Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Nuclear Suppliers Group. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Nuclear Suppliers Group. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 4 de julio de 2017

Industry 4.0 and the risk of nuclear proliferation


Because 3D printers can produce a wide variety of three-dimensional objects, the potential commercial and industrial applications are generating the arrival of a new manufacturing revolution, known as Industry 4.0.

Industry 4.0 is spreading in all the fields of manufacturing industry, and it also includes (¿why not?) defense industry. Some examples:
  • The U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is already experimenting with 3D printing in the manufacture of rocket engines.  (Dfr.: Kimberly Newton, “NASA Engineers Test Combustion Chamber to Advance 3-D Printed Rocket Engine Design,” NASA.gov, December 8, 2016)
  • The U.S. and British Navies have been using 3D printers on aircraft carriers at sea to produce customized UAVs (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles) during deployments. (Cfr.: Kyle Mizokami, “The future of America’s aircraft carriers?  Floating drone factories,” The Week, April 21, 2016; Jon Rosamond, “U.S., U.K. Navies Expanding Experiments Using 3D Printing,’ USNI News, September 22, 2015.)
But not all about 3D printing is pink-coloured, as it presents certain risks that must be taken into account. In this regard, Matthew Kroenig and Tristan Volpe assessed the risk of nuclear proliferation in their article titled “3D printing the bomb?” (Cfr.: The Washington Quarterly, Vol. 38, No. 3, Fall 2015, pp. 7-19) and the topic is garnering attention among policy analysts.

Much of the concern surrounds whether 3D printing represents a new way for a state-level WMD program to circumvent nonproliferation export controls, thanks to use a convenient way to produce sensitive components: The law uses to run behind the life, and today we have to face the risk of following guidelines developed by the Nuclear Suppliers Group and Missile Technology Control Regime in an era when 3D Printing didn't exist... but to be applied followed in a new era where anybody can send electronically some different CAD files corresponding to different parts of a sensitive assembly, to be printed in different 3D printing service bureaus located in different countries. ¿Impossible? Not at all: If you can imagine it, it can happen. And if the Nuclear Suppliers Group and the Missile Technology Control Regime do not update their guidelines to the new challenges represented by the Industry 4.0, the hidden production and sale of sensitive WMD-relevant dual-use goods is not entirely hypothetical.

sábado, 11 de abril de 2015

Pakistan quiere entrar en el NSG


En 2010, Washington anunció el respaldo a la India para ser aceptada en el NSG (Nuclear Suppliers Group).


Esto no fue visto con buenos ojos por Pakistan, quien desde entonces está molesto con la administración USA por esta y por otras muestras de favoritismo hacia su vecino y rival.


Más concretamente, Estados Unidos no sólo ha respaldado a India en lo referente al NSG, sino tambien respalda su presencia en el Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR), el AG (Australian Group) y el WA (Wassenaar Arrangement).


Pakistan quiere ser tratado de igual manera que su vecino, y denuncia que la admisión de la India en estos cuatro organismos pondría en peligro la paz en el sureste de Asia. Sin embargo, Estados Unidos mira con mucho recelo a Pakistan, a quien consideran un país de quien difícilmente se pueden fiar, dadas las buenas relaciones que mantiene con grupos terroristas como Al Quaeda, así como por sus buenas relaciones con China, Irán, y Corea del Norte.


Por lo que se refiere a China, Pakistan está forjando alianzas de cooperación con el gigante asiático al objeto de seguir avanzando en el desarrollo de su programa de armamento nuclear. Esto ha despertado los recelos del CFR (Council on Foreign Relations) quien ha advertido sobre el riesgo que supondría el desarrollo de un programa que posibilitaría a Pakistan consolidarse en tan sólo diez años como la cuarta superpotencia nuclear mundial.