Stopping a Nuclear
War in South Asia
by David Krieger*, June 3, 2002
Two nuclear-armed
countries stand on the brink of war and the world seems paralyzed
as it watches events unfolding in what seems like slow motion.
It is a war that could easily escalate into a nuclear holocaust
taking millions or tens of millions of lives, and virtually nothing
is being done to end the standoff. The US and the UK have advised
their citizens to leave the region and the UN is pulling out the
families of UN workers in the region, but the UN Security Council
has not yet even put the matter on its agenda let alone put forward
any constructive solution.
The US has sent its Secretary of Defense
to the region, but has lifted sanctions on the sale of military
equipment to both countries that it imposed after they conducted
nuclear tests in 1998. At the same time, the US continues to demonstrate
its own reliance on nuclear weaponry, announcing on June 1st that
it will resume production of plutonium "pits" used to
trigger nuclear warheads.
Here is what Indian novelist Arundhati Roy has
to say about the situation:
"Terrorists have the power to trigger nuclear
war. Non-violence is treated with contempt. Displacement, dispossession,
starvation, poverty, disease, these are all just funny comic strip
items now. Meanwhile, emissaries of the coalition against terror
come and go preaching restraint. Tony Blair arrives to preach
peace and on the side, to sell weapons to both India and Pakistan.
The last question every visiting journalist asks me: 'Are you
writing another book?'
"That question mocks me. Another book? Right
now when it looks as though all the music, the art, the architecture,
the literature, the whole of human civilization means nothing
to the monsters who run the world. What kind of book should I
write? For now, just for now, for just a while pointlessness is
my biggest enemy. That's what nuclear bombs do, whether they're
used or not. They violate everything that is humane, they alter
the meaning of life.
"Why do we tolerate them? Why do we tolerate
the men who use nuclear weapons to blackmail the entire human
race?"
Arundhati Roy is absolutely right. It is because
we tolerate these men and their dangerous, inhumane and genocidal
policies whether they be in the US, Russia, UK, France, China,
Israel, India or Pakistan -- that nuclear war is possible and
increasingly likely.
But what should we do now, while these men remain
in control of the future of the fate of the people of India, Pakistan
and the rest of the world? Here are a few modest suggestions:
Call for the UN Security Council to take charge
of the situation as a matter of highest priority, require Indian
and Pakistani forces to stand down their nuclear forces, move
back from their front line positions, interpose UN Peacekeeping
forces between them and require mediated talks between the leaders
of the two countries.
Call for the permanent members of the UN Security
Council (US, Russia, UK, France and China) to immediately cancel
the sale and delivery of all military equipment to both India
and Pakistan.
To deal with the continuing dangers of nuclear
war, so easy to visualize in the India-Pakistan standoff, we should
also call for all nuclear weapons states to immediately commence
good faith negotiations for the elimination of all nuclear weapons
as required by the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and the International
Court of Justice.
Forty years ago, the world stood by helplessly
as the US and former Soviet Union almost stumbled into nuclear
war during the Cuban Missile Crisis. We obviously failed to learn
the lesson then that nuclear weapons are too dangerous to be left
in the hands of any military force. Now we run the risk that acts
of terrorists in the Kashmir conflict could trigger a war in South
Asia that could quickly escalate to nuclear war. Similar conditions
exist in the Middle East.
The potential for war in South Asia must be defused
now before it erupts into large-scale conflict that could go nuclear.
But it is not enough to only defuse the present crisis. The world
must also become deadly serious about putting away forever these
dangerous instruments of annihilation and genocide, before these
instruments become seriously and massively deadly in wars that
no one can truly desire or in the hands of terrorists.
*David Krieger is president
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
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