- May 19, 2011
- 20,257
- 14,885
- 136
I didn't want to de-rail the Israel thread, but in light of the whole "does Iran have nukes" topic, there was a secondary point being made that if Ukraine had nukes then they wouldn't have been invaded in the first place, which people there seem to be in general agreement about.
I have three general feelings on the topic:
1) The notion of spending billions on a weapon that you will literally never use is just mind-boggling to me, partly because the use of nuclear weapons is a stunningly bad idea in pretty much every plausible scenario (e.g. mutually assured destruction) and at absolutely best such a decision no matter the circumstances would be considered as highly controversial, and partly because there are plenty of causes in a given society that are far more deserving.
2) Belligerent arseholes will always be belligerent arseholes, ie. if Ukraine/Iran had nukes then Russia/Israel would still find a way to be the arsehole. Nuclear weapons didn't stop decades of cold war conflict either.
3) Largely as a 'therefore' from points 1 and 2, I would be extremely surprised if a leader authorised the use of nukes in my lifetime, no matter how 'reasonable' the circumstances were.
Obligatory 'Yes, Minister' clip, which I've always felt to be part of my opinion about the nuclear deterrent:
The only counter-argument I can think of is that the kind of fucking morons who want to start wars rather than fix shit are like the Pakled in the Star Trek franchise who might be deterred at the first obstacle being that their potential target has nukes, and maybe by extension a tonne of other political powers in the potential-invader country are thinking that they don't want to experience a nuclear shampoo at any point soon. Maybe it discourages those who would start wars purely for ego-related reasons.
Is ego always a major factor in the decision to start a war? Therefore is my 'moron' counter-argument the one with the most weight?
I have three general feelings on the topic:
1) The notion of spending billions on a weapon that you will literally never use is just mind-boggling to me, partly because the use of nuclear weapons is a stunningly bad idea in pretty much every plausible scenario (e.g. mutually assured destruction) and at absolutely best such a decision no matter the circumstances would be considered as highly controversial, and partly because there are plenty of causes in a given society that are far more deserving.
2) Belligerent arseholes will always be belligerent arseholes, ie. if Ukraine/Iran had nukes then Russia/Israel would still find a way to be the arsehole. Nuclear weapons didn't stop decades of cold war conflict either.
3) Largely as a 'therefore' from points 1 and 2, I would be extremely surprised if a leader authorised the use of nukes in my lifetime, no matter how 'reasonable' the circumstances were.
Obligatory 'Yes, Minister' clip, which I've always felt to be part of my opinion about the nuclear deterrent:
The only counter-argument I can think of is that the kind of fucking morons who want to start wars rather than fix shit are like the Pakled in the Star Trek franchise who might be deterred at the first obstacle being that their potential target has nukes, and maybe by extension a tonne of other political powers in the potential-invader country are thinking that they don't want to experience a nuclear shampoo at any point soon. Maybe it discourages those who would start wars purely for ego-related reasons.
Is ego always a major factor in the decision to start a war? Therefore is my 'moron' counter-argument the one with the most weight?