Ukraine’s fate puts a big question mark over nuclear disarmament efforts

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Security analysts have warned that the conflict in Ukraine could embolden Tehran and the North Korean regime in their quest for nuclear weapons. (AFP)
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Rubble and flames are seen in Bucha, Ukraine, on Feb. 27, 2022. (Bucha City Council/Handout via REUTERS)
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A view shows an apartment building damaged by recent shelling in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Feb. 26, 2022. (REUTERS/Gleb Garanich)
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Ukrainian refugees fleeing from a Russian invasion stand at Nyugati station in Budapest, Hungary, on Feb. 27, 2022. (REUTERS/Marton Monus)
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Updated 28 February 2022
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Ukraine’s fate puts a big question mark over nuclear disarmament efforts

  • Ukraine inherited a huge arsenal of Soviet-era nuclear warheads which it voluntarily gave up
  • Russian invasion may have long-term implications for future nuclear nonproliferation efforts

IRBIL, Iraqi Kurdistan: As Russia’s invasion of Ukraine enters its fourth day, what is for certain is that the geopolitical repercussions will be felt far away from the European operational theater. Analysts say Ukraine’s grim fate may well have long-term implications for future nuclear disarmament efforts, including in the Middle East.

When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, Ukraine gained its independence. Along with Belarus and Kazakhstan, Ukraine inherited a huge arsenal of intercontinental ballistic missiles, bombers and, more crucially, nuclear warheads, which it gave up.

The government of former president Leonid Kravchuk agreed in 1994 to completely dismantle that arsenal, one of the largest in the world at the time, as part of the Budapest Memorandum, which included security assurances for protecting Ukraine’s territorial integrity and political independence in return.

The full title of that agreement was the “Memorandum on security assurances in connection with Ukraine’s accession to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.”

Despite all this, Russian tanks are now rolling into Kyiv to topple Ukraine’s democratically elected government, ostensibly for its pro-Western orientation. Ukraine, which aspires to be a member of both the EU and the NATO, is receiving insufficient support and assistance from Western countries to stop the Russian military juggernaut.




A Russian military armored vehicle drives along a street in Armyansk, Crimea, after Russian President Vladimir Putin authorized a military operation into Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022. (REUTERS)

Some argue that former Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi made a similar mistake when he surrendered his substantial stockpile of weapons of mass destruction to the West in 2003, only to be toppled by, and killed in, a popular armed uprising that was given decisive NATO air support less than a decade later.

Ukraine, however, could set a precedent altogether different from serial human rights-violating pariah states such as Gaddafi’s Libya, Saddam Hussein’s Iraq or North Korea. It is a democratic and genuinely pro-Western country.

If the West cannot guarantee Kyiv’s security in return for furthering the campaign for nuclear disarmament, then why would unpopular, nondemocratic governments put their trust in similar security assurances in return for dismantling their stockpiles (or pledging to never develop such weapons) in the future?

“In a general sense, the invasion of Ukraine does reinforce the utility of nuclear weapons in protecting states. Ukraine gave up its nuclear weapons and was attacked, yet the far more vulnerable Baltic states are (for now, anyway) safe because of NATO’s nuclear guarantee,” Kyle Orton, an independent Middle East analyst, told Arab News.

“Take the Gaddafi precedent. Had he retained his nuclear program and completed it, such weapons could not have prevented a rebellion from erupting against him in 2011. But the stark truth is it could have prevented NATO support for the rebellion, and without external support, it might well have failed, and Gaddafi would have survived,” he said.




The late Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi delivers an address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York City on Sept. 23, 2009. (AFP file photo)

Shashank Joshi, defense editor at The Economist, also believes that “the violation of the Budapest Memorandum does show that such diplomatic agreements, and particularly negative security assurances — the promise that you won’t attack someone — are difficult if not impossible to enforce over a period of decades.

“Though Gaddafi did not receive such assurances explicitly, NATO’s role in facilitating the collapse of his regime, which culminated in his murder, is also a precedent that would-be nuclear authoritarian states will keep in mind,” Joshi told Arab News.

In return for surrendering his “weapons of mass destruction” stockpile, Gaddafi was promised better relations between Libya, then an impoverished pariah state, and the West, as well as the lifting of economic sanctions against his country. Nevertheless, by 2009 he seemed to have come to regret the decision, lamenting on a visit to Italy: “We had hoped Libya would be an example to other countries … but we have not been rewarded by the world.”

In Joshi’s opinion, while such precedents “probably make it harder to secure the disarmament of North Korea, it’s important to bear in mind that Pyongyang probably would not disarm even if it did have those guarantees.” By all accounts, Kim Jong-un, and his father before him, leaders of arguably one of the most isolated and secretive countries on the planet today, took note of the Gaddafi episode.




North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un (C) visits a drill for ballistic missile launch by the Korean People's Army on July 21, 2016. (KCNA VIA KNS / AFP)

Now, the West’s collective failure to match its words with action, in the case of a country as like-minded and globally integrated as Ukraine, could serve to further reduce the already unlikely prospect that Pyongyang would ever seriously consider nuclear disarmament in return for international guarantees and sanctions relief.

That said, could the Ukraine fiasco also impact the ongoing negotiations between Iran and the international community to revive the 2015 nuclear accord? Iran now has an estimated nuclear breakout time as short as five weeks, meaning it could build a bomb in that time frame if it decides to do so.

It is unclear if the undoubted failure of the Budapest Memorandum has further convinced some in Tehran that restoring the JCPOA is a futile endeavor. Orton, for one, is highly skeptical that the Ukraine crisis has, or will have, any significant bearing on Iran’s decision making vis-a-vis its nuclear program.




Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps chief Hossein Salami watching a launch of missiles during a drill last year. (AFP/File)

“The invasion of Ukraine has only an indirect bearing on the Iran nuclear talks, really,” he told Arab News. “Russia and the clerical regime are strategic partners, so when Russia feels emboldened against a weak and ineffective West on the strength of its Ukraine conquest, it seemingly reinforces the argument for even more Iran-friendly terms for the nuclear deal.”

Orton added: “But it’s not really a precedent or anything: Tehran’s advance toward the bomb is its own thing, for its own reasons, with its own timeline.”

Analysts further say that it is important to note that if Iran ultimately does opt to develop nuclear weapons, it may not only use them to entrench the regime’s power and deter external threats.

“Much of the debate around Iran’s nuclear program is centered on the question of whether Iran would develop nuclear weapons to use to coerce its neighbors into submitting to it, rather than in defense of Iran,” Nicholas Heras, deputy director of the Human Security Unit at the Newlines Institute for Strategy and Policy, told Arab News.

Either way, the regime in Tehran could conclude that developing nuclear weapons is worth the consequences and the risks.

Orton says that even though there are “real costs” for states that “overtly cross the nuclear threshold,” such as North Korea, some countries have concluded that those costs are worth paying.

“India, Pakistan and Israel have had their status and security enhanced by nuclear weapons,” he said: “You can run a global menagerie of Islamic radicals who kill thousands of Western troops, but you are shielded from the cost because of your nuclear coercive diplomacy.”




Russia's RS-24 Yars, a MIRV-equipped, thermonuclear weapon intercontinental ballistic missile, aredisplayed during a World War II victory celebration in Moscow. (Shutterstock photo)

Orton summed up the argument this way: “The incentives we have set, unfortunately, are for states to gain nuclear weapons and hold on to them. Technical expertise, money, state intentions and vulnerability to US sanctions seem likely to be the main constraints on proliferation going forward, not UN-blessed diplomatic instruments.”

In much the same vein, Heras described nuclear weapons as “the most effective deterrent threat against invasion that any state could possess in the modern world.”

“All nuclear weapons-possessing states have clear national security strategies that permit the use of these weapons to defend themselves,” he told Arab News. “This is a universal fact of statecraft in our modern world.”

In the final analysis, Heras said, the debate over nuclear weapons springs from the concern that the more states, or even nonstate actors, that possess them, the greater the likelihood is of such weapons being used in future conflicts.


How Gaza’s winter became another front in an unfinished war

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How Gaza’s winter became another front in an unfinished war

  • Winter storms have submerged and upended tents and brought down bombed-out homes across the enclave
  • At least nine infants have died of hypothermia in recent weeks amid reported Israeli restrictions on aid entry

LONDON: Gaza’s winter nights have grown longer and deadlier as torrential rains, flooding and bitter cold batter hundreds of thousands of Palestinians already wearied by more than two years of Israeli bombardment. Many are so malnourished they lack even the body fat needed to withstand the cold.

Families across the enclave stay awake through the night gripping their tents to keep them from being torn away by strong winds or swept off by floodwaters, all while fearful of a sudden Israeli airstrike. Parents carry children for hours, and at times older children carry younger ones to protect them from drowning.

“When it rains, of course all the tents flood, and all their bedding is soaked,” said Maysa Yousef, a mother of four and artist based in central Gaza. “People spend the entire night fighting for their lives, crying and pleading.”

“Civil Defense rushes in, along with rescue crews, to save people,” Yousef told Arab News. “They secure the tents and take families to so-called safe places; but in reality, there are no safe places because all of Gaza is destroyed; they take them to schools or other locations.”

The same conditions afflict those trying to help. Yousef’s husband works as a mental health specialist at a field hospital in central Gaza, where nearly all staff live in tents and have been heavily affected by the winter storms.

“All night long they don’t sleep, each one holding a broom, pushing the water away, while he and his children and their bedding are soaked,” Yousef said. “In the morning, they put on their wet clothes and go to work.

“When my husband sees them at work, he is shocked by how they haven’t slept all night, how their clothes are still wet, and yet they come in the morning and work all day, treating people and easing their suffering, when they themselves need support.”

More than 90 percent of Gaza’s population have been displaced repeatedly by the Israeli onslaught on the enclave, which started on Oct. 7, 2023, following a Hamas-led attack on southern Israel.

Those not living in tents are sheltering in bombed-out schools and damaged residential buildings. The UN said in November that nearly 81 percent of all structures in the Gaza Strip have been damaged. 

Strong winds and heavy rain since November have submerged or destroyed more than 90 percent of displacement tents, Gaza’s Civil Defense said. Storm Byron, which hit from Dec. 10 to 17, damaged more than 17 buildings, according to the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, UNRWA.

The storm also damaged or destroyed more than 42,000 tents, affecting at least 235,000 people, according to Gaza’s Shelter Cluster, a coalition of UN agencies and NGOs.

Even before Byron, rainfall and flooding upended more than 13,000 tents in November alone, according to the Israeli rights group B’Tselem. At least 740,000 people were affected.

“Gaza is completely destroyed,” Yousef said. “With the rain, even houses that are still standing are at risk of collapsing over their residents.”

Some bombed houses, she added, have given way under the weight of heavy rain and strong gale. “Some people were living in damaged houses that collapsed while they were inside. About 20 people were killed; some fell and drowned.”

With the sewage system destroyed, floodwater has nowhere to drain. “With continuous rain, large, deep pools form to the point that a tent ends up completely submerged by water,” Yousef said.

She described surreal scenes of “donkey carts transporting people, completely covered by water; the water would be covering the donkey itself, with only its head visible as it carries people.”

After nights of relentless rain, mornings bring a grim routine.

“The next day, you see everyone around you spreading their mattresses and belongings out in the sun — if the sun even comes out,” Yousef said. “Sometimes the rain lasts three or four days, even a week, causing severe flooding in Gaza because there is no sewage system and water levels keep rising.”

Coastal flooding has made matters worse.

“The sea rises and begins to overflow toward us, pulling away all the tents, even those on higher ground,” she said. “Soil erosion follows, and the ground gives way, to the point that even tents placed above the waterline and sea level suddenly collapse, with children falling into the sea, and Civil Defense searching for them.”

The floods have not only swept away tents and debris but also lives. On Dec. 31, and after a desperate search, rescuers in Gaza City pulled the lifeless body of seven-year-old Ata Mai by the ankle to pry him out of muddy waters.

Mai, who drowned on Dec. 27 in an improvised displacement camp, was the sixth child to be killed by a lack of adequate shelter during the harsh winter conditions in December, according to the UN Children’s Fund, UNICEF.

The organization’s regional director, Edouard Beigbeder, said that “teams visiting displacement camps reported appalling conditions that no child should endure, with many tents blown away or collapsing entirely.”

Children in Gaza lack proper winter clothing and are often barefoot or dressed in thin garments, huddling at night near improvised fires, which may be deadly. The risk was clear in early January, when a displaced grandmother and her four-year-old grandson burned to death after their tent caught fire.

But the cold has been even deadlier. At least eight newborns died of hypothermia within a month, and more than 74 children have died in 2025 amid the brutal winter conditions, UNRWA said on Jan. 9.

On Jan. 10, the extreme cold amid severe Israeli restrictions on aid entry killed another infant who was born only a week before, according to several media reports.

“We enter this New Year carrying the same horrors as the last,” said UNRWA Communication Officer Louise Wateridge. “There’s been no progress and no solace. Children are now freezing to death.”

Aid agencies say those deaths were preventable. The UN and international NGOs are calling on Israel to allow more aid into Gaza to help families survive the winter, saying Israeli restrictions continue to block deliveries.

While a fragile ceasefire since October has allowed some aid to re-enter Gaza after months of blockade, assistance still falls far short of the need, aid groups say.

Thousands of tents and hundreds of thousands of tarpaulins have been distributed since October, the UN says, but over one million people still urgently need shelter support.

Further compromising the humanitarian operation in Gaza, Israel announced in December it would suspend the permits of 37 aid agencies — a move described by UN Human Rights Chief Volker Turk as “outrageous.”

“Such arbitrary suspensions make an already intolerable situation even worse for the people of Gaza,” Turk said on Dec. 31. “I remind the Israeli authorities of their obligation under international law to ensure the essential supplies of daily life in Gaza, including by allowing and facilitating humanitarian relief.”

Israel said that the targeted international NGOs, including Doctors Without Borders and the Norwegian Refugee Council, had not complied with a deadline to disclose information on their Palestinian staff.

Several of the targeted INGOs told news agencies that they would never knowingly employ people engaging in military activity.

Even those living in the bombed-out ruins of what were once their homes have not been spared the winter suffering.

Each time Yousef tries to secure windows in her bomb-damaged house, intense shelling along the “yellow line” in eastern Gaza blasts them loose again.

“The window flips outward because it no longer fits its frame,” she said. “Doors swing open with every strike and won’t stay shut.”

The anxiety caused by layers of hardship have robbed Yousef of much-needed sleep. “At night, we sleep in a state of anxiety,” she added. “The walls are pulling apart; they are at risk of collapse.”

Rain turns daily life into a constant struggle. “When it rains, you are left wondering where to put the dishes, constantly watching where the rain is coming from and where it is leaking,” she said. 

“My house has three floors, and the floor beneath me has walls riddled with cracks. Rain pours through as if you are sitting in the street with rain falling directly over you. 

“Water can reach five, six, seven, even 10 centimeters. We spent weeks wading through it.”

Personal hygiene has become another excruciating ordeal amid a lack of heat sources and toiletries.

“Water is extremely cold,” Yousef said. “We fetch it from far away and store it in containers.”

Even when firewood is available, wet conditions make it useless. “On rainy days, it’s impossible to light a fire or bathe in hot water,” she said. “So we’re forced to bathe in cold water.”

“Imagine the weather is extremely cold, and there is nothing to protect you — the windows are covered with ripped plastic sheets that melt in the sun and fly away with the wind. On top of that, you and your children bathe in icy water.”

The consequences have been severe. Yousef said she developed intense bone pain since the cold weather began.

“Every time I poured the cold water over myself and braced my body, the pain in my back worsened, especially with the cold wind,” she said. “Imagine what it is like for children.”

Bathing her children often made them ill. “Because of this, people greatly reduced bathing with cold water in winter. You would see children, and even adults, extremely dirty, their clothes filthy, their stench overwhelming, yet they did not bathe to avoid getting ill.” 

Soap is also scarce. “We went nearly six months without even a single bar of soap,” Yousef said, adding that some people began to improvise and make soap from oil and other materials.

With infrastructure shattered and sanitation systems crippled, waste has piled up across Gaza, the UN said. Rainwater mixed with raw sewage has exposed residents to waterborne diseases, Save the Children warned.

The organization said that outbreaks of hepatitis, diarrhea and gastroenteritis have spread, made more lethal by widespread malnutrition.

Ahmad Alhendawi, the regional director, noted on Jan. 8 that “basic shelter items are stuck at the border.”

“The denial of humanitarian aid is a serious violation of humanitarian laws and a grave violation against children,” he said. “And yet it is still happening on our watch.” 

For Yousef, the fear of illness is constant.

“During winter, one of the most exhausting realities we face is how quickly diseases spread,” she said. “All it takes is for your child to go out onto the street to buy something or mix with people for just fifteen minutes, and they may come back infected with a virus or an illness.”

As winter deepens, Gaza’s nights continue to stretch longer, with conditions increasingly deadly for those left exposed.