Nonstrategic Nuclear Weapons Congressional Research Service
22 first use of nuclear weapons. The Bush Administration never confirmed this view, and, instead, indicated that it would not use nuclear weapons in anything other than the most grave of circumstances. The Obama Administration, on the other hand, seemed to foreclose the option of using nuclear weapons in some regional contingencies. Specifically, it stated, in the 2010 NPR, that the United States will not use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against nonnuclear weapons states that are party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and in compliance with their nuclear nonproliferation obligations Specifically, if such a nation were to attack the United States with conventional, chemical, or biological weapons, the United States would respond with overwhelming
conventional force, but it would not threaten to use nuclear weapons if the attacking nation was in compliance with its nuclear nonproliferation obligations and it did not have nuclear weapons of its own At the same time, though, the NPR stated that any state that used chemical or biological weapons against the United States or its allies and partners would face the prospect of a devastating conventional military response—and that any individuals responsible for the attack, whether national leaders or military commanders, would beheld fully accountable.”
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The 2018 NPR echoed some of the Obama Administration’s policy, but altered it to track more closely with the policy of the Bush Administration. First, the 2018 NPR repeated the paragraph from the 2010 NPR stating that the United States will not use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against nonnuclear weapons states that are party to the NPT and in compliance with their nuclear nonproliferation obligations But it then stated that the United States reserves the right to make any adjustment in the assurance that maybe warranted by the evolution and proliferation of
non-nuclear strategic attack technologies emphasis added and US. capabilities to counter that threat
Elsewhere in the document, the NPR indicated that nonnuclear strategic attacks could include chemical, biological, cyber, and large-scale conventional aggression Hence, where the Obama Administration left open the possibility of nuclear retaliation in response to biological attacks, but stated that other threats could be deterred by the prospect of a devastating conventional response, the Trump Administration included a wider range of circumstances where the United States might retaliate with nuclear weapons after an attack.
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