In Sweden, an Ethical Dilemma of Nuclear Proportions

Similar documents
SACT s remarks to UN ambassadors and military advisors from NATO countries. New York City, 18 Apr 2018

Why Japan Should Support No First Use

NATIONAL DEFENSE PROGRAM GUIDELINES, FY 2005-

SUMMARY OF NATIONAL DEFENSE PROGRAM GUIDELINES. for FY 2011 and beyond

ZAPAD 2017: Russia Demonstrating its Combat Readiness to NATO

09/13/2017 ZAPAD-2017 Q&A. The Warsaw Institute Foundation

NATO's Nuclear Forces in the New Security Environment

SS.7.C.4.3 Describe examples of how the United States has dealt with international conflicts.

CHINA S WHITE PAPER ON MILITARY STRATEGY

SSUSH20 The student will analyze the domestic and international impact of the Cold War on the United States.

1 Nuclear Weapons. Chapter 1 Issues in the International Community. Part I Security Environment Surrounding Japan

Arms Control and Proliferation Profile: The United Kingdom

9. Guidance to the NATO Military Authorities from the Defence Planning Committee 1967

Great Decisions Paying for U.S. global engagement and the military. Aaron Karp, 13 January 2018

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Cold War Tensions

NATO s Diminishing Military Function

A/CONF.229/2017/NGO/WP.2

Montessori Model United Nations. First Committee Disarmament and International Security

THE ESTONIAN DEFENCE FORCES

North Korea s development of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles poses a new level of threat

II. Arms transfers and tensions in North East Asia

THE TREATY ON THE PROHIBITION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND ITS COMPATIBILITY WITH SWEDEN S SECURITY ARRANGEMENTS

Nuclear Forces: Restore the Primacy of Deterrence

Italy s Nuclear Anniversary: Fake Reassurance For a King s Ransom

NUCLEAR ARMS CONTROL: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES IN Steven Pifer Senior Fellow Director, Arms Control Initiative October 10, 2012

Rebuilding Capabilities of Russian Navy to Be Long Process

MATCHING: Match the term with its description.

Russia s New Conventional Capability

A FUTURE MARITIME CONFLICT

John Fitzgerald Kennedy: Foreign Policy. A Strategic Power Point Presentation Brought to You by Mr. Raffel

KENNEDY AND THE COLD WAR

Pakistan, Russia and the Threat to the Afghan War

Towards a European Non-Proliferation Strategy. May 23, 2003, Paris

The US Retaliates in Yemen

Tactical nuclear weapons 'are an anachronism'

Policy Responses to Nuclear Threats: Nuclear Posturing After the Cold War

ALLIANCE MARITIME STRATEGY

OPCW UN JOINT MISSION IN SYRIA

SA ARMY SEMINAR 21. The Revision of the South African Defence Review and International Trends in Force Design: Implications for the SA Army

Unit Six: Canada Matures: Growth in the Post-War Period ( )

Nuclear Disarmament Weapons Stockpiles

Nuclear dependency. John Ainslie

Cuban Missile Crisis 13 Days that Changed the almost changed World

Reducing the waste in nuclear weapons modernization

THE NUCLEAR WORLD IN THE EARLY 21 ST CENTURY

NATO. Canada & The Cold War. Canada and the Creation of NATO. Chapter 8-9 Social Studies

By Helen and Mark Warner. Teaching Packs - World War II - Page 1

Issue Briefs. Nuclear Weapons: Less Is More. Nuclear Weapons: Less Is More Published on Arms Control Association (

Foreign Policy and Homeland Security

When/why was the word teenager invented? a) Have teenagers changed all that much since the word was made? Why or why not?

Entering the New Frontier

Chapter 4 The Iranian Threat

Guided Notes. Chapter 21; the Cold War Begins. Section 1:

Missile Defense: A View from Warsaw

Ch 27-1 Kennedy and the Cold War

10/16/2017 ZAPAD lessons learned. The Warsaw Institute Foundation

1. The number of known arms producers has doubled after the end of the cold war.

Entering the New Frontier

THE MILITARY STRATEGY OF THE REPUBLIC OF LITHUANIA

Montessori Model United Nations. Distr.: Upper Elementary Twelfth Session XX March First Committee Disarmament and International Security

The Logic of American Nuclear Strategy: Why Strategic Superiority Matters

Introduction. General Bernard W. Rogers, Follow-On Forces Attack: Myths lnd Realities, NATO Review, No. 6, December 1984, pp. 1-9.

Missile Defense: Time to Go Big

Challenges of a New Capability-Based Defense Strategy: Transforming US Strategic Forces. J.D. Crouch II March 5, 2003

Dear Delegates, It is a pleasure to welcome you to the 2014 Montessori Model United Nations Conference.

Montessori Model United Nations. Distr.: Middle School Twelfth Session XX March First Committee Disarmament and International Security

YEARS OF WAR. Chapters 6

Errata Setup: United States: ANZAC: The Map: Page 8, The Political Situation: Japan The United Kingdom and ANZAC

Analysis of Fiscal Year 2018 National Defense Authorization Bill: HR Differences Between House and Senate NDAA on Major Nuclear Provisions

Chapter 17: Foreign Policy and National Defense Section 3

A New World. The Cold War - Part 2

The Cold War Begins. Chapter 16 &18 (old) Focus Question: How did U.S. leaders respond to the threat of Soviet expansion in Europe?

Timeline: Battles of the Second World War. SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance) BATTLE: THE INVASION OF POLAND

NATO Narrows Military Gap on Its Eastern Flank

The United States Enters the War Ch 23-3

National Defense University. Institute for National Strategic Studies

1

Issue Briefs. The UN Sanctions' Impact on Iran's Military

Section 6. South Asia

GREAT DECISIONS WEEK 8 NUCLEAR SECURITY

ARMS CONTROL, SECURITY COOPERATION AND U.S. RUSSIAN RELATIONS

The Iran Nuclear Deal: Where we are and our options going forward

HAWAII OPERATION ATTACK ON PEARL HARBOR

A/56/136. General Assembly. United Nations. Missiles. Contents. Report of the Secretary-General

International Nonproliferation Regimes after the Cold War

US Nuclear Policy: A Mixed Message

Steven Pifer on the China-U.S.-Russia Triangle and Strategy on Nuclear Arms Control

Strengthening partnerships: Nordic defence collaboration amid regional security concerns

A Global History of the Nuclear Arms Race

Background Data: Nuclear Weapons, Missiles, and the Red Dragon Rising Game. The Atomic Bomb

The Atomic Bomb. Background Data: Nuclear Weapons, Missiles, and the Red Dragon Rising Game. Offensive and Defensive Responses

U.S. Nuclear Policy and World Nuclear Situation

A European Net Assessment of the People s Liberation Army (Navy)

Iran Nuclear Deal: The Limits of Diplomatic Niceties

Disarmament and International Security: Nuclear Non-Proliferation

The War in Europe 5.2

National Security Policy: American National Security Policy 1

The Nuclear Powers and Disarmament Prospects and Possibilities 1. William F. Burns

Centre for Military and Strategic Studies. The European Union, Canada, and the Arctic: Challenges of International Governance.

Matt Phipps Dr. Patrick Donnay, Advisor

Transcription:

In Sweden, an Ethical Dilemma of Nuclear Proportions Sept. 8, 2017 By signing a new nuclear weapons ban, Stockholm would be giving up U.S. and NATO security cooperation. Editor s note: An earlier version of this analysis misstated the capital of New Zealand. It has since been corrected. By Allison Fedirka It s not every day that a country finds itself in a position where one decision can shape the security framework of an entire region. At the moment, Sweden is in just such a position: It must decide whether to sign a new U.N. nuclear weapons ban. On its face it sounds fairly harmless Sweden doesn t have its own nuclear weapons anyway, and U.N. measures are typically ineffectual but the responses to it tell a different story. The United Kingdom, France and Germany have all warned Sweden against signing onto the treaty, but the harshest response came from Washington. U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis sent a letter to his Swedish counterpart threatening to end security cooperation with Stockholm if the agreement is signed. He warned that Sweden s approval on the new U.N. convention banning nuclear weapons, including on Swedish territory, would affect U.S. defense cooperation both in general and during a crisis. He s not wrong. To Sign, or Not to Sign In a move consistent with its stance on nuclear weapons for the past 50 years, Sweden voted in favor of the updated anti-nuclear resolution in July. Sweden ended its military nuclear program in 1965 and dismantled its last plutonium laboratory in 1972. It had started its program for the purpose of nuclear deterrence as part of its national defense doctrine, but it abandoned this outlook once it realized its efforts would encourage neighboring countries to pursue their own nuclear programs. The pursuit of safety, Sweden feared, would only make the region more dangerous. Since then, the government in Stockholm has supported the idea of nuclear disarmament, with the aim of lowering the levels of preparedness of nuclear arsenals throughout the world. 1 / 6

What the new U.N. resolution would do and why the U.S. and NATO allies warned so strongly against Sweden s signing it is ban signatories from either delivering or receiving nuclear weapons, or from stationing nuclear weapons on their territory. Air bases and sea ports could be denied to vessels (submarines, destroyers and bombers) carrying nuclear weapons such as ballistic missiles. The consequences are especially dire for the United States; U.S. military doctrine does not permit officers to disclose what types of weapons are on their vessels. In effect, all U.S. military vessels and aircraft would lose access to Swedish sea ports and air bases. This could severely limit NATO s operational capabilities in the event of a military conflict, particularly a conflict with Russia over the Baltics. The Baltic states (Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia) occupy one of the most vulnerable positions along the Intermarium, an emerging containment line sponsored by the U.S. to keep Russian influence in Europe at bay. The Baltic countries comprise the northern limits of the Intermarium and are isolated, wedged between the Baltic Sea, Russia and very pro-russia Belarus. Only Lithuania shares a border with the mainland, anti-russia bloc of Europe a mere 65 miles (104 kilometers) with Poland. 2 / 6

(click to enlarge) In recent years, as part of its resurgence, Russia has built up its military capabilities along its western border and in Kaliningrad, its exclave on the Baltic Sea surrounded by Lithuania and Poland. Kaliningrad is equipped with a sophisticated anti-access/area denial network that includes the S-400 air defense system and Iskander short-range ballistic missiles, which have a range of just over 300 miles. Russian corvettes in the Baltic have been observed to be equipped with long-range Kalibr missiles (range of 1,600 miles) as well as the Bastion anti-ship missile system, which has an effective range of roughly 150 nautical miles. Russian bombers, fighter jets and reconnaissance planes are also based in the exclave. These forces in Kaliningrad pose a serious threat to the Baltic Sea and the Baltic states, which must rely on NATO to defend themselves from Russia. Sweden enters the mix because of an island called Gotland, which is strategically located to play a key role in the military control of the Baltic Sea. Given Sweden s unofficial alignment with the U.S., this means mitigating aerial threats posed by weapons systems in Kaliningrad, such as denying Russia the opportunity to control the entire airspace around the Baltic states. Whoever holds Gotland is well-positioned to monitor submarine activity in the Baltics and can heavily influence the naval supply of resources and troop reinforcements to the coasts of the Baltic states (and, to an extent, to Poland). 3 / 6

(click to enlarge) Mutually Assured Dependence Ever since Mattis warning, Sweden has been backpedaling from its support for the U.N. nuclear ban treaty. The government initiated a study of the consequences of signing the agreement, allowing it to save face and take its time before making a decision. Stockholm knows that it needs outside support to guarantee its national security. Besides upgrading the weaponry deployed in Kaliningrad and the Baltic Sea, Russia has stepped up its military exercises. Sweden and the Baltic states have taken note, because past Russian land grabs Georgia in 2008 and Crimea in 2014 were preceded by upticks in Russian military drills in those areas. In 2013, Russia simulated two nuclear attacks on Sweden using bombers. In 2014, it sent ships and 4 / 6

planes into Swedish airspace to probe the country s military reaction and capabilities. The incursions confirmed what Sweden already knew: that the Swedish military had minimal operational capability and could not defend itself against a major attack. Swedish troops patrol outside Visby's 13th-century city wall in Gotland on Sept. 14, 2016. SOREN ANDERSSON/AFP/Getty Images Sweden has done what it can to overcome its vulnerability on its own. It plans to increase defense spending by 11 percent by 2020 and reinstated mandatory military service. It reestablished a military presence on Gotland island, and from Sept. 11-29, it will host its largest military exercises in 20 years. But the Swedish government knows that even with these steps, it can t face down Russian threats alone, so it has cultivated stronger defense ties with NATO and with the United States. In 2014, Sweden received Enhanced Opportunities Partners status in NATO, which allows the country to have deeper cooperation with NATO without having to join the bloc. Two years later it ratified a host nation support agreement with NATO, making it easier for NATO to send troops into Sweden for training or real operations, and signed a statement of intent over joint defense cooperation with the United States. The U.S. was once in a similar situation with New Zealand. In the 1950s, islands in Oceania were 5 / 6

Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org) popular locations for European countries and others to conduct hydrogen and other bomb tests. New Zealand opposed the practice and adopted a strict anti-nuclear weapons stance. In 1985, Wellington denied port to a U.S. destroyer because it would not verify whether it had nuclear weapons on board. The U.S. responded by banning New Zealand vessels from U.S. ports. This practice continued for nearly 30 years, until China s rising naval presence in the Asia-Pacific began to raise security concerns for both countries. In 2012, the U.S. decided to allow New Zealand port access again, and four years later, U.S. warships were allowed back in New Zealand. Just as the threat from China forced New Zealand to change its policy, the threat from Russia is challenging Sweden s own stance on nuclear weapons. It needs U.S. and NATO security guarantees, just as they need its cooperation and access to Gotland island to protect the Baltic states. In the end, they ll likely find a way to work together. 6 / 6