500–1799
    List of wars 1800–1899
    List of wars 1900–1944
    List of wars 1945–1989
    List of wars 1990–2002
    List of wars 2003–2010
    List of wars 2011–present

    Weird how roughly 40% of all wars happen *after* 1945, when he says war basically ended. That assumes that all sub-lists have approximately the same length, which isn't precisely true, but it's close enough for our purposes (in fact, the longest seem to be the 1900-1944 and 1945-1989 lists). So you could easily argue that, while nukes may prevent major wars, they do so by converting them into numerous small wars.

    And even his premise of "no major wars" is not proven. Sure, we haven't had a World War since '45. That's 65 years or so. They've had wars that *lasted* longer than that. Having a peace that lasts that long in "Western and Northern Europe and North America" isn't exactly uncommon. I can imagine people made the same argument about the rifle in pre-Napoleonic Europe, and I know people said such things about machine guns after WWI.

    The Fallout games had it right - war never changes.

    1. Re:No wars... right... by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      Considering the Western Hemisphere, there were several "general wars", involving the major powers of the day. The Seven Years War could probably be considered the first actual world war, as it involved the Great Powers and their overseas empires.

      That is considerably different than regional or civil wars. Yes, there have been more of those, but when you compare them to the sheer losses of massive conflicts like the Thirty Years War or WWII, it's hard see how your comparison is all that fitting.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:No wars... right... by arceum · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wikipedia breaks it down like this because of the availability of information, not the frequency of the subject. You really think there have been the same number of wars from the beginning of time to 1000ad as the last 18 months, as you imply? There have wars that took out entire civilizations that you've never heard of, that no one has heard of, Wikipedia is no time traveler. There have been no major wars, what makes a war major, you ask, my answer would be: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wars_and_anthropogenic_disasters_by_death_toll

    3. Re:No wars... right... by LateArthurDent · · Score: 1

      Some of them you can discard as "non-major countries", but too many of them had major, nuclear-armed powers on at least one side.

      He means wars between two or more "major countries" and he defines "major" as nuclear powers. Which is the author's point. No (direct) wars between two nuclear-armed powers. Therefore, he believes if everyone had nukes, we'd be at a stalemate, with nobody willing to risk attacking anybody else.

      It's pretty simplistic and naive. I think complete disarmament is a bad idea, because it leaves you vulnerable. That said, if everyone had nukes, he doesn't consider the possibility of alliances. You could theoretically get a bunch of large nuclear powers to agree to completely eliminate a lesser common enemy. It's conceivable you'd make it impossible for them to respond, making the "war" pretty short, but still something we'd like to avoid.

    4. Re:No wars... right... by gman003 · · Score: 1

      That's ignoring the wars between Pakistan and India, both of whom are nuclear-armed.

    5. Re:No wars... right... by alen · · Score: 1

      when has Europe been at peace longer than 65 years?

      the hundred years war between england and france
      before that it was france and germany
      the vikings
      30 years war
      the wars of the reformation
      the wars of succession
      napoleonic wars
      franco-prussian
      prussian austrian
      WW1
      WW2
      spanish civil war

    6. Re:No wars... right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one said police actions, other than you. The term used was "peripheral countries".

      All of those wars were in peripheral countries and isolated.

    7. Re:No wars... right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're ignoring the silent graveyard of wars that we know little or nothing about and may never know, that are excluded from the list. Not saying you're wrong, but the percentage may be quite different.

    8. Re:No wars... right... by Fned · · Score: 1

      Were they when they were fighting?

    9. Re:No wars... right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, because for those wars (with one minor Pakistani incursion shortly after Pakistan got the bomb) all happened before either of them had the bomb.

    10. Re:No wars... right... by MobyDisk · · Score: 2

      No wars... right... (Score:5, Insightful)

      The article doesn't say no wars. You just refuted a point the article didn't make.

      Some of them you can discard as "non-major countries", but too many of them had major, nuclear-armed powers on at least one side.

      Exactly as the article says. Things like police actions and proxy wars will still be fought.

      I can imagine people made the same argument about the rifle in pre-Napoleonic Europe.

      Imaginings are not evidence.

      Also: Any Wikipedia list of anything will be biased toward current events.

    11. Re:No wars... right... by Carnildo · · Score: 1

      So the Vietnam War, the Korean War, the Dominican Republic wars, the Arab-Israeli and Yom Kippur wars, the Soviet and American invasions of Afghanistan, two Persian Gulf wars, the Falklands War, the Invasion of Grenada, the Serbia-Bosnia war, and too many more to list... those are just what, "police actions"?

      Take a close look at that list. You'll notice something interesting: not one of those wars was between a pair of nuclear-armed states. The closest would be the Korean, Vietnam, and Soviet Afghanistan wars, where one nuclear-armed state had troops on the ground, and another was providing resources but not troops to the other side. That's the basis of this guy's thesis that nukes create peace.

      --
      "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
    12. Re:No wars... right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Weird how roughly 40% of all wars happen *after* 1945

      Most silent films have been lost. About half of all films with audio made between 1927 and 1950 are lost. History forgets. Anyone that claims those lists of wars, some covering 500 years where no more than sparse, politically biased religious chronicles exist, are comprehensive is one of two things; profoundly naive or lying.

      Which is it?

    13. Re:No wars... right... by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      And how many of those wars do both sides have nukes. Oh yeah, none of them. That's the entire point. Feel free to disagree with the conclusion drawn, but the simple fact is that nuclear armed nations have not got into shooting wars directly with each other. Of course if they did there'd be no wikipedia to keep score...

    14. Re:No wars... right... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Yes. Here is the most recent example.

      However, these kinds of things are more like border conflicts than actual wars. Soviets and Chinese also did have scraps like that without launching warheads at each other. What nukes actually prevent is the kind of war where Indian tanks drive all the way to Islamabad (or Pakistani tanks all the way to Delhi).

  34. He is absolutely right by onyxruby · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Love it or hate it, MAD is the most successful peace program this world has ever known. I know a lot of the anti-nuke zealots out there while immediately shout "but, they could kill whole cities, hundreds of thousands of millions could die".

    History will tell you that conventional arms are leading that race by well over a hundred million just in the last century alone. Because of nukes the cold war remained cold and never became hot. Pick a body count site and look at the body count from the number of people killed before, during and after the cold war.

    I'm on the pro-nuke side of this argument and my body count is many, many millions less than the other side of the argument. The bottom line is that the cold war with it's policy of MAD was the most peaceful period in human history.

    It really boils down to one idea, and you have to make a simple value judgement to know which side of the argument to sit on. Is the concept of nuclear free /peace/ in the air more important than the reality of millions of dead bodies in the ground? Try as you might, the one thing you can never change is human nature.

    1. Re:He is absolutely right by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      True, but the longer the timeframe, the more justifiable opportunity to use nuclear weapons. While the proliferation of nuclear weapons has reduced the frequency of major wars, it has also increased the severity of such a war; And if it happens once, that might also be the last war that is ever fought. A quote widely-attributed to Einstein is, "I don't know how world war 3 will be fought, but I know how world war 4 will be: With sticks and stones."

      That isn't to say we should dismantle our nuclear stockpile; but we should be aware that as the timeframe increases, the probability of a nuclear weapon being used again approaches 1. That means the probability of two nation states which possess nuclear weapons entering into a nuclear war also approaches 1, though over a longer timeframe than the first case. Sooner or later, nuclear weapons will kill us all. There is peace today -- tomorrow, there might be nothing left to remember that, however.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    2. Re:He is absolutely right by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Love it or hate it, MAD is the most successful peace program this world has ever known

      Well, except for the fact that armed conflict hasn't been reduced in the age of MAD, and much of it has been driven directly by the geopolitical rivalry of the nuclear armed powers.

      MAD has influenced the selection of the venues and targets of armed conflict among the existing options by changing the relative costs of engaging one target vs another, but it hasn't done anything to reduce armed conflict.

      Because of nukes the cold war remained cold and never became hot.

      The wars in Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan, etc., never happened in the world you live in?

    3. Re:He is absolutely right by onyxruby · · Score: 1

      Let's put this in perspective. Please note that I am including civilian deaths and not just soldiers in these numbers.

      The Korean war killed 3 million.
      The Vietnam war killed 4.2 million.
      Afghanistan wars killed 1.8 million. (Soviet and American)
      The three wars you named together combine to about 7 million. Those three wars alone are less than the Congo Free State war or about on par with the holocaust. Their combined totals come to less than half of WW1 and a mere fraction of world war 2. The body count really is over a 100 million ahead just in the 20th century.

      The site I have referred you to is a pretty good site with sources. Take some time to study it and look at the number for yourself.

    4. Re:He is absolutely right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look at the death toll in the Democratic Rep. of the Congo.

    5. Re:He is absolutely right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm on the pro-nuke side of this argument and my body count is many, many millions less than the other side of the argument.

      And as soon as the nice caution that's been exercised since 1945 is thrown out the window, the tables will turn quite rapidly.

    6. Re:He is absolutely right by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      The three wars you named together

      I don't think you understand what "etc." means.
      The examples were just three of the best most recognizable of a very long list of post-1945 wars fueled by by the geopolitical rivalry of the nuclear powers and genocides and other atrocities carried out by regimes protected from outside intervention by one or more nuclear powers (including by one or more of the perpetrators being nuclear powers.)

    7. Re:He is absolutely right by onyxruby · · Score: 1

      I was trying to get you to get off your lazy butt and do your own basic research by pointing you in the right direction. Go back the source I sent you, or find another one if you like. I have already researched this topic, it's something you can do. Asking someone else to do you own homework is sheer laziness - especially when I pointed you in the right direction to begin with. Add up the etc.

      Your still off by a 100 million + dead.

    8. Re:He is absolutely right by onyxruby · · Score: 1

      WW2, the bombing of Japan. Compare the numbers killed against the number killed elsewhere by conventional bombs. I'll give you a hint, start by going to google and put in 'firebomb & Tokyo'.

      The cold reality is that nukes ended a world war that 8+ millions lives short of where it would have ended without them. MAD will has worked since the day the first nukes were dropped (we were gearing up for WW3 against the Soviets when we were still fighting WW2).

      MAD works, however MAD only works because rational people realize the folly of using nukes in combat. At that point you are correct about the tables turning quite quickly in a regional setting. A crazy country like Iran is immune to MAD because they are incapable of rational foreign policy. This is why non-proliferation is critical, because without it you move from rational countries to crazy countries.

    9. Re:He is absolutely right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some folks (European Committee on Radiation Risk) say that the number of deaths worldwide resulting from nuclear weapons fallout is 61 million.

      Other folks (U.S. CDC) say that the number of deaths in the U.S. resulting from nuclear weapons fallout is 15,000.

      It is worth reading the material and making your own decision. As the years progress, however, and our collective knowledge about radiation exposure increases, it seems that the methods and theories used by the ECRR appear to more accurately model the long-term effects of low-level radiation exposure.

    10. Re:He is absolutely right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the anti-MAD argument isn't "but, they could kill whole cities, [..sob sob..] die".

      The argument is that MAD is crazy expensive and there are much better things to do with all that money than let some small minded people play boom boom and feel powerful. Therapy is much cheaper and covered by insurance.

    11. Re:He is absolutely right by verifine · · Score: 1
      Si vis pacem parabellum

      If you wish for peace, prepare for war. Don't GO to war, simply prepare for it. Your neighbors, regardless of distance, will take note. It's very effective. Was it Heinlein or Machiavelli? An armed society is a polite society.

      Disarm and the rest of the world will trample you. Prepare for conflict and there's a good chance you will experience peace in your lifetime.

    12. Re:He is absolutely right by a_hanso · · Score: 1

      Introduce nuclear armed non-state actors into the mix and MAD fails. Introduce covert nuclear strikes that cannot be tracked back to origin and MAD fails. Otherwise you are quite correct.

    13. Re:He is absolutely right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The unconvinced gotta watch The Fog of War. Very interesting.

    14. Re:He is absolutely right by Pav · · Score: 1

      Population has tripled, almost quadrupled, since 1930. How does correcting for population growth make these numbers look?

  35. 357 magnum peace keeper, now Nuclear Rocket by na1led · · Score: 2

    Doesn't mater how powerful a gun someone has, they will eventually find reason to use it.

    --
    -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
    1. Re:357 magnum peace keeper, now Nuclear Rocket by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, if the person they want to use the gun on also has one, few sane people would take that chance.

    2. Re:357 magnum peace keeper, now Nuclear Rocket by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Three and a half generations have passed, and the world keeps looking more and more peaceful, even with global economic depression. We should be at each others throats right now, but I haven't seen anyone leaning towards even thinking about starting a war. With the USSR out of the picture, everyone seems to "get it" now, and we all refrain from heightening tensions, at least where nuclear powers are concerned.

    3. Re:357 magnum peace keeper, now Nuclear Rocket by avandesande · · Score: 1

      There are millions of guns in the US that will never be used against anyone. Not sure what you are trying to get at....

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    4. Re:357 magnum peace keeper, now Nuclear Rocket by na1led · · Score: 1

      There are millions of Nukes in the world that will never be used, but a few could devastate us all.

      --
      -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
  36. You better hurry up then by davidwr · · Score: 1

    ... because in your imaginary the United States will be back to a 48-star flag by the time you finish reading this sentence.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  37. Neo-Realism is useless in Middle East Politics by alinuxguruofyore · · Score: 1

    Waltz' infatuation with neo-realism does not serve him well when looking at Middle Eastern politics.
    .
    .
    He turns a blind eye to the India-Pakistan skirmish over Kashmir, neatly dismissing the idea that both nations have nuclear weapons. .
    .
    He assumes that Iran would act rationally, and would not destroy Israel out of religious zealotry and the conviction that their actions and own inevitable mutually assured destruction would make them martyrs. A nuclear Iran would not remain nuclear at all. It's mullahs would fulfill their religous obligations as quickly as they possibly could. .
    .
    He assumes that the Sunni nations, like Saudi Arabia would not feel threatened by a Shia nuclear superpower in their backyards and would not start up their own nuclear programs..

    1. Re:Neo-Realism is useless in Middle East Politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If russia sucessfully invaded the US, would it choose to learn russian and accept communism or would it use its nuclear weapons.

  38. Nobody would think of by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lets say countries A, B, and C have nukes. A makes a couple nukes with the signature of country B, sneaks them in, and shoots them off to country C. Voila, C nukes B, and A takes over.

    Waltz is an idiot.

  39. Yes and no by Nidi62 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Nuclear weapons have eliminated wars between major powers, yes. But this does not mean they are peacekeeping weapons. Instead what they do is effectively put a ceiling on the scale and intensity of a conflict. The US doesn't want to get in a major set-piece battle with Russia, because everyone knows if that happens, there won't be a US, Russia, or probably a Europe either. Most wars these days are very low-intensity, and many of them involve proxies of some sort or another: Vietnam, Afghanistan(1980s), Iraq (2003). In all 3 of these cases you have major military powers fighting an enemy that is not as well equipped or armed, but has external backing of another major power to one extent or another. In Vietnam you had the Soviets arming, training, and in some cases fighting for the North Vietnamese; Afghanistan has mujaheddin funded and armed by US money and weapons, and in Iraq you had Syria and Iran assisting the insurgents. Here's an analogy: if you dislike a guy, but you know he carries a gun with him, you aren't going to walk up to him and punch him in the face: you're going to get shot. But you can get at him by paying a kid $20 to go slash the guy's tires while he's sitting in a bar or something. You two are not exactly "at war", but you are also not at all at peace. So what nuclear weapons do is basically force you, as a leader, to draw the line at how far you are willing to take a conflict, and who you're willing to fight against. But hostile action is, and mostly likely always will be, a major and vital part of statecraft. And this would be true even if every state had nuclear weapons.

    That being said, I have read Waltz numerous times, and I know I've cited him him several times while in grad school. And he is right that we still need to keep nukes around, because even a bunch of low-intensity conflicts are "better" (ie, not as costly in terms of human life and money) than just one major conflict between large nations like the US and Russia (partly because any conflict of this magnitude would certainly draw in other states, while a low intensity conflict is more likely to stay isolated).

    --
    The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    1. Re:Yes and no by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

      So what nuclear weapons do is basically force you, as a leader, to draw the line at how far you are willing to take a conflict, and who you're willing to fight against.

      Tell that to John F. Kennedy's ghost. He came damned close to pressing the button.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    2. Re:Yes and no by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      So what nuclear weapons do is basically force you, as a leader, to draw the line at how far you are willing to take a conflict, and who you're willing to fight against.

      Tell that to John F. Kennedy's ghost. He came damned close to pressing the button.

      He just decided that for him that line was pretty far. It also serves as a good lesson for what can happen as you near that line

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    3. Re:Yes and no by na1led · · Score: 1

      Hitler with nukes! How would that have played out?

      --
      -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
    4. Re:Yes and no by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      Hitler with nukes! How would that have played out?

      Seeing as how the Allies dropped the bomb twice on Tokyo, Berlin would have ended up destroyed, as would probably the countryside around London (but not London itself). Hitler actually was trying to make an atomic bomb, but the costs and technology were prohibitive, and for the sake of argument if he were actually able to make a bomb on the same timetable as the Allies his delivery methods would have been extremely limited and all would have been very inaccurate. Considering the yield of atomic devices of that time, and comparing that to the best efforts of his V programs and the Luftwaffe, it is unlikely he would have hit his intended target of London (the most likely target). So, really not much different would have happened.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    5. Re:Yes and no by Deep+Esophagus · · Score: 1

      As the wise philosopher Tom Lehrer put it, "'cause the balance of power is maintained that way!"

    6. Re:Yes and no by Denagoth · · Score: 1

      A fascinating question. Since I agree with Nidi62's excellent post, here's how I think it would play out, assuming that Germany, England, France and the US had nuclear weapons at the start of WW2: Germany exterminates their local Jewish population and invades those countries that do not have a nuclear deterrent. England, France, and the US decry Germany's actions, push for economic sanctions, and fund / equip the local freedom fighters / terrorist groups (depending on your point of view) to promote "regime change" and make life for Germany difficult. The "Allies" don't invade - they can't afford the casualties. Germany becomes isolated from the world stage and ends up as impoverished as North Korean. The people of Germany either effect their own regime change, or live for generations in misery. The thing about nuclear weapons is that they make a country proof against foreign invasion. All predators seek out easy prey - the kind that can't hurt them - and nation-states, whether acting morally or not, prefer easy prey...hence the hypocracy about nuclear proliferation.

    7. Re:Yes and no by na1led · · Score: 1

      Hitler was bent on world domination. Anyone sick enough to burn millions of people without remorse, would probably be reckless with nukes. How many other Hitler wannabees are out there?

      --
      -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
    8. Re:Yes and no by Denagoth · · Score: 1

      It's one thing to be bent on world domination, and quite another to have the ability to carry it out. Back in 1944, it was an option. Today, with nukes on the table, it's not. What do you think keeps crime in check - the police? Criminals are much more afraid of being shot and killed by an armed citizen than being caught by the cops. The same thing applies to nations, which is why there will never be a major conflict between nuclear powers unless one side's nuclear deterrence is rendered impotent first.

      The math works like this:
      1. If I have nukes, and you don't, I get to do whatever I want to you - invade your country, take your resources, whatever. This is the preferred state for me - and I will do everything in my power to maintain it.
      2. If we both have nukes, I can't win a major conflict with you, so there's no point in starting one. If I attack you with conventional forces, you'll counter with nuclear strikes once you start losing. I don't like this scenario because I can't impose my will on you, but instead have to treat you as an equal, whether I like it or not.

      BTW, political leaders dislike nukes because it takes some of their options away. Oil prices to high? Let's go take someone elses...oh, drat, they have a nuclear deterrent. The military-industrial complex dislike nukes because they're bad for business - who need's trillions of dollars in soldiers, tanks, aircraft, and warships when a few hundred nukes will provide all the security you need? Of course, that also rules out all that nation-building stuff that every empire wants to do...

      In any event, we'll know the answer in a few more decades. Nuclear technology is 70 years old now - it's only a matter of time before it's widespread. What happens after that will be...interesting.

  40. India and Pakistan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is from the article, "India quite naturally did not want Pakistan to become a nuclear state. A second nuclear state cramps the style of the first. It is hard to imagine one nuclear state acquiescing easily or gracefully to its adversary going nuclear. But certainly in the long run, the nuclear weapons have meant peace on the subcontinent. This is in GREAT contrast to the expectations that most people entertained. Statements abounded by pundits, academics, journalists that suggested that nuclear weapons would mean war on the subcontinent. These experts all denied that the nuclear relationship between India and Pakistan could be like that between the U.S. and the Soviet Union. When two countries have nuclear weapons it becomes impossible for either to strike at the manifestly vital interests of the other. It remains very possible, however, for nuclear states to engage in skirmishes, and those can of course be deadly. A historical example is the Soviet-China border disputes (1969), and a more recent one is the Mumbai attacks. But never have any of these skirmishes gotten so out of hand as to escalate to full-scale war."

    Mr Waltz missed something very important - the Kargil War (or Incident or Debacle as it's also known). At one point, Pakistan moved nuclear weapons forward. President Clinton contacted Prime Minister Nawaz Sharief, who was unaware of this according to his autobiography. Prime Minister Sharief then ordered General Musharraf to stand down.

    Here's a more detailed explanation of the incident - http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/kargil-99.htm.

  41. "Deterrent" my ass by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1

    Didn't stop Argentina invading the Falklands.

    Didn't stop Al Queda hitting America.

    Never stopped Hizbollah from firing rockets into Israel.

    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
    1. Re:"Deterrent" my ass by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      Did spend your youth hiding from Spetsnaz? Do you recall fighting hand-to-hand with Chinese on Sunset Beach? No? Thank nuclear weapons.

    2. Re:"Deterrent" my ass by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1

      Did spend your youth hiding from Spetsnaz? Do you recall fighting hand-to-hand with Chinese on Sunset Beach? No? Thank nuclear weapons.

      I think China has had more pressing concerns than invading Sunset Beach over the last 50 odd years. So no, I won't thank nukes.

      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
  42. education stopped war by alen · · Score: 1

    before WW2 most people could barely read or not read at all and the only job they could get was working on a farm. serving in the military and getting some war booty was more exciting. back in those days graduating high school was a major achievement.

    now in the first world the vast majority of people know how to read, have a high school education and a lot have higher education degrees. why would these people want to join the army, crawl through the mud and be shot at or blown up? for minimum wage salary?

    1. Re:education stopped war by Bob-taro · · Score: 1

      before WW2 most people could barely read or not read at all and the only job they could get was working on a farm. serving in the military and getting some war booty was more exciting. back in those days graduating high school was a major achievement.

      now in the first world the vast majority of people know how to read, have a high school education and a lot have higher education degrees. why would these people want to join the army, crawl through the mud and be shot at or blown up? for minimum wage salary?

      this chart indicates literacy hasn't changed that much in the 1900s, and this article suggests it's gotten worse among military applicants. The statistics are based on people who were not allowed to enlist due to lack of basic reading skills. You need to read a lot of notices, manuals, written orders, etc in the military. Believe it or not, some people (I believe most) join because they want to *serve*, not because it's the best they can do financially.

      I am not a veteran, but I know many and I respect them and it bothers me when they are characterized as being stupid or greedy, when in my experience they are intelligent and generous.

      --
      Prov 9:8 Do not rebuke mockers or they will hate you; rebuke the wise and they will love you.
    2. Re:education stopped war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      before WW2 most people could barely read or not read at all and the only job they could get was working on a farm. serving in the military and getting some war booty was more exciting. back in those days graduating high school was a major achievement.

      now in the first world the vast majority of people know how to read, have a high school education and a lot have higher education degrees. why would these people want to join the army, crawl through the mud and be shot at or blown up? for minimum wage salary?

      I don't know. You tell me why they're doing it. The handful of idiot relatives I have who did it couldn't fully explain it. One wanted to be a helicopter pilot. Another basically just wanted to shoot at things. Both were otherwise reasonably intelligent, could factor polynomials, talk about existentialism and knew how Hamlet died, but they joined the army anyway and got sent into war zones. One got exposed to DU during the first gulf war and has all kinds of really bizarre medical problems and has been completely abandoned by the VA. Another one did three rotations in Iraq and seems mostly normal, other than seeming to have been mentally and emotionally stunted in a way that's hard to describe. A third got tossed for medical reasons and also has to continuously fight the VA for anything.

      Anyway, I have no idea why the entire US Army continues to be populated by volunteers and why education has done nothing to stop war. Maybe it's because the job market is so horrible.

  43. The problem with peacekeeping weapons... by mrjb · · Score: 1

    The problem with peacekeeping weapons is that they're still weapons. The only reason nukes are effective as peacekeeping weapons is that nobody so far has been willing to take responsibility to use them between superpower countries. That doesn't mean an irresponsible a-hole won't show up at some point.

    So here's a crazy idea. If you want to keep peace, look at solutions THAT ARE NOT WEAPONS to accomplish it. I reckon that if the army budget would be invested instead in education, foreign student exchange programs, international sports events etc, this would prove to be FAR more effective to promote peace than weapons.

    Either that, or stop claiming to be offering "freedom from fear". You can't have both.

    --
    Visit http://ringbreak.dnd.utwente.nl/~mrjb/growingbettersoftware to download your free copy of the book
    1. Re:The problem with peacekeeping weapons... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the american army budget is largely an unemployment reduction program. that's what printing money and paying people to move rocks around with it is.

    2. Re:The problem with peacekeeping weapons... by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      So here's a crazy idea. If you want to keep peace, look at solutions THAT ARE NOT WEAPONS to accomplish it. I reckon that if the army budget would be invested instead in education, foreign student exchange programs, international sports events etc, this would prove to be FAR more effective to promote peace than weapons.

      There are so many real world examples that show why and how that could never work. I actually touched on one of them in my Master's thesis. Look at what's happening with the disarmament efforts in Afghanistan, or Libya. In both of these cases you have multiple armed groups with varying relationships between each other, ranging from tenuous alliances to outright hostility. In both of these cases there are pushes for these groups to disarm, offering political participation and representation, as well as financial and reconstructive aid (in the case of Afghanistan). The problem is that none, or at best very few, of these groups are disarming. The reason for this is fear. If they disarm and the other groups don't, then they are vulnerable. It's basically a large scale Mexican standoff: no one wants to be the first to put down their guns because they might get shot if they do. It's the same reason why your idea would never work. If you remove most, or all, of your military budget, then you lose power and influence relative to your neighbors and any state that may have plans or interests in your region. Unless every state makes this transition at once, pretty much no one would do it (and those that do do it would be states that don't have to worry about power/influence loss due to protection from another power or relative geopolitical irrelevancy)

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    3. Re:The problem with peacekeeping weapons... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I reckon that if the army budget would be invested instead in education, foreign student exchange programs, international sports events etc, this would prove to be FAR more effective to promote peace than weapons.

      And I recon that, if both our countries agree with your plan, but mine stashes away a couple of nukes "just in case" - and then, when yours fully disarms, brings them out and launches them, it'll be even more effective to promote peace, since there will only be one country left.

      You cannot have any meaningful solution to this problem that doesn't involve weapons as deterrents for as long as there are sovereign countries, each of which has its own idea of what's good for itself. This is exactly the same reasoning as why anarchy doesn't work in practice - sure, if everybody is nice and behaves, we can all get together just fine, but if just one guy is not, they'll spoil the party for everybody else; so you need police to keep the bad guys in check. And we don't have anything resembling police on the world scale, so for the time being it's everyone for themselves, and it'll only change when/if we have a single World State.

  44. Profit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Preparing for war is more profitable than war itself, if you know the business (which obviously government does).

  45. Afraid of a nuclear-armed state? by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    Yeah, that notion worked real well with Al-Qaeda flew planes into buildings in the US. They were clearly terrified of attacking a nuclear-armed state.

    And don't give me the "stateless" argument, either. Just because they weren't affiliated with a state doesn't mean they couldn't be counterattacked. The US used it as an excuse to invade Afghanistan, and then Iraq as well. Al-Qadea knew there would be retaliation, and they did it anyways.

    In other words, nukes don't prevent wars or violent acts.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:Afraid of a nuclear-armed state? by rraylion · · Score: 1

      they have also targeted London and Paris -- UK and France two other nuclear states

    2. Re:Afraid of a nuclear-armed state? by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      The war with Al-Qaeda began long before that, and it was probably the US that fired the first shot. Afghanistan seems like it would have been a great nuclear target, though. From "Graveyard of Empires" to just "Graveyard". But besides being a huge pussy, Bush wanted to play General...

    3. Re:Afraid of a nuclear-armed state? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      3,000 dead versus 60,000,000. You are suffering from severe scope insensitivity.

  46. What about defeating Napoleon? by Tr3vin · · Score: 1

    Depending on your sample size and definition of major state, you could say that a defeated Napoleon prevents war. I get what Waltz is saying, but I don't know that his conclusion is valid. I think the major states have more modern ways of fighting than outright killing. A trade agreement or sanction can do about as much damage as a war, especially to the governing officials.

  47. More data needed. by mosb1000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Once we have a few global nuclear wars under our belt, we'll have a better idea of the overall destructiveness, as well as the frequency, and we'll be able to make a more meaningful comparison. This is hypothetical, of course, because it's unlikely someone would seriously consider that question after a full scale nuclear war had occurred.

    1. Re:More data needed. by marcosdumay · · Score: 2

      Is there any doubt that the overall destructiveness is huge? It is way too unlikely that a thermonuclear war stays at the level of WWII destructiveness or just a bit above it.

      The only open question is about the frequency.

    2. Re:More data needed. by Opie812 · · Score: 5, Funny

      The only open question is about the frequency.

      I'd say, that'd be about 1.

      --
      I'm not a nerd. Nerds are smart.
    3. Re:More data needed. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      There's no doubt that it's huge. But would it mean the extinction of the human race? Or just the end of civilization? Maybe the survivors would be so war-weary they would rebuild in a way that no more wars would occur at all. In that case, if society continues for a long time after that the frequency of 1 nuclear ware ever might not be worse than business as usual. But there are so many assumptions that go into that. It'd be better if we started rebuilding society now.

      Perhaps if we make many more movies about life in a post-apocayliptic wasteland, and nuclear war, and then show them to all our young children, but neglect to mention that none of it is actually real, they'll get the point better than we did.

    4. Re:More data needed. by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 4, Funny

      No human anyway, but I'm sure some kind of ant would wonder what kind of creature managed to make it to the moon without an exoskeleton.

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    5. Re:More data needed. by mrsquid0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So far we have had one nuclear war, one war between two nuclear-armed states that did not escalate to the use of nuclear weapons, and several wars between nuclear and non-nuclear states. We are still in the realm of small-numbers statistics.

      --
      Just because you are paranoid does not mean that no-one is out to get you.
    6. Re:More data needed. by j00r0m4nc3r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Maybe the survivors would be so war-weary they would rebuild in a way that no more wars would occur at all

      It's a good thought, but the next generation of people would have no concept of the reality of war, so this weariness would slowly die out, and once again you'd be left with another not-war-fearing population.. It's not quite the same to read about war in a book as it is to actually experience it.

    7. Re:More data needed. by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'd say about 1/2 to 1/3 of a war. Since we wont' even be finished with it before we have a scorched earth situation.

    8. Re:More data needed. by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      The only open question is about the frequency.

      You must be talking to Kenneth.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    9. Re:More data needed. by mosb1000 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You'd have to rebuild society in a way that war would not occur because people would not be seeking the things that encourage people to go to war. You'd probably need to develop new language to de-emphasize the glory of conquest, acquisition of wealth, fame and things like that. You'd probably also need to get rid of top-down authoritative structures and place a lot more emphasis on the individual's responsibility in decision making, since war never looks good to the individual.

      There are societies that are hard to imagine going to war, it's just that the people with the nukes don't belong to such societies.

      Realistically, these kinds of changes would be necessary before we can go to space in any meaningful way. Technology that enables space travel is so powerful that making it easily available to everyone would practically guarantee a global nuclear war.

    10. Re:More data needed. by KumquatOfSolace · · Score: 1

      I'm reminded of how when the Concorde had its only crash, it went from being the safest airliner in the skies to being the least safe.

    11. Re:More data needed. by NalosLayor · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wars pretty much happen because of scarcity of resources and imbalance of information. Both sides think they can win (even factoring in the cost of war) and both sides can't have the resources. Structuring languages and governments can make more slightly less likely, but not significantly so.

      You can't fix the imbalance of information as no society will believe a simulation all the time, especially of war, which depends on all sorts of human factors. The only way out, really, is to have unlimited resources. That is actually the main thesis implied by the push for globalization: That through capitalism, we can have a non-zero sum game (drastically increase available resources to all nations) and avert real war. And it seems to work -- but it leads to the (reasonable) criticism of the anti-globalists: that there is still a finite amount of resources and sooner or later capitalist technological innovation won't be able to extend them any further.

      Which leads to the basic final disconnect: Are you fundamentally optimistic about technology or pessimistic? If you're an optimist, we've already solved the long term problems that create world wars, and the last two were simply a painful transition period. If you're a pessimist, we've only delayed the inevitable and they were merely a preview of coming attractions -- which increased resource use is hastening.

    12. Re:More data needed. by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      The only open question is about the frequency.

      You could always ask Kenneth.

    13. Re:More data needed. by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      Which is an appropriate analogy(or fill in the right word) since even if you just look at the east-west MAD standoff, luck was a considerable factor in our survival. Robert Mcnamara described the Cuba crisis as follows:

      For many years, I considered the Cuban missile crisis to be the best-managed foreign policy crisis of the last half-century. I still believe that President Kennedyâ(TM)s actions during decisive moments of the crisis helped to prevent a nuclear war. But I now conclude that, however astutely the crisis may have been managed, by the end of those extraordinary 13 daysâ"October 16-October 28, 1962â"luck also played a significant role in the avoidance of nuclear war by a hairâ(TM)s breadth.

      And it's not the only story.

    14. Re:More data needed. by Raenex · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wars pretty much happen because of scarcity of resources and imbalance of information.

      It's not just resources. Lots of wars are about fighting over ideas. I'd say that most conflicts of the past century have been more over ideas than resources (examples: communism vs. capitalism, dictatorship vs. democracy, religion vs secular).

    15. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      depends on how destructive the war was.

      A war were half the human race was annihilated and there was a return to city states would change the face of warfare. especially if nuclear tech gets spread to the point where every city state has at least a handful of nukes. Maybe if we did that and go over the Nationalism bullshit ( a person in Houston has more culture heritage shared with someone from Tijuana then a guy from Portland, yet Houston and Portland are part of the same nation. It would also address the economic problem that many useful areas economically can't be developed because they are national borders, and any development would at best a diplomatic nightmare and at worst a war. Also, important resources don't get distributed with all people in mind because of jackasses at the national level calling the shots (the Colorado/ California water debacles where Coloradoan can't use their own water because that would inconvenience the Californians, and the Colorado people aren't getting a thing for this hardship.

      TL; DR version. A world without nationalism would be a better world. better utilization of resources, more unique cultures could develop, and a much lower chance of one guy getting such a big stick they could destroy the world.

    16. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets be honest: keeping the soft parts on the outside DOES sound weird

    17. Re:More data needed. by icebike · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Not likely to happen that way.

      The most likely scenario for a thermonuclear war is between one or two smaller states with long running hatred
      and religious fanatical governments.
      The big players are likely to stay out of it. It will be far from a global event, and won't even fully destroy the
      states involved.

      Lets say Pakistan and India have a go, or Iran and Israel: I don't see any other state too interested
      to jump into that mix on any of the sides. The participants get stung hard, exhaust their arsenals
      and beg for humanitarian aid.

      Contrary to popular belief a few tens of warheads going off is not going to affect life on earth
      that much from a biological stand point.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    18. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In a war over ideas, the resource being disputed is personnel.

    19. Re:More data needed. by NalosLayor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I disagree. There have been lots of states that DEEPLY disagree about ideology but didn't escalate to war. Ideology is an excuse for war, not a cause of it.

    20. Re:More data needed. by Tailhook · · Score: 2

      Interminable large scale conventional wars — OR — one nuclear war.

      I honestly don't know which is worse. As it is we are at peace waiting for a nuclear war. I'm absolutely certain this is better than being in the middle of a conventional World War IV or V.

      The thesis that nukes prevent conflicts between nuclear powers is 100% correct in my opinion. Our propensity to indulge our rage explains the invasion of Iraq; there was a deeply felt need to bloody someone more significant than Afghan warlords after 9/11 and, right or wrong, Iraq happened to be right at the top of the US shit list. Had Saddam been armed with nukes and ballistic missile technology that war would not have happened.

      Give China a blue water navy (circa 2017 or so) and a reason and they'll snap up some non-nuclear armed nation's shit just as fast, despite what US hating malcontents tell themselves.

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    21. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's what the powers that be want you to believe. It's always been that way..

      Keyword: cashes

    22. Re:More data needed. by Alioth · · Score: 2

      It might affect human life, though. Not extinction level of course, but we've got good evidence that a hypothetical regional war with around 50 warheads of around the power of the Nagasaki bomb would bring with it a "nuclear autumn". A very large volcano blowing up a couple of hundred years ago brought "the year without a summer", this kind of regional war would bring "the decade without a summer". Growing seasons in the breadbasket of the United States would be cut by around 60 days, enough to cause food shortages and considerable misery for non-combatant nations. True, in the long run, life on earth would just carry on. But on a human timescale we're talking a particularly miserable period which will go on for quite some time.

    23. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You dummy

      Wars are NEVER fought over ideas. Wars are sold to people as ideals they are supposed to fight for/against, but they are always fought about resources. ALWAYS.

      Anyone who says different is either stupid or selling you something

    24. Re:More data needed. by hoggoth · · Score: 2

      At least that's what they write in the history books.

      Don't believe it for a second. Name a conflict and I (or someone) will follow the money and resources that someone wanted.

      --
      - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
    25. Re:More data needed. by oldmac31310 · · Score: 1

      No. Territory, resources, power. The other stuff you mention is just incidental.

      --
      http://www.acetonestudio.com
    26. Re:More data needed. by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Lots of wars are about fighting over ideas.

      In lots of wars -- almost all of them historically -- the people leading the war use some abstract idea like national pride or religion or whatever else as a propaganda tool to get other people to fight in the war for them.

      But, ultimately, they are about who (both on the national level and the personal level) controls resources.

    27. Re:More data needed. by nedlohs · · Score: 2

      Both sides don't have to think they can win.

      The side trying to take the resources from someone else would have to think they can win (well baring insanity of course). But the side defending its resources might know it can't win but figure fighting is better than handing them over. Or maybe the leadership sees fighting in order to secure better terms of surrender or a chance to escape as worth it?

      See the US invasion of Iraq - Iraq fought even though it had zero chance of winning.

    28. Re:More data needed. by babblefrog · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Do you have some citations for that? We firebombed that many cities in WWII without seeing that much climate change.

    29. Re:More data needed. by Andtalath · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ah, excellent, backup if global warming gets out of hand!

    30. Re:More data needed. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      Wars pretty much happen because of scarcity of resources and imbalance of information.

      No they don't. Wars happen because rulers want more power for themselves and individuals in a hierarchal authority structure have little ability to stand up to them and say "I won't die so you can have more land." And even though this is the case, there are countless examples of individuals who have stood up and done that, even though it cost them their life.

      If you eliminate the mentality that people should do whatever an authority tells them, you will eliminate the possibility of war (among other things).

    31. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ROFL.

      Your examples were just the ostensible reasons for the wars. Those were the words used to motivate the poor to go get shot. The actual reasons the governments directed their people to go die were still a matter of wanting control over someone else's resources.

    32. Re:More data needed. by Raenex · · Score: 1

      Don't believe it for a second. Name a conflict and I (or someone) will follow the money and resources that someone wanted.

      Mao. Lenin. Castro. Pol Pot. Osama bin Laden. The Korean War. The Taliban. The Iranian Revolution. Those are from the top of my head.

    33. Re:More data needed. by icebike · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually we don't have much evidence for 50 warheads theory. Maybe 200, but not 50.
      Often these predictions are based on speculation and take on the trappings of truth, but when you track them down you find a single source with very little science behind it. The gigantic explosions of the Krakatoa volcano was equivalent to about 13,000 times the nuclear yield of the bomb that devasted Hiroshima, Japan, during WWII, and it lowered global temperature by 1.2 degrees C for one year.

      So 50 nukes = Krakatoa? No. Try something like a thousand or 500 modern day nukes for equivalent power.
      But Krakatoa blew from below and lofted the entire volcano into the atmosphere. Nukes are triggered above ground and don't lift anywhere near that much material.

      We heard the same predictions for all the smoke kicked up when Saddam fired all the oil wells. There were people actually wringing their hands and talking in terms of the "end of the world". You could see the smoke from space, so clearly it meant doom.

      We've found at Chernobyl that radiation can also be survivable, even in fairly high quantities.

      So as long as all the Nuclear nations don't fire everything at once, a regional nuclear war is likely to be a humanitarian disaster, but not that big of a deal globally.

      Note: there is also the modern day assessment that only the US, China, Great Britain, and maybe France would have enough weapons to offer reprisal. And among the smaller nations, whoever strikes first would not have to face a counter attack. This would cut the number of actual warheads detonated.

      This is the scary part if you ask me. With nobody else willing to step in on either side, and the participants having no launch on warning capabilities, the situation with proliferation of Nukes is such that some nut-job will sooner or later launch a surprise attack knowing they will not have their own country destroyed in return.
      MAD only works if its truly MAD and if religious nut jobs don't see it as a path to heaven.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    34. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wars pretty much happen because of scarcity of resources and imbalance of information.

      It's not just resources. Lots of wars are about fighting over ideas. I'd say that most conflicts of the past century have been more over ideas than resources (examples: communism vs. capitalism, dictatorship vs. democracy, religion vs secular).

      Wars used to happen because of material goods. It was easier to take than to make. With industrialization, it became easier to make than to take. Then of course, societies became rich enough they could afford to fight over ideology. Now wars are about ideologies in the developed countries, and material items in the underdeveloped countries.

    35. Re:More data needed. by Carnildo · · Score: 1

      I'd say that most conflicts of the past century have been more over ideas than resources (examples: communism vs. capitalism, dictatorship vs. democracy, religion vs secular).

      Let's take your idea and look at the major wars of the past century in that light:

      World War I: started as a war between Austria-Hungary and Russia over control of the Balkans. (resources)
      Russian Civil War: war between various groups over control of the Russian Empire. (resources)
      Chinese Civil War: war between various warlords and non-warlord groups over control of China. (resources)
      Second Sino-Japanese War: started with the Japanese conquest of Manchuria. (resources)
      Pacific theater of World War II: started with Japan grabbing various natural resources it needed, to compensate for an international blockade. (resources)
      European theater of World War II: started with German efforts to recover lands lost in World War I, followed by efforts to gain further territory (see "Lebensraum"), and with Italian efforts to take colonial territories in Africa. (resources)
      Korean War: Started as a war for control of liberated Korea, expanded into a proxy (and then direct) war between the United States and China over influence in Asia. (resources)
      Vietnam War: Started as an independence movement (the First Indochina War) and expanded into a proxy war between the United States and the Sino-Soviet alliance for influence in southeast Asia. (ideas, resources)
      Indo-Pakistani wars: Fought over control of the Kashmir area. (resources)
      Arab-Israeli wars: Fought over control of the former British Mandate of Palestine. (resources)

      True, many of the belligerents in these wars can be identified with specific ideologies, but the goal of the war has usually been to gain access to resources (land, minerals, governmental control, influence, etc.).

      --
      "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
    36. Re:More data needed. by NalosLayor · · Score: 1

      Oh, I was careful to not define "win", on purpose.

    37. Re:More data needed. by NalosLayor · · Score: 1

      You're still wrong. That mentality allows wars to happen, it doesn't cause them. Necessary and sufficient conditions are very different beasts, my friend.

    38. Re:More data needed. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      A hierarchal command structure is necessary and sufficient. Wars will result regardless of any other factors, as leaders fight to gain power.

    39. Re:More data needed. by Raenex · · Score: 1

      True, many of the belligerents in these wars can be identified with specific ideologies, but the goal of the war has usually been to gain access to resources (land, minerals, governmental control, influence, etc.).

      Sure, if you just relabel everything as "resources", and discount the ideology that drives it, especially stuff like "government control" and "influence", then you can say it is only over resources, but that isn't giving a true picture.

    40. Re:More data needed. by u38cg · · Score: 1

      War double plus ungood? Protip: young underemployed men *always* want to go to war. It's why armies are stuffed full of them.

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    41. Re:More data needed. by tmosley · · Score: 2

      Might want to re-examine that, as there have been 2000 nuclear tests in our history. Quite a bit more than any regional war would ever produce.

    42. Re:More data needed. by NalosLayor · · Score: 1

      Of course it's not sufficient. What leader will fight if he has nothing to gain, and more importantly, expects to lose?

      And, it should go without saying: People can be wrong. Both about thinking that they will win, and can take into account irrelevant factors like "guts" or "purity", and that they have something to gain (e.g. irrational concepts like "honor" or "pride"), but in modern, literate societies those factors are less common and less prevalent, varying from society to society and individual to individual.

    43. Re:More data needed. by tqk · · Score: 1

      You'd probably also need to get rid of top-down authoritative structures and place a lot more emphasis on the individual's responsibility in decision making, since war never looks good to the individual.

      What turnip truck did you just fall off? People have always clamoured to sign up to go off to war. Canadians even signed up to fight in VietNam. Prior to the US entering the war, US citizens came to Canada to sign up for WWII. Patriotism and nationalism are powerful motivators, and besides, it's an adventure.

      --
      "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
    44. Re:More data needed. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      I would suggest a search to see what is the longest amount of time that there has not been a war between, say, the top ten powers anywhere on Earth.

    45. Re:More data needed. by aminorex · · Score: 1

      > we are at peace

      What country do you live in? Here in the U.S. we are conducting several simultaneous wars of aggression, including a civil war "on herbs" and an global war on Islam.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    46. Re:More data needed. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Consider that without nukes, we would have immediately gone to war with Stalin, and that that war would have been just as bloody as WWII. Then there likely would have been another one twenty years later, and another, and another, and we would probably be fighting another one now.

      The Cold War had the chance to escalate like it did because it occurred during the transition from the pre nuclear world to the nuclear one. You should notice that there is no nation in the world that we now threaten with nukes, and none of the nuclear powers threaten anyone else using their nukes save as a measure of self defense. This is likely the new standard. Future wars, like past ones, will be determined to a great extent by financial strength, but now there will be no blood spilled. This is a good thing. A financial war doesn't really leave the deep abiding resentments that tend to cause neighbors to go to war over and over--the resentment caused by bloodshed.

      Nuclear brinksmanship is a thing of the past, in my opinion.

    47. Re:More data needed. by aminorex · · Score: 1

      And small-numbers is all you'll ever get. Social science is not like physics or pharmacology. Hell, the whole "justice" system is built on the fallacy of hasty induction, under the rubric of "precedent".

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    48. Re:More data needed. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      It's a risk vs. reward analysis. No one will start a war they expect to lose. But someone might organize a coup if they aren't completely sure they'll win, assuming they could get away and try again if they fail. That's the good thing about having other people fight your wars for you. And if you do decide to go to war because you think you can win, your enemy may still fight you even though he believes he can't win in the hopes he can negotiate terms. That's the beauty of being in charge, and that's why so many people fight for it.

    49. Re:More data needed. by vivian · · Score: 1

      As soon as the leader of one war weary group wanted to build his new residence on top of the same hill as the leader of another war weary group, there would be new potential for conflict and much shaking of pointy sticks. Eventually someone might even throw one of those sticks, and then where would we be?

      Until there is a way to deal with assholes whose solution to resolving conflict is to convince their followers to go beat up on some other asshole's followers, there will always be war at one scale or another.
      Unfortunately we seem to have a predisposition to listening to assholes and letting them lead us.

      I'd like to see a society where all conflicts are resolved with the leaders out first on the front lines. I am sure there would be much greater tendency for them to talk and resolve issues peacefully instead of with pointy sticks/bullets/nukes.

    50. Re:More data needed. by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      tell that to North Korea when they can finally get their 2nd stages to ignite without blowing up the whole missile.

    51. Re:More data needed. by bratwiz · · Score: 1

      Capitalism is an extremely flawed system. If there were sufficient profit in it, a good capitalist would happily unload his nukes.

    52. Re:More data needed. by bratwiz · · Score: 1

      Territory, wealth and pussy. That pretty much sums it up.

    53. Re:More data needed. by russotto · · Score: 1

      It might affect human life, though. Not extinction level of course, but we've got good evidence that a hypothetical regional war with around 50 warheads of around the power of the Nagasaki bomb would bring with it a "nuclear autumn". A very large volcano blowing up a couple of hundred years ago brought "the year without a summer", this kind of regional war would bring "the decade without a summer".

      50 little 20kt warheads like that wouldn't make a dent, except locally. Tambora was about a gigaton, and close to optimum for tossing particles into the stratosphere.

    54. Re:More data needed. by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      True, I cut my lawn today and shot a few Muslims for the fun of it.
      Hyperbole much?

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    55. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Contrary to popular belief a few tens of warheads going off is not going to affect life on earth that much from a biological stand point.

      Just to reinforce this point: over 2,000 nuclear weapons have been detonated in tests, with no significant effect on the earth's climate, and about a 0.2% increase in the worldwide level of background radioactivity.

    56. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Firebombing is quite different. Ash from a conventional bomb stays in the lower atmosphere and falls back to earth fairly quickly and locally.

      Ash from a nuke (or volcano) tends to get into the upper atmosphere where it can stay for months and circle the globe several times.

    57. Re:More data needed. by Raenex · · Score: 1

      Then please explain stupid shit like battles over Jerusalem. Ideology defines the battle lines, the participants, and provides motivation. To dismiss it is so easily is reckless.

    58. Re:More data needed. by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      Is there any doubt that the overall destructiveness is huge? It is way too unlikely that a thermonuclear war stays at the level of WWII destructiveness or just a bit above it.

      On the plus side, an all-in thermonuclear war would immediately solve global warming, the obesity crisis, and the IPv4 address-space-exhaustion problem.

      So there's that.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    59. Re:More data needed. by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      Consider that without nukes, we would have immediately gone to war with Stalin, and that that war would have been just as bloody as WWII

      That's a very questionable statement. It's also not related to my argument. The risks of nuclear armament have constantly been underestimated by those who defend it. In fact, it's presented as a pretty solution. A solution that can blow up in your face when things get shaken up a bit is not a pretty solution. Instable situations where you're no longer in full control of the situation, like disintegration of USSR , Cuba crisis, internal problems in Pakistan, should be part of the calculation, not something to dismiss. And I'm not saying that as a radical opponent of MAD.

      and none of the nuclear powers threaten anyone else using their nukes save as a measure of self defense.

      More or less right.
      The US has repeatedly considered using tactical nukes. Also self defense can be stretched to fit anything, and it is. Normally Israel's nuclear strategy is considered more than self defense. Eg in the Yom Kippur war they used them to blackmail the US into helping them. They've also made clear that Europe is a target, so Europe better align itself fully with Israel. "If we go down we take everyone with us".

      Nuclear brinksmanship is a thing of the past, in my opinion.

      You won't believe this, but that's what a lot of leading Iranians think. They appreciate the political strength of nuclear capability, but they don't see enough value in it to go all the way. Certainly not with Israel, which is too far away to do major damage with conventional means.

      Of course, not every Iranian general will think the same about nukes, which is one reason for that Khamenei fatwa against nukes. It's a commitment. You can't turn your back on it without looking really bad. This way you make sure nobody gets any ideas.

      I can provide links, that at least show this is indeed what they say, It won't stop anyone from thinking it's all elaborate deception of course. There's an interview of Charlie Rose with Mohammad Javad Larijani two years back that's worthwile. This article is just new http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/NG04Ak04.html and discusses things I say here.

    60. Re:More data needed. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      Pardon me. War never looks good to an individual outside a hirearchial power structure. But of course, those in power do can use their authority to help convince people to go, by offering money and status and bullshit ideological arguments among other things. In my mind, people acting in such situations aren't really acting as individuals, but I can see how you might disagree. My point is, without that it's unlikely someone would decide to put their life on the line just so some rich person can gain even more wealth. And even with the perks, many people still will regret having gone to war (if they survive).

    61. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't recall there being a decade or century without summer when there was a casual habit of blowing up devices worth of hundreds (and sometimes thousands) of nagasaki bombs.

    62. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MAD only works if its truly MAD and if religious nut jobs don't see it as a path to heaven.

      Perhaps we need to develop a warhead that attaints the souls of its victims, so that they are always sent to hell, rather than merely killed.

    63. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wars pretty much happen because of scarcity of resources and imbalance of information. Both sides think they can win (even factoring in the cost of war) and both sides can't have the resources. Structuring languages and governments can make more slightly less likely, but not significantly so.

      You can't fix the imbalance of information as no society will believe a simulation all the time, especially of war, which depends on all sorts of human factors. The only way out, really, is to have unlimited resources. That is actually the main thesis implied by the push for globalization: That through capitalism, we can have a non-zero sum game (drastically increase available resources to all nations) and avert real war. And it seems to work -- but it leads to the (reasonable) criticism of the anti-globalists: that there is still a finite amount of resources and sooner or later capitalist technological innovation won't be able to extend them any further.

      Which leads to the basic final disconnect: Are you fundamentally optimistic about technology or pessimistic? If you're an optimist, we've already solved the long term problems that create world wars, and the last two were simply a painful transition period. If you're a pessimist, we've only delayed the inevitable and they were merely a preview of coming attractions -- which increased resource use is hastening.

      So, if one country hoards precious materials, to the detriment of another, or if one country becomes the largest most powerful country in the world, it is justifiable to start a war in order to redistribute available resources.

    64. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Globalization is just a smoke screen for a single currency takeover by the banker elites. Not to mention all the waste of resources putting the scheme into place. I cant think of a more dangerous predicament for the expendable populace. You will never get rid of war because it is so profitable both monetarily and politically you can literally get away with murder.

    65. Re:More data needed. by madhi19 · · Score: 1

      Not likely to happen that way.

      The most likely scenario for a thermonuclear war is between one or two smaller states with long running hatred and religious fanatical governments. The big players are likely to stay out of it. It will be far from a global event, and won't even fully destroy the states involved.

      Lets say Pakistan and India have a go, or Iran and Israel: I don't see any other state too interested to jump into that mix on any of the sides. The participants get stung hard, exhaust their arsenals and beg for humanitarian aid.

      Contrary to popular belief a few tens of warheads going off is not going to affect life on earth that much from a biological stand point.

      Not a bad analysis to prevent that we likely need something like the great convention. "You drop one nuke and everybody else in the world gang up on you!"

    66. Re:More data needed. by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

      This is why it is flashing red light and loud siren critical that we blanket the US with breeder reactors. Fossil fuels are only ever going to get scarcer and scarcer. Breeder reactors are the only tech that could replace fossil fuels. Thanks Jimmy Carter!

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
    67. Re:More data needed. by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      Overall, very well reasoned and well supported. And not just because it matches my own conclusions :) but I will nitpick two points and object strongly to one.

      Note: there is also the modern day assessment that only the US, China, Great Britain, and maybe France would have enough weapons to offer reprisal. And among the smaller nations, whoever strikes first would not have to face a counter attack.

      This can't be a certainty, just a probability. I'd be surprised if Russia didn't still have sufficient second strike. While DPRK and Israel may not be considered to have a robust second strike capability, there is a very real probability that a first strike against them would not destroy all weapons... and could thus be very costly. Granted, this may be difficult, but any country planning a first strike against them would have to consider it.

      Additionally, smaller nations also generally have less advanced targeting, intelligence, command and control, and delivery systems. The US is much more able to launch a disarming first strike than, say, Iran. In retaliating, smaller nations probably have weaker controls on nuclear weapons. Local commanders may be able to launch tactical or strategic nuclear weapons without authorization (e.g. launch codes) from national leaders. In short, given the same nuclear arsenals smaller nations are less able to conduct an effective first strike and more likely to be able to launch a second strike.

      With nobody else willing to step in on either side, and the participants having no launch on warning capabilities, the situation with proliferation of Nukes is such that some nut-job will sooner or later launch a surprise attack knowing they will not have their own country destroyed in return.

      The danger is probably more in extension of nuclear umbrellas. If, say, China extended theirs to DPRK, or if the US does to Israel... things could get interesting very quickly.

      MAD only works if its truly MAD and if religious nut jobs don't see it as a path to heaven.

      I have never been able to find a shred evidence or intelligent analysis in the literature that concludes Iran or DPRK are anything other than rational, intelligent actors. They may seem crazy, but they follow the same logic as everyone else.

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    68. Re:More data needed. by someoneOtherThanMe · · Score: 1

      Two smaller states, like India and Pakistan? As opposed to the really big ones like France or UK?

    69. Re:More data needed. by Carnildo · · Score: 1

      The ideology doesn't drive it. The desire for resources drives it, and the ideology comes along for the ride.

      --
      "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
    70. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      History shows us that dominant powers deal with a lot of small wars, or `low intensity conflicts.' This is normal. The training that has you exaggerating, parroting euphemisms and repeating invented nonsense makes you appear hysterical.

      With moderately good judgment you can expect reach a natural end without ever having experienced life threatening violence in the US. That is abnormal by historical standards and would certainly be characterized as `peace' by our ancestors. You're free to put yourself in jeopardy handing contraband `herbs', volunteering for combat or indulging in domestic dramas but the resulting violence does not indict the prevailing peace, no matter how thoroughly you've been trained to believe it does.

    71. Re:More data needed. by Raenex · · Score: 1

      Too dismissive of just how driven people are by ideology.

    72. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Tsar bomb was about 1/4 the energy of Krakatoa, and we're all still here so I think you're right:

      http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orders_of_magnitude_(energy)

      Also, the US alone conducted > 300 atmospheric nuclear detonations before the test ban treaty, and we're still here:

      http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_weapons_testing

    73. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great distinction....too many people make the weak minded mistake of blaming an ideology or religious belief as the reasons for violent wars....no those are just people who decided to be violent...PERIOD! We can have different views from opposite sides of the spectrum and elect to hold those positions with no need to violent towards anyone.

    74. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That through capitalism, we can have a non-zero sum game (drastically increase available resources to all nations) and avert real war.

      That's the oversimplified unavoidable form of capitalism responsible for wider availability of existing resources. The actual modern implementation you're crediting only widely distributes and accumulates resources to those at the top, so they don't send their inferiors to war. In this way, capitalism creates its own class-divided scarcities in addition to true resource scarcities. It is not the solution to zero-sum resource scarcity.

    75. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once we have ONE nuclear war under our belt we will be no more.

    76. Re:More data needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually contrary to your mislead belief and according to popular belief, any modern warhead could cause a huge mess from a biological stand point and bring civilization to its knees.

  48. MAD is a Gamble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MAD has been reasonably successful *so far* at keeping global peace (with the exception of quite a few bloody and horrific wars) but the more nations have them, the more inevitable it becomes that someone's going to launch one and a bunch of others will follow someday.

    This is more serious and real a threat than anything else, and when it happens we're all, and I mean all, going to go from a relatively wonderful existence to incomprehensible and permanent hell in a matter of only a few hours.

  49. USA would be making a mistake to cut nuke force .. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    down. China will at some point want to attack. If we have only 300 nukes, then in a first wave, they can take out more than 1/2. That means 150 or less nukes. Easy to block that.
    OTOH, if we have 3K+, then China can not block all of them.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  50. The flaw by tsotha · · Score: 2

    The flaw in this argument, of course, is nuclear weapons prevent wars between great powers in the same way the IMF, World Bank, and the Fed prevent the collapse of banks. That is, they can do so for decades, but when the banking system fails everyone goes down together.

    It's an academic question anyway. There isn't any way to verify a country hasn't stashed a few nukes away on the sly, which means nobody is going to get rid of their arsenal completely. There will never be a nuclear weapon free world.

  51. Civil wars can't be stopped by arceum · · Score: 1

    you will always be able to break up a nuclear nation into regions with and without bunkers. National borders are fluid, there is no way to create this kind of peace forever.

  52. "Given how close Iran & Israel are" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And that's also why neither will nuke the other. The radiation could spread from the nukee back to the nuker. Remember radiation from Chernobyl spread as far away as Norway.

  53. Misses Non-State actors... by trims · · Score: 1

    All the above criticisms about unstable governments (and leaders) is valid, though the original article did have some interesting points about stability in international relations.

    All the article's points are completely moot, however, as it doesn't discuss non-state actors at all. That is, organizations which are NOT governments tied to geographic locations. And, there is where the problem with nukes lie.

    Proliferation means an increasing risk that non-state actors will get their hands on nukes. And, non-state actors are bound (and influenced by) none of the inhibiting factors that governments have, when dealing with possible use of nukes. Indeed, mere possession of a nuke by a non-state actor is something almost guarantied to start a war, instantly. Because, there is very little down side to using said nuke by that non-state actor.

    -Erik

    --
    There are always four sides to every story: your side, their side, the truth, and what really happened.
  54. Did you miss Korea? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Korea was a war between the US and China. I don't think you can claim there were no wars between major powers since WW2.

  55. Why Aliens Have Never Visited Earth by Trip6 · · Score: 1

    Because before they got smart enough to master long distance space travel they mastered WMDs and blew themselves up.

    --
    I hate being bipolar; it's awesome!
  56. we're unofficially at war with nuclear Pakistan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's just the fighting is mostly going on inside Afghanistan but let's be honest: the war in South Asia is against the Pakistani intelligence services and their proxies.

  57. Based on a false premise by milkasing · · Score: 1

    Kenneth Waltz seems to have cherry picked information to support his hypothesis. The full article mentions that he basis his hypothesis on India-Pakistan relationship, but it is clear that he has ignored several things in it.
    First of all, unlike what he mentions in TFA, India and Pakistan relationship has had a full fledged war (and not just terrorist actions launched by Pakistan) , after Pakistan conducted A-Bomb tests. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kargil_War
    India has come very close to waging war on other occasions as well, especially after the terrorist attacks on the Indian Parliament.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Parakram
    Waltz is right that the possibility of nuclear war raises the stakes, but what he does not acknowledge (and what the Pakistani example shows) is that the a nuclear state might indulge in risky behavior against another nuclear states, precisely because it counts on the other state to act more conservatively. And sooner or later, there is a miscalculation of the risk by the aggressive nuclear state.
    This makes the entire premise that Nukes Are "The Only Peacekeeping Weapons the World Has Even Known," a wrong one.

  58. Fewer wars maybe but rogue nations by tlim · · Score: 1

    and terrorists getting their hands on them? Imagine zealots who are looking for the end of the world to occur in their lifetimes. It would be catastrophic.

  59. Peace at any cost? by jdavidb · · Score: 1

    Weapons on a battlefield threaten people who are fighting.

    Nuclear weapons threaten millions of innocent, non-fighting men, women, and children.

    Judge for yourself if it is moral to protect yourself by threatening innocents.

    1. Re:Peace at any cost? by aminorex · · Score: 1

      Is it moral to refrain from protecting yourself when "yourself" includes millions of innocents?

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  60. Hold on a sec... I've seen this one before. by mark-t · · Score: 1

    Wasn't that shtick from Beneath the Planet of the Apes?

  61. Don't Even Need a War by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    Even when they are, war still finds a way.

    You do not even need a war. If you have 200 nations wach with their own nuclear deterrent can be be sure that every single nuclear device is secure enough that it will never be stolen by a terrorist group? I agree that there seems to be some evidence that nuclear weapons seem to have effectively stopped large scale conflict (although I think there needs to be a longer period of peace before I'll be convinced). However I see considerable danger in trying to scale this unproven principle down to smaller, regional conflicts.

    1. Re:Don't Even Need a War by yakovlev · · Score: 2

      Beyond that, there are nations that would effectively use terrorist groups to act as proxies in a nuclear quasi-war.

      If Iran had nuclear weapons, we know they can't use them directly, that would result in outright destruction. However, if they "carelessly" get a nuclear weapon stolen, a terrorist group could bomb a target in Israel or the US without giving the victim an excuse to invade. This has been the strategy of many nations for a while with conventional weapons, and it only becomes more effective with nuclear weapons.

      Both the US and the USSR understood that if one of their nukes got used on the other, there was going to be war, and it was going to be devastating. Many of the terrorist-supporting states won't have that fear because it hasn't worked that way for them in the past.

      Right now, most of the nations of the world with nuclear weapons (this includes North Korea and Israel) are nations that carry out their military operations overtly. If they decide to attack with nuclear weapons, the whole world will know they were the ones responsible. These nations know that openly attacking a nuclear power will simply result in their annihilation, so they won't do it.

      That isn't true for many of the nations in the middle east. They have a strategy of letting terrorist groups do their dirty work precisely because they don't get the direct repercussions of it. There's no reason to believe that the strategy would be any different with nuclear weapons. So, how does the US respond when some terrorist group operating out of Iran "steals" a nuclear weapon and uses it to blow up DC? Do you nuke Iran? They'll simply tell the world "we didn't do it, the terrorists did." Do you kill a few individual terrorists after the fact? That won't appease the american people, who will be out for blood, I assure you. I can see Iran expecting (particularly against the US) that the world community would prevent the victim from directly attacking Iran with nuclear weapons, and thus expecting controlled use of nuclear weapons through terrorist groups to move political negotiations in their favor.

      The only ways I see to avoid this are either to make terrorist-supporting countries responsible for the terrorism now, so that they won't attempt nuclear terrorism, or to prevent those kinds of countries from acquiring nuclear weapons. Since the former will just make the US look like a bully in the short term and result in significant instability, I understand why the current plan is to try and prevent nuclear weapons from spreading.

    2. Re:Don't Even Need a War by jedidiah · · Score: 2

      No. If the US were nuked and we traced the fuel back to the Iranian enrichment program, no one would care about the subtleties. Iran would be leveled before the cries for blood died down enough for people to start thinking clearly again.

      It wouldn't matter if Iran did it or "merely allowed their nuke to get stolen".

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    3. Re:Don't Even Need a War by Tim12s · · Score: 1

      And that is the whole truth...

      I believe that the Iranian scientists probably understand this, to its fullest extent, however the religious nutters are what you have to worry about.

    4. Re:Don't Even Need a War by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. If the US were nuked and we traced the fuel back to the Iranian enrichment program, no one would care about the subtleties. Iran would be leveled before the cries for blood died down enough for people to start thinking clearly again.

      It wouldn't matter if Iran did it or "merely allowed their nuke to get stolen".

      Assuming that is the case - are you certain the Iranians will believe it before "losing" a nuke? One problem with deterrence is, it depends on a rational adversary. If the adversary believes that you won't respond, you do not deter. "There was a book, I believe by Ludlum, where after investigating the conspiracy it turned out the Vietnam War was merely a scheme to present the US leaders as being so crazy they would respond with nuclear weapons to a Russian land invasion of Europe. It was the most sensible explanation I ever heard, which disturbs me.

    5. Re:Don't Even Need a War by aminorex · · Score: 1

      Well that should be easy enough to arrange, for a motivated party such as a certain little state in the levant.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    6. Re:Don't Even Need a War by lister+king+of+smeg · · Score: 1

      The only ways I see to avoid this are either to make terrorist-supporting countries responsible for the terrorism now, so that they won't attempt nuclear terrorism, or to prevent those kinds of countries from acquiring nuclear weapons. Since the former will just make the US look like a bully in the short term and result in significant instability, I understand why the current plan is to try and prevent nuclear weapons from spreading.

      that is exactly what we have been doing what do you think Iraq and Afghanistan were about it was about killing the terrorists base (Afghanistan) and funding enabling government (Iraq)

      --
      ---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
    7. Re:Don't Even Need a War by downhole · · Score: 1

      Personally, I say that if a nuke is detonated on US soil and the material was found to have originated in Iran, we level them. Same for any other country that tried to pull something like that. I don't even want to listen to what they say about how it got here; if it's here, they're responsible. I fully expect that's what the US would actually do, and I fully expect that every other nuclear power on the planet would do the same thing if somebody nuked them. I doubt any other nuclear power would object to it either - they all know that though the US is currently number 1 on the radical Islam shit list, they don't exactly love Russia or China either and have attacked them in the past and will attack them in the future.

      It isn't about revenge or bloodthirstiness, it's about deterrence of future attacks. Pretty much everything in international relations is really about what message the actions or events send to other nations. It doesn't actually matter what the truth is about how it got there - if a nuclear weapon goes off on your soil and you just take out a couple of terrorists, that sends a message to every other country in the world that if you want to nuke our country, you just have to dummy up a terrorist group, claim you have no control of them, and give them a weapon, and let them do it. Leveling the country sends the message that there's no way you can get out of your responsibility; that if the weapon came out of your labs and ends up on our soil, you will face the consequences, no matter what you say, so you better make damn sure it never actually gets stolen by some group you have no control over.

      --
      I don't reply to ACs
    8. Re:Don't Even Need a War by tuxicle · · Score: 1

      Well shit, a nation already accused of state sponsored terrorism has nukes. I guess it's just a matter of time?

  62. What's coming next? by GiantRobotMonster · · Score: 1

    What comes after the nuke in the development of how to be nasty to each other on a massive scale?

    Something that raises the ante even further, in the same way that the Sherman Tank was a big improvement over the sharpened stick?
    I seem to recall someone proposing sharks in space with frickin' lasers or something...
    Personally I'm hoping for a self-replicating plague of robot monsters, but I think we're a little way off achieving that one yet.

    Some sort of stasis bubble would be pretty neat -- nominate a sphere and slow-down time -- you could use that to counter all sorts of nasty things...

  63. What if the assurance isn't mutual? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What if someone in a position to act is simply wrong about their odds of success in nuclear war? All they lose, personally, is their own life, which they'd probably gambled many times already to get into power.

  64. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  65. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  66. Nuclear weapons haven't kept much peace by DragonWriter · · Score: 2

    Didn't stop Argentina invading the Falklands.

    Didn't stop Al Queda hitting America.

    Or the IRA from attacking the UK military. Or Chechen separatist from attacking the Russian military.

    For that matter, nuclear weapons didn't stop forces from nuclear-armed superpowers from directly engaging each other in Korea, Vietnam, and a number of other places, either.

    So, nuclear weapons haven't stopped:
    1. State actors without nuclear weapons from engaging in armed conflict with nuclear armed states on the other side (Argentina v. UK, etc.),
    2. Non-state actors without nuclear weapons from fighting engaging in armed conflict against nuclear armed states (IRA v. UK, Al-Qaeda v. US, Chechen separatists v. Russia, etc.), or
    3. State actors with nuclear weapons from engaging in direct armed conflict against forces from other nuclear-armed states (U.S. v. USSR in Korea, Vietnam), or
    4. State actors with nuclear weapons from engaging in armed conflict against major states without nuclear weapons (Suez 1956, USSR v. Afghanistan 1980, U.S. v. Panama 1990, U.S. v. Iraq 1991, U.S. v. Iraq 2003, etc.)

    Nuclear weapons haven't really done much to stop wars. They may have channelled conflict such that mutual aggression between nuclear-armed states is mostly directed into conflict on the territory of third-party client states where, but its not clear that that translates into a reduction in conflict if third-party non-nuclear client states weren't available, or whether it just means a return to direct conflict if third-party non-nuclear proxies aren't available as venues for playing out major-power aggression.

    1. Re:Nuclear weapons haven't kept much peace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A. you need to check the scale of wars before and after WWII. Hundreds of millions died in the 67 years before, less than 10 million died after.

      B. nukes don't come into play except during INVASIONS. No-one will ever INVADE the US, and no state will ever engage in a massive attack against the US. Period. Same with any other nuclear nation.

  67. Erroneous conclusions by infochuck · · Score: 1

    So... in the past two thousand years, there has been a large amount of large wars between large states. But because there have been none in the last 60 years, a *whopping* three percent of that 2000-year period, we can congratulate ourselves on stopping war, all thanks to nukes? How about if we revisit this argument in another 2000 years? Maybe then I'll buy it.

  68. Defusing the Nuclear Threat by Bloody+Peasant · · Score: 1

    Martin Hellman at Stanford has made a consistent, logical, and compelling counter-argument to this for many years. Purely from a statistical point of view, the longer one waits, the higher the probability of a (possibly accidental) trigger.

    To my mind, the assertion that nukes are in any way useful is short-sighted and likely a result of inexperience. The author (Keck) in the OP was a student a couple of years ago, whereas Hellman has had a long and distinguished career at Stanford and elsewhere.

    I know who I'm going to listen to first.

    --
    -- This .sig intentionally left meaningless.
    1. Re:Defusing the Nuclear Threat by Bloody+Peasant · · Score: 1

      Rats, I got my authors mixed up. The article in the OP was not Keck, but Waltz; the latter was who he was interviewing. Sorry dudes.

      --
      -- This .sig intentionally left meaningless.
    2. Re:Defusing the Nuclear Threat by GiantRobotMonster · · Score: 1

      the longer one waits, the higher the probability of a (possibly accidental) trigger

      This.
      Offtopic, but the same thing springs to mind when it comes to storing gigalitres of CO2 underground. Entire cities of people drowned in their sleep isn't something I'd advocate...

      To my mind, the assertion that nukes are in any way useful is short-sighted and likely a result of inexperience

      I agree, but I can understand why a state would want nuclear weapons when its rivals already have them.
      Until a technology is developed that can reasonably defend against nuclear annihilation (which really doesn't seem likely), or they all magically disappear at once (again not likely), along with the ability to recreate them (not very likely either), we're stuck.
      States will feel the need to retain their god-awful weapons so they don't feel naked against these other rogue nations that might want to blow them up, as unhelpful for the world as that might be.

      FWIW, I write this from a nation without any (official) nuclear weapons. I wouldn't be surprised to learn that the USA have hundreds of the things littered about the place.

  69. Timing by gmuslera · · Score: 1

    Is not about having, but about using. Is after using the nukes that the world will rest in peace.

  70. Re:USA would be making a mistake to cut nuke force by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    China will at some point want to attack. If we have only 300 nukes, then in a first wave, they can take out more than 1/2.

    If we have 300 nukes on the ground at the time a "first wave" is launched, its unlikely that even half will still be on the ground by the time it strikes.

    Easy to block that.

    No, its not.

    OTOH, if we have 3K+, then China can not block all of them.

    Its rather unlikely that there will ever be more than an extended period of time where China will have a defense system that gives it near-certain protection against 150 nukes of the type the US would have deployed at the time, but not against 3,000 of them.

  71. Conventional war nearly as lethal by wcrowe · · Score: 1

    The conventional battlefield has become so lethal in recent years that it is nearly on par with nuclear weapons yet it has not stopped nations from waging war. In the case of the U.S. it has caused us to try to "manage" warfare better to reduce "collateral damage", but we still screw up from time to time, with horrific results. You would think that would discourage us from going to war, but it doesn't. And I think there is still a mentality in some political and military circles that nuclear war can be "managed" just like conventional warfare.

    --
    Proverbs 21:19
    1. Re:Conventional war nearly as lethal by The+Mister+Purple · · Score: 2

      Peter Singer, in discussing his book, Wired for War , once pointed out that the difference between a nuke and a drone-launched missle is largely academic to the people at the point of impact.

      --
      "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled." Feynman
  72. The only way to win, is NOT to play ... ... ... . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It seems ominous that this story is getting attention in this way, from the media. The nuclear arms race; might be heating up, as more 'players' are getting involved. The question still remains: IS more better; Can the treat of annialation with nuclear weapons be a true catelist for 'peace'? Like the game(s): Poker - It is a bluff, that my 'hand' is stronger than 'yours'; OR, 'chess'; where the game isn't over, till the opponent 'KING' has no moves left to make - 'Check Mate'? I think nether scenario fits this argument. Something simpiler might apply to this story, the childerens game: Tic-Tac-Toe'. Sure there IS a winner; If the opponent makes a mistake. But for most knowledged adults, this is a mindless game that usually ends in a 'draw'. Like the AI (War Operation Plan Response (WOPR)) in the movie War Games says after playing 'Gobal Thermonuclear War' and 'Tic-Tac-Toe' at the same time: 'A strange game. The only winning move is not to play. How about a nice game of chess? '

    If we as 'human's' have not learned that we can destroy ourselves and the future abilities of this planet (EARTH) in a very short time; shouldn't we concentrate our efferts on the reverse - To live longer as a species and preserve/ protect our home, for future generations? This is no GAME as the consequences of our actions have 'life altering' ramifications. The only way to WIN, is not to PLAY!

  73. Foolish idiots by WaffleMonster · · Score: 1

    As technology improves the barrier to laser enrichment and plutonium implosion technology will continue to shrink dramatically over time.

    M.A.D. is meaningless when you have nuke(s) and don't represent any state.

  74. What about the cost of peace? by tirnacopu · · Score: 1

    How can the author ignore the insane costs of a nuclear programme? Surely he realizes thousands, if not orders of magnitude more, will die due to starvation, poorer health services and forced labour while a government is busy maintaining an implausible status quo, is that just signed off as "acceptable loss"?

  75. Anticipatory retaliation by sinan · · Score: 1

    Will also ensure that the other guy will not attack you...

  76. Nuclear weapons are the definition of insanity by Conspicuous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Kenneth Waltz's argument is entirely specious.

    Yes, MAD is probably the only reason there hasn't to this point been a world war III. But you need to zoom out and judge this on a slightly longer timescale than 65 odd years

    I think it's pretty obvious that the probability of a nuclear armed state entering into a confilct with another in any given year is non zero. In fact, if you look at the cuban missiles crisis, or the able archer incident, it's pretty obvious that that probability can be fairly high.

    It's also pretty obvious that any major power nuclear conflict would result in the deaths of most of the worlds population, quite concieveably all of it.

    Therefore, the probability of an absolutely catostrophic nuclear incident will asymptotically approach 1 the longer we have nuclear armed states. In my view our annilihation is assured if we keep these weapons around long enough.

    Being willing to contemplate the destruction of the entire human race, rather than contemplate the destruction of your particlar political power base/ideology is to my mind the purest expression of human insanity.

  77. Fear and peace are two different things by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 1

    Difference is:
    When you're afraid of your enemy, you still plan an offensive. You are just very careful about what you let them know.

    When you have peace, you don't need an offensive because there is a genuine mutual trust between entities.

    Nukes are a crappy form of insurance against ill-placed trust.

    --
    Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
    1. Re:Fear and peace are two different things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Difference is:
      When you're afraid of your enemy, you still plan an offensive. You are just very careful about what you let them know.

      When you have peace, you don't need an offensive because there is a genuine mutual trust between entities.

      Nukes are a crappy form of insurance against ill-placed trust.

      So, when in all of human history has everyone trusted everyone else?

  78. Times Change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kazakhstan decided to give up Nuclear weapons because they did not trust their own methods of securing nuclear and fissionable materials and felt like it was more of a threat than an asset.

    I firmly believe that with the spread of information that aging nuclear weapons now pose more of a threat to the nations which possess them rather than the other way around. Consider the problem of keeping them secure in an age where one disgruntled employee might leak such information that might enable an enemy to detonate them on one's own soil and it is almost intractable in this day and age. What if Stuxnet had a much more devastating aim?

    If you think I am underestimating the capabilities of a government to secure these materials, consider the case of North Korea; a state which possesses virtually no freedom of anything. Undesirables are kept in a prison system for 3 generations, and basically starved and taught to rat on their own family. Yet 1 such person has escaped from such a system with very little means. Now consider the reality that there are people who wish to wreak such havoc and they are much freer than this person. How do you prevent these desperate people from achieving such havoc?

    I'd recommend getting rid of these weapons entirely and unilaterally. Though they were useful in the past, I don't believe they are very useful anymore.

  79. He's a fool, an abject fool. by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

    Iran is not the US, Russia, China, or even India or Pakistan. It's a state on the edge, susceptible to revolution and incapable of properly securing a nuclear weapon or nuclear technology.

    I even agree nuclear weapons have been a net boon, but one of these things is not like the other.

    Why not reduce his argument, one could even say to the point of absurdity, and say that we'll be better off if everyone in my neighborhood has a nuclear weapon? I mean who's going to rob me if I can nuke them, am I right??

    No. We can't allow Iran to get a nuclear weapon. States don't have "rights", so fairness is not an issue. And it's clearly not in our or anyone's interests if they have a revolution or someone in their smallish government decides they want to allow some terrorists access to a nuclear weapon or even just the technology to make a very dirty conventional weapon.

    1. Re:He's a fool, an abject fool. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Iran is not the US, Russia, China, or even India or Pakistan. It's a state on the edge, susceptible to revolution and incapable of properly securing a nuclear weapon or nuclear technology.

      Your definition actually applies far more to Pakistan than it does to Iran.

    2. Re:He's a fool, an abject fool. by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Possibly, maybe this is why there are rumors we are prepared to go in and use force at a moment's notice to secure their weapons in that eventuality.

  80. Re:The only way to win, is NOT to play ... ... ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did the world not learn anything from October 30, 1961, the Tsar Bomba and its 50 Megaton test? Thousands of above/ below ground weapons tests have taken place since 1939. We need to focus our abilities on creation, instead of destruction. Creation is a much more challanging direction, for we as a species to do. 'So much easier to push, instead of pull ... ... ... .

  81. Can't believe the posts here?!!? by orlanz · · Score: 1

    There are so many people on here saying Waltz is a "idiot" or "moron" for an observation he has made. Talk about knee jerk and shooting the messenger. I understand about not RTFA but not RTFS which is fairly clear? Waltz is making a very clear & though provoking observation that most people (and clearly it exists here too) are "head stuck in the sand" about.

    All Waltz is saying is that through out human history, nukes have been the best deterrent to big wars. Prior to nuclear proliferation, there was a MAJOR country at war with another big country every bloody decade. And it impacted a significant part of the known world population. We fought with Japan, Russia, & Germany. Once we all got nukes, we stopped fighting on the big scale cause escalation will result in mutual destruction. We nuked Japan once, do you think we will nuke them again? Do you think Japan would invade and conquer like it did before and risk getting nuked? We aren't "enlightened", we are the same as before.

    Yes, nukes are not a permanent solution... BUT THERE ISN'T ONE. There is no such thing as "getting rid of nukes". That is fairly tale talk. The world doesn't have a Superman standing on a incorruptible moral highground who can detect nukes around the world and toss them into the sun. What nuclear disarmament means in reality is that a small batch of people have secret nukes and the rest don't. And this is a far more dangerous and unstable situation than nuclear proliferation.

    Why? Cause when one/few nations have nukes, they have a very high value weapon: They can destroy your enemy! When your enemy has nukes... Nukes will destroy you! Before, you risked losing, but you could win too. Someone has to win! Now, BOTH parties' options are one totally wins, OR more likely both totally lose and having no winner at all. The reward of war has gotten smaller and risk has gotten higher.

    Just look at our history and even today. USSR and the US never went to war. They both setup nukes right next to each other but never went to war. They hated and despised each other right down to the 2 year olds, but no war! India didn't want Pakistan to have nukes cause else the sky will fall. Didn't happen once they got it. In fact, they have defused every escalating skirmish since they both got nukes. What's the most unstable region in the world? Middle East... the only location where one superpower has the nukes and the rest don't. So the rest constantly scheme about how to take out the giant and the giant schemes how to keep the little guys down. Both live in constant fear of the other in a restless twitching mode of operation.

    NO, nukes are not a permanent solution and they will cause utter destruction... if used. But, the risk of that is small and there is no realistic alternative. The best deterrent that humans have come up with against war is nukes. The best deterrent humans have come up with against nukes.... is nukes. That's all Waltz is really saying.

    Yes, there are lots of "wars" happening all over the world but in relative terms per history, they are the equivalent of a few villages duking it out somewhere in the British empire. The empire itself is at peace.

  82. hostages by shentino · · Score: 1

    Nukes prevent wars the same way that taking people hostage prevents a shootout with police.

    All it does is make people back down, and makes sure the guys that have nukes get their way without resistance.

    1. Re:hostages by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Nukes prevent wars the same way that taking people hostage prevents a shootout with police. All it does is make people back down, and makes sure the guys that have nukes get their way without resistance.

      There's no police on global scale, though. And some countries thinking that they're some sort of popular sheriff and can go gung ho on the "bad guys" (i.e. those they personally dislike) on that basis is not really helping.

  83. The scary part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The scary part is that I think that the effectiveness of nuclear deterrance is mostly psychological. Or sociological. The psyche of the masses. Whatever you call that.

    If everyone is afraid of nuclear war, then MAD works. If people start to doubt the effectiveness of MAD, then they believe there's a chance that their opponent could nuke 'em. And now you've got a scenario where they're looking down an opponent's barrel.

    Likewise, in the other extreme, if people start to take MAD for granted, and they believe that they can invade a nation, grab resources, bully politics, and be generally belligerent, then MAD is effectively not in play. It has been forgotten. They'll never launch their own nukes, but they won't fear others'.

    The really scary part is that conversations like this, or even the lack of them, influence the social view of nuclear weapons. If only a little. And that's pushing us collectively one way or another.

  84. Who's this nutcase? by it5complicated · · Score: 1

    India and Pakistan had nukes and still went to war over Kargil. There is a good, big list of nuclear close calls during cold war. If you think nuke close calls are preferable to World Wars, your brain is totally and completely cooked. And the Sanest Country in History is actually the only one ever to detonate a nuke in anger. Two, actually.
    No major states went to war since WW2? I'd say, let the Superpower clowns screw each other until their rear ends bleed, but leave the poor developing countries to develop in peace. We don't want Cuba or Vietnam or Cambodia or Chile or Nicaragua or Palestine squeezed because big and benevolent America can't wave her(?) dong at Russia which had Peacekeeping nukes.
    If you can make the case that nukes led to global peace, I can make the case that Nazism rid the world of Colonialism. Please stop glorifying these academic nuts with coverage.

  85. Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do I really have to name the wars we've started to try and stop other people from getting nukes or trying to get rid of them? We almost blew ourselves up.

  86. Ozzy mentioned this years ago! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank God for the bomb.

    Same message coming from another mouth.

  87. Why shouldn't it work for countries and nukes? by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

    It works for civilians and pistols.

    Even with psychopaths and criminal gangs preying on innocent victims, the crime, injury, and death rates are substantially lower where the gun-toting is higher and potential victims are often armed. And when laws are changed to encourage or discourage victim self-armament the crime, injury, and death rates change accordingly. So it seems to be a real effect and driven from laws to carry to crime, not some artifact. (See _More Guns, Less Crime_ by John Lott for research supporting this side of the interminable argument.)

    This is what you expect if you think about it more than superficially. When it comes to behavior, especially with something known to be dangerous, people tend to be mostly rational actors and only occasionally random number generators. Predators avoid victims that are likely to injure or kill them. The few that don't are likely to have a much shorter career when victims are armed than when they can continue unchecked (or until caught by police).

    In international level, treating governments as if they were people, you have a small neighborhood. And you have no police at that level (despite the posturing of international organizations), just competing gangs. The same real-world effects can be expected to rule at this scale that rule when a few people are interacting.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re:Why shouldn't it work for countries and nukes? by J3947 · · Score: 1

      I see two problems with your claim:

      First, guns are relatively common in society. This means that gangs and thieves can get ahold of them relatively well. In the context of a society where criminals can be expected to have guns, then your claim is that when ordinary civilians *also* have guns, then the gun crime goes down. The claim being made is actually that the presence of nukes in a world where nukes are relatively difficult to get increases peace. To put it another way, let's imaging some different scenarios:

      (1) Nobody has guns/nukes
      (2) Some nations have guns/nukes
      (3) Criminals have guns/nukes
      (4) Everybody has guns/nukes

      The claim your making in your comment is that situation #4 results in lower crime than situation #3. The claim being made in the summary is that situation #2 results in fewer wars than situation #1.

      The second problem I see is that even if we assume nations are rational actors, there is a danger of mistakes (there have been several times in the Cold War when nukes were almost used), I don't trust that terrorist groups won't use nukes to attain their political goals (even if they don't use the nukes, if they have control of one or two nukes they can still threaten nations to get their way), and I don't trust that individuals will always be rational actors (for example, the Aum Shinrikyo cult who tried to use Sarin gas in Tokyo subways to jump start the apocalypse).

  88. Think of the game developers! by The+Mister+Purple · · Score: 2

    But if we don't abolish nukes, then we won't get a proper world war going again, and what will FPS developers do?

    --
    "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled." Feynman
  89. Faulty premise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The statement that major powers have not engaged in war since 1945 is false. The USA and China fought in Korea, the USSR and America fought in Vietnam. Plus let's not forget that major powers have come very close to nuclear war, in fact I believe the USSR ordered the launch of nucs at one point and we were saved by someone holding back to confirm the attack on them was real. Nuclear weapons have almost caused human destruction multiple times in the last 60 years, stretch out that time line long enough and they will eventually end us, on purpose or by accident.

  90. I disagree with the fundamental assumption by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 1

    CONSERVATIVELY 250 million people were killed in 'wars' in the 20th Century alone, far outstripping the casualties in any other century. Large scale wars have raged around the world continuously both before and after the introduction of nuclear weapons. In fact the casualty rate INCREASED somewhat after WWII.

    I see not the slightest evidence that even the basic premise of Waltz's hypothesis is valid. He's proposing a causal link between nuclear weapons and some non-existent 'peace'. The whole proposition is insane and his hypothesis is idiotic on the face of it.

    --
    "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
    1. Re:I disagree with the fundamental assumption by Denagoth · · Score: 1

      Excluding WW1 and WW2, how many of the slain were from countries that had nuclear weapons? Alternatively, how many were killed by internal strife - civil wars, ethnic cleansing, etc? Not to sound jaded, but it depends on how you keep score.

      Nuclear weapons will not keep states from killing their own citizens, but they most assuredly will prevent two nuclear powers from escalating conflict beyond a certain point.

    2. Re:I disagree with the fundamental assumption by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 1

      The Iran/Iraq war was larger than WWI just by itself. The list of wars that caused 1 million or more casualties since WWII is rather long. I would argue that in fact there is little different between nuclear and non-nuclear powers. Nuclear powers simply use proxies, either directly against each other or against each others' client states. The end result is the same. In fact a government will generally at least feel SOME restraint or limit when sacrificing its own citizens (some goals may not be worth it), but in the "I cannot be directly attacked" post-nuclear world there's nothing at all stopping them from pushing their clients and proxies on and on forever to the very bottom of the slipperiest slope into unending conflict.

      There is in this sort of world also no real fundamental difference between a civil war and an international war. They are all largely the result of different nuclear powers pushing different agendas in different regions.

      Another aspect of this is the inability of a great power to push a conclusion with an asymmetrically weaker enemy, leading to endless stalemate and maximized suffering and death. This sort of issue is pretty apparent in Afghanistan where a fear of destabilizing other nuclear powers (Pakistan) or antagonizing them too much (again Pakistan) has lead to a permanent stalemate that will simply go on killing people and draining resources such that other parts of the world also fall into disorder, etc. This will go on essentially forever, until the whole conflict becomes irrelevant, which could be another 20-30 years (though I suspect the US will effectively collapse before that).

      And that's a whole other aspect that hasn't been talked about by Mr Waltz. He seems to live in a fantasy world where nation states endure endlessly. Sometime in the next couple decades he's going to get a very rude awakening on that one!

      So, no, IMHO nuclear weapons do nothing to foster peace. They push warfare to the periphery of the orbit of the great powers is all. Europe may be safe from war, and North America, but for the rest of the world? It is a giant curse. Even for us the piper will eventually be paid. Someone will slip up, go insane, miscalculate, etc. Then all of civilization will be ashes and any putative saving of lives will have been paid for 1000x over.

      --
      "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
    3. Re:I disagree with the fundamental assumption by Denagoth · · Score: 1

      I actually think we're in agreement on at least one thing: Nuclear weapons only make life "safer and peaceful" for those who have them, which is what I meant by "how you keep score".

      Imagine for a moment you were suddenly elected President of Iraq and could immediately acquire a credible and robust nuclear deterrent. Would you do it? I sure as hell would. Unless my country has a nuclear deterrent, I am at risk to all the scenarios you outlined above - and since my country has resources that other countries need, I am very much at risk w/o an "equalizer" on the field of battle.

      So, I ask again - would you do it?

    4. Re:I disagree with the fundamental assumption by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 1

      I think anyone would do it when looked at from a purely selfish point of view. The problem is that nuclear weapons are a prisoner's dilemma. There's no payoff better than long-term mutual annihilation that doesn't involve everyone giving up the sure payoff in the short term.

      The ULTIMATE and fundamental problem with Waltz's analysis is the end result IS annihilation. While we don't know the exact risk of nuclear war per unit time we can deduce from first principles and observation that it is non-zero. We can deduce further that it increases as the number of nuclear states increases. Thus given enough time it will happen, and given more proliferation it will surely happen more swiftly.

      And lets not kid ourselves, there are very few SURVIVABLE nuclear war scenarios. Even modeling of limited exchanges by regional powers like India and Pakistan show incredible damage, probably enough to collapse all of modern technological civilization. The odds of any of the people in this forum surviving such an occurrence, of ANYONE YOU KNOW surviving it, are poor to say the least. Even very optimistically you're looking at a death toll of something like 1 billion people in the immediate aftermath. That dwarfs all the wars we can even imagine, let alone any that Waltz can optimistically assume have been prevented.

      Waltz is just wrong. Very wrong. The scary part is his argument is one that is a very convenient justification for the short term selfish behavior of the people who could decide to end the madness.

      --
      "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
    5. Re:I disagree with the fundamental assumption by Denagoth · · Score: 1

      I think you're prisoner's dilemma analogy is spot-on. Unfortunately, that particular case study never seems to turn out well for the prisoners.

      I also agree with your scenario analysis. Both the nonfiction book "Caging the Nuclear Genie" and the fiction book "One Second After" discuss how less than a hundred nuclear devices, targeted at critical infrastructure elements (sea ports, bridges, power stations, etc) could effectively cause nationwide collapse and a return to essentially pre-industrial civilization. In this scenario, most of the casualties are due to starvation or exposure, rather than radiation or blast effects.

      A tough problem to be sure, and one with no easy solution. Thank you for the thoughtful discussion!

    6. Re:I disagree with the fundamental assumption by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 1

      Yeah, definitely. It is a tough problem. I guess all we can do is keep our fingers crossed and keep electing people that see the problem and will continue a policy of nuclear arms reduction. I pretty much assume they're never going away (unless we invent something even scarier) but if we got to a point where the great powers have a handful of bombs each we might work it out. All agree to put them on low low readiness and some day perhaps we'll learn to settle differences without making threats. Kinda optimistic perhaps, but so it goes.

      --
      "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
  91. Nukes not internet? by gshegosh · · Score: 1

    Suuuure, it's all about nukes and nothing about how interconnected modern economies are. It used to be beneficial to start a war with your neighbour, it's no longer the case because he's now your customer and manufacturer.

  92. There is no viable alternative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When countries agree to disarm themselves, all you can say with certainty is that they are lying to each other.

    They might disassemble *a few* nuclear weapons, for show, but you can bet your bottom dollar they will keep plenty enough to retaliate if they ever faced a nuclear threat.

    Even if a country does get rid of all of its nuclear weapons...the instant the tide changes and war looks likely, they will build more.

    Disarmament is nothing but feel-good placation for the stupid.

  93. World War is not all wars by jklovanc · · Score: 1

    The presence of nuclear weapons may have stopped major conflicts but it had an interesting effect of allowing minor conflicts to continue. As long as a conflict did not involve the US and Russian interests significantly it was allowed to go on. Take a look at this link, this link and this link and see if you agree that nuclear weapons have stopped all wars.

  94. Not just nukes . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But also the ability to deliver them to the civilian population. Enthusiasm for war dampens quite a bit if your loved ones & you are in direct danger.

  95. A nuclear bitch slap... by ormondotvos · · Score: 1

    Think for a second.
    Three anonymous tactical nukes, one each, Mecca, Vatican, Jerusalem.
    What would happen? Can you not think clearly about this?
    Then maybe you're not ready for Prime Time Politics.

    1. Re:A nuclear bitch slap... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given that all Jerusalem (assuming you mean the old city) and Vatican city are large extremely heavy stone structures sitting atop rocks ... not much would happen. All the detonation energy would be used up in vaporizing a layer of that rock, damaging buildings and statues and roofs and windows and what have you, but there will not be sufficient energy to completely vaporize them. Anybody who is in a location where they can directly see the nuke without a window between them and it would probably be dead, everyone else would be fine. That is unlikely to be very many people, either in Jerusalem or Vatican city. Few, if any, buildings would collapse.

      And of course, the average American atheist would gloat about how wonderful all this death and destruction would be.

      Mecca however is a very recent implant of modern buildings (even the -current- Kaaba is a construction nobody who's seen it believes to be more than 10 years old, same goes for everything inside it) built with substandard materials which would have had relatively slim margins had it been built with the correct materials. They regularly collapse with the only shockwaves coming from feet on stairs and cars on the street. Everything around it is as you would expect everything in a horrible hellhole dictatorship to be : mostly tents and extremely weak buildings, all of them flammable, which would probably be set ablaze by a nuclear detonation even if they fired it at the wrong city, resulting in a disaster. Furthermore, medical facilities there, due to their racist laws and very few saudi doctors, are substandard. The only advantage it more or less has is that it is right next to a massive trade channel, so help would arrive quickly.

      And of course, the average American atheist would gloat about how terribly racist this particular atom bomb was. Let's hope whoever fires that particular bomb doesn't paint it white.

      Both Jerusalem and Vatican city have people behind them and believing in them that have capable militaries and working economies, which would have to sacrifice a lot, but not their very existence to attack others. Mecca has neither a capable military, and it's surroundings have an internal economy besides oil that the average North Korean city would find depressingly bad, and as far as intellectual performance goes : the cultural output of all muslims worldwide (books, movies, videos, ...) roughly equals that of Luxembourg, and that of Saudi Arabia doesn't would have trouble matching the publishing prowess of the average middle american village.

      The world economy, of course, is running on margins so thin that any war involving any major trading partner would destroy it. Doesn't really matter which one. That means only one thing, of course, like any system that can be taken out by a fly, it has a limited shelf-life.

  96. Makes sense ... until the first nuclear civil war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, that can't possibly end badly.

  97. Christian are arguably worse bny anecdote by aepervius · · Score: 2

    I mean at least muslim have the balls to explode THEMSELVES, rather than blackmail people into doing it the cowards : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proxy_bomb

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
    1. Re:Christian are arguably worse bny anecdote by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I can't say for all conflicts that involve Muslims, but e.g. in case of Chechnya, there have been plenty of recorded cases where suicide bombers were young females - usually widows or sisters of mujis killed in action - who were peer pressured into doing what they did. SImply because the community would refuse to support them otherwise, and without a male in the family they have no other means of support. They often use drugs to ensure compliance in the final moments, too.

    2. Re:Christian are arguably worse bny anecdote by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      I somehow doubt that the typical "muslim" suicide bomber had anything whatsoever to do with the planning or execution of the bombing that killed them. They "agree" to do it for reasons mostly unrelated to the goals of the bombing. IMO, the real bombers here aren't the ones blowing up.

  98. We'll be back to.... by WhackAttack · · Score: 0

    We'll end up going back into the Cuban Missile Crisis....

  99. Maybe. It's speculative, and data is missing. by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 2

    I don't think it's at all certain that quick and devastating nuclear strikes would amount to more dead than the conventional wars which nuclear weapons have made impossible.

    This is, of course, as-yet unknown, since there has never been a war that has started with both sides already in possession of nuclear weapons.

    Approximately 60 million people were killed in World war II, or about 2.5% of the world population. "Only" approximately 150,000-246,000 of those dead were killed by atomic weapons.

    Well, true, but the second world war was actually two separate wars, one in Europe and one in the Pacific. The war in Europe was over before nuclear weapons were introduced. Even counting them both together, since world war II lasted about 2170 days and three of those days were fought with one of the two combatants armed with nuclear weapons, you're saying that 0.13% of the duration of the war accounted for 0.4% of the deaths.

    If WWII is any indication, if a war were to break out with a nuclear-armed state, it would end abruptly.

    This is not clear. WWII was a war in which one of the two combatants had nuclear arms.

    ...

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  100. Peace != Fear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since when is being afriad of saying or doing something that might cause another to bringing about death and devastation the same as mutually accepting, recognizing, and cooperating with other groups of people without consideration of coercion or violence? Peace isn't just the absence of war, violence, and hatred, but being free from the conditions that bring about those things. If anything, weapons only drive up resentment and anxiety against anyone who has them.

    If I walked in to a room full of people carrying handguns, I wouldn't feel any safer knowing that because some people had them they'd be less likely to start fights with each other because it would do nothing reduce the possibility of killing everyone around them in a hail of gun fire if someone did start shooting. In that situation, I'd feel at a disadvantage if I didn't have a weapon, but arming myself would make me part of the problem.

    "Because weapons exist and we can't trust other people not to use them on us, we must arm ourselves to give us the same advantage to hurt them to deter their violence" doesn't sound like the definition of peace to me. It sounds like a trick to keep the pot at a simmer but not let it boil over.

  101. James Blish foretold: by rpresser · · Score: 1

    "someday they will all be nuclear powers, and the art will become as formal and minor as flower arranging."
    from "Black Easter", 1968

  102. Re:...Until there is a war between major states. E by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about actually using the comment field you filthy wanker?

  103. Maybe You Just Take Your Pills by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..and drop the crappy Tom Clancy novel.

  104. If your Arse Will Be Burnt In 30 minutes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..even some "mad" people like the Nork leadership or Richard Nixon will get sane. If they don't get sane by themselves, a bullet will also do. A bullet from the sane guy next to Richard.

  105. Huge logical hole. First prove your premise by raque · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I am horrified that the smart people of slashdot are simply accepting the premise that nukes have exclusively created peace in the world. Misunderstanding this point can cause that it is trying to avoid. Mr Waltz's thesis is that since the end of WWII there hasn't been a major war between Nuclear powers. He asserts that the major change has been the existence of nukes, therefore nukes are what are keeping the peace. That logic is flawed horribly. This is confusing correlation with causation. Other things have changed also. For example:

    I can assert that since 1945 the United Nations has existed. Therefor the UN has prevented a major war;

    World War II is the most heavily documented event in human history. Since we cannot ignore the mountains of history we are able to avoid repeating it. Santayana is proved, not Waltz;

    After WWII education and communications have boomed. Since smart people anywhere on Earth who can commentate in written English can exchange ideas freely on Slashdot the conditions for war are ameliorated. Therefor Slashdot and the internet and mass communication have prevented war.

    As a corollary: To be correct Waltz would have to rephrase his comments to: Nukes can't keep the peace, they are objects. It is knowledge of what will happen if the Nukes are used that keeps the peace. The confounding of Nukes and knowledge is troubling.

    This also ignores two facts: First, that except for a tiny part all of the damage of WWII was done with conventional weapons. When we look at image after image of different blasted cities, only two were nuked. If we hid the few important landmarks could anyone here tell the difference. Horror and death are horror and death -- how they are achieved may not be important. Second, India and Pakistan are still well within the average, 17.3 years, between wars. We have no proof that Nukes have done anything to maintain peace between them.

    It is most important to realize that none of these are exclusive. It can easily be argued that it is some combination of the factors I have laid out that keeps the peace.

                       

    1. Re:Huge logical hole. First prove your premise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While it would be horrific, almost any modern city could weather the two dropped on Japan. The same cannot be said of modern nukes; the technology improved rapidly, as did understanding of how to effectively use it. Any usage of nukes nowadays would be brutally unforgiving—modern nukes make Little Boy and Fat Man look like firecrackers.

      Second, India and Pakistan are still well within the average, 17.3 years, between wars. We have no proof that Nukes have done anything to maintain peace between them.

      There is a serious disparity there, in terms of size, manpower, and the ability to credibly act on that threat. Because of this Pakistan knows it would be suicide to engage India in total war, it certainly isn't MAD when neither the 'M' nor the 'A' applies. Nonetheless I don't see total war happening between the two; while Pakistan couldn't possibly win it could make any Indian victory bitter-sweet indeed. Even brushfire conflicts are less-likely to occur due to the inherent nature of those conflicts inevitably causing escalation. Any conflicts are — at the very least — likely to be low intensity, all things considered.

      It is knowledge of what will happen if the Nukes are used that keeps the peace. The confounding of Nukes and knowledge is troubling.

      What's that? You cannot intimidate another party if they're completely unaware of why what you're attempting to intimidate them with is a credible threat? No shit, Sherlock! While we're stating the blindingly obvious let me put this forward: while it is true that potential aggressors need merely believe your retaliation be overwhelming and inescapable, convincing them of that usually requires that you're actually capable of following through. The reason neither your point nor my corollary were espoused by Waltz would be that they are, as I previously noted, blindingly obvious.

    2. Re:Huge logical hole. First prove your premise by raque · · Score: 1

      I'll cop to berating the obvious, though I felt that the obvious being short changed. No matter the extent of anyone's Napolian Complex, an Army or a Battle Ship is not something that can be operated by one man, a nuke is. Politically a nuke and the British Grand Fleet are similar, the thing in itself is very different. The difference in power between WWII nukes and modern ones is irrelavent. The difference in sizes is not.

      Nukes as a threat *might* promote peace, but that ignores the fact that they are also huge vey expensive displays of status. If someone tries to join the big boys club who doesn't belong there that can cause instability. It is just as easy to argue against Waltz's conclusions using the same data.

      Waltz fails to show that it was the nukes that caused the stability between the US and the USSR, not the stability causing the nukes to be not used. Until that can be shown, not assumed, speculating on India and Pakistan is dangerous.

  106. Samson, Suicide Attacker, Killed 3000 Civilians by chrb · · Score: 1
    Remember the heroic Samson?

    Now the house was full of men and women; and all the lords of the Philistines were there; and there were upon the roof about three thousand men and women, that beheld while Samson made sport.

    And Samson called unto the LORD, and said, O Lord GOD, remember me, I pray thee, and strengthen me, I pray thee, only this once, O God, that I may be at once avenged of the Philistines for my two eyes. And Samson took hold of the two middle pillars upon which the house stood, and on which it was borne up, of the one with his right hand, and of the other with his left. And Samson said, Let me die with the Philistines. And he bowed himself with all his might; and the house fell upon the lords, and upon all the people that were therein. So the dead which he slew at his death were more than they which he slew in his life.

    p.s. Silver Surfer was a suicide bomber. Shocked that a Hollywood movie would glorify such acts?

    1. Re:Samson, Suicide Attacker, Killed 3000 Civilians by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      So, waitaminute... one guy (who wasn't even Christian) in roughly 6000 years of history, no bombs involved, and he's proof that all fundies are suicide bombers?

      Am I missing something here?

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    2. Re:Samson, Suicide Attacker, Killed 3000 Civilians by chrb · · Score: 1
      I didn't say anything about a proof, but merely pointed out that one man's suicide terrorist killing thousands of civilians is another man's Bible hero.

      (who wasn't even Christian)

      But he is considered a Hero of The Bible, and whilst I doubt that most Christians even realise that he wasn't Christian, the ones that do still go through mental gymnastics to include Samson as one of their own ("Therefore Samson was a Jew and so are you and I if we call ourselves Christians.")

      You appear to be arguing that modern Christian fundamentalists are scared of death and martyrdom. Given the history of Christianity, I'm not so convinced that is accurate. "Christians, fear of death, fear of death. The fear of death shows you don't believe.... God needs soldiers to fight so his children may live free. Are you afraid??? I'm not. SEND ME!!!" - Mark David Uhl, a modern fundamentalist. Are you sure you would trust someone like that with a nuclear weapon?

    3. Re:Samson, Suicide Attacker, Killed 3000 Civilians by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Yes, the terrible oppression of being stuck inside of a tiny ghetto and subjected to random incursions by a military of a fanatical theocracy that wants you and everyone like you dead because you were on their land before they got there.

  107. Oh yeah, The "Button" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you would educate yourself to the world of nuke launching, you would quickly find that control over nukes does not rest on a single button nor on a single person. Lots of keys, lots of people, quite a bit of paperwork required.
    And "if one guy goes mad" I am sure there will be a needle with a sedative ready in less than three minutes for the "Commander In Chief". That's why the have a "Surgeon General".

    1. Re:Oh yeah, The "Button" by war4peace · · Score: 1

      It's funny how you pass everything through your USA-like filter. How do you know how things work in North Korea, for example? Or China, or Israel, for that matter?
      Yeah, in the USA maybe everything is under control and triple-checked. Good for you. I have strong doubts though about the same control being implemented in other, more dictatorial countries.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
  108. The Jewish Propagandists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ,,,of that Apartheid State told him.

  109. Maybe with rational countries... by asmkm22 · · Score: 1

    There are countries in the world that simply don't care if they get nuked, as long as they take the enemy down first. Give a country like Somalia a few nukes and see how long they can sit around "enjoying the peace" before trying to figure out a way to make money from it. It wouldn't take long before they start threatening to detonate a nuke they've claimed to smuggled into another country unless that country gives into a demand (money, prisoner release, seat on the U.N. security council, etc). What country could simply ignore that kind of threat, regardless of how unlikely it might be true? And then you have any nation governed by religious zealots. Someone makes a joke about Muhammad in a bear suit and they might just piss off the right nation at the right time. Today, that nation would simply threaten to send a suicide bomber or something, but if they had nukes? Simply put, if your idea of world peace means everyone is walking on egg shells for fear of accidentally offending someone who has a nuke, then I guess this guy makes sense.

  110. and thats why The Football is carried by a Soldier by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

    If the POTUS went nuts what do you think would happen??

    1 Sure start World War Three Point One
    or

    2 "Im sorry Sir But I can't Do That Until you Calm Down First"

    Don't forget that serving the Office Of The President does not always include serving the guy wearing The Hat

    --
    Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
  111. Precisely! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yes, and what if they are about to removed from power, e.g. uprising? What's to stop them from having the
    mentality of "if I can't have, no one will".

    Yes, this! Over 9000 times this!

    This is precisely the reason that 98% of the world's population died from 1991–2001, after Gorbachev let the missiles fly during the Yeltsin coup in the USSR that attempted to oust the Communists.

    No one over here really knows whether the coup succeeded, because Russian transmission systems were knocked out by US EMP strikes. We *think* we got all their bunkers in Moscow (after all, our Minuteman III's had a 120 meter CEP). Best guess is that the remains of the Red Army brass have established various fuedal warlord "states", each claiming to be the true successor of the Soviet government.

    Aside from the direct casualties of nuclear holocaust, billions more died of starvation in the subsequent decade.

    Every year, on the anniversary of the Great Death, a robotic rover is sent to drop a floral wreath on the beach where the highly radioactive remains of the Statue of Liberty rise above the sands...

  112. This system is not diplomacy. It is vendetta. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This diplomatic strategy is the valid equivalent to "Stand your ground" lawys the US has in some southern states.
    The universal, if you kick me, I will kick you back is the best way to operate in an anarchy. The 'kick you back' is the detterent
    to violence. You have no gain to destroy your ennemy since you know he will destroy you back = Mutually assured destruction.

    For it to work, the threat must be believable and you can't afford not to react to provocations. You have to be seen as one
    who will not stand being bullied and this will eventually escalate in conflicts over time, until maybe complete destruction.

    This system is not diplomacy. It is vendetta.

  113. Peace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Peace is not the absence of war. Peace is the absence of fear."

  114. Re:Maybe You Jews by Nadaka · · Score: 1

    Not a Jew.

    Not even remotely a zionism supporter.

    What does that have to do anything?

    ALL of this shit would stop if the world was cured of faith and religion.

    Have you thought about that?

  115. Kenneth Waltz: Classic Academic Troll by bdwoolman · · Score: 1

    He knows it's stupid, but he wants some attention. Or he wants to sell a book. Or maybe just get a squib on Slashdot (Okay, maybe not that). It is pretty impossible to get any public attention by taking an established sensible position on anything. As far as media outlets and the public are concerned consensus it is a big fat yawn. "Well-known scientist agrees with other well-known scientists that Einstein was right." One gets respect, of course, from one's peers in this way. But that and two bucks will get you a cup of coffee.

    But if you want a turn on The Today Show, and you crave some book sales, then you have to be bold, to swim against the turgid current of normalcy. You have to GET CRAZY -- in a measured academic sort of way. But I have to give Waltz credit for flying high and wild. He must have a new mistress he needs to house. Nonproliferation? Fugedaboudid! Bring it bitches! W00T! Let's have some Plute! Uranium? I want it rich, Bitch. Where's Teller when you need him? Let's give Nicaragua a Super H so they can dig a canal. Why can't we all just get along?

    I'm A Dinner Jacket (Ahmadinajad) is an apocalyptic nut case holocaust denier who says Israel should be erased -- but I guess Waltz thinks he is just posturing. If Waltz actually believes in his theory let's see if he moves to Tel Aviv when Iran gets its weapon. Which they will.

    Okay, If we were talking real politik globally, as we were during the cold war, then Waltz might have a leg to stand on. Might. But this is a Cosmic war. The problem with Jerusalem is not political. It is religious. Or better put, the politics of this contentious boil poisoning the bloodstream of the planet is religious at root. Whether you are a Taliban or a Talibaptist or an Israeli Zealot we are not talking rational nuclear game theory here. Apocalyptic weapons in the hands of hyper-religious spun up Apocalyptics? I should say not. And Mr Waltz knows better, too. Shame on him!

    --
    "No fear. No envy. No meanness." Liam Clancy
  116. Air Force Security Service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The good thing is, they can make General LeMad have some nice five-week diarrhoea, until the crisis is over. If that does not work, contact the cubans if they have an American loner with a good gunshot+hunting rifle in their ranks. Then tell them about LeMad's daily route. Problem eliminated.

  117. I have to call Bull-S*** on this one... by MossStan · · Score: 1

    ...because a fair amount of the world is already in one war or another. Holding a proverbial gun to the world's head has had no positive effect.

    --
    It is what it is.
  118. Gatling Gun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Dr Gatling thought his weapon would be so devastating that people would never want to fight wars again. I'm sure this idea has been attached to many other weapons throughout history and nobody has been right yet.

    Eventually someone will be crazy enough to use nukes in warfare. Their enemies will use this to justify using nukes in retaliation and we will quickly forget how absurd nuke-free war seemed as lobbing nukes at civilian populations becomes standard practice.

  119. Does not scale well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Give just 1 to one of those countries itching to nuke someone.

  120. Ha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can argue the point but some expert said this about most every "advance" in warfare technology, like the airplane, submarine, poison gas, etc. and all were proved wrong. All it takes is for someone's belief in their own cause to exceed their common sense and humanity and we don't have anyone around like that right ?

  121. Suicidal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He forgot the important fact that Iran is the part of the world where suicide bombers come from. They would be perfectly happy to blow up earth,as long as they killed all the infidels.

  122. Gatling gun HISTORY by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

    This man is an idiot. They said the same thing about the Gatling gun, and look where that got us collectively as a race. Fail to learn from history, doomed, repeat, etc.

    --
    C|N>K
  123. Ideas come from somewhere. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From what I understand (which is admittedly not much,) the ideology is more often simply the method used to demonize the competitor so decision makers can justify to themselves and the population acts of horrific violence. This is especially true when those in charge require a complicit population and have a conscience.

    In the end what we have is evolution on a cultural and societal scale. Much like an individual with multiple personalities there is much disagreement on what should and should not be done. Seems to me putting a loaded pistol in each of the personalities' hands and putting them against the shared head in order to quiet disagreements between personalities is a bad idea.

    So far we've been fortunate to reach the levels of general non-violence we have, but peace is not guaranteed and as soon as anyone sees death of all as being better than their current situation or perceived projection of their future situation they will pull the trigger. It is in our best interest to work as hard as possible towards equality, peace, open communication, non-violence and sanity.

    People will do what they must to survive and to some people survival means maintaining their home, to those without homes it means putting food in their childrens' stomachs. For those who are failing to do that, it can mean behaving in a way that the holy one will grant them everlasting peace and prosperity after inevitable death or exacting revenge on those they understand to be responsible for their misery or stopping the people they see as threatening their family.

    Viktor Frankl said, Happiness = Meaning - Suffering. If self-perceived meaning is lacking, people will either work towards increasing their meaning or try to eliminate whatever they perceive as suffering even further. If Suffering is great and they can't do anything about it, then people find a way of creating great meaning for their misery. Failure to do so results in depression. I can see this causing war when powerful/wealthy people have little self-perceived meaning and other people see themselves as suffering for no good reason.

    Finally there are anomalies that will always be there such as crazy people who find themselves in positions of power and great fear leading to accidental scares that could escalate to the destruction of civilization. Anomalies are unavoidable can can only be dampened, not completely mitigated.

  124. Patents as an analogy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone is busy stockpiling patents, thinking the more they have, the more it will deter everyone else from suing each other.

    Then along comes a megalomaniac hand-JOB who decides to go "thermonuclear war", and the rest, as they say, is history.

  125. war versus War by anorlunda · · Score: 1

    I was in college on the day of the Cuban missile crisis. I and everyone else in the dormitory that day thought that the world was going to end in 30 minutes. After that, we spent the next 30 years fatalistically believing that is was not a question if the world would be blown up but when. We all believed the "On The Beach" scenario as the only credible outcome.

    Then in 1989, things changed abruptly. We dodged the bullet of extinction level war. I should say War. Not a nuclear war, but The War.

    In the comments of this thread, I don't see that distinction coming out. Man could probably survive one or several global nuclear wars, as distinct from The War. war is a question of politics and power. War is a question of survival of the species (or should I say all species.)

    Of course, War is still possible no matter how unlikely we like to believe. But I hate discussion of war as if it were War.

  126. They make a desert, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they call it peace.

  127. It's the same thing. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

    If you're fighting a war for resources, you are fighting for an ideology. Not every culture on the earth believes in grabbing as much as possible for itself, or trying to build empires out of the other nations of the earth.

  128. Re:USA would be making a mistake to cut nuke force by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    Nuclear civil war. Now that's a novel concept. China vs China, or America vs America. Don't think it can't happen. Nations do split from within. Though there are supposed to be nuclear code safeguarded measures against such things, but I'm not entire convinced it's good enough.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  129. My take (probably already stated) by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

    When there are a few stable countries with nukes, they know that firing them off is a bad idea. With the past few decades of less-stable countries (and less stable leaders) either getting them (missing USSR nukes) or working to build them, then I see much less deterrent. Especially since all the sanctions against Iraq and N. Korea do zilch. "We promise we'll stop." "OK then, have a cookie."

    --
    Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
  130. That's what they said about the Machine Gun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And inevitably, spreading technology only made wars far more destructive, as both the "Concert of Europe" principals and the relative industrial balance between Britain, France, Russia, Germany, and Austria broke down.

    Every time a new technology that killed more people more effectively came into being, it was used, and transformed war fundamentally: the pike square defeated mounted knights and helped end feudalism, the mass-musket armies defeated the pike square and remnants of feudal knightly soldiers, the repeating rifle defeated mass muskets, quick firing artillery defeated repeating rifles, along with the machine gun and barbed wire, armored vehicles and mass air assaults defeated the WWI trench defended by machine guns and barbed wire, the ICBM and nukes defeated the modern combined arms (air, land, sea) blitzkrieg.

    Iran's gamble is not a lunatic one, like the Kaiser in 1914 they reckon on strategic and tactical weakness in the West, aim to "one bomb state" destroy Israel as an object lesson to gain surrender in the Gulf, expel the US Navy (which has controlled it since 1944) and set the world price of oil to around $145 a barrel which is their basic break-even point for paying their goon army. The Financial Times calculated that Russia under Putin needs oil at $117 for his current budget, about $128 for future spending plans.

    Kaiser Wilhelm thought he could pick up an easy win, Britain had a fairly poor professional army with few men, France had an even worse one, Russia was very weak, and he did not fear conflict, having great confidence in the Schlieffen Plan which absent Parisian taxis just might have worked (aka the "Miracle on the Marne" when Parisian Taxis ferried French troops on a desperate stand against the advancing Germans who outran their supply lines). Germany/Prussia had won every conflict on its borders easily (against the Austrians, Danes, and French respectively). Wilhelm and the senior Juncker class thought the French and British and Russians would capitulate quite easily. They had reason to think so, the weakness and fairly decadent behavior of the respective ruling classes did not give confidence in firmness and strength of the opponent. Iran is similarly convinced that the Western powers and Israel fundamentally lack the will to fight and any conflict will be easy enough, certainly not the bloodbath of the Iran-Iraq War.

    Ultimately peace 1945-1991 was achieved by a stand-off duopoly largely of massive nuclear arsenals; the more that massive advantage is under-cut and nations develop their own arsenals, the more likely war is to come. Peace is not the default condition of mankind, war is. Peace is only established when a power or group of powers collectively is strong enough to deter attacks and war. Peace did not happen when the Roman legions left Britain in 419 AD, just the reverse. The place found war visiting it constantly until the final battles at Culloden. Nearly 1300 years of fairly regular war.

    Iran fundamentally wants very high oil prices and the West cannot survive with them. If you like today's economy, just imagine it with oil nearing $200 a barrel. War is inevitable unless the West is strong, and seen to be strong, enough to deter Iranian attacks and make them live with strategic defeat of their oil price objectives.

  131. Grim Double Entendre by neoshroom · · Score: 1

    The article states: Israel is an anomaly in this way. This anomaly will be removed if Iran becomes a nuclear power.

    The person writing the article didn't seem to realize, this could be taken in two ways...

    --
    Big apple, new Yorik, undig it, something's unrotting in Edenmark.
  132. Why am I not surprised.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People like this put less obnoxiously stupid people to shame.

  133. Mutual Assured Destruction & the 19th-century by TheRealHocusLocus · · Score: 1

    I find it ironic that an approach with a proven track record, Mutual Assured Destruction, has been lambasted as some sort of cold-war artifact, of intrinsic evil. The threat of Armageddon is the evil, MAD was the preventative. The United States of America was even founded on it. The 'armed militia model' where the empire and an armed populace, each with the power to hold the other in check -- the whole quotable 'We the People' litany -- is just a flowery and (to our ears) archaically quaint way of introducing the concept of Mutual Assured Destruction as a deterrent to tyranny. In a practical and historical sense MAD is the only device capable of holding peoples in restraint, long enough that the meme of self-restraint might creep into the culture.

    It's just like guns. We've seen Sum of All Fears. There are presently enough loose nuke warheads and 'nuclear partners' to make them, to keep the world supplied with little boomers like the one that took out Baltimore Stadium -- for thousands of years of dirty little tricks and false flag pranks. Why not accept that as a 'given' rather than participating in escalating campaigns of denial? It's like turning in all the guns... and of course we were only joking last time, this time we'll get all of them, another historical circus recursus which always seems to distill into a "You first, we'll reconsider later" policy.

    Then there is the business of generating energy. Nuclear Fission is the only -- only! only! -- thing on the table that could keep the grid up through some long, dark winter of inclement weather with limited or no transportation infrastructure operating. Neither solar, nor wind nor great rail-transported volume of coal passes this simple test. Nuclear plants are self contained and require only occasional delivery of fuel, which could be carried by mule train (a big slow one but hey, it's possible and I'd love to see that)

    Which is why I get pissed whenever my country goes ballistic on nuclear energy programs around the world. In a country like Iran nuclear energy is the only way to ensure a peaceful future because you can guard shipments of nuclear fuel, you can harden security around plants, but no one will ever be able to protect liquid or gas pipelines. Never mind the oil in the ground. What hope do they (or anyone) have for stability? Aside from being stupid, I consider the US's policy on nuclear development tantamount to terrorism itself. Like regulating, confiscating and blocking distribution of penicillin.

    Special note to the Japanese: please do not put your emergency backup generators in a basement at sea level with no watertight doors or bulkheads protecting them from complete immersion. All the haughty discussion about 'is nuclear a good idea' re: Fukushima is smoke and mirrors, Fukushima was a 19th-century 'FAIL' in terms of how simply it could have been prevented. Yes, I'm talking about steel doors and rubber seals! It really is THAT simple! Some 19th century steel door and rubber seal technology would have changed everything. Merely a mess, not a disaster.

    Also good reading, http://it.slashdot.org/story/04/05/29/2242203/the-worlds-most-dangerous-password

    --
    <blink>down the rabbit hole</blink>
  134. Re: jumping into the mix by neonsignal · · Score: 2

    Conflicts have been known to escalate beyond rationality in the past; World War I is a prime example.

  135. Only partly true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Although there is a grain of truth to the assertion that nuclear proliferation encourages peace - it primarily only encourages nuclear peace, and even then only temporarily. This has long been known as the doctrine of "Mutually Assured Destruction," an overt reference to its acronym in that it would indeed be "MAD" to start a nuclear war because the response would surely be too devastating to even contemplate. There has been a grain of truth to this. It's a bit like the beneficial effect of shall-issue concealed carry firearms laws upon violent crime: "An armed public is a polite public."

    However, the problem is that over time, "madmen" do indeed occasionally gain control of technologically advanced sovereign states. So all it really accomplishes is to create a form of destruction which is larger grained. It may happen less frequently, but when it does happen the inevitable destruction is so horrible that it surely will not have been worth the wait. Unfortunately nuclear weapons are here to stay. We cannot roll back the clock on the doctrine of M.A.D. even though it may not offer complete assurance.

    Similarly, firearms are here to stay. Those countries which have experimented with civilian disarmament have discovered what should be the obvious principle that laws only apply to the law abiding. Even in heavily armed societies, most of the worst gun crimes end up occurring in designated gun-free zones.

    So, the assertion that nukes are "The Only Peacekeeping Weapons" is both incompletely true at face value, and outright false in its details. Guns, when freely possessed by responsible civilians, do also keep peace at least as well as nuclear weapons do, but simply on a personal scale rather than on an international scale.

  136. Flesh eating bacteria by KingTank · · Score: 1

    The greatest weight loss plan the world has ever known.

  137. Communication by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Communication may be the better approach to avoid a war. Ignorance and Nukes are of course the simplest alternative to just keep solving problems.
    As most wars that include offensive strikes start with some kind of exaggerated reason which is deepened and broadened in the process, communication is usually not an option, as the card house could collapse and usually the truth is the first victim during war.

    Do you think today a war would be accepted by a population given our current level of networking and communication? Today the leading industry nations fight their "wars" based on economic figures, not life or death. Totalitarian nations do not really fit into this picture, as they dont separate economics or religion from politics. There, everything is a political issue, therefore everything could be made a cause for a war or terrorism.

  138. Psst... Pakistan has nukes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And that doesn't stop us from sending drones in, or helicopters full of SEALs or...

    Bah.

  139. Re:Maybe. It's speculative, and data is missing. by matunos · · Score: 1

    Technically, all of the components of Little Boy were ready by July 26th... so, 11 days.

  140. Thank you for the post. by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 1

    Brilliant response. Thank you for that.

    This is why I read slashdot: different points of view, supported by fact and logic (and occasionally experience).

  141. Re: jumping into the mix by icebike · · Score: 1

    And which countries had nuclear weapons in the first world war?

    Try to keep up with the topic at hand.

    --
    Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
  142. Dr. Strangelove by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You only need one of these.

  143. A point of order... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And once all 200 or so countries has nukes, we'll be perfectly safe.

  144. Re: jumping into the mix by neonsignal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Your topic was whether nuclear weapons will keep 'non-fanatical' countries out of a war. My point is that you are overconfident of the rationality of the two countries that maintain the bulk of nuclear weapons. Woodrow Wilson taked about "the war to end war". Now you say that nuclear weapons are the weapons to end all major wars. Forgive my skepticism; I base this on past behaviour, not on suppositions about whether large states will or will not join a conflict. We are still over reliant on wise and considered decision making (such as the judgement call by Stanislav Petrov); I don't think we can take that short term stability for granted. If the assassination of a single person in Bosnia can lead to a world war, what do you imagine might happen if a nuclear weapon was used to murder an entire city?

  145. every weapon is for "peace keeping" by davydagger · · Score: 1

    Every sort of the arms race from tanks, to machine guns, to computers has been part of a detterent somehow.

    Only Nukes are so fucking destructive no one would admit wanting to use them, But people did/do.

    Castro wanted to nuke NYC for the bay of pigs. Goldwater wanted to nuke china.

    then we have all the brush wars nuclear powers fought against eachother in proxy. Kept peace my ass.

  146. Our Nukes aren't keeping anyone safe by Nyder · · Score: 1

    Ya, Nukes keep the world safe.

    That is why there has been wars going on pretty much non stop since we've had nukes.

    Our nukes have kept us safe, after all, the threat of us having nukes keep 9/11 from happening. Oh, wait, it didn't.

    Our having nukes have keep our soldiers safe. oh, wait, they have been dying.

    Israel having nukes have keep them safe, right? No terrorist acts, no people dying?

    Nukes haven't done shit but make the USA a big ass bully.

    --
    Be seeing you...
  147. one spark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's like saying drenching your house in gasoline will make it less likely of an accidental fire since you'll have to be very careful. I think the world would be better served with many manageable fires rather then one spark causing the entire world to explode.

  148. To soon to make this conclusion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Glad to see most comments are quite sensible.

    Nukes DO NOT make peace, they have merely altered the global strategic landscape significantly in the last 50 years, bringing COMPARATIVE peace to PARTICULAR states. And, we're only looking at 50 years. Give it a few more decades and we'll see what infinite human stupidity can do to disprove Waltz. Moreover, bad egg dictator states with nukes are less likely to see positive reforms, let alone revolutions that lead to some semblance of democracy and liberty for citizens.

  149. War, or peace, or something between by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    If you are going to make statements about the statistical significance of 67 years worth of data, please find out how many other 67 year periods of peace there have been.

    I used the phrase "no large scale war," and you have modified this to "peace". There have been no large-scale wars, as I chose to define it, but certainly this has not meant "peace." There have been very few years with no wars at all, with Korea following on the heels of World War II so quickly that they almost appear phases of a single conflict.

    Since there is a lot of flexibiliity in what is aggregated as "war," it's hard to say what the statistical significance is. It's dicey to make statistics when you can chose what to count in a way to adjust the result to anything you want. For example, I can claim 1815 to 1914 as a 99-year period of no large-scale wars. What? You say there were plenty of wars? Spanish American? Franco-Prussian War? Ah, but not large-scale wars.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  150. India and Pakistan by NewYork · · Score: 1

    I agree with Kenneth Waltz.
    Because India and Pakistan are not using nuclear weapons inspite of
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kashmir_dispute#Reasons_behind_the_dispute and
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008_Mumbai_attacks

  151. fine time, lucille by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    here we are in the midst of endless war, and you spout this bullshit

  152. Deterrence ... its not going to work by FreedomFirstThenPeac · · Score: 1

    The mathematics of deterrence are much more complicated than the simplistic Prisoner's Dilemma, but the Prisoner's Dilemma can inform some 30,000 foot understandings. It does not take a genius to see that when you put an infinity in one of the spaces in the PD payoff matrix, the math goes all bananas (the technical term). Religious nutjobs all seem (to me) to think in terms of infinite losses or infinite rewards. Or both. In decision sciences we would call those people irrational.

    --
    "There is no god but allah" - well, they got it half right.
  153. What about this weapon? by HArchH · · Score: 1

    I think the French would argue that the white flag has served them equally well.

  154. Famous last words before WWI by Dabido · · Score: 1

    He is echoing what they said just before WWI. Tirpitz's 'Risk theory' was that the German Navy was supposed to be big enough that the British wouldn't risk attacking it as it would do significant damage to the British Navy. Didn't happen. Instead they [Europe] had a lot of little 'preventative wars', that were supposed to stop the big one, but ultimately lead to the big one. Now we're supposed to believe that nukes will work using the same 'Risk theory', and we've been watching a lot of small 'preventative wars' that happened after WWII all over the world, and the world almost came to nuclear war between USSR and USA with the Cuban Missile Crisis. Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat its mistakes.

    --
    Sure enough, the cow costume was hanging up next to the superhero outfit and sailors uniform. (S,Spud)
  155. No so clear by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    If the US were nuked and we traced the fuel back to the Iranian enrichment program, no one would care about the subtleties.

    I can see that this would be the case if nuclear material was "stolen" and they said nothing. However suppose they informed the world that the material had been stolen? Even if it had happened accidentally-on-purpose unless you had proof that they deliberately allowed it to be stolen there is no way that the US or anyone else would be able to nuke them in retaliation. They could certainly put enormous pressure to bear to shutdown their nuclear program but beyond that, without proof, it would be very hard.

  156. The irony of nuclear weapons by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

    You're right that the knowledge of how to make nuclear weapons will never go away. That is why we need to learn to look at the issue differently:
    http://www.pdfernhout.net/recognizing-irony-is-a-key-to-transcending-militarism.html
    "Nuclear weapons are ironic because they are about using space age systems to fight over oil and land. Why not just use advanced materials as found in nuclear missiles to make renewable energy sources (like windmills or solar panels) to replace oil, or why not use rocketry to move into space by building space habitats for more land?"

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
    1. Re:The irony of nuclear weapons by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      "Nuclear weapons are ironic because they are about using space age systems to fight over oil and land. Why not just use advanced materials as found in nuclear missiles to make renewable energy sources (like windmills or solar panels) to replace oil, or why not use rocketry to move into space by building space habitats for more land?"
        Well I agree thinking is in order.
      1. Solar and Wind have no effect on the consummation of oil in the US. Only 3% of the electricity used is generated by oil.
      2. It is so not cost effective to use rockets to transport people and the technology used in ICBMs is solid propellant.
      Ummm way not practical and well into the land of fantasy.
      Then you have the issue with water and food. Now using more nuclear power including things like the Thorium molten salt reactor can help there but solar and wind are too expensive.
      And before you go and say we could use electric cars... Do you own one? The cost and performance of batteries still makes them impractical for large segments of the population. As a second car that you use in a city that has recharging ports it can work but for a large segment of the population they are a no go. Electric aka battery power will not work for planes, ships. long haul trucks, or commercial fishing boats. It can and is used by trains but unfortunately not much in the US.
      So your suggestions are I am sorry to say impractical fantasy. When you come up with ideas like that you may want to ask "Why are we not doing it" When your answer is because somebody powerful like : government, megacorp, the illuminati, space aliens, and or ghosts is evil and doesn't want it then you are probably not looking hard enough at the problem. There are solutions but they are not easy or simple and will take work. I can tell you right now wind mills and solar while should be part of our energy system are not the solution. Lots of cheap on demand power is at least part of the solution.
       

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    2. Re:The irony of nuclear weapons by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

      The cost trends for solar PV show it cheaper than coal real soon now (as in a few years, google on GE and solar power cheaper than coal), and at that tipping point our society will begin to switch over in a big way. There may be other energy solutions (including cold fusion) but that solar trend is happening and is pretty much unstoppable at this point. Solar PV is already cheaper than fossil fuels in many materially poorer countries.

      Time and time again people predict forward only the negative exponential trends while ignoring the exponential good ones. People dismiss solar power because it is such a small percent, ignoring it has been growing exponentially for decades and there is no reason to think it will not continue to grow (barring something even better). Cheap electricity can produce cheap synthetic liquid fuels or hydrogen, so your argument about transport is weak.

      Because you raise the issue of corruption, it is also true the current economic concentrations of power resists their displacement in various ways, including in the case of fossil fuels and nuclear, using lobbying to get tax and regulatory preferences... If fossil fuels had paid their true costs up-front in pollution and risk, renewables and energy efficiency would have been economically cheaper since the 1970s.

      Remember, at one point nuclear weapons were an impractical fantasy. Now we have to live with them, as they were brought into reality by cooperation and hard work and inspiration. So, today's Star Trek impractical fantasy (medical tricorders? portable small global communicators? matter printers?) may very well be tomorrow's reality (and do all exists in some form now). We should choose wisely what we want to make into reality of all the things we can imagine.

      Still, overall I agree with you that: "There are solutions but they are not easy or simple and will take work." But they also take imagination and some optimism.

      --
      A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
    3. Re:The irony of nuclear weapons by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      The cost isn't the problem. The problem with solar vs oil is you can use it in a car, plane, or ship.
      It doesn't replace oil. The other issue is that it is not on demand. You can only get power from PVs for a few hours a day. For every watt of Solar you also need a watt of peaking power. AKA a gas turbine burning natural gas for cloudy days, dusk, dawn, and night. The trend is nice but not their yet and you have limited areas that it will work in. I doubt that Sweden, Can dada, the UK, and even the costal areas of the Pacific northwest are good candidates.
      We can go on but my statement stands solar can not replace oil. You are changing your claim now to fossile fuels, which is truer in that solar can supplement them at this time. You will never hear me arguing for a Coal fired plant. Nuclear, natural gas, Solar, and Wind are all much better choices. But you specifically said oil and oil it the one that can not be replaced.
      The other problem is that we do not need cheap as coal. We need power a lot cheaper than coal. We need power cheaper than hydro.
      Lets got over your orignal post one issue by issue.
      You think that we should use the technology used to build nuclear weapons to solve the problems of energy and land.
      1. Nuclear weapons are not that high tech. The standard ICBM in the US is the Minuteman which is probably older than you are 1960s. The SLBM used by the US is the Trident II D5 which is very possibly older than you are since it was built in the 1980s. The SSBN that carries the Trident is from the 1970s as well. For cruise missiles we are still using the ALCM from the 1970s and for bombers the B-52 from the 1950s, the B-1b 1970s/80s and the B-2 which is the most modern. You suggested that we could move off planet. The thing is that rocket tech used in ICBMs is way behind that of all current lunchers like the Atlas V, Delta IV, and the Falcon 9. The simple truth is that keep nuclear weapons around is CHEAP. You do not need many and the systems do not need to be upgraded all that often. A rocket that can carry a nuclear weapon from the US to a target on the other side of the planet will do that for a very long time. Sure you may want to update the pen aids now and then but for the most part they just work. They are at the same maturity level frankly as the rifle.
      So nuclear weapons are cheap. Getting ride of them will not save much money and their is no tech to take from them to solve our current problems.
      Now conventional weapons are expensive. Here is the rub. Getting ride of nuclear weapons will mean spending even more on conventional weapons. The US would have to have enough weapons that we could totally deter a nuclear armed state. Total cost in resources would be higher than keeping the Nuclear weapons.
      Next you talk about emigration as a solution to fighting over land. Not going to work. Even when their was almost total free emigration to the "New world" People still found reasons to fight in Europe. Emigration has never solved over crowding even when it was cheap and easy on earth. It still doesn't today. There are towns in the great plans of the US right now that are standing empty.
      It isn't just about land it is about opportunity. We have land enough house every one now and frankly many more. The problem isn't really land, food, or even water as much as opportunity.
      You are right that most wars are fought over resources but sometimes those resources are not oil or just land. The Iran Iraq war was over access to a port as well as other reasons. The Falkland island war was over a worthless rock with sheep on it. At the time the Falkland islands where of no value. That was a war of pride. The Civil war in Syria right now is over ideas. The Korean War is another example.
      Not all wars are over some commodity. You will not stop wars anytime soon and you will not stop them with solar panels and windmills.
      In other words impractical fantasy. I will give you that it is a wonderful idea but it will not work and is impractical. Where I do agree that pushing for more cheap

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  157. World War 3 by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    Personally, I say that if a nuke is detonated on US soil and the material was found to have originated in Iran, we level them. Same for any other country that tried to pull something like that.

    Great - so if a Russian nuke is stolen and detonated in the US we are going to have World War 3 then? What about the UK - would you nuke us too, or does this just apply to Iran because you don't believe that it really was "stolen"? The problem with this policy is that any state which can have nuclear weapons stolen from it clearly has nuclear weapons and can retaliate in-kind. A better solution would be to insist that the country gives up its nuclear stockpile - if you cannot secure the weapons then you do not get to keep them.

  158. Problems of MAD doctrine,consequences,alternatives by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

    Good points. See also my essay: http://groups.google.com/group/virgle/msg/e34f9013282af9d7
    "The policy of "Mutually Assured Destruction" (MAD) with strategic nuclear weapons policy is based on decision makers being rational and not wanting their own country destroyed (were they to use their nuclear weapons and receive reprisals or even just spreading radiation). This essay explores a few reasons why this MAD policy will ultimately fail due to irrationality or other reasons for bad decisions by humans or the bureaucracies they inhabit. This reasoning is also applicable to understanding why any similar policies about bioweapons or drones or nanotech and so on could also fail. Then the consequences of this are explored, and some alternatives suggested (including sharing information leading to healthier local communities and ultimately creating space habitats)."

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
  159. they are a peace-keeping instrument only when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...in the hands of someone capable of rational thought and who cares about long-term consequences. Some (mostly religious nuts) do not. ...no-one makes a mistake (and the more there are, and the more people involved, the higher that likelihood gets).

    Yes, it's true, people tend to walk carefully on tightropes. That's not a good argument for making all sidewalks into tightropes.

  160. don't overlook strategy, logistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fact: the only instance of nuclear weapons being used in a conflict brought about an immediate and decisive end to that conflict. Fact: one cannot use 'sufficiently nuclear devices' in the same manner as which one would simply hurl a hand grenade, pull a trigger or drop a conventional explosive. We have non-nuclear devices which rival small nukes in terms of destructive power - they're called thermobarics and we (the US) use them all the time. To deliver a nuclear payload, specifically one with a yield substantial enough such that only nuclear force will suffice, and deliver it accurately, effectively, every time one turns the key, is an enormously complex and very costly endeavor. The logistical infrastructure required to maintain a viable nuclear deterrent is often the prohibiting factor for many who would wish to field such a deterrent. Thus the only states which wield nuclear arsenals of any consequence are those with plenty of intelligence, wealth and resources. Such societies can't accumulate and retain their assets without clear foresight, careful planning and a willingness to cooperate, deliberate and mitigate - not quite the characteristics synonymous with religious extremism or radical totalitarian agendas. Therefore it is false to state that nukes will definitely be used in conflict against another and that this eventual attack is due only to the fact that they exist.

    For a another example of why nukes, and weapons in general, don't necessitate use due to their own existence I will offer a scenario based on the facts noted throughout my personal experience using weapons as deterrents. I own a handgun (a revolver, specifically). I keep it loaded 24/7 and have it in my truck whenever I am in my truck as it is a self defense weapon and can do little good if too far removed from myself. It would be pointless to try and persuade a thief that "handguns are known to exist but can be too dangerous in the wrong hands, so we should acknowledge our mutual self-interest to continue living and remove this potential threat to ourselves by refusing to use guns." That's how you get robbed and/or shot and/or killed. However, the mere existence of a gun within my reach has dissuaded a potential aggressor from taking any action he may have attempted with an unarmed person. The same principals apply to all known forms of warfare and weaponry extant today (you can get embargoed, invaded and defeated without an effective deterrent on the state level). As for sheer lunacy coupled with weaponry... Well, you're just going to have to accept the fact that yes, although quite rare in occurrence, there have been and shall always be sufficiently insane/enraged/drugged/desperate individuals who ignore the common-sense contract which exists between well-armed entities and act without regard for anyone's best interest, including their own. I often experience sudden bouts of extreme disgust toward many of the incompetent drivers along my local roadways, yet never have I considered using my weapons (truck included) against another in anger. Removing the weapons does not resolve the problem. I, and a lot of other genuinely peaceful and peace-loving people, feel much better about accepting the nutjob factor with a weapon at my side.

  161. Targets, or affects? by phorm · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't say that they target the leadership per-se, but it definitely affects them.
    The aforementioned narcissistic bastard may be able to ignore poor people on the street, drug use, abandoned/abused children, and whatever other ills are beneath him/her when living in some big mansion on the hill in a rich neighbourhood.
    However, when he (/she) has to live in some underground bunker because the world above is radioactive, his favorite mall is glowing, that bakery he frequented on second-street is a smoking hole, and there's nothing on television... then it's a lot harder to ignore. Obviously said narcissistic bastard wants to avoid that.

    The big issue I see is when there's nothing left to lose. Perhaps he's about to be pulled from power and imprisoned, sentenced to death, or whatever. To a true psychotic narcissist, perhaps he's just going to die of cancer or even age soon anyhow. Then suddenly pushing the big red button and taking everyone out with him seems a lot more appealing.

    Look at parents losing custody battles that end up killing themselves and their kids. Sometimes their neighbours and relations all account them as normal, nice people. What happens when one of those people is in charge of the launch button?

    1. Re:Targets, or affects? by Frangible · · Score: 1

      Not even the Cheyenne Mountain Complex or Raven Rock will stop a direct hit from a large nuke. There is no nuclear-proof bunker... once you achieve a certain combination of accuracy and yield. So yes, the leadership is directly at risk.

  162. USA agressor by luk3Z · · Score: 0

    Why USA agressor don't allow other countries to build what they want ? People are more important than money (paper). Capitalism fail. Pseudo democracy is not democracy.

    --
    Recipes for USA bankrupt - http://tinypaste.com/0d66f dd = dollar deluge (printed in the infinity)