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Tag: nuclear

  • PolitiFact – Fact-checking Chris Christie on U.S. security obligations toward Ukraine

    PolitiFact – Fact-checking Chris Christie on U.S. security obligations toward Ukraine

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    During the third Republican presidential debate, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie explained that his support for Ukraine against the continuing Russian invasion traces back to promises made during the 1990s.

    “In 1992, this country made a promise to Ukraine,” Christie said during the Nov. 8 debate in Miami. “We said, ‘If you return nuclear missiles that were part of the old Soviet Union to Russia, and they invade you, we will protect you.’”

    This makes the U.S. obligation to defend Ukraine sound cut and dried. However, as we’ve previously written, it was anything but.

    Christie’s campaign did not respond to an inquiry for this article.

    The crack-up of the USSR and the 1994 Budapest agreement

    When the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991, the rest of the world expressed concern over the fate of the Soviet nuclear arsenal, which was spread across not just Russia but also three newly independent states, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine. 

    Belarus and Kazakhstan agreed to dismantle or return to Russia what they had. But Ukraine looked at the roughly 1,900 warheads on its soil and began seeking something in exchange before it ceded them.

    “Essentially, it was something that they traded off in order to encourage international recognition,” Brian Finlay, a specialist in nonproliferation at the Stimson Center, a military-focused Washington, D.C., think tank told PolitiFact in 2015.

    According to a 2011 report by Steven Pifer, the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine from 1998 to 2000, Ukraine wanted Russia to promise to respect its sovereignty and its borders, a promise that Russia made but has since broken. Ukraine also wanted money, and it knew that going non-nuclear would open the door to better ties with the West.

    In early 1994, the United States agreed to provide money to dismantle Ukraine’s nuclear infrastructure, while Russia agreed to forgive Ukraine’s debts. In December 1994, the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom and Ukraine signed the Budapest Memorandum of Security Assurances

    The agreement reaffirmed certain commitments among the parties:

    Pifer described in his report the lengths to which Washington lingered over the precise phrasing of the U.S. security obligations to Ukraine.

    State Department lawyers “took careful interest in the actual language … to keep the commitments of a political nature,” Pifer wrote. “U.S. officials also continually used the term ‘assurances’ instead of ‘guarantees,’ as the latter implied a deeper, even legally binding commitment of the kind that the United States extended to its NATO allies.”

    Pifer wrote that American diplomats made sure that the Russians and Ukrainians understood specifically that the English meaning of “assurance” was not the same as a “guarantee.”

    Has anything changed?

    We asked several experts whether anything had changed since we last covered this topic eight years ago (which also came during a presidential election cycle, in comments by Republican candidates Ben Carson and Ted Cruz).

    The experts agreed that although Russia has continued to break its promise to respect Ukraine’s borders, the U.S. obligations remain the same. The U.S. under President Joe Biden has supported Ukraine as it tries to fend off Russia’s invasion, including providing arms and money. But the U.S. has done this by choice, not because the Budapest agreement legally obligates it to do so. 

    Christie seems to be framing it as a pledge akin to NATO’s Article 5, which treats an attack on one member as an attack on all, obligating a response, said Erik Herron, a West Virginia University political scientist who specializes in Eastern Europe. But such an obligation “is not part of any written agreement,” Herron said.

    Pifer, the former ambassador to Ukraine, told PolitiFact that when negotiating the language, “Ukrainian officials asked us, the U.S. officials, what the United States would do if Russia violated its commitments. We responded that the United States would take an interest and support Ukraine, but we made clear that we were not committing to send U.S. troops.”

    And that is basically what has happened since Russia invaded in 2022, Pifer said. 

    “To my mind, U.S. support for Ukraine over the past two years has lived up to what we told Ukrainian officials in the early 1990s,” he said. 

    Our ruling

    Christie said, “In 1992, this country made a promise to Ukraine. We said, ‘If you return nuclear missiles that were part of the old Soviet Union to Russia, and they invade you, we will protect you.’”

    Setting aside that the agreement was signed in 1994, not 1992, Christie makes it sound as if the U.S. had an ironclad obligation to protect Ukraine if its borders were violated — that it had a “promise” to “protect” Ukraine.

    But the United States carefully avoided making a strong promise. The agreement deliberately steered away from the term “guarantee” in favor of “assurances,” which entails a lesser degree of obligation.

    The United States agreed to respect Ukraine’s borders and go to the United Nations if another power threatened Ukraine’s borders.

    We rate the statement Mostly False.

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  • PolitiFact – Switzerland has distributed iodine tablets to residents for years, and not because of nuclear war

    PolitiFact – Switzerland has distributed iodine tablets to residents for years, and not because of nuclear war

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    A recent video shared on Facebook warns of “extremely disturbing information,” but the truth is much less sensational. 

    “The entire of country of Switzerland has received packages, mostly around the nuclear power plants,” a man says in the Oct. 25 video, recounting what he describes as a report from a subscriber. “There are 5 million Swiss that have received iodine tablets in the mail yesterday or actually today, the 25th of October 2023, so she says the government must be worried about something.”

    He then says that iodine tablets “are used for nuclear war” and asks if that’s a “good sign, 5 million people getting iodine tablets before the outbreak of nuclear war.” 

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    In reality, Switzerland distributes iodine pills every decade to residents living within 50 kilometers (31.1 miles) of one of the country’s three nuclear power plants. If a radiation emergency occurred at the plants, taking the pills would protect the people from thyroid cancer. (The iodine pills, technically potassium iodide, stops the thyroid gland from absorbing radioactive iodine that may leak from nuclear plants.)  

    “The campaign may seem like a Cold War relic to some,” Bloomberg News reported Oct. 28. “Newly arrived expatriates are often startled to be handed a voucher for their pills when they register at the town hall. But the idea is that sirens would sound in the event of a nuclear accident so that people could take a dose before any fallout reaches them.”

    This has been going on “for years,” Reuters reported in 2021. “In 2014, the last time Switzerland handed out iodine, it gave tablets to nearly 5 million people in 1.9 million households.”

    We rate claims that Switzerland is distributing iodine tablets to prepare for a looming nuclear war False.

     

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  • Putin oversees Yars ICBM launch in Russia’s nuclear drill: Video

    Putin oversees Yars ICBM launch in Russia’s nuclear drill: Video

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    Russian President Vladimir Putin oversaw a Yars intercontinental ballistic missile being test-launched on Thursday as part of nuclear drills, a video released by the country’s Defense Ministry showed.

    The Kremlin said in a statement that “practical launches of ballistic and cruise missiles took place during the training.”

    Russian Defense Minster Sergei Shoigu said that Moscow was rehearsing its ability to deliver a “massive” nuclear strike.

    “[T]raining is being conducted to control the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, during which the tasks of delivering a massive nuclear strike by strategic offensive forces in response to an enemy nuclear strike will be worked out,” said Shoigu.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on October 25, 2023. Putin oversaw a Yars intercontinental ballistic missile being test-launched on Thursday as part of nuclear drills, a Defense Ministry video showed.
    SERGEI GUNEYEV/POOL/AFP/Getty Images

    Nuclear tensions have intensified amid Putin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The Russian leader has said he would be prepared to use nuclear weapons to defend Russian territory. Some Western officials have in the past expressed concern that Ukraine recapturing its annexed Black Sea peninsula, Crimea, would be a red line for Putin.

    Russian state TV showed Shoigu speaking to Putin via video link.

    “Practical launches of ballistic and cruise missiles took place during the training,” the Kremlin said in a statement.

    The Kremlin said a Yars intercontinental ballistic missile was fired from the northwestern Plesetsk Cosmodrome to a test site in Russia’s far-eastern Kamchatka region. Another ballistic missile was fired from a nuclear-powered submarine in the Barents Sea, and air-launched cruise missiles were test-fired from Tu-95MS long-range bombers.

    “In the course of the events, the level of preparedness of the military command authorities and the skills of the senior and operational staff in organizing subordinate troops were tested,” the Kremlin said. “The tasks planned in the course of the training exercise were fully accomplished.”

    The drills were conducted as Russia’s upper parliament on Wednesday voted to revoke ratification of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, a move that raises fears that Moscow will resume nuclear testing.

    Newsweek has contacted Russia’s Foreign Ministry via email for comment.

    The landmark Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty prohibits “any nuclear weapon test explosion or any other nuclear explosion” anywhere in the world. It was was adopted in 1996 by the UN General Assembly. The document was ratified by Russia, but not by the United States and China.

    Moscow has maintained that it would not resume nuclear weapons testing unless Washington does so first.

    Russia has justified revoking its withdrawal of the treaty by saying that Washington has signed but never ratified it.

    Earlier in October, State Duma Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin said Moscow was pulling out from the treaty because of the “irresponsible attitude” of the U.S. to global security.

    He said on his Telegram channel that Moscow had ratified the nuclear test ban treaty in 2000, but Washington had failed to do so because of its “irresponsible attitude to global security issues.”

    Do you have a tip on a world news story that Newsweek should be covering? Do you have a question about the Russia-Ukraine war? Let us know via worldnews@newsweek.com.