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question,
Nevertheless one thing seems clear:
no one has any doubt but that
each state has the power to make certain of what is going on within its own
borders in the production and use of fissionable materials,
If that is true
for every state, then it necessarily follows that global control is not impossible
from a technical standpoint, since means could be found for making use of the
various national systems as the basis for international control.
political rather than a scientific problem,
commission may well find it worth their while
But this is a
The members of the atomic energy
to explore it thoroughly.
What all this comes down to is the following:
There is no reason to believe
that the treaty mechanism is inherently incapable of bearing the load which would
be associated with the international control of atomic weapons,
Nevertheless ;
this load would necessarily be very great indeed, and there is no likelihood
that nations would willingly narrow their freedom of action in relation to
atomic energy merely on the naked promise of other states to do likewise.
The
potential advantages to be gained by a successful evasion of such a treaty are
apparently so stupendous that very powerful safeguards would have to be provided
against possible violations,
None of the ordinary types of safeguards seem
strong enough to provide this assurance,
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One possible way of meeting this problem would.betg/eliminate all existing
atomic weapons, destroy all means of production and prohibit all future -steps
toward production.
This idea has wide public support and is in fact set forth
in the Truman-Attlee-King declaration and the Moscow resolution as one of the
ultimate aims of the work of the atomic energy commission,
But in moving in this
direction, one is met by a third dilemma of imposing proportions,
On
the one
hand, having no bombs in existence would seem to remove any opportunity to embark
on an adventure in atomic warfare,
On the other hand, if no bombs are in
existence, then any state which successfully evades the agreement and produces
bombs would have a complete monopoly of them.
Under such conditions the
SO