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Bush’s
Nuclear Madness by Frida Berrigan
The agreement by the two largest nuclear powers to reduce deployed strategic warheads by two-thirds over the next ten years was heralded as a historic breakthrough. In some ways it is: It is the first agreement on nuclear weapons reductions of any kind in more than a decade. But the agreement nevertheless leaves the Bush administration free to do pretty much anything it wants. As Jon Stewart of The Daily Show on Comedy Central observed, “Instead of being able to blow the world up 11 or 12 times over, we’ll only be able to do it 4 or 5 times.” The agreement:
No wonder one Bush official described it as “our kind of agreement.” Emphasizing the trivial aspects of the Bush-Putin “agreement” is the release in March of classified portions of the Pentagon’s Nuclear Posture Review (which got only limited media attention when first released in outline form in January) that name nuclear weapons as a central and usable component of the U.S. “anti-terror” arsenal. The Pentagon report stresses the need to develop new nuclear capabilities for use against hardened underground targets like bunkers. The Bush policy appears to take this dangerous approach a step further by embracing the development of “usable” low-yield weapons (known as “mini-nukes”) as a central goal of U.S. nuclear policy. The review suggests shifting U.S. strategic forces from the Cold War triad of ICBMs, bombers and submarine launched ballistic missiles to a triad of forces that includes both non-nuclear and nuclear strike capabilities and highlights the costly Star Wars “defense” system. Given all of this, it is uncannily prescient that the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, a historic antinuclear organization founded by Manhattan Project scientists, moved the minute hand of their “Doomsday Clock” closer to nuclear midnight this past February 27. The Doomsday Clock was designed by the Bulletin founders in 1947 to evoke both the imagery of apocalypse (midnight) and the contemporary idiom of military attack, the countdown to Zero Hour. The clock has stood between 17 and nine minutes to midnight since the end of the Cold War. At the height of tensions between the Soviet Union and the United States in 1984 the clock stood at three minutes to midnight, dramatically expressing the imminence of nuclear danger. This most recent “tick-tocking” from nine to seven minutes before nuclear midnight was triggered by a series of serious setbacks in international security catalogued in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’ February press release:
The Bulletin concludes with a grim but inescapable picture: “Moving the clock’s hands at this time reflects our growing concern that the international community has hit the ‘snooze’ button rather than respond[ing] to the alarm.” Frida Berrigan is a Research Associate at the World Policy Institute and a member of WRL’s Executive Committee. |
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