How Ukraine relinquish of nuclear wepons and why it influence on current warfare with Russia.
On December 25, 1991, Mikhail Gorbachev announced his retirement, and handed over the so-called “nuclear suitcase” to Russian President Boris Yeltsin. Although the Soviet Union went into oblivion, its huge nuclear arsenal remained intact, now dispersed among few Soviet states. A lot of time has passed, and a number of lessons can still be learned from the Ukrainian experience of abandoning nuclear capabilities, says a new analysis by Senior a researcher at the Belfer Research Center at Harvard University, and associate professor at the Odessa National University Polina Sinovets.
In the analysis published on the English-language analytical portal War and the Rocks, researchers point to Ukraine’s path to abandoning the world’s third largest nuclear potential and present some historical lessons to address the current problems of nuclear proliferation.
“The case of Ukraine is the most instructive among other Soviet nuclear heirs. The United States and their allies formulated the hopes that, after the collapse of the USSR, there should be only one nuclear power, and everyone understood that this state was Russia. While Belarus and, after a brief hesitation, Kazakhstan adhered to these expectations, Ukraine was more intricate in this regard” – the authors note.
Ukraine, which inherited the third largest nuclear arsenal in the world, received 176 intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) armed with 1240 nuclear warheads and 44 strategic bombers with hundreds of cruise missiles.
Cutting off strategic bombers Tu-22 at a military airfield near Poltava, November 12, 2002
In 1994, the state acceded to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons as a non-nuclear state and agreed to transfer all [its nuclear stockpile] to Russia. In return, Ukraine received compensation for nuclear material in warheads and security guarantees from other nuclear powers.
According to the authors, particular attention should be paid to a number of factors that accompanied Ukraine’s relinquishing of nuclear potential.