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Russian experts call for cut in number of nuclear warheads in high readiness
Russian AVN Military News Agency
Moscow, 31 October: Russia and the United States have 6,000 strategic weapons
each, a report entitled "Reduction of combat readiness of Russian and US
nuclear forces is a way to step down nuclear threat" says.
The report was elaborated by the armament non-proliferation and reduction
sector of the Political and Military Forecast Centre under the Russian Academy
of Sciences' Institute of Global Economy and International Relations.
A deputy director of the institute, Vladimir Baranovskiy, a co-author of the
report, said a major share of nuclear munitions was permanently in a high degree
of combat readiness. It means that Russian and US intercontinental ballistic
missiles (ICBMs) can be launched several minutes after the order, and ballistic
missiles deployed on patrolling submarines 15 minutes after the order. The total
number of Russian and US warheads in a high degree of combat readiness makes
3,500 to 4,000.
The report's authors believe that stepping up combat readiness of strategic
nuclear forces and extending the term of nuclear strike authorization is the
most obvious way of preventing a mistake or incorrect interpretation of data
from missile launch early warning systems. Reduction of combat readiness would
also contribute to the strategic nuclear weapons cut without affecting the
containment potential, Baranovskiy stressed.
The report will soon be forwarded to Presidents Vladimir Putin of Russia and
George W. Bush of the United States, as well as to interested federal and
legislative bodies of the two nations. The research director of the Strategic
Nuclear Forces Centre under the Russian Academy of Sciences, Vladimir Dvorkin,
told Interfax-Military News Agency that "a consolidated agreement and
decision of all nuclear nations, not only Russia and the United States"
would be a real contribution to the problem's solution.
The parties have even discussed the possibility of reducing the number of
Russian and US nuclear warheads in a high-degree of combat readiness to 300 to
350 units, as in the inventory of France, Great Britain and China, Dvorkin said.
"This measure is possible, but it will have no effect on theoretical risks
of accidental launchers if a part of nuclear missiles is in the combat-ready
mode," he said. "The making of such consolidated decision is possible
as a small step towards strengthening of general trust, but it will not have a
serious effect at once," Dvorkin stressed.
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