INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
France secretly upgrades capacity of nuclear arsenal |
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by Kim Willsher The Guardian Entered into the database on Friday, February 10th, 2006 @ 18:19:01 MST |
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· Modification increases range of missiles · Altitude bomb to knock out electronic systems France has secretly modified its nuclear arsenal to increase the strike range
and accuracy of its weapons. The move comes weeks after President Jacques Chirac
warned that states which threatened the country could face the "ultimate
warning" of a nuclear retaliation. A military source quoted yesterday by the Libération newspaper claimed
France had tinkered with its nuclear weapons to improve their strike capability
and make this threat more credible. The source said there had been two major changes: the bombs can now be fired
at high altitude to create an "electromagnetic impulsion" to destroy
the enemy's computer and communications systems; and the number of nuclear warheads
has been reduced to increase the missiles' range and precision. During his surprise speech, which was made in January, President Chirac said:
"The number of nuclear warheads has been reduced in certain of the missiles
in our submarines". Military experts said this was not a step towards disarmament, but a move to improve
the performance of the weapons. Until now each submarine carried 16 French-made
M45 missiles, each fitted with six nuclear warheads. After being fired, each warhead
would separate to hit a different target, in effect giving each submarine 96 nuclear
bombs. In reducing the number of warheads, down to one per missile in some cases,
the weapon is lighter and has a longer range. It can also be targeted more accurately. Libération speculates that while potential targets are "secret",
it is clear they include the Middle East or Asia, and that its military contacts
suggest the changes are aimed at adding "flexibility" to France's
nuclear deterrent. "These evolutions are aimed at better taking into account the psychology
of the enemy," defence minister Michèle Alliot-Marie said after
President Chirac's warning in January. In a speech to MPs, she added: "A potential enemy may think that France,
given its principles, might hesitate to use the entire force of its nuclear
arsenal against civilian populations. "Our country has modified its capacity for action and from now on has
the possibility to target the control centres of an eventual enemy." French government sources said the president's speech, given at a nuclear submarine
base in Brittany, was not targeted specifically at Iran - despite Tehran's decision
to continue its nuclear programme - or at individual terrorist organisations,
but at countries that posed a direct threat to France itself. It is also seen as an attempt to justify the more than €3.5bn (£2.4bn)
a year France spends to maintain its estimated 300-350 nuclear weapons more
than a decade after the end of the cold war. "The ultimate warning restores the principle of dissuasion," the
military source told Libération. The president is not talking about a
choice between an apocalypse or nothing at all." The paper says according to its information "ultimate warning" could
take two new forms. The most demonstrative would be to fire a relatively weak warhead into a deserted
zone far from centres of power and habitation. The more radical option would
be to explode a bomb at an extremely high altitude with the aim of creating
a brief but enormously strong electromagnetic field which would disable or destroy
all non-protected electronic systems in the area. During the cold war France's "ultimate threat" involved firing nuclear
bombs into Soviet military divisions and large cities. |