APS April Meeting 2021
Volume 66, Number 5
Saturday–Tuesday, April 17–20, 2021;
Virtual; Time Zone: Central Daylight Time, USA
Session Y05: The Changing Nuclear World Order
1:30 PM–3:18 PM,
Tuesday, April 20, 2021
Sponsoring
Unit:
FPS
Chair: Stewart Prager, Princeton University
Abstract: Y05.00003 : The Emerging Technologies Arms Race, Nuclear Weapons, and Global Security
2:42 PM–3:18 PM
Live
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Sebastien Philippe
(Princeton University)
A new technological arms race, led by the United States, Russia, and China, has begun,
involving a competitive search for disruptive technologies with potentially profound military
and global security implications. Such technologies as artificial intelligence, autonomous
systems, quantum technologies, sensors with continuous global coverage, along with
hypersonic, highly precise, and maneuverable weapon systems, are rapidly being developed
and integrated into existing military structures and capabilities. The key goals of these efforts
are to accelerate the tempo of warfare by reducing the time to detect, target, and destroy
military objectives, to expand to a global scale the space for such actions, and to conduct them
with increased precision. This arms race is reinforced by elite discourses within the major
powers characterized by over-promising, parity-seeking, and fears of falling behind, as well as a
sense of inevitability rooted in technological determinism. There are grounds, however, for
skepticism and uncertainty in whether these still emerging technologies can credibly yield the
promised new revolution in military affairs within the foreseeable future.
When and whether this prospective revolution will prove technologically feasible, however, has
serious global security implications. If perceived as successful, this revolution could conceivably
provide those with access to these new technologies with the capacity to threaten deployed
nuclear delivery systems with successful counterforce attacks anywhere and at any time --
signaling the obsolescence of existing and future nuclear forces as survivable, credible means of
deterrence. Such a radical development could enable new interest in nuclear arms reduction
and disarmament for some states, but could drive other states towards even riskier postures
and increase the likelihood of nuclear war. In either case, new forms of international
cooperation aimed at restraining military capabilities, doctrines, postures, and escalation
pathways will be required.
This talk will present the current technological arms race, highlighting key enabling
technologies, with the goal to better understand the compounding factors and risks associated
with the rapid development, militarization, and deployment of emerging technologies,
including the scientific and technical basis for any claims of potential transformative impacts, as
well as possible arms control measures and other restraint options. It will also make
suggestions on how the physics community could get involved in this debate.