International law prohibits nuclear proliferation, but with Vladimir Putin consistently banalising the recourse to nuclear weapons and Donald Trump casting doubts on NATO’s reliability, some countries may be tempted to build their own nuclear arsenals. Nuclear non-proliferation aims to halt the spread of nuclear weapons, fissionable material, and weapons-applicable nuclear technology to countries other than the five recognised nuclear powers: the USA, the then-USSR succeeded by Russia, France, the UK, and China. Largely, nuclear non-proliferation was initially aimed at preventing Germany, the country that ignited World War Two, from developing a nuclear arsenal. Hitler’s Germany was working on a nuclear program, and had it been more advanced, today’s world might look a little bit different. This is why it is surprising how candid the calls for creating a European nuclear arsenal sound, coming from the SDP lead candidate in Germany ahead of the European elections. Admittedly, Katarina Barley, also vice-president of the European Parliament, spoke about a possible EU capability, not a German arsenal. But in Poland, a high military official, Brigadier General Jaroslaw Kraszewski, said that if Warsaw had nuclear weapons, it would deter possible aggression because “those who possess nuclear capabilities have a very high level of security”. |