The Indoctrination of Missile Launch Officers
by David Krieger
August 01, 2011

David KriegerThe US Air Force has a history of indoctrinating its missile launch officers to assure that these officers will have no moral qualms about following orders to use weapons of mass annihilation.  In a PowerPoint presentation used in the training, the Air Force makes absurd arguments for the morality of war and the use of nuclear weapons.  It includes numerous quotations from both the Old and New Testaments to make the case for the morality of war.  For example, “Jesus Christ is the mighty warrior.” (Revelation 19:11)

The Air Force training acknowledges the devastation caused at Hiroshima and then raises questions for the young officers to contemplate, in seeking to assure that they are not hindered in their assignment to launch nuclear weapons if ordered to do so.  Among the questions are those below with my own response to each of them in italics.

No, I can’t imagine such a circumstance, and with nuclear weapons, the number of civilians killed could reach far beyond thousands into the millions.

No, I can’t exercise such faith in our decision makers.  I know, for example, that in my lifetime, US leaders have not always been honest and have led us into aggressive and illegal wars on false grounds.

Why not put our efforts where our hopes and our consciences are instead of training for a job that would cause untold death and suffering?

Deterrence has many flaws.  The capability and the will to launch nuclear weapons are not sufficient to assure that nuclear deterrence will be effective.  It requires, for example, rationality and clear communications.  The will required is the will to massively slaughter innocent people.  Nuclear weapons are immoral instruments and nuclear deterrence is an immoral doctrine that could result in mass annihilation.  We profess to have the will to use nuclear weapons now, and I can only respond by continuing to work to assure that we will have moved beyond nuclear weapons and the theory of deterrence long before fifty years have passed.

Bonus answer: We are morally safer working to eliminate all nuclear weapons than to maintain them, assuring that no one has either the capacity or the moral indoctrination to launch these weapons of mass annihilation.

To bolster its argument for the morality of using nuclear weapons, the Air Force training quotes former Nazi rocket scientist Wernher von Braun: “We wanted to see the world spared another conflict such as Germany had just been through, and we felt that only by surrendering such a weapon to people who are guided by the Bible could such an assurance to the world be best secured.”  It is a fine touch to turn to a former Nazi scientist for moral standards. 

Captain Charles Nicholls, Electronic Warfare Officer of the 328th Bombardment Squadron, is quoted in the PowerPoint as stating: “Each of us in the strategic nuclear deterrence force must establish a moral foundation for our service.  Our will to unhesitatingly fulfill our duty will strengthen deterrence, the morally best choice of action to assure peace and freedom.”  He calls, in essence, for a moral foundation to unhesitatingly choose the morality of massive nuclear annihilation.

The PowerPoint presentation also includes a quote from General Omar Bradley: “Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.  We know more about war than we know about peace, more about killing than we know about living.  We have grasped the mystery of the atom and rejected the Sermon on the Mount.”  The Air Force would do well to reflect upon General Bradley’s statement. 

The Air Force seems to have been comfortable with attempting to demonstrate its nuclear prowess in combination with its ethical infancy.  It has just announced, however, that it has taken this PowerPoint out of its curriculum “to have a good hard look at it and make sure it reflected views of modern society.”  It would be a significant step forward if it were to find that society’s views, long after the end of the Cold War, reflected the morality of a desire to urgently achieve the phased, verifiable, irreversible and transparent elimination of nuclear weapons.

David Krieger is President of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.

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Josh12-23-2011   13:20

Sir, with all due respect, which is little in your case...you are a fool for believing the surface of what you have seen/heard. It is evident in your language that you are a dedicated liberal at heart, and you were probably a supportive protester during Vietnam and/or any other conflict in which the U.S. has been a part; rather, than a supporter of our troops facing such conflict. I would also venture to say that you have never had the courage to support and defend the constitution of this great nation as a military member. The deterrence that our missile crews provide have eliminated nuclear attacks on our country, unless I may have missed something. The deterrence doesn't come in the form of hoping to never launch, which we do hope never happens. It rather comes in the form of highly trained and professional officers that may not want to launch, but through discipline and training will if absolutely necessary. This is the key to our deterrence, and this is what tells our adversaries that we have not only the capability, but also the will. Try thinking a little more critically, not just the superficial liberal ways in which you are accustomed. On a lighter note, try being more supportive of our country and our military, and not so quick to bash. And, if you can't, try relocating to a country in which you believe your views would prove more fitting.

Thank You, Mr. Krieger08-12-2012   13:53

This is an excellent insight as to the misguided nature of military training in the United States.  It is telling that the military training relies on religious symbols and stories in the attempt to justify mass slaughter.

I am grateful to you, Mr. Krieger, for taking the time to reveal this important detail that sheds light on what must be a question to the vast majority of Americans who favor total abolishment of nuclear weapons: that question is "will those in the military have the good sense to ignore an order to end the entire human race, or are they being indoctrinated-- using my tax dollars-- to disavow their own humanity?" 

Your article helps to answer this question as well as offers a glimmer of hope-- through mentioning the withdraw of this ludicrous power point presentation-- as a result of officials believing it may not coincide with the values of the great majority of Americans, which it certainly does not. 

I will be asking your permission to reprint this article in The Reader Magazine, which I own, so that the 390,000 people who receive it are made aware of this indoctrination that is, in truth, a hindrance to their own personal security, and so they may be given the opportunity to approve or disapprove of their tax dollars being used in this way. 

Thank you again.

Christopher M. Theodore

Founder, The Reader Magazine


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