The Art of War
The nuclear race accelerates
Manlio Dinucci
At the Redzikowo base in Poland, work has begun on the
installation of the Aegis Ashore system, at a cost of more than $180 million.
It will be the second U.S. missile base in Europe, after that of Deveselu in
Romania became operational in 2015. The official function of these bases is to
protect, with the "shield" of SM-3 interceptor missiles, the U.S.
forces in Europe and those of European NATO allies from "current and
emerging ballistic missile threats from outside the Euro-Atlantic area".
In addition to the two land installations, four ships
equipped with the same Aegis system, deployed by the U.S. Navy at the Spanish
base of Rota, cross the Mediterranean, Black Sea and Baltic Sea. The U.S. Navy
has about 120 destroyers and cruisers armed with this missile system.
Both ships and Aegis land installations are equipped
with Lockheed Martin's Mk 41 vertical launchers: vertical tubes (in the body of
the ship or in an underground bunker) from which the missiles are launched.
Lockheed Martin itself, illustrating the technical characteristics, documents
that it can launch missiles for all missions: anti-missile, anti-aircraft,
anti-ship, anti-submarine and attack against land targets. Each launch tube is
adaptable to any missile, including "those for long-range attack,"
including the Tomahawk cruise missile. It can also be armed with a nuclear
warhead.
It is therefore impossible to know which missiles are
actually in the vertical launchers of the Aegis Ashore base in Romania and
which will be installed in the one in Poland. Nor which missiles are on board
the ships that cross the limits of Russian territorial waters. Not being able
to check, Moscow takes for granted that there are also nuclear attack missiles.
Same scenario in East Asia, where Seventh Fleet Aegis warships cross in the
South China Sea. The main US allies in the region - Japan, South Korea,
Australia - also have ships equipped with the US Aegis system.
This is not the only missile system the US is
deploying in Europe and Asia. In his speech at the George Washington School of
Media and Public Affairs, General McConville, Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army,
stated last March that the U.S. Army is preparing a "task force" with
"long-range precision fire capability that can go anywhere, consisting of
hypersonic missiles, medium-range missiles, precision strike missiles" and
that "these systems are capable of penetrating anti-aircraft barrage
space. The general pointed out that "we plan to deploy one of these task
forces in Europe and probably two in the Pacific."
In such a situation, it is not surprising that Russia
is accelerating the deployment of new intercontinental missiles, with nuclear
warheads that, after ballistic trajectory, glide for thousands of kilometers at
hypersonic speed. Nor is it surprising to hear the news, published
by the Washington Post, that China is building over one hundred new silos for
intercontinental ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads. The arms race takes
place not so much on the quantitative level (number and power of nuclear
warheads) as on the qualitative one (speed, penetrating capacity and
geographical location of nuclear carriers). The response, in case of attack or
presumed attack, is increasingly entrusted to artificial intelligence, which
must decide the launch of nuclear missiles in a few seconds. It increases the
possibility of a nuclear war by mistake, risked several times during the Cold
War.
The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons,
adopted by the United Nations in 2017 and entered into force in 2021, has so
far been signed by 86 states and ratified by 54. None of the 30 NATO and 27 EU
countries (except Austria) have ratified or even signed it. In Europe, only
Austria, Ireland, Malta, San Marino and the Holy See have signed and ratified
it. None of the nine nuclear countries - the United States, Russia, France,
Great Britain, Israel, China, Pakistan, India and North Korea - has ratified or
even signed it.
Manlio
Dinucci
(il manifesto, July 13, 2021)
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