The
Second Nuclear Age
PressInfo #
191
October
3, 2003
By
David
Krieger,
TFF Associate
"The world has entered a new nuclear age, a
second nuclear age. The danger is rising that nuclear
weapons will be used against the United States. Just as
bad, the danger is rising that the United States will use
nuclear weapons against others."
-Jonathan
Schell
With the fall of the Berlin Wall and the breakup of
the Soviet Union, many Americans gave a deep sigh of
relief and pronounced the nuclear threat at an end. It
was a heady time. I can remember being asked, "What will
the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation do now that the nuclear
threat is gone?" My response was that the nuclear threat
was still with us despite these momentous changes in the
geopolitical landscape. It was far too soon to pronounce
the Nuclear Age dead.
In retrospect, from a vantage point of more than 12
years after these tectonic shifts in geopolitics, we can
see that the Nuclear Age, with new and growing dangers,
is still with us. The first half-century of the Nuclear
Age was marked by a mad arms race between the United
States and the former Soviet Union that resulted in the
development and deployment of tens of thousands of
nuclear weapons capable of destroying civilization and
most life on Earth.
While the nuclear standoff between the US and former
USSR is no longer the extraordinary danger it was, new
nuclear dangers have arisen that have led many astute
observers to the conclusion that we have entered a second
Nuclear Age. Among these new dangers are:
- the nuclear standoff between nuclear-armed rivals
India and Pakistan, two countries that have more than
a fifty-year history of warfare and serious
tensions;
- the partial breakdown of command and control
systems that protect nuclear weapons and weapons-grade
nuclear materials in the former Soviet countries,
giving rise to the increased possibility that these
weapons and materials could fall into the hands of
other countries and terrorist organizations;
- the pursuit of nuclear weapons programs and the
development of nuclear arsenals by countries, such as
North Korea and Iran, that feel threatened by the Bush
administration's policy of preemptive war;
- the impetus that Israel's nuclear arsenal gives to
other countries in the Middle East to develop their
own nuclear arsenals;
- the provocative policies of the Bush
administration to pursue smaller, more usable nuclear
weapons and those with a specific use in warfare such
as the so-called "bunker busters," blurring the
distinction between conventional and nuclear arms;
and
- the possibility that the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty, which has already lost its first member, North
Korea, could fall apart due to the failure of the
nuclear weapons states to fulfill their obligations
under Article VI of the Treaty to engage in good faith
efforts to achieve nuclear disarmament.
The United States, as the world's sole surviving
superpower, has had the opportunity to lead the world
toward a nuclear weapons free future. It is an
opportunity that our country has largely rejected, and
has done so at its own peril. Political leaders in the
United States have yet to grasp that nuclear weapons make
us less secure rather than more so, and their policies
have reflected this failure to comprehend the dangers of
the second Nuclear Age.
In the year 2000, the parties to the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, including the United States,
agreed to 13 Practical Steps for Nuclear Disarmament.
These included "[a]n unequivocal undertaking by
the nuclear-weapon states to accomplish the total
elimination of their nuclear arsenals," along with
specific steps such as ratification and entry into force
of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), preserving
and strengthening the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM)
Treaty, and applying the principle of irreversibility to
nuclear disarmament.
In each of these areas the United States, under the
Bush administration, has led in the opposite direction.
The administration's policies have sent a message to the
world that the world's strongest military power finds
nuclear weapons useful for its national security and
plans to maintain its nuclear arsenal for the indefinite
future. The Bush administration has opposed ratification
of the CTBT and has withdrawn from the ABM Treaty. Its
approach to nuclear disarmament has been to employ
maximum flexibility and make reductions fully
reversible.
The US pact with Russia, the Strategic Offensive
Reductions Treaty (SORT), signed by Presidents Bush and
Putin in May 2002, calls for reductions in deployed
strategic nuclear weapons to between 1,700 and 2,200
weapons on each side by the year 2012. The treaty has no
timetable other than the final date to achieve these
reductions, and there is no requirement to make these
reductions irreversible. The Bush administration has
already announced that it plans to put the weapons it
takes off active deployment status into storage ready for
redeployment on short notice. The Russians are likely to
follow suit, creating more opportunity for the stored
nuclear weapons in both countries to fall into the hands
of terrorists. In the meantime, the US and Russia are
each maintaining over 2,000 nuclear weapons on
hair-trigger alert, subject to being launched
accidentally.
In addition, the Bush administration pursued an
illegal preventive war against Iraq because of its
purported, but never found, weapons of mass destruction.
This action sent a message to North Korea, Iran and other
states that if they want to be more secure from US
attack, they had better develop nuclear forces to deter
the US.
North Korea has repeatedly made a simple request of
the US. They have asked for security assurances from the
US that they will not be attacked. This is not
unreasonable considering that the Korean War has never
officially ended, that the US maintains some 40,000
troops near the Demilitarized Zone that separates the two
Koreas, that the US keeps nuclear-armed submarines in the
waters off the Korean Peninsula, and that the Bush
administration has pursued a doctrine of preemption. In
return for a Non-Aggression Pact from the US, the North
Koreans have indicated that they would give up their
nuclear weapons program and rejoin the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty.
It would be a great shame if Americans only awakened
to the dangers of the second Nuclear Age with the
detonation of one or more nuclear weapons somewhere in
the world. Given the increased threats associated with
terrorism and the dangers that nuclear weapons or
bomb-grade nuclear materials could fall into the hands of
terrorists, it is not beyond the realm of possibility
that the next detonation of a nuclear weapon or other
weapon of mass destruction could take place in a city in
the United States.
It is of critical importance that Americans be made
aware of these dangers and reverse our policies before we
are confronted by such tragedy. The Nuclear Age Peace
Foundation has set forth a series of needed steps that
have been widely endorsed by prominent leaders, including
38 Nobel Laureates, in its Appeal to End the Nuclear
Weapons Threat to Humanity and All Life. These steps are
de-alerting all nuclear weapons, reaffirming commitments
to the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty and the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, commencing good faith
negotiations on a treaty to eliminate all nuclear
weapons, declaring a policy of No First Use of nuclear
weapons and reallocating resources from nuclear arsenals
to improving human health, education and welfare
throughout the world.
Our challenge is to translate this program into
action. It will require a sea change in the thinking of
US political leaders. This cannot happen without a
grassroots movement from below, that is, from ordinary
citizens, who hold the highest office in the land. The
starting point is the recognition that the Nuclear Age
did not end with the fall of the Berlin Wall, and that we
are now living in the second Nuclear Age. We ask for your
support in this fight for the future of humanity and all
life on our planet.
© TFF 2003
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