Nuclear Weapons Dialogue
Socrates and the President
by David Krieger, April 5, 2007
(Vaya
aquí para la versión española ) |
On a pleasant spring day,
Socrates ran into the President while on a stroll through
Washington. After
exchanging greetings, the following dialogue ensued.
Socrates: What are nuclear weapons?
President: They are the most destructive weapons ever
invented by man. They are considered a great technological
achievement.
Socrates: What do you use them for?
President: We use them to protect ourselves.
Socrates: How do they protect you?
President: We threaten to use them against anyone who
would attack us.
Socrates: And does that keep others from attacking you?
President: I’ve always thought so.
Socrates: How can you know that it was the nuclear weapons
that kept someone from attacking you? Perhaps they
wouldn’t have attacked you anyway?
President: You have a point, but we think nuclear weapons
make us safer.
Socrates: How do they make you safer?
President: We can destroy any country that might attack
us.
Socrates: Are there countries that might attack you?
President: Of course, it’s a dangerous world.
Socrates: Would you say that other countries can be divided
into two groups, those that are friends and those that
are enemies?
President: Yes.
Socrates: I suppose that you wouldn’t expect to
be attacked by a friendly country, and thus wouldn’t
need nuclear weapons to threaten your friends?
President: That’s true.
Socrates: So, it would only be your enemies that you would
need to threaten with nuclear weapons?
President: Yes.
Socrates: Which enemies are you threatening now with nuclear
weapons?
President: Well, there’s North Korea.
Socrates: But hasn’t North Korea offered to give
up its nuclear weapons in exchange for security assurances
and development assistance?
President: Yes, it has.
Socrates: Are there other enemies?
President: There is Iran.
Socrates: Does Iran have nuclear weapons?
President: No, but they have the capacity to perhaps develop
nuclear weapons in the future.
Socrates: Shouldn’t you then negotiate with them
now to prevent them from developing nuclear weapons?
President: That would make sense, but they are hard to
negotiate with.
Socrates: Since these weapons are so dangerous, wouldn’t
it be worth the effort?
President: I suppose.
Socrates: Isn’t it true that if some countries have
nuclear weapons, other countries will desire them?
President: Yes.
Socrates: Isn’t it true that in the Non-Proliferation
Treaty, nearly all countries in the world agreed to not
develop or acquire nuclear weapons, and in exchange the
countries with nuclear weapons agreed to negotiate in good
faith to give them up?
President: Yes, but the countries with nuclear weapons
only said that to get the non-nuclear weapons states to
join the treaty.
Socrates: So the nuclear weapons states had no intention
of fulfilling their part of the bargain?
President: It would be irresponsible of us to give up
our nuclear weapons.
Socrates: But don’t you agree that your nuclear
weapons are an incentive to other countries to develop
their own nuclear weapons?
President: That makes sense.
Socrates: Will the world be safer if more countries develop
nuclear weapons?
President: No, it will be more dangerous.
Socrates: Then shouldn’t the countries with nuclear
weapons fulfill their obligation to negotiate the elimination
of nuclear weapons?
President: But a terrorist might develop nuclear weapons,
and we need to protect ourselves against terrorism.
Socrates: Did your nuclear weapons protect you against
the terrorist attack on 9/11?
President: No.
Socrates: Could your nuclear weapons have protected you
against a nuclear 9/11?
President: No.
Socrates: You still haven’t located Osama bin Laden. If
terrorists attacked you with nuclear weapons, who would
you retaliate against?
President: I don’t know.
Socrates: Wouldn’t it be less likely for terrorists
to obtain a nuclear weapon if there were far less of them
in the world?
President: Yes.
Socrates: Isn’t this a reason for nuclear disarmament?
President: Yes. But we would need other countries
to join us in nuclear disarmament.
Socrates: How would it be possible to have other countries
join you in nuclear disarmament?
President: Someone would have to take a leadership role
in convening negotiations.
Socrates: Would it be reasonable for the most powerful
country in the world to take such a leadership role?
President: Yes, I suppose it would.
Socrates: Wouldn’t the most powerful country in
the world have everything to gain from such leadership?
President: Yes. It could fulfill its obligations
under international law, while taking the moral high ground. It
could also dramatically reduce the risks of nuclear weapons
falling into the hands of terrorists.
Socrates: What are you waiting for?
President: I must hurry back to my office. I’m
eager to share these thoughts with members of Congress,
and to get the negotiations started right away. Thank
you, Socrates. How fortunate it was to meet you today.
David Krieger, who unearthed this dialogue, is President
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (www.wagingpeace.org).
He is a big fan of Socrates and an advocate of serious
nuclear disarmament.
You can listen to an interview with
David on KPFK-FM's World Focus program aired February 4,
2007 by RIGHT-clicking HERE and
saving the MP3 file to your computer. |