More nations are likely to pursue nuclear weapons due to growing global instability, Russian Security Council Deputy Chairman Dmitry Medvedev has said.
In an interview with Kommersant published on Monday, the former Russian president expressed pessimism about nuclear non-proliferation, stating, “the rift that has formed in the world order is pushing a number of states to find the most effective ways to defend themselves.”
“Some will decide that the best option is acquiring nuclear weapons,” he said. “A range of nations have the technical capacity to run a military nuclear program, and some are pursuing research in this area. That may be against the interest of humanity, but let’s be honest, humanity has not invented another way to guarantee self-defense and sovereignty with certainty.”
The 1968 Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) recognizes the five permanent UN Security Council members as the only states with nuclear weapons. Since its signing, India, Pakistan and North Korea have developed nuclear arsenals, while Israel is widely believed to possess undeclared capabilities.
Apartheid-era South Africa is the only country to have dismantled a successful military nuclear program.
Several nations have been accused of pursuing nuclear weapons, notably Iran, which was attacked last year by Israel and the United States with the stated aim of halting such efforts – a charge Tehran denies.
Medvedev’s interview focused on the impending expiration of the New START nuclear reduction treaty with the US, signed during his presidency. He said Russia has preserved its sovereignty thanks to its nuclear arsenal and is developing new delivery systems in response to deteriorating nonproliferation mechanisms.
“The Europeans, and also Americans under the [President Joe] Biden administration, have been constantly provoking us into taking harsh responses. And those provocative actions continue,” he said. Russia’s recent use of its new Oreshnik medium-range missile against a Ukrainian military plant could just as well have involved a nuclear version, he added.
Medvedev argued that while nuclear weapons raise the stakes in conflicts, they also promote stability by “putting fresh air into the brains of anyone with dangerous designs” against other nations.