by exploited » Fri Jan 31, 2014 3:39 pm
Weapon sharing does give the Dutch people the exact same benefits as developing the weapons themselves. "Dear NATO, Russia just nuked us, should we maybe nuke them back?" In fact, that was the very point of the weapons sharing program to begin with.
From Wikipedia:
"In case of risk of war the NPT treaty would cease, the sharing would end and the management of the nukes would pass totally below the hosting states.[1]"
In other words, these programs were developed so that once war began, control would pass to the host country to be used as they see fit. So once again we see the value in nuclear sharing programs - which are blatantly illegal under the Treaty, I might add.
I already mentioned that these programs are effective and provide the same benefit as actually having your own. Which is why the decision to prohibit their development makes no sense - now you have to kill hundreds of thousands in order to achieve the exact same strategic reality.
If Iran nuked Saudi Arabia, they would be utterly destroyed, whether by nuke or by conventional arms. There is simply no way around it - which is precisely why the entire prohibition scheme is so pointless. The US, Pakistan or China would inevitably nuke them or just destroy them conventionally. It is like saying we should ban a drug that kills its user instantly... Why? Its like banning suicide.
It is better for people to develop their arms openly, and for the international community to help them secure and store them safely, with a minimum of secrecy and a far better means of persuading others to adhere to good practices.
As for the expense, an ICBM (which Iran would need to hit the US) is insanely expensive. The per unit cost of a Peacekeeper ICBM is $70 million. Add on another 10-15 for a launcher. Add another $2-3 per year for maintenance and staff. And that is after thirty years of cost reductions - the price for Iran would be astronomically higher.