angrysoba
Philosophile
Fortunately Japan is a peaceful country and wouldn't hurt a fly. But if they did, the nuclear missiles would be embossed with Hello Kittys.
Japan has extensive experience with nuclear technology for energy production. Thermonuclear weapons are 60 years old, the scientific principles are well-known.Interesting that Japan's been mentioned twice.
Given the secrecy that surrounds the development of these weapons, and the obvious sensitivity within Japan wrt having them in their arsenal, does anyone have a (speculative) idea what the extent of Japan's capability is? Eg, they'd have to start completely from scratch, or they have done some theoretical development and could manufacture the components in a couple of years, etc, etc?
I think they could build an arsenal in the order of magnitude of 5,000 weapons within five years from the moment they decide to do so. Without outside help, and able to defeat any ballistic missile defense. (It took the US 20 years to build an arsenal of 30,000+ in 1966, so 5,000 in five years is reasonable.)
The first succesful ICBM dates back to 1957. It's 54 year old technology, not counting earlier ballistic missiles.Warheads aren't the entire story though. One also needs reliable and effective delivery platforms. Those can be troublesome to develop, and can be expensive.
The nuclear deterrent worked against Stalin and Mao, even though both of them also posessed nukes.
Concerning the value of human life or rationality, I don't think the Iranian mullahs are worse than those two.
The MAD concept assumes that both sides are rational and actively want to avoid death. This is not necessarily a given with Iran, and much less a given for the kinds of people that Iran might, possibly, give nukes to if they had them.
I am sorry, but the war on stupid requires that stupid be identified and fired upon.the risk of a world-wide nuclear war, is almost non-existant.
This is true. But what are the odds that Iran can destroy the USA? 0%. What are the odss that the USA can destroy Iran? 100%
Two word: delivey systems. The USA has 14 which are pretty much undestroyable, the Ohio class sub. Each one of these subs carries up to 24 missiles which can each carry up to 8 warheads. 14*24*8=2688.
The first succesful ICBM dates back to 1957. It's 54 year old technology, not counting earlier ballistic missiles.
Given the political will, advanced countries like Germany or Japan could today easily develop the equivalent to any system the superpowers built half a century ago.
Iran could put nukes into half a dozen US cities by smuggling them in. Don't even for a second imagine that that couldn't be done.
The MAD concept assumes that both sides are rational and actively want to avoid death. This is not necessarily a given with Iran, and much less a given for the kinds of people that Iran might, possibly, give nukes to if they had them.
Could it be done? Perhaps so. Could it be done without getting caught somewhere along the line? Considerably less likely it seems to me.
Under the New START nuclear arms reduction pact announced recently, Russians have downsized their delivery systems and nuclear warheads way ahead of the 2018 deadline. 250 less strategic warheads, over 250 less launchers, and so forth than the US. At least according to this article:The only nation besides ourselves with sufficient warheads and delivery systems would be Russia, to my knowledge. Although there is some degree of parity in terms of sheer numbers of warheads, I believe that the Russian delivery systems have fallen far behind after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
I hate to spam wikipedia drivel, but I'm assuming this is pertinent to the argument at hand:Warheads aren't the entire story though. One also needs reliable and effective delivery platforms. Those can be troublesome to develop, and can be expensive.
De facto nuclear state
...
Significant amounts of reactor-grade plutonium are created as a by-product of the nuclear energy industry, and Japan was reported in December 1995 to have 4.7 tons of plutonium, enough for around 700 nuclear warheads. Japan also possesses an indigenous uranium enrichment plant[25] which could hypothetically be used to make highly enriched uranium suitable for weapon use. Japan has also developed the M-V three-stage solid fuel rocket, similar in design to the U.S. LGM-118A Peacekeeper ICBM, which could serve as a delivery vehicle, and has experience in re-entry vehicle technology (OREX, HOPE-X).
But if you send 20, it doesn't really matter all that much if only ten get through.
I hate to spam wikipedia drivel, but I'm assuming this is pertinent to the argument at hand:
Japan also possesses an indigenous uranium enrichment plant[25] which could hypothetically be used to make highly enriched uranium suitable for weapon use. Japan has also developed the M-V three-stage solid fuel rocket, similar in design to the U.S. LGM-118A Peacekeeper ICBM, which could serve as a delivery vehicle, and has experience in re-entry vehicle technology (OREX, HOPE-X).
In terms of capability, the Japanese are up there in production of nuclear weapons and the ability to deliver them.
Note the bolded words. "Could" and "experience" do not instantly translate into weapons systems that work with the necessary accuracy, reliability, and effectiveness. Indeed, there's a long history of weapons systems working well enough in peacetime testing but which failed in actual combat.
Of course. But it takes time and money to do so. And a lot of engineering and testing.
Could it be done? Perhaps so. Could it be done without getting caught somewhere along the line? Considerably less likely it seems to me.
In terms of capability, the Japanese are up there in production of nuclear weapons and the ability to deliver them.
Doubtful this will happen at all, unless the N. Koreans really push them to.