Seven Steps to Improving
US and Global Security
by David Krieger*, September 2001
An effective US response to the September 11th
terrorist attacks - one that improves US and global security -
must be moral, legal, and thoughtful. It must place higher value
on protection of Americans on US soil than on vengeance abroad,
not taking more innocent lives. It must uphold the rule of law
sanctioned by the United Nations, and seek to understand what
grievances against us are legitimate.
To meet these criteria, the US can and should implement
seven policy steps in order to increase both domestic and global
security.
1. Improve intelligence,
and take far stronger preventative security measures. We
must understand why our intelligence services failed to prevent
the September 11th attacks. Why were known associates of Osama
bin Laden not effectively tracked by US intelligence services?
Why did the arrest of a known associate of bin Laden for suspicious
behavior at a flight school weeks before the attacks not alert
the FBI?
2. Act multilaterally to
bring the attackers to justice, under UN auspices and existing
international treaties on terrorism and sabotage. Since
the September 11th attack was an international crime against citizens
of some 80 countries, perpetrators should be brought before an
International Tribunal established for this purpose and tried
for crimes against humanity.
3. Prevent weapons of mass
destruction from being used by terrorists. The US must
give top priority and full funding to efforts to prevent chemical,
biological, radiological or nuclear weapons attacks against population
centers, whether via ground vehicles, crop dusting planes, or
other suspected means of delivery.
4. Bring all nuclear weapons
and fissile material in the world under control and move quickly
toward banning these weapons under international law, as the US
has already agreed to do under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
In the short term we must reduce the number of nuclear weapons
in the world to controllable numbers, on the order of 100 weapons
per nuclear weapon state, to keep them out of terrorist hands.
We must institute an international inventory of all nuclear weapons,
weapons-grade materials and nuclear scientists, and increase financial
and technological support for Cooperative Threat Reduction programs
that strengthen non-proliferation efforts in the former Soviet
Union. Planning should begin now for controlling Pakistan's nuclear
weapons in the event of a government takeover by extremists.
5. Immediately deploy military
protection for all nuclear power plants in the US and rapidly
phase out these plants. Nuclear power reactors are dormant
radiological weapons located in the proximity of major US cities.
Currently the NRC has them on "heightened alert," but
has no meaningful way to repel terrorist attacks on them. Flying
an airplane into a nuclear reactor or waste storage site, or introducing
explosives through intakes, could result in a Chernobyl-type release
of radioactive materials with unimaginable consequences. Until
shut down, operating nuclear power plants should be patrolled
by National Guard troops and protected by anti-aircraft weapons.
Radioactive waste sites and spent fuel stored at nuclear power
plants, should also be guarded, as should shipments of all radioactive
materials that could be used for nuclear or radiological weapons.
6. Learn to listen.
We must ask why the United States is so hated that terrorists
are willing to die themselves to murder us. Is it, as President
Bush said, that they hate freedom and democracy itself, or that
they hate US policies - US military presence in the Middle East,
our conduct of the Gulf War and economic sanctions against Iraq,
our support of a despotic Saudi regime, and our ongoing economic
and military support for Israel? As recently as the 1960s America
was admired throughout the Islamic world precisely because it
was seen as a beacon of freedom and democracy, and an opponent
of autocratic colonialism. A few decades of US policy changed
all that. Although our policy cannot be dictated by terrorism,
short-sighted policies that fuel deep-seated and widespread hatred
can and should be amended. Without considering our policies that
engender such hatred, no security measures will be able to protect
us from future attack.
7. Use our power to uphold
security, justice and dignity not just for ourselves and industrialized
countries allied with us, but for the world, recognizing that
true security is cooperative, and in the long run life in America
will be only as secure as life on the planet as a whole.
Some 35,000 children worldwide die quietly each day from malnutrition
and preventable diseases, while America has systematically reduced
foreign aid and UN funding commitments. The UN has the tools to
promote justice, human rights and sustainable development, but
it can't do so without American commitment and leadership.
Since September 11th, the world has arrived at
a crossroads. America will play a major role in determining its
future path. Will we resort to old instincts of applying crushing
military force, intensifying hatred toward the US without substantially
reducing the threat of terrorism against us? Or will we take the
above steps towards making the US and the world more secure in
all respects?
*David Krieger,
an attorney and political scientist, is President of the Nuclear
Age Peace Foundation.
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