What About the
WMDs that Do Exist?
by Lawrence S. Wittner*, February, 8, 2004
Now that it's acknowledged by
all but hardcore supporters of the Bush administration that weapons
of mass destruction were not present in Iraq at the time of the
U.S. invasion, it's time to take a look at such weapons that
do exist.
According to the authoritative Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists,
there are more than 30,000 nuclear weapons in the world today.
Eight nations are known to possess them (the United States, Russia,
Britain, France, China, India, Pakistan and Israel). And a ninth
(North Korea) might have some as well.
The vast majority of these nuclear weapons are in the hands
of the United States and Russia. Each of these nations maintains
more than 2,000 of them on hair-trigger alert, ready at a moment's
notice to create a global holocaust in which hundreds of millions
of people would die horribly. Even the much smaller nuclear arsenals
of the other nuclear powers have the potential to cause unimaginable
destruction.
Recognizing the unprecedented dangers posed by nuclear weapons,
the nations of the world have signed a number of important nuclear
arms control and disarmament agreements over the past four decades.
These include the Partial Test Ban Treaty in 1963, the Anti-Ballistic
Missile (ABM) Treaty in 1972 and two Strategic Arms Limitation
Treaties, the first in 1972, the second in 1979.
After a short hiatus occasioned by the revival of the Cold War,
they were followed by the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty
in 1987, two Strategic Arms Reduction Treaties (START I, in 1991
and START II, in 1993), and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty
(CTBT, in 1996). These agreements limited nuclear proliferation,
halted the nuclear arms race and reduced the number of nuclear
weapons.
The lynchpin of these agreements is the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty of 1968, in which the non-nuclear signatories agreed to
forgo development of nuclear weapons in return for a pledge by
the nuclear powers to move toward nuclear disarmament. A few
non-nuclear countries, such as India, kept their options open
by refusing to sign the treaty. But the overwhelming majority
of nations signed the agreement, because they considered it a
useful way to reverse the nuclear arms race.
As late as the year 2000, the parties to
the Non-Proliferation Treaty promised an "unequivocal undertaking by the nuclear-weapon
states to accomplish the total elimination of their nuclear arsenals." This
included taking specific steps, such as preserving and strengthening
the ABM Treaty and ratifying and putting into force the CTBT.
Although the U.S. government is a party to the Non-Proliferation
Treaty -- indeed, initiated it and lobbied hard for its acceptance
-- the Bush administration has decided that it will not be bound
by the treaty's provisions. It has pulled out of the ABM Treaty,
an action that also has the effect of scrapping the START II
Treaty. The administration has also rejected the CTBT and this
past fall pushed legislation through Congress to begin building
new nuclear weapons. A resumption of U.S. nuclear testing, halted
in 1992, seems in the offing.
How long other nations will put up with the flouting by the
United States of the world's arms control agreements before they
resume the nuclear arms race themselves is anybody's guess. But
it probably won't be very long.
As in its other policy initiatives, the
Bush administration has fallen back on the "war on terror" to justify its
abandonment of nuclear arms control and disarmament treaties.
But, as Mohamed ElBaradei, the director-general of the International
Atomic Energy Agency, has noted, terrorist groups will not be
affected by nuclear weapons. "A nuclear deterrent is clearly
ineffective against such groups," he declared this past
October. "They have no cities that can be bombed in reply,
nor are they focused on self-preservation." By building
additional nuclear weapons and provoking other nations to do
the same thing, the Bush administration has enhanced the prospect
of "loose nukes" becoming available to terrorists and
other fanatics.
Wouldn't the United States be safer if there were fewer nuclear
Weapons -- or none? That's what poll after poll has shown that
the public thinks. And that's what both Republican and Democratic
presidents have argued since the advent of the nuclear era. Even
Ronald Reagan, an early nuclear enthusiast, came around to recognizing
the necessity for building a nuclear-free world.
Evidently the Bush administration thinks
otherwise. While talking loosely (and misleadingly) of nuclear
dangers from "evil" regimes,
it has jettisoned the U.S. government's long-standing commitment
to nuclear arms control and disarmament. Unless this policy is
reversed, the world faces disasters of vast proportions.
*Lawrence S. Wittner is a professor of history
at the State University of New York/Albany and author of "Toward
Nuclear Abolition" (2003). This article was orginally posted
in the History News Service.
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