Day 8.  Review goals of NPT treaty.  Review current threats to global nuclear security.  Reflect on content & skill learning.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
US-India Civil Nuclear Relations ITRN 603 International Trade Relations Kristin Isabelli Slide 1.
Advertisements

Evolution and Resilience of the Nuclear Nonproliferation System Arian L. Pregenzer November 3, 2013.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Longman.
Nuclear Club Powers under NPT – U.S., Russia, United Kingdom, France, China Non-NPT – India, Pakistan, North Korea Undeclared – Israel From a high of 65,000.
Nuclear Weapon Issues in the 21 st Century – Conference Review and the Future Pierce S. Corden, Visiting Scholar Center for Science, Technology and Security.
The Future of Nuclear Weapons More proliferation or further reductions? Keith Hansen February 19, 2015.
Nuclear Disarmament and Arms Control SALT (Strategic Arms Limitation Talks)
April 6, NPR in Context Third comprehensive review of U.S. nuclear policies and posture –Previous reviews in 1994 and 2001 Conducted by DoD.
Challenge of Nuclear Weapons
Bulletin of atomic scientists
GO131: International Relations Professor Walter Hatch Colby College Nuclear Deterrence.
Lesson – Disarmament.  Review goals of NPT treaty.  Compare different types of weapons.  Identify key treaties regulating nuclear arsenals.
Lesson 2 – Disarmament.  Review goals of NPT treaty.  Compare different types of weapons.  Identify key treaties regulating nuclear arsenals.  Describe.
Nuclear Treaties Dennis Silverman, U C Irvine Source:
 One person from a team up at once.  Touch only your team buzzer (you will lose 1 point)  Answer only if you are first to buzz in (buzzer will blink)
Regional Nuclear Challenges: South Asia Sharad Joshi Monterey Institute of International Studies November 13, 2009.
 Nuclear Security Summit 2014 Chairs: Hank Chau, Evonne Pei, Jonathan Wu.
April 5, The President’s Nuclear Security Agenda First articulated in Prague in April 2009 –Reduce nuclear dangers and pursue the long-term goal.
Ministry for Foreign Affairs Sweden Government Offices of Sweden Sweden and the Nuclear Security Summit Process Jan A. Lodding Deputy Director Disarmament.
Update on the Nuclear Arms Race: What you can do to end it and make the US and the world more secure Hiroshima – Nagasaki Day Memorial Service.
Missile Defence - Threats, Responses and Projections - Bradford March 2004 Dr Philip Webber Chair, Scientists for Global Responsibility SGR Arms and Arms.
Nuclear Weapons: At What Cost ? 1.little do we know 2.rough estimates: cost over time 3.recent estimates: cost at a given time 4.nuclear weapon states.
Post-2012 Summit Nuclear Security Process Man-Sung Yim Department of Nuclear and Quantum Engineering KAIST.
The Nonproliferation Treaty. Atoms for Peace December 8, 1953 President Eisenhower spoke to the UN suggesting that peaceful uses of the atom be promoted.
The Nuclear Club Who’s in? Who’s out? And where do we go from here?
Lesson 1– The NPT.  Students will differentiate between nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons.  Students will explain the history and purpose of.
Lesson 1– The NPT.  Students will differentiate between nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons.  Students will explain the history and purpose of.
US Dependence on Strategic Nuclear Weapons Does shifting to “zero” make sense? Keith Hansen June 15, 2012.
US and Asia Today 4 developments with Asian countries over the past ten years.
Steps to Safety: Reducing the Danger of Nuclear Weapons.
Steven Biegalski, Ph.D., P.E. Director, Nuclear Engineering Teaching Laboratory Associate Professor, Mechanical Engineering Dusting off the Atom: Nuclear.
Outline for 10/3: Weapons of Mass Destruction Considerations in acquiring WMDs US nuclear force policy ABM Treaty Various WMD regimes with a focus on the.
Lesson 1– The NPT.  Students will differentiate between nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons.  Students will explain the history and purpose of.
Current Military Expenditures Top 20 United States$305.4 Billion Russia $55.0 Japan $41.1 China $37.5 United Kingdom $34.6 France $29.5 Germany $24.7 Saudi.
Nuclear Proliferation. Categories ► Declared Nuclear Powers: signed nuclear treaties.  Rules and regulations 1. U.S Russia Britian 1952.
Nuclear Proliferation
By: Tyler Gripshover NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT IN THE MIDDLE EAST.
Review MP 2 Exam Review. Directions No calling out from the team (you will lose 2 points).
First Nuclear Age, s Bipolarity – balance Deterrence – vulnerability Arms Control – Managing rivalry Rationality Second.
NUCLEAR ARMS CONTROL: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES IN 2013 Steven Pifer Senior Fellow Director, Arms Control Initiative October 10, 2012.
Day 2 Lesson – The NPT.  Students will differentiate between nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons.  Students will explain the history and purpose.
Lesson 1– The NPT.  Students will differentiate between nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons.  Students will explain the history and purpose of.
Lesson 2 – Disarmament.  Review goals of NPT treaty.  Compare different types of weapons.  Identify key treaties regulating nuclear arsenals.  Describe.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS 10/15/2015. COLLECTIVE SECURITY 1648: Peace of Westphalia Ended 30 Years War & Eight Years War Holy Roman Empire, Spain, France,
IS ARMS CONTROL THE ANSWER? What makes WMDs different? Chem, bio, & nuke vs. conventional weapons They seem.
IS ARMS CONTROL THE ANSWER? What makes WMDs different? Chem, bio, & nuke vs. conventional weapons They seem.
Nuclear Proliferation Theo Farrell, CSI Lecture 4, 2011.
April 27 th  Learning Target  I can understand the threat of nuclear proliferation.  Opener  Name all the countries you can think of that have nuclear.
“A world free of nuclear weapons would be a global public good of the highest order” and ICAN is a means to this goal. Sec-Gen Ban Ki Moon (Oct 2008)‏
DO WE REALLY NEED TO WORRY ABOUT WMDS? What is a “weapon of mass destruction”? Why are they “different”? Is the classification WMD an example of hegemony?
Technical Division Overview: Nonproliferation & Arms Control Mission To promote and advance the research, development and application of effective technologies.
The UK’s National Defence Needs and International Nuclear Disarmament Responsibilities Final report and recommendations #NET.
Iran has rejected a proposal to have much of its low-enriched uranium converted into fuel abroad and has suggested an alternative. Countries want Iran.
Nuclear Weapons Part I.
Bipolarity Deterrence Arms Control Rationality Multipolarity
Ozersk, Russian Federation School #39
Nuclear Proliferation and Arms Control (Part 2)
International Security and Peace
Features and Consequences of Detente
What is required for nuclear disarmament?
The Future of US-Russia Nuclear Arms Control
Nuclear Proliferation and Arms Control (Part 4)
Modern world today There are a lot of internal and international conflicts all over the world. Force methods are often used and have high effectiveness.
The Development of Strategy
Arms Control and Disarmament Prof
Who Has the Bomb? US 1945 USSR/Russia 1949 UK 1952 France 1960
Missile Madness.
Features and Consequences of Detente
The Modern World.
The Arms and Space Race Unit 9: Cold War.
Presentation transcript:

Day 8

 Review goals of NPT treaty.  Review current threats to global nuclear security.  Reflect on content & skill learning

 What are the goals of the NPT? Non-Proliferation Disarmament Fair Access for Peaceful Use

 Nuclear power plants Atomic energy (electricity)  Radioactive Isotopes (Medicine, Agriculture, Industry)  Oversight? NRC IAEA

 Ballistic vs Cruise? Enter atmosphere Lower flying jet-propelled  Tactical vs Strategic? Intermediate Range BM Submarine Launched, Intercontinental BM  Defensive? ABM ABM Defense System ABM Treaty

 Which agreements deal with testing? LTBT, CTBT  Which agreements address disarmament? SALT I & II; INF, START I, II, New START; SORT  Which agreements address proliferation? NPT, SORT

 Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) - Reduce nuclear dangers & move towards zero Prevent nuclear terrorism (secure materials, accountability) Prevent nuclear proliferation Reduced role in US defense Continued arms reduction w/Russia Renounce dvpt of new nuclear weapons

 India/Pakistan  Israel  Syria/Myanmar  Iran  North Korea “ Deterrance is dependent on rationality, and the more people with access to nuclear weapons increases the risk that irrationality will enter the equation.” Jon Meacham

 Skill Reflection Why is annotation a valuable skill? Assess your strengths/weaknesses with this skill.  Content Reflection How did your content knowledge grow or change? What should be done to address nuclear security?  Unit Reflection What did you like/dislike about unit structure? Suggestions?