Discussion about this post

User's avatar
MarkS's avatar

"In 2022, Russia violated that agreement, launching an unprovoked invasion of Ukraine’s borders, claiming pieces of its territory."

Wrong! The invasion happened in 2014, when Russia seized Crimea, approximately 5% of Ukraine's land area. (For comparison, Montana is a similar percentage of the continental US.)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russo-Ukrainian_War

It is very important to get this history right. The complete non-reaction of the West to the 2014 invasion is what set up its escalation in 2022.

Expand full comment
Geoffrey G's avatar

Not many people know this (including here in Sweden), but Sweden had a secret nuclear weapons program during the Cold War, started right around the time as the Manhattan Project. By the 1950s, clandestine nuclear testing was possible. And by 1965, Sweden was within 6 months of fielding a nuclear weapon--closer to the bomb, reportedly, than Iran today.

Like other almost-nuclear powers (including South Africa!), Sweden voluntarily wound down its own secret program under influence of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) in 1968. And it was strongly influenced to do so by the United States and by an implicit guarantee for (nominally) neutral Sweden that the long arm of NATO would save the day against the USSR.

A lot of the pro-nuke arguments in this essay are relevant to not just front-line middle powers like South Korea or Poland, but even a much wider long-list of countries who have reason to fear Russian or Chinese imperialism and revanchism. Why shouldn't they acquire the ultimate insurance now? I'd think that Vietnam and the Philippines would be interested, too, given how much China is throwing her weight around in the (maybe soon to be literally) South China Sea.

And maybe Romania, alongside Poland, would think that weaponizing their civilian nuclear capability as defense against Russian attempts to reconstitute a Neo-USSR makes sense. Lithuania doesn't have nuclear power now, but is planning it, and the temptation for the extremely vulnerable Baltics and its own soft underbelly of a border with Russia's Kaliningrad, in particular. Finland, famously, abandoned its Finlandization for full NATO membership and already have civilian nuclear power. Why not supplement that long and very indefensible border with Russia with some boom-booms?

Expand full comment
99 more comments...

No posts