Tulsi Gabbard, the
"As we stand here today, closer to the brink of nuclear annihilation than ever before," Gabbard said, "political-elite warmongers are carelessly fomenting fear and tensions between nuclear powers." That reference to unspecified warmongers hewed to her unfortunate pattern of spreading conspiracy theories. Her boss, President
But Gabbard was right about her other point: that we — Homo sapiens — may be closer to the brink than ever before. That’s what I keep hearing from experts on nuclear strategy in
The diagnosis is essentially a long list of separate but simultaneous developments that collectively upset the relatively simple balance of terror that stabilized the late Cold War.
At that time, two nuclear superpowers held each other in check while a few other nations kept small arsenals for deterrence and almost all other countries abided by the Non-Proliferation Treaty, meant to limit the spread of these diabolical weapons.
Entire ecosystems of expertise had blossomed in academia and government to model the scenarios that might lead to Armageddon, and the resulting game theory, though sophisticated, was relatively straightforward. Stipulating that a nuclear war "cannot be won and must never be fought," the big two —
Instead, it tops the horror rankings again. The last remaining arms-control treaty between
Worse, a third nuclear superpower,
This new reality forces strategists in
The
Experts agree that nuclear deterrence is not a pure numbers game (all sides would soon just be irradiating rubble). And game theory is far from clear about what is stabilizing and destabilizing in the real world; the math in such a "three-body problem" becomes forbidding.
Nor does the number three capture the horror of this analytical hairball. In total, nine countries have nukes. And even if the recent American strikes on
More players mean more scenarios for people to miscalculate. (An especially dangerous period is the phase when countries are making nukes but do not yet have them because adversaries may contemplate preemptive strikes.)
Even that catalog doesn’t do justice to the new threat landscape because the types of warheads and delivery vehicles are changing. For example, more countries are investing in those tactical nukes I mentioned, which are "limited" only in theory but in practice likely to set off uncontrollable escalation to full-scale nuclear war.
Add to these twists the imponderable of artificial intelligence, which drastically accelerates human decision-making and thus increases the potential for human error, especially under pressure. Those risks become even worse wherever AI meets misinformation. (During the recent clash between nuclear-armed
Bright minds are studying these developments, including
"We’re approaching a tripolar world, and everything is different in that scenario," says
Trump seems to have grasped this reality. He has said repeatedly that he wants to restart arms-control negotiations and that he wants them to be at least trilateral, including both
Much divides those three leaders, and indeed humanity. But if we can’t agree to sequester our hatreds and vanities to deal with this singular threat, none of those other things will matter.
(1) "Deployed" means ready for use at any time — for instance, on the tip of a missile in a silo.
(COMMENT, BELOW)
Andreas Kluth is a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion. He was previously editor in chief of Handelsblatt Global and a writer for the Economist. He's the author of "Hannibal and Me."
Previously:
• 03/12/25: How Trump could win, and deserve, a Nobel Peace Prize
• 06/10/24: America has many allies. Maybe too many
• 04/09/24: The terrorist threat is growing, but not necessarily to the US
• 02/14/24: Ditch the 'Rules-Based International Order'
• 01/08/24: America has a new Axis of Evil to prevent
• 12/04/23: As Heinz and Henry, Kissinger brought Germany redemption
• 11/30/23: Biden's Gaza pause brings joy --- and anguish
• 11/09/23: The Biden Doctrine: Show strength, whisper restraint
• 11/02/23: Where's the United Nations in all this? Oh, right, nowhere
• 09/22/23: We all need to keep supporting Ukraine, Elon
• 09/22/23: Biden said the right things at the UN. That won't be enough
• 08/02/23: Russia outnumbers the US 10-to-1 in tactical nukes. Now what?
• 06/27/23: Putin's biggest mistakes in the Wagner uprising
• 05/31/23: Should Ukraine take the war into Russia?
• 05/08/23: Ukraine in NATO: The heart says yes, the head no
• 04/25/23: How NATO should deter Vladimir Putin's Russia
• 03/29/23: Putin ups the ante with nukes in Belarus
• 02/15/23: Russia's 'human wave attacks' are another step into hell
• 12/09/22: Germany just averted the Fourth Reich
• 11/28/22: Russia's mass abductions are genocide
• 10/21/22: If Putin orders a nuke, will his generals obey?
• 09/23/22: A decision tree for Biden if Putin goes nuclear
• 08/25/22: Putin wouldn't shrink from starting Chernobyl 2.0 in Ukraine
• 07/08/22: Ukraine has better heroes than this friend of fascism
• 06/10/22: Merkel will enter history as the Neville Chamberlain of our time
• 04/29/22: NATO needs to seal the deal with Sweden and Finland fast
• 01/24/22: Vladimir Putin has no time for your reality
• 01/06/22:Bombast, distance and distrust: Your guide to Ukraine talks
• 01/06/22: An international court decision forces all of us to debate who should get medical care if it must be rationed
• 12/08/21: A crisis of masculinity as robots replace men
• 11/03/21: In post — Merkel Europe, what is 'conservatism'?
• 11/03/21: In this nuclear arms race, China's hypersonic gliders are a wake — up call
• 07/16/21: By doggedly backing a Russian gas link, Angela Merkel has let down the U.S. and Europe — — — and left her successor only bad options
• 06/08/21:Will you have fewer friends after lockdown?
• 07/29/20: OK, boomer, we're gonna socialize you
• 07/09/20: The fight over a coronavirus vaccine will get ugly
• 05/26/20: The EU is entering a constitutional crisis

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