“穷人的原子弹”的神话:化学、生物和核武器研究中的知识、方法和意识形态

IF 1.7 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Journal of Global Security Studies Pub Date : 2022-12-19 DOI:10.1093/jogss/ogac037
Biejan Poor Toulabi
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引用次数: 1

摘要

化学和生物武器(CBWs)经常被描述为“穷人的原子弹”:一种廉价且容易获得的核武器替代品,对所谓的第三世界国家特别有吸引力。这一观点也反映在西方政府和专家长期夸大生化武器扩散的估计中,尤其是在全球南方国家中。在这篇文章中,我分析了生化武器的传播是普遍的,它主要发生在全球南方国家之间,这种观点是如何存在和持续的。通过剖析一个经常被引用的关于生化武器传播的数据集,我揭示了经常出现的方法缺陷——比如概念混淆、对来源的误解,以及对来自美国政府的扩散指控的偏见——这些缺陷滋生并维持了夸大的估计和错误的指控。随后,我展示了一个以隐喻性使用“扩散”和“穷人的原子弹”为中心的主流认知框架,使分析人士和政策制定者将化学、生物和核武器的历史和未来解释为不可避免的扩散,特别是在非西方的“他者”之间。最后,我提出了在教学、研究和政策方面对抗这种意识形态正统的方法。
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The Myth of the “Poor Man's Atomic Bomb”: Knowledge, Method, and Ideology in the Study of Chemical, Biological, and Nuclear Weapons
Chemical and biological weapons (CBWs) have often been characterized as a “poor man's atomic bomb”: a cheap and easy to acquire alternative to nuclear weapons that is particularly appealing to so-called Third World states. This idea is also reflected in Western government and expert estimates that have long exaggerated the spread of CBWs, especially among states in the Global South. In this article, I break down the ways in which the idea that the spread of CBWs is prevalent and that it primarily happens among states in the Global South has come to exist and persist. By dissecting an oft-cited dataset on CBW spread, I unravel frequently occurring methodological flaws—such as conceptual confusion, misinterpretation of sources, and a bias toward proliferation charges originating from the US government—that breed and sustain inflated estimates and faulty allegations. Subsequently, I show that a dominant cognitive framework that centers on the metaphorical use of the terms “proliferation” and “poor man's atomic bomb” primes analysts and policymakers to interpret the history and future of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons as being characterized by inevitable spread, particularly among the non-Western “Other.” In conclusion, I offer ways to counter the orthodoxies of this ideology in teaching, research, and policy.
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来源期刊
Journal of Global Security Studies
Journal of Global Security Studies INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
34
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