Nuclear Policy News – November 4, 2019

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TOP NEWS

Senate confirms nuclear commander
The Hill

Russia just tested an ICBM near the site of its deadly nuclear missile accident
Business Insider

Iran spins more centrifuges on U.S. Embassy crisis anniversary
Associated Press

United States

Senate confirms nuclear commander
The Hill11/1/19
The Senate confirmed Vice Adm. Charles Richard to be commander of U.S. Strategic Command by unanimous consent Thursday night as part of a batch of military nominees. Richard will also be promoted to a four-star admiral as part of the confirmation.

Space-sensor program at Missile Defense Agency taps four firms for prototype development
Military Embedded Systems11/2/19
Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Leidos, and L3Harris each received a $20 million contract to design a prototype sensor payload by the deadline of October 31, 2020.

Russia

Russia just tested an ICBM near the site of its deadly nuclear missile accident
Business Insider11/1/19
Russian state news says the Russian military has successfully launched an intercontinental ballistic missile from its new Borei A-class submarine.

Last major nuclear arms pact could expire with no replacement, Russia says
New York Times11/1/19
A Russian arms control official said for the first time on Friday that there was not enough time to replace the last and most important nuclear arms-limitation treaty with the United States before it expires early in 2021, raising the possibility that Washington and Moscow would then be free to expand their arsenals without limits.

Middle East

Iran spins more centrifuges on U.S. Embassy crisis anniversary
Associated Press11/4/19
The comments mean that Iran is now operating double the amount of advanced centrifuges than was previously known.

East Asia

N.K. official heads to Moscow for nuclear nonproliferation conference
Yonhap News Agency11/4/19
A North Korean diplomat departed for Moscow on Monday to attend a nuclear nonproliferation conference amid speculation that he could possibly meet with U.S. officials also attending the forum.

N.K., U.S. may hold nuclear working-level talks no later than early Dec.: Seoul
Yonhap News Agency11/4/19
North Korea and the United States may hold working-level nuclear talks in November or no later than early December, ahead of the year-end deadline Pyongyang has set for a nuclear deal with Washington, Seoul’s spy agency was quoted as saying Monday.

Analysis/Commentary

The real value of artificial intelligence in nuclear command and control
War on the RocksPhilip Reiner and Alexa Wehsener
11/4/19
There is likely an intense internal debate going on within the U.S. government on the role of artificial intelligence in NC2 — one that is strong enough to be spilling into the public domain.

North Korea’s strong hand against the U.S.
Wall Street Journal11/1/19
With his nuclear arsenal firmly established, Kim Jong Un is in no hurry to make a deal, and he knows that President Trump is unlikely to seek confrontation.

This is how an accidental nuclear World War III could begin
National InterestMichael Peck
11/2/19
The Cold War is full of examples of near nuclear disasters and those remain a threat today.

Net-zero world must conquer its irrational fear of nuclear power
Financial TimesJonathan Ford
11/3/19
Decarbonization will be hard enough without zapping one consistent zero-carbon source.

What if India’s missile defense system caused a nuclear war with Pakistan?
National InterestMichael Peck
11/2/19
If one side is immune from attack, it raises the risk of conflict because mutually-assured-destruction no longer holds.

Turkey has long had nuclear dreams
Foreign PolicyColum Lynch
11/1/19
Ankara has been contemplating developing nuclear weapons since the 1960s.

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