A Victory for All
Humanity
by David Krieger*, November 28, 2000
We are gathered for this Citizens’ Assembly
to re-commit ourselves to assuring that no other city will ever
again suffer the terrible nuclear devastation experienced by Nagasaki
and Hiroshima. It is time to build on the important work already
done by the hibakusha, by Abolition 2000 and others, to create
a full-fledged global campaign to eliminate all nuclear weapons
from Earth.
We are gathered here because the future matters.
Nuclear weapons are powerful, but not as powerful
as human beings. Nuclear weapons can only defeat us if we allow
them to do so.
Nuclear weapons have the power to create the final
unalterable silence, but only if humanity is silent in the face
of their threat.
Nuclear weapons have the power to destroy us, but
also to unite us.
We must choose how we will use and control the
technological possibilities we have created. We can choose to
continue to place most of life, including the human species, at
risk of annihilation, or we can choose the path of eliminating
nuclear weapons and working for true human security. It is clear
that nuclear weapons pose a species-wide threat to us that demands
a species-wide response.
Nuclear weapons are not really weapons. They are
devices of unimaginable destruction that draw no boundaries between
soldiers and civilians, men and women, the old and the young.
The stories of the hibakusha attest to this. Nuclear weapons have
no true military purpose since their use would cause utter devastation.
We know the hell on Earth they created at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Despite this knowledge, some countries continue to rely upon these
weapons for what they call national security.
If terrorism is the threat to injure or kill the
innocent, then nuclear weapons are the ultimate instruments of
terrorism. They are held on constant alert, ready to destroy whole
cities, whole populations. They are corrupting by their very presence
in a society. They contribute to a culture of secrecy, while undermining
democracy, respect for life, human dignity, and even our human
spirits.
Nuclear weapons should awaken our survival instincts
and arouse our human spirits to resistance.
The survivors of Nagasaki and Hiroshima, the hibakusha,
have persistently reminded us that human beings and nuclear weapons
cannot coexist indefinitely. The relationship is bound to end
in future tragedies, if for no other reason than that we humans
are fallible creatures and cannot indefinitely maintain infallible
systems.
We must have a global movement that joins with
the hibakusha and builds upon their efforts to save the world
from future Nagasakis and Hiroshimas. In doing so, we will save
our human spirits as well. Nuclear weapons should awaken our survival
instincts and arouse the human spirit to resistance.
As we approach our task of seeking to eliminate
all nuclear weapons from the arsenals of all countries, we must
remember that there is no legitimate authority vested in governments
to place the future of humanity and other forms of life at risk
of obliteration. The authority of governments comes only from
their people. Governments lose their authority when they become
destructive of basic rights, including the rights to life, liberty
and security of person as set forth in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights.
Peace is not the province of governments. It is
the province of the people. It is a responsibility that rests
upon our shoulders. If we turn over the responsibility for peace
to the governments of the world, we will always have war. I am
convinced that the people know far more about achieving and maintaining
peace and human dignity than the so-called experts – political,
military or academic – will ever know.
As far back as 1968, when the Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) was signed by the US, UK and Soviet Union, these
states promised good faith negotiations to achieve nuclear disarmament.
Although this treaty entered into force in 1970, the nuclear weapons
states made virtually no efforts to act on this obligation. Twenty-five
years later at the NPT Review and Extension Conference in 1995,
the nuclear weapons states again promised the “determined
pursuit…of systematic and progressive efforts to reduce
nuclear weapons globally, with the ultimate goals of eliminating
those weapons….” Five years later at the 2000 NPT
Review Conference, the nuclear weapons states again promised an
“unequivocal undertaking … to accomplish the total
elimination of their nuclear arsenals….”
So far, all they have done is play with words and
promises. They have shown no sincerity in keeping their promises
or fulfilling their obligations. If we wait for the governments
of the nuclear weapons states to act in good faith, we may well
experience future Nagasakis and Hiroshimas. The abolition of nuclear
weapons cannot wait for governments to act in good faith. The
people must act, and they must do so as if their very lives depend
on it -- because they do.
We are not only citizens of the country where we
reside; we are also citizens of the world. Citizenship implies
responsibilities. We each have responsibilities to our families,
our communities and to our world community.
As we enter the 21st century, we must accept our
responsibilities as citizens of the world. I offer you this Earth
Citizen Pledge: “I pledge allegiance to the Earth and to
its varied life forms; one world, indivisible, with liberty, justice
and dignity for all.” This pledge moves national loyalty
to a higher level – to the Earth – and incorporates
the principle aim of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
that all persons deserve to be treated with dignity.
The organization I lead, the Nuclear Age Peace
Foundation, is committed to waging peace. We believe in a proactive
approach to peace. Peace must be waged, that is, pursued vigorously.
Peace does not just happen to us. We must make it happen. We must
build effective global institutions of peace such as an International
Criminal Court and we must strengthen existing institutions such
as the United Nations and its International Court of Justice so
that they can better fulfill their mandates. We cannot turn decisions
on war and peace over to national governments. This is what led
to World War I, World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War,
and countless others. It is what led to Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The primary goal of our Foundation is the same
goal that motivates the hibakusha of Nagasaki and Hiroshima. It
is the goal of abolishing all nuclear weapons from the face of
the Earth. It is, in my opinion, the most important responsibility
of our time. It is a responsibility that should dominate the human
agenda until it is realized.
Our Foundation is a founding member of the Abolition
2000 Global Network and has served in recent years as its international
contact. The Network has now grown to more than 2000 organizations
and municipalities in 95 countries. It is one of the world’s
largest civil society networks. It connects abolitionists across
the globe. Its principle aim is to achieve a treaty for the elimination
of nuclear weapons. Developing a strategy to achieve this goal
is the Network’s most important task.
The time is overdue for an effective global campaign
aimed at dramatically changing the policies of the nuclear weapons
states. In the words of Jonathan Schell, we have been given “The
Gift of Time.” But time is running out. General Lee Butler
has pointed out that we have been given a Second Chance by a gracious
Creator, but there may not be a third chance.
We need to focus our attention on a global campaign
to awaken a dormant humanity. I would propose that this campaign
must include the following elements:
First, we need clear simple messages that can reach
people’s hearts and move them to action. Examples might
include: Destroy the bomb, not the children. End the nuclear threat
to humanity. No security in weapons of mass murder. Sunflowers
instead of missiles. A nuclear war can have no winners. Nuclear
war, humanity loses.
Second, these messages must be spread by word of
mouth and by all forms of media, particularly the Internet. Basic
information on the need for abolition and ideas for what a person
can do may be found at wagingpeace.org.
Third, we must have an easily recognizable symbol
to accompany the messages. We already have this, the Sunflower.
We must make better use of it. Sunflowers should be sent regularly
to all leaders of nuclear weapons states, along with substantive
messages calling for abolition.
Fourth, we must enlist major public figures to
help us spread the messages. We must use public service announcements
as well as paid advertisements. We have already succeeded in having
many leading world figures sign an Appeal to End the Nuclear Weapons
Threat to Humanity. This Appeal states clearly that “nuclear
weapons are morally and legally unjustifiable,” and calls
for de-alerting all nuclear weapons and for “good faith
negotiations to achieve a Nuclear Weapons Convention requiring
the phased elimination of all nuclear weapons….” Signers
include Mayor Itoh of Nagasaki and Mayor Akiba of Hiroshima, former
US President Jimmy Carter, Harrison Ford, Michael Douglas, Muhammad
Ali, Barbra Streisand, and 36 Nobel Laureates, including 14 Nobel
Peace Laureates.
Fifth, we must target certain key groups in society:
youth groups, women’s groups, and religious groups. We must
work especially to motivate youth to become active in assuring
their future; to inform women’s groups of the threat nuclear
policies pose to their families; and to alert religious groups
to the moral imperative of nuclear weapons abolition.
Sixth, we must provide an action plan to these
groups. Each group, for example, could select key decision makers
at the local level (a member of Congress or parliamentarian) and
at the national level or international level (President, Prime
Minister, Foreign Minister, Defense Minister, etc.). The group
would be charged with sending monthly letters and sunflowers to
their key decision makers, particularly US decision makers, trying
to persuade that individual to take more effective action for
nuclear abolition. This would, of course, be a worldwide effort.
Seventh, best practices and successes can be shared
by means of the Internet, including our web site www.wagingpeace.org.
Eighth, we must not give up until we have achieved
our goal, and we must not settle for the partial measures offered
by the nuclear weapons states that continue a two-tier system
of nuclear “haves” and “have-nots.”
We must continue to speak out. We must find ways
to compel large masses of our fellow humans to listen to the message
of the hibakusha.
We have a choice. We can end the nuclear weapons
era, or we can run the risk that nuclear weapons will end the
human era. The choice should not be difficult. In fact, the vast
majority of humans would choose to eliminate nuclear weapons.
Today, a small number of individuals in a small number of countries
are holding humanity hostage to a nuclear holocaust. To change
this situation and assure a future free of nuclear threat, people
everywhere must exercise their rights to life and make their voices
heard. They must speak out and act before it is too late. They
must demand an end to the nuclear weapons era.
Our dream is not an impossible dream. It is something
that we can accomplish in our lifetimes. Slavery was abolished,
the Berlin Wall fell, apartheid ended in South Africa. We need
to bring the spirit of the hibakusha to bear on nuclear weapons.
Our goal of a world free of nuclear weapons will be achieved by
individual commitment and discipline, and by joining together
in a great common effort. Achieving our goal will be a victory
for all humanity, for all future generations.
Each of us is a miracle, and every part of life
is miraculous. In opposing nuclear weapons and warfare, we are
not only fighting against something. We are fighting for the miracle
of life.
Our cause is right. It is just. It is timely.
We will prevail because we must prevail.
*David Krieger
is President of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. This speech
was a keynote address at the Nagasaki Global Citizens’ Assembly
for the Elimination of Nuclear Weapons.
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