The Challenge of Abolishing Nuclear Weapons
by David Krieger, September 3, 2007 |
There
are many serious problems confronting humanity, including
climate change, infectious diseases, poverty and pollution,
but none poses a more pervasive and urgent threat than
the continuing dangers of nuclear weapons. There
are still some 26,000 nuclear weapons in the world. Twelve
thousand of these are deployed, and some 3,500 are on hair-trigger
alert, ready to be fired in moments. Nuclear weapons
are a delicately balanced “Sword of Damocles” hanging
over our human future.
We have seemingly failed to learn the lessons made evident
by the atomic destruction of the cities of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki. Nine nuclear weapons states remain
poised to inflict such mind-numbing devastation again,
but on a far greater scale. The current nuclear weapons
states show no signs of giving up their reliance on nuclear
weapons and, as a result, other states may seek to join
the nuclear club. The spread of nuclear weapons
to additional states will only increase the risks of nuclear
catastrophe.
We are now in the seventh decade since nuclear weapons
were created and used on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. From the outset of the Nuclear Age,
the world has witnessed an insane nuclear arms race, which
has threatened the human species with annihilation. Despite
the end of the Cold War more than 15 years ago, this threat
has not gone away. The future of civilization and
even the human species hangs in the balance, and yet, among
the world’s major problems, very little attention
is being paid to ending this threat. We are challenged,
individually and collectively, to address and end this
ultimate danger to humanity. This is surely one of
the greatest challenges of our time, and we share a common
responsibility to meet this challenge and pass the world
on intact to the next generation.
Warnings
Nuclear
weapons unleash the power within the atom. The creation
of these weapons demonstrated significant scientific achievement,
but left humankind threatened as never before and faced
with the challenge of what to do with them. Albert
Einstein, whose theoretical understanding of the relationship
of energy and mass paved the way for nuclear weapons, was
deeply troubled by the creation of these weapons. “The
unleashed power of the atom,” he stated, “has
changed everything save our modes of thinking, and thus
we drift toward unparalleled catastrophe.” Einstein,
who died in 1955, lived long enough to see the onset of
the nuclear arms race and the development and testing of
thermonuclear weapons.
By
1955, ten years after the first use of nuclear weapons,
both the US and USSR had developed thermonuclear weapons,
potentially thousands of times more powerful than the weapons
that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the nuclear
arms race had begun. The US and USSR had begun testing
nuclear weapons on the lands and in the surrounding waters
of indigenous and island peoples, demonstrating little
concern for the health and well being of the native peoples
affected. Along with philosopher Bertrand Russell,
Einstein issued an appeal to humanity called the Russell-Einstein
Manifesto, which was additionally signed also by nine other
prominent scientists. The Manifesto stated: “There
lies before us, if we choose, continual progress in happiness,
knowledge, and wisdom. Shall we, instead, choose
death, because we cannot forget our quarrels? We
appeal as human beings to human beings: Remember your humanity,
and forget the rest. If you can do so, the way lies
open to a new Paradise; if you cannot, there lies before
you the risk of universal death.” It was a
stark warning.
Other
warnings from highly credible sources throughout the Nuclear
Age sought to put the world on notice of the peril nuclear
weapons pose to humanity. Warnings came from soldiers
and scientists, politicians and literary figures. A
notable warning was issued by a high-level group of eminent
personalities in 1996 in the Report of the Canberra Commission
on the Elimination of Nuclear Weapons. The Report
stated:
“The
Canberra Commission is persuaded that immediate and determined
efforts need to be made to rid the world of nuclear weapons
and the threat they pose to it. The destructiveness
of nuclear weapons is immense. Any use would be catastrophic.
“The proposition that nuclear weapons can be retained
in perpetuity and never used – accidentally or by
decision – defies credibility. The only complete
defense is the elimination of nuclear weapons and assurance
that they will never be produced again.”
One of the members of the Canberra Commission was General
George Lee Butler, who had served as the commander-in-chief
of the United States Strategic Command. In this capacity
General Butler had been in charge of all US strategic nuclear
weapons. After retiring from the US Air Force, General
Butler devoted himself to the abolition of nuclear weapons. He
argued, “What is at stake here is our capacity to
move ever higher the bar of civilized behavior. As
long as we sanctify nuclear weapons as the ultimate arbiter
of conflict, we will have forever capped our capacity to
live on this planet according to a set of ideals that value
human life and eschew a solution that continues to hold
acceptable the shearing away of entire societies. This
simply is wrong. It is morally wrong, and it ultimately
will be the death of humanity.”
In 2006, another expert commission, the Commission on
Weapons of Mass Destruction, also known as the Blix Commission
after its chairman, former chief weapons inspector in Iraq,
Hans Blix, issued a report, echoing the Canberra Commission
Report. Referring to weapons of mass destruction,
the Blix Commission Report stated: “So long as any
state has such weapons – especially nuclear arms – others
will want them. So long as any such weapons remain
in any state’s arsenal, there is a high risk that
they will one day be used, by design or accident. Any
such use would be catastrophic.” The Blix Commission
Report continued:
“The accumulated threat posed by the estimated 27,000
nuclear weapons, in Russia, the United States and the other
NPT [Non-Proliferation Treaty] nuclear-weapon states, merits
worldwide concern. However, especially in these five
states the view is common that nuclear weapons from the
first wave of proliferation somehow are tolerable, while
such weapons in the hands of additional states are viewed
as dangerous….
“The Commission rejects the suggestion that nuclear
weapons in the hands of some pose no threat, while in the
hands of others they place the world in mortal jeopardy. Governments
possessing nuclear weapons can act responsibly or recklessly. Governments
can also change over time. Twenty-seven thousand
nuclear weapons are not an abstract theory. They
exist in today’s world.”
In May 2007, the Founding Congress of the World Future
Council issued “The Hamburg Call to Action.” In
this document they warned: “Nuclear weapons remain
humanity’s most immediate catastrophic threat. These
weapons would destroy cities, countries, civilization and
possibly humanity itself. The danger posed by nuclear
weapons in any hands must be confronted directly and urgently
through a new initiative for the elimination of these instruments
of annihilation.”
With
the serious dangers that nuclear weapons pose to the human
future, it is curious that so many warnings, over so long
a period of time, have gone unheeded. Some 97 percent
of the world’s nuclear weapons are in the arsenals
of the United States and Russia. These must be the
countries that lead the way, working with the seven other
countries that also have nuclear weapons: the UK, France,
China, Israel, India, Pakistan and North Korea. They
must also work with the more than 35 nuclear capable countries
that could choose to develop nuclear arsenals – countries
that possess the technological capability of developing
nuclear weapons. Some countries, such as Japan, are
virtual nuclear powers, possessing the technology and nuclear
materials to develop nuclear arsenals in weeks or months.
Awakening Humanity
What
will it take to awaken humanity, and change its course? Many
people think that this will not happen until there is another
catastrophic use of nuclear weapons. This would,
of course, be an immense tragedy and a great failure of
imagination. If we can imagine that another nuclear
catastrophe is possible, shouldn’t we act now to
prevent it?
Throughout
the Cold War, humanity lived with the danger of Mutually
Assured Destruction, which has the appropriate acronym
of MAD. Today MAD has an additional meaning, Mutually
Assured Delusions. It is delusional to think that
nuclear weapons protect us. Despite the official
justifications that nuclear weapons provide security, it
should be clear to those who think about it that nuclear
weapons themselves cannot provide protection in the sense
of physical security. At best, they can provide psychological
security if one believes that they provide a deterrent
against attack. But belief in and of itself
does not make a person or a society safe, certainly not
from nuclear dangers. The belief itself is a well-promoted
delusion.
The United States is currently spending tens of billions
of dollars to develop a missile defense system, which its
proponents argue is capable of defending against nuclear
attacks by rogue states. The only reasonable interpretation
of this expenditure is that US defense planners understand
that deterrence is not foolproof and that it can fail. Of
course, missile defenses themselves are far from foolproof,
and many experts believe that they will not work as promised
in real-world conditions. In fact, most scientists
not being paid by the missile defense program and the industry
benefiting from it believe that missile defenses will not
be reliable. Like the French Maginot Line, they are
a defensive barrier that is unlikely to provide security. Missile
defenses may be thought of as a “Maginot Line in
the sky,” a highly touted and expensive defensive
system with a very low probability of actually providing
defense.
The Shortcomings of Deterrence
The
United States government bases its need for nuclear weapons
in the 21st century on deterrence. The US Secretaries
of Defense, Energy, and State released a joint statement
in July 2007, “National Security and Nuclear Weapons:
Maintaining Deterrence in the 21st Century.” The
statement begins, “A principal national security
goal of the United States is to deter aggression against
ourselves, our allies, and friends. Every American administration
since President Truman’s day has formulated US national
security policy in much the same terms, making clear to
adversaries and allies alike the essential role that nuclear
weapons play in maintaining deterrence.” What
the statement fails to state is who is being deterred,
why nuclear weapons are critical to deterrence, and whether
the US wouldn’t make its citizens and the world safer
by negotiating the elimination of nuclear weapons.
Reliance on deterrence is dangerous. Deterrence
is a theory about human behavior and it has many shortcomings. For
it to be effective, a threat of retaliation must be accurately
communicated and it must be believed. Such
a threat is likely to increase an opponent’s military
might rather than to reduce conflict. In addition,
deterrence won’t work when an opponent is suicidal
or not locatable. This is surely the case against
non-state extremist actors, groups such as al Qaeda.
Should Nuclear Weapons Confer Prestige?
If nuclear weapons cannot provide protection for a population,
and almost certainly guarantee that a state possessing
them will become a target of other states’ nuclear
weapons, what other advantages do they offer? One
possible answer to this question is prestige. Since
the five permanent members of the United Nations Security
Council all developed nuclear weapons, it may seem to other
states that nuclear weapons would contribute to their prestige
in the world. This idea was given credence by the
large-scale celebrations in the streets of India and Pakistan
when these two countries tested nuclear devices in 1998.
Even the capacity to make nuclear weapons by enriching
uranium or separating plutonium appears to attract attention
and is perceived to bestow prestige. Although there
is no clear evidence that Iran seeks to develop nuclear
arms, its uranium enrichment program has brought it under
intense international scrutiny. This is reflective
of current nuclear double standards, in which some countries,
such as Iran, are highly criticized for developing nuclear
technology, while others, such as India, seem to increase
their status in the international community for having
developed and tested nuclear weapons.
Reflecting the positive view of his country’s nuclear
capacity, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of Brazil
stated in July 2007, “Brazil could rank among those
few nations in the world with a command of uranium enrichment
technology, and I think we will be more highly valued as
a nation – as the power we wish to be.”
Whatever prestige nuclear weapons or the technology to
produce them may confer, it comes with a heavy price. Nuclear
weapons are costly and possessing them will almost certainly
make a country the target of nuclear weapons.
Weapons of the Weak
Nuclear weapons serve the interests of the weak more than
they do the powerful. In the hands of a relatively
weak nation, nuclear weapons can serve as an equalizer. One
has only to look at the difference in the way the US has
treated the three countries that Mr. Bush incorrectly labeled
as being part of an axis of evil: Iraq, Iran and North
Korea. The US invaded Iraq on the false charge of
having a nuclear weapons program, is threatening Iran for
enriching uranium, but has negotiated with North Korea,
which has tested long-range missiles and is believed to
have a small arsenal of nuclear weapons.
From the perspective of a powerful state, even one heavily
armed with nuclear weapons, the worst nightmare would be
for nuclear weapons to fall into the hands of a non-state
extremist organization, whose members were both suicidal
and not locatable. This could create the ideal conditions
for these weapons to be used against a major nuclear power
or another state. The US, for example, would be relatively
helpless against a nuclear-armed al Qaeda. The US
would not be able to deter al Qaeda. It could only
hope to be able to prevent al Qaeda from obtaining a nuclear
weapon or the materials to create one, or locate and destroy
the weapon before it was detonated.
Why Abolish Nuclear Weapons?
Nuclear weapons undermine security. Under current
circumstances, with so many nuclear weapons in the world
and such an abundance of fissile materials for constructing
nuclear weapons, there is a reasonable likelihood that
nuclear weapons will eventually end up in the hands of
non-state extremist organizations. This would be
a disastrous scenario for the world’s most powerful
counties, opening the door to possible nuclear 9/11s.
In addition, nuclear weapons are anti-democratic. They
concentrate power in the hands of single individuals or
small cabals. The president of the United States,
for example, could send the world spiraling into nuclear
holocaust with an order to unleash the US nuclear arsenal. The
undemocratic nature of nuclear weapons should be of great
concern to those who value democracy and the participation
of citizens in decisions that affect their lives.
Nuclear weapons and their delivery system are also extremely
expensive. The US alone has spent over $6 trillion
since the onset of the Nuclear Age. The Soviet Union
bankrupted itself and broke apart after engaging in a nuclear
arms race with the United States for over 40 years. The
funds currently expended for nuclear arsenals could be
used far more constructively.
Nuclear weapons should also be viewed in terms of their
consequences. They are long-range weapons of indiscriminate
mass destruction. They destroy equally civilians
and combatants; infants and the aged; the healthy and the
infirm; men, women and children. Viewed from this
perspective, these weapons must be seen as among the most
cowardly ever created. By their possession, with
the implicit threat of use that possession implies, nuclear
weapons also destroy the souls of those who rely upon them.
They are a coward’s weapon and their possession,
threat and use is dishonorable. This was the conclusion
of virtually all of the top military leaders of World War
II, most of whom were morally distraught that the US used
these weapons against Japan. Truman’s Chief
of Staff, Admiral William Leahy, for example, wrote this
about the use of atomic weapons on Japan: “My own
feeling was that in being the first to use it, we had adopted
an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark
Ages. I was not taught to make war in that fashion,
and wars cannot be won by destroying women and children.”
Humanity Has a Choice
Humanity still has a choice; in fact, it is the same choice
posed in the Russell-Einstein Manifesto. We can choose
to eliminate nuclear weapons or risk the elimination of
the human species. A continuation of the status
quo, of reliance by some states on nuclear arsenals, is
likely to result in the proliferation of nuclear weapons
to others states and to extremist organizations. Ultimately,
it will lead to their use. Richard Garwin, a leading
US atomic scientist who helped develop thermonuclear weapons,
believes that there is a 20 percent per year probability
of nuclear weapons being used on a US or European city. This
is a dangerous probability. The alternative is to
pursue the path of eliminating nuclear weapons.
What would it take to achieve the elimination of nuclear
weapons? On the one hand, the answer to this question
is “very little.” On the other hand,
because of the resistance, complacency and myopia of the
leaders of the nuclear weapons states, the answer may be “a
great amount.”
To move forward with the elimination of nuclear weapons
would require compliance with existing international law. The
International Court of Justice concluded in 1996: “There
exists an obligation to pursue in good faith and bring
to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament
in all its aspects under strict and effective international
control.” In the decade since the Court announced
its opinion, there has been scant evidence of “good
faith” negotiations by the nuclear weapons states
moving toward any reasonable conclusion.
The negotiations that the Court describes as an obligation
of the nuclear weapons states would need to move toward
the creation of a Nuclear Weapons Convention, a treaty
setting forth a program for the phased and irreversible
elimination of nuclear weapons with appropriate means of
verification. With the political will to pursue these
required negotiations, a treaty would not be a difficult
task to achieve. What is lacking is the requisite
political will on the part of the leaders of nuclear weapons
states. To achieve the requisite political will,
the citizens of the nuclear weapons states, and particularly
of the United States, must make their voices heard.
A Special Responsibility, A Tragic Failure
The United States, as the world’s most powerful
country and the only country to have used nuclear weapons
in warfare, has a special responsibility to lead in fulfilling
its obligations under international law. In fact,
without US leadership, it is unlikely that progress will
be possible toward nuclear disarmament. But rather
than lead in this direction, the United States under the
Bush administration has been the major obstacle to nuclear
disarmament. It has failed to ratify the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty; withdrawn from the Anti-Ballistic Missile
Treaty to pursue missile defenses, space weaponization
and increased military dominance; opposed a verifiable
Fissile Material Cut-Off Treaty; and in general has acted
as an obstacle to progress on all matters of nuclear disarmament.
The US has also pursued a double standard with regard
to nuclear weapons. It has been silent on Israeli
nuclear weapons, and now seeks to change its own non-proliferation
laws to enable it to provide nuclear technology and materials
to India, a country that has not joined the nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty and has developed a nuclear arsenal. At the
same time, in its 2001 Nuclear Posture Review the US called
for contingency plans to use nuclear weapons against seven
countries, five of which were at the time thought to be
non-nuclear weapons states.
It is tragic that the American people don’t seem
to grasp the seriousness of their government’s failure. They
are lacking in education that would lead to an understanding
of the situation. Their attention has been diverted
to Iraq, Iran and North Korea, and they fail to see what
is closest to home: the failure of their own government
to lead in a constructive and lawful manner to achieve
the elimination of nuclear weapons. “And thus,” in
Einstein’s words, “we drift toward unparalleled
catastrophe.”
To bring about real change in nuclear policy, people must
begin with a vision of a world free of nuclear weapons,
and then they must speak out as if their lives and the
lives of their children depended on their actions. It
is unlikely that governments will give up powerful weapons
on their own accord. They must be pushed by their
citizenry – citizens unwilling to continue to run
the risk of nuclear holocaust or to accept the logic of
Mutually Assured Delusions.
A New Story
We need a new story for considering nuclear dangers, a
story that begins with the long struggle of humans over
some three million years to arrive at our present state
of civilization. That state is far from perfect,
but few would suggest that it should be sacrificed on the
altar of weapons of mass annihilation capable of reducing
our major cities to rubble.
The
first humans lived short and brutal lives. They
were both predators and preyed upon. They survived
by their nimbleness, more of body than mind, doing well
if they lived into their twenties. Enough early humans
were able to protect and nurture their infants in their
hazardous environments that some of the children of each
generation could survive to an age when they could themselves
reproduce and repeat the cycle.
Without
these clever and capable early ancestors, and those that
followed who met the distinct challenges of their times
and environments for many hundreds of thousands of generations,
we would not be here. Our human ancestors needed
to survive the perils of birth, infancy, childhood and
at least early maturity in order for each of us to have
made it into the world.
On
the basis of the pure physical capacity to survive, we
owe a debt to our ancestors, but with this debt comes something
more. We each have a responsibility for helping
to assure the chain of human survival that passes the world
on intact to the next generation. In addition to
this, we share an obligation to preserve the accumulated
wisdom and beauty created by those who have walked the
earth before us – the ideas of the great storytellers
and philosophers, the great music, literature and art,
the artifacts of humankind’s collective genius in
its varied forms. Our responsibility extends not
only to each other and to the future, but to preserve and
protect the rich legacy we have received from the past – from
Socrates to Shakespeare; from Homer to Hemingway; from
Beethoven to the Beatles; from Michelangelo to Monet.
All
of the manifestations of human genius and triumph are placed
in jeopardy by nuclear weapons and the threat of their
use. Why do we tolerate this threat? Why are
we docile in the face of policies that could end not only
humanity, but life itself?
Those
of us alive today are the gatekeepers to the future, but
the management of power by the nuclear-armed states has
left us vulnerable to the continuing threat of nuclear
annihilation. The only way to be free of this threat
is to be free of nuclear weapons. This is the greatest
challenge of our time. It will require education
so that people can learn to think about nuclear weapons
and war in a new way. We will need organizational
modes of collective action to bring pressure to bear on
governments to achieve nuclear disarmament. Ordinary
people must lead from below; citizens must lead their political
leaders.
The Role of Citizens
Organizations
working for nuclear disarmament – such as the Nuclear
Age Peace Foundation, Abolition 2000, the Middle Powers
Initiative and the Mayors for Peace – can help give
shape to efforts to put pressure on governments. But
the change that is needed cannot be the sole responsibility
of interest groups. Without the intervention of
large numbers of people, we will go on with business as
usual, a course that seems likely to lead to nuclear proliferation
and further catastrophic uses of nuclear weapons. This
is not a distant problem, nor one that can be shunted aside
and left to governments.
We who have entered the 21st century are not exempt from
responsibility for assuring a human future. Fifty
years ago, Japanese Buddhist leader Josei Toda called for
young people to take the lead in pursuing nuclear disarmament. His
proposal has great merit given the fact that it is their
future and the future of their children that is imperiled
by these weapons. But we must ask: How do we educate
young people to care and to believe that they can make
a difference in what must seem an often indifferent and
terribly dangerous world? How do we empower young
people to live with integrity as citizens of the world
and press for the changes that are needed to assure their
future?
Change occurs one person at a time. Each of us
must take responsibility for creating a world free of nuclear
threat. Noted anthropologist Margaret Mead offered
this hopeful advice: “Never doubt that a small group
of people can change the world. Indeed, it is the
only thing that ever has.”
In the end, the necessary changes to eliminate nuclear
dangers cannot be left to governments alone. For
the most part, governments have failed to come to grips
with the nuclear dangers that threaten humanity. Most
governments have not even tried. They have lived
with double standards, engaged in insane nuclear arms races,
lived under “nuclear umbrellas,” and continued
to rely upon nuclear weapons against the security interests
of their own people.
It is up to each of us to play a role. What can
we do? There is no panacea, no magic wand. Change
requires recognizing that this is not someone else’s
problem, but a shared problem of humanity. It requires
rolling up our sleeves and becoming active.
I have five suggestions for those who would like to contribute
to ending the nuclear threat to humanity. First,
become better informed. You can do this by visiting
the website of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation at www.wagingpeace.org as
well as many other informative websites focused on nuclear
disarmament. Second, speak out, wherever you are. You
can raise these issues with your family, friends, and other
people around you. Third, join an organization working
to abolish nuclear weapons, and help it to become more
successful. By becoming active in an organization
working for nuclear disarmament you can help the outreach
and effectiveness of the effort. Fourth, use your
unique talents. Each of us has special talents that
can help make a difference. Use them. Fifth,
be persistent. This is a tough job requiring strength
and persistence. Even if desired results don’t
come about quickly, we must remain committed and not give
up.
By working for peace and a world free of nuclear weapons,
you can be a force for saving the world. Being a
nuclear weapons abolitionist will require all the courage
and commitment of those who worked in the 19th century
for the abolition of slavery. Abolishing slavery
was the challenge of that time; abolishing nuclear weapons
is the even more consequential challenge of our time.
[Please note this related upcoming event: "The
Challenge of Abolishing Nuclear Weapons" Conference,
San Francisco, September 8-9.]
David Krieger is the President of the Nuclear Age Peace
Foundation (www.wagingpeace.org)
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