braineclipse
Steve Sedgley
North Korea and Pakistan have nuclear weapons. The first must be one of the most mad regimes in history. The latter is torn between radical islamic extremists and a military out of government control. Both have serious active disputes with neighbours.
The greatest stand-off in history was between the US and USSR, each with a ridiculous amount of nuclear weapons. The stand-off between India and Pakistan over Kashmir hasn't escalated when both have nuclear weapons, even after the Mumbai terrorist attack.
While I'd much prefer Iran not get nuclear weapons, the idea that they would use them to destroy Israel is fantasy. Iran is in a dangerous part of the world and haven't a recent history of invading neighbours. Several countries with nuclear weapons have threatened action against them so you can see why they might want them.
You could also argue that the return to a more symmetric balance of power might draw Israel to the peace table with genuine intent. As it is they know they are secure and can act with impunity, pretending to want peace talks while making sure its impossible with continued settlement building and occasional wars of intimidation. This will continue as long as the US can be manipulated.
It's not confirmed that North Korea have nukes is it? For very similar reasons to Iran they really shouldn't be allowed to have them. I have a sneaky feeling that the Chinese agree, luckily,.
I disagree about Pakistan, I think the situation is worse for it.
I don't think the current situation in Iran can be compared to the cold war with much meaning behind the analogy. Mutual assured destruction was a real threat during the cold war, but I wouldn't trust it to have the same chilling effect with the current and potential future leaders of Iran. Won't go into my whole reasoning for this right now as I don't have half an hour, but religion and lack of rationality would be the main reasons. What you call fantasy they might see as a potential reality.
Problems with states like these having nukes are many, but for me the point that any foreign aid in a potential revolution (and a revolution in itself) becomes a lot more risky to the point of almost unfeasible means that the rulers gain that much more power. Just imagine Libya having nukes last summer, would NATO really be confident enough to support the uprising and in doing so pushing Gaddafi to the edge and over knowing that he was sitting there with a fudging nuclear suitcase by his desk? To me it seems like allowing these leaders nuclear weapons is almost the same as allowing them to stay in power almost indefinitely. Another problem of course is the propensity for states like these to support international terrorists. "We don't fear those that have thousands of nuclear weapons, we fear those that have one".