The Smaller Bombs That Could Turn Ukraine Into a
Nuclear War Zone
March 21,
2022, 2:53 p.m. ETMarch 21, 2022
March 21,
2022
William J.
Broad
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/21/science/russia-nuclear-ukraine.html
In
destructive power, the behemoths of the Cold War dwarfed the American atomic
bomb that destroyed Hiroshima. Washington’s biggest test blast was 1,000 times
as large. Moscow’s was 3,000 times. On both sides, the idea was to deter
strikes with threats of vast retaliation — with mutual assured destruction, or
MAD. The psychological bar was so high that nuclear strikes came to be seen as
unthinkable.
Today, both
Russia and the United States have nuclear arms that are much less destructive —
their power just fractions of the Hiroshima bomb’s force, their use perhaps less
frightening and more thinkable.
Concern
about these smaller arms has soared as Vladimir V. Putin, in the Ukraine war,
has warned of his nuclear might, has put his atomic forces on alert and has had
his military carry out risky attacks on nuclear power plants. The fear is that
if Mr. Putin feels cornered in the conflict, he might choose to detonate one of
his lesser nuclear arms — breaking the taboo set 76 years ago after Hiroshima
and Nagasaki.
Analysts
note that Russian troops have long practiced the transition from conventional
to nuclear war, especially as a way to gain the upper hand after battlefield
losses. And the military, they add, wielding the world’s largest nuclear
arsenal, has explored a variety of escalatory options that Mr. Putin might choose
from.
“The
chances are low but rising,” said Ulrich Kühn, a nuclear expert at the
University of Hamburg and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “The
war is not going well for the Russians,” he observed, “and the pressure from
the West is increasing.”
Mr. Putin
might fire a weapon at an uninhabited area instead of at troops, Dr. Kühn said.
In a 2018 study, he laid out a crisis scenario in which Moscow detonated a bomb
over a remote part of the North Sea as a way to signal deadlier strikes to
come.
“It feels
horrible to talk about these things,” Dr. Kühn said in an interview. “But we
have to consider that this is becoming a possibility.”
Washington
expects more atomic moves from Mr. Putin in the days ahead. Moscow is likely to
“increasingly rely on its nuclear deterrent to signal the West and project
strength” as the war and its consequences weaken Russia, Lt. Gen. Scott D.
Berrier, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, told the House Armed
Services Committee on Thursday.
President
Biden is traveling to a NATO summit in Brussels this week to discuss the
Russian invasion of Ukraine. The agenda is expected to include how the alliance
will respond if Russia employs chemical, biological, cyber or nuclear weapons.
James R.
Clapper Jr., a retired Air Force general who served as President Barack Obama’s
director of national intelligence, said Moscow had lowered its bar for atomic
use after the Cold War when the Russian army fell into disarray. Today, he
added, Russia regards nuclear arms as utilitarian rather than unthinkable.
“They
didn’t care,” Mr. Clapper said of Russian troops’ risking a radiation release
earlier this month when they attacked the Zaporizhzhia nuclear reactor site —
the largest not only in Ukraine but in Europe. “They went ahead and fired on
it. That’s indicative of the Russian laissez-faire attitude. They don’t make
the distinctions that we do on nuclear weapons.”
Mr. Putin
announced last month that he was putting Russian nuclear forces into “special
combat readiness.” Pavel Podvig, a longtime researcher of Russia’s nuclear
forces, said the alert had most likely primed the Russian command and control
system for the possibility of receiving a nuclear order.
It’s unclear
how Russia exerts control over its arsenal of less destructive arms. But some
U.S. politicians and experts have denounced the smaller weapons on both sides
as threatening to upend the global balance of nuclear terror.
For Russia,
military analysts note, edgy displays of the less destructive arms have let Mr.
Putin polish his reputation for deadly brinkmanship and expand the zone of
intimidation he needs to fight a bloody conventional war.
“Putin is
using nuclear deterrence to have his way in Ukraine,” said Nina Tannenwald, a
political scientist at Brown University who recently profiled the less powerful
armaments. “His nuclear weapons keep the West from intervening.”
A global
race for the smaller arms is intensifying. Though such weapons are less
destructive by Cold War standards, modern estimates show that the equivalent of
half a Hiroshima bomb, if detonated in Midtown Manhattan, would kill or injure
half a million people.
The case
against these arms is that they undermine the nuclear taboo and make crisis
situations even more dangerous. Their less destructive nature, critics say, can
feed the illusion of atomic control when in fact their use can suddenly flare
into a full-blown nuclear war. A simulation devised by experts at Princeton
University starts with Moscow firing a nuclear warning shot; NATO responds with
a small strike, and the ensuing war yields more than 90 million casualties in
its first few hours.
No arms
control treaties regulate the lesser warheads, known sometimes as tactical or
nonstrategic nuclear weapons, so the nuclear superpowers make and deploy as
many as they want. Russia has perhaps 2,000, according to Hans M. Kristensen,
director of the Nuclear Information Project at the Federation of American
Scientists, a private group in Washington. And the United States has roughly
100 in Europe, a number limited by domestic policy disputes and the political
complexities of basing them among NATO allies, whose populations often resist
and protest the weapons’ presence.
Russia’s
atomic war doctrine came to be known as “escalate to de-escalate” — meaning
routed troops would fire a nuclear weapon to stun an aggressor into retreat or
submission. Moscow repeatedly practiced the tactic in field exercises. In 1999,
for instance, a large drill simulated a NATO attack on Kaliningrad, the Russian
enclave on the Baltic Sea. The exercise had Russian forces in disarray until
Moscow fired nuclear arms at Poland and the United States.
Dr. Kühn of
the University of Hamburg said the defensive training drills of the 1990s had
turned toward offense in the 2000s as the Russian army regained some of its
former strength.
Concurrent
with its new offensive strategy, Russia embarked on a modernization of its
nuclear forces, including its less destructive arms. As in the West, some of
the warheads were given variable explosive yields that could be dialed up or
down depending on the military situation.
A
centerpiece of the new arsenal was the Iskander-M, first deployed in 2005. The
mobile launcher can fire two missiles that travel roughly 300 miles. The
missiles can carry conventional as well as nuclear warheads. Russian figures
put the smallest nuclear blast from those missiles at roughly a third that of
the Hiroshima bomb.
Before the
Russian army invaded Ukraine, satellite images showed that Moscow had deployed
Iskander missile batteries in Belarus and to its east in Russian territory.
There’s no public data on whether Russia has armed any of the Iskanders with
nuclear warheads.
Nikolai
Sokov, a former Russian diplomat who negotiated arms control treaties in Soviet
times, said that nuclear warheads could also be placed on cruise missiles. The
low-flying weapons, launched from planes, ships or the ground, hug the local
terrain to avoid detection by enemy radar.
From inside
Russian territory, he said, “they can reach all of Europe,” including Britain.
Over the
years, the United States and its NATO allies have sought to rival Russia’s
arsenal of lesser nuclear arms. It started decades ago as the United States
began sending bombs for fighter jets to military bases in Belgium, Germany,
Italy, Turkey and the Netherlands. Dr. Kühn noted that the alliance, in
contrast to Russia, does not conduct field drills practicing a transition from
conventional to nuclear war.
Mariupol
refuses to yield. Ukraine rejected Russia’s demand to surrender the embattled
southern port city, where an estimated 300,000 people remain trapped. In a rare
firsthand account on social media, a resident who escaped described what she
called a living “hell.”
A bloody
stalemate. With the invasion stalled, few signs of progress on peace talks and
the war appearing to have reached a stalemate, Russia is turning to deadlier
and blunter methods, including a missile strike that reduced a Kyiv shopping mall
to a smoldering ruin.
Biden’s
diplomatic push. President Biden will travel to Europe for talks with NATO
allies this week, in his most direct effort yet to rally opposition to the
invasion. In a call with Western leaders ahead of his trip, he assailed
Russia’s attacks on civilians and discussed providing assistance to refugees.
In 2010,
Mr. Obama, who had long advocated for a “nuclear-free world,” decided to
refurbish and improve the NATO weapons, turning them into smart bombs with
maneuverable fins that made their targeting highly precise. That, in turn, gave
war planners the freedom to lower the weapons’ variable explosive force to as
little as 2 percent of that of the Hiroshima bomb.
The reduced
blast capability made breaking the nuclear taboo “more thinkable,” Gen. James
E. Cartwright, a vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under Mr. Obama,
warned at the time. He nonetheless backed the program because the high degree
of precision lowered the risk of collateral damage and civilian casualties. But
after years of funding and manufacturing delays, the refurbished bomb, known as
the B61 Model 12, is not expected to be deployed in Europe until next year, Mr.
Kristensen said.
The steady
Russian buildups and the slow American responses prompted the Trump
administration to propose a new missile warhead in 2018. Its destructive force
was seen as roughly half that of the Hiroshima bomb, according to Mr.
Kristensen. It was to be deployed on the nation’s fleet of 14 ballistic missile
submarines.
While some
experts warned that the bomb, known as the W76 Model 2, could make it more
tempting for a president to order a nuclear strike, the Trump administration
argued that the weapon would lower the risk of war by ensuring that Russia
would face the threat of proportional counterstrikes. It was deployed in late
2019.
“It’s all
about psychology — deadly psychology,” said Franklin C. Miller, a nuclear
expert who backed the new warhead and, before leaving public office in 2005,
held Pentagon and White House posts for three decades. “If your opponent thinks
he has a battlefield edge, you try to convince him that he’s wrong.”
When he was
a candidate for the presidency, Joseph R. Biden Jr. called the less powerful
warhead a “bad idea” that would make presidents “more inclined” to use it. But
Mr. Kristensen said the Biden administration seemed unlikely to remove the new
warhead from the nation’s submarines.
It’s
unclear how Mr. Biden would respond to the use of a nuclear weapon by Mr.
Putin. Nuclear war plans are one of Washington’s most deeply held secrets.
Experts say that the war-fighting plans in general go from warning shots to
single strikes to multiple retaliations and that the hardest question is
whether there are reliable ways to prevent a conflict from escalating.
Even Mr.
Clapper, the former director of national intelligence, said he was unsure how
he would advise Mr. Biden if Mr. Putin unleashed his nuclear arms.
“When do
you stop?” he asked of nuclear retaliation. “You can’t just keep turning the
other cheek. At some point we’d have to do something.”
A U.S.
response to a small Russian blast, experts say, might be to fire one of the new
submarine-launched warheads into the
wilds of Siberia or at a military base inside Russia. Mr. Miller, the former
government nuclear official and a former chairman of NATO’s nuclear policy
committee, said such a blast would be a way of signaling to Moscow that “this
is serious, that things are getting out of hand.”
Military
strategists say a tit-for-tat rejoinder would throw the responsibility for
further escalation back at Russia, making Moscow feel its ominous weight and
ideally keeping the situation from spinning out of control despite the dangers
in war of miscalculation and accident.
In a darker
scenario, Mr. Putin might resort to using atomic arms if the war in Ukraine
spilled into neighboring NATO states. All NATO members, including the United
States, are obliged to defend one another — potentially with salvos of nuclear
warheads.
Dr.
Tannenwald, the political scientist at Brown University, wondered if the old
protections of nuclear deterrence, now rooted in opposing lines of less
destructive arms, would succeed in keeping the peace.
“It sure
doesn’t feel that way in a crisis,” she said.
David E.
Sanger contributed reporting from Washington.
William J.
Broad is a science journalist and senior writer. He joined The Times in 1983,
and has shared two Pulitzer Prizes with his colleagues, as well as an Emmy Award
and a DuPont Award. @WilliamJBroad



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