The Nonproliferation Policy Education Center has posted World at Risk, The Report of the Commission on the Prevention of WMD Proliferation and Terrorism. (By my count, this is the third Commission to style itself “The WMD Commission,” following efforts by Hans Blix and Charles Robb and Laurence Silberman.)

It ain’t exactly the 1965 Gilpatric Report, if you know what I mean.

For one thing, the Gilpatric Report turned in at trim 22 pages; This behemoth is over a hundred — and that is not counting all the frontmatter and appendices.

For another, the Gilpatric Report made an argument. Despite its slim slize, the Gilpatric Report arguably changed US policy toward the spread of nuclear weapons forever (See Schwartz, Gavin and Brands).

I can’t say the same thing about World at Risk. Henry Sokolski makes the point in his additional view that the report doesn’t really address the issue of proliferation in general. Sokolski describes the choice as one of balance, noting that the report “is imbalanced since it places a primary emphasis on nuclear and biological terrorism threats rather than on preventing nuclear proliferation to new states and the ramp-up of nuclear bomb capabilities in several existing nuclear armed states.”

The problem is worse that Sokolski suggests — the report is imblanced because it doesn’t reflect any particular explanation or insight into why the world is allegedly on the brink of what the authors call “a new era of proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.

The Gilpatric Report expressed a distinct view of why nuclear weapons weapons would spread and prescribed remedies that flowed logically from the diagnosis.

World At Risk, on the other hand, doesn’t. It reads like a laundry list of recommendations — most of which, I hasten to add, are quite sound.

World At Risk could have selected many candidate explanations for why the world might experience a new bout of nuclear and biological proliferation. My own view is that the spread of nuclear and biological technologies, along with climate change, are part and parcel of the information revolution that is driving globalization. Dramatic advances in computing technology have made possible revolutions in manufacturing and the life sciences. These developments are mostly good things, resulting in cheaper goods and better medicines. But the spread of such technologies also increases the number of countries that can manufacture centrifuge components or develop deadly pathogens.

The urgent task, as John Steinbruner argued in Principles of Global Security, is to transform our security relationships to maximize our defense against these threats, rather than simply repeating what we have done in the past. World At Risk, on the other hand, calls not for transforming our security relationships, but rather a need to “reframe Cold War deterrence strategy to address 21st-century threats.” I am all for deterring nuclear smugglers, but it seems to me that this particular historical moment requires something a little more venturesome than reframing.

I know you are thinking — “well, Jeffrey, you are asking an awful lot of something written by a Committee!” That’s true, but that is precisely what was so amazing about the Gilpatric Report — that it contemplated a fundamental transformation in our policies toward nuclear weapons and Soviet Union, based on an insight into the nature of the shared danger we face:

We must acknowledge the importance of participation by the Soviet Union in efforts to stop proliferation. Furthermore, it is unlikely that others can be induced to abstain indefinitely from acquiring nuclear weapons if the Soviet Union and the United States continue in a nuclear arms race. Therefore, lessened emphasis by the United States and the Soviet Union on nuclear weapons, and agreements on broader arms control measures must be recognized as important components in the overall program to prevent nuclear proliferation.

We believe that the Soviet Union, because of its growing vulnerability to proliferation among its neighbors, probably shares with us a strong interest in preventing the further spread of nuclear weapons. Further, we believe that the change of leadership in the Soviet Union and the possible resulting review of Soviet nuclear policies may now provide an immediate opportunity for joint or parallel action in the near future to stop the nuclear spread.

Not bad for a report written by committee.