Why Nuclear
Weapons Should Matter
by David Krieger
CommonDreams.org
For most Americans, nuclear weapons are a distant concern, and deciding
what to do about them is a low priority. As a culture, we are relatively
comfortable possessing nuclear weapons, believing that they are, on
balance, a good security hedge in a dangerous world. We leave it to
our leaders to determine what should be done with these weapons. But
our leaders may be moving in exactly the wrong direction.
Seymour Hersh reported in the April 17, 2006 New Yorker magazine that
the US government is developing plans for the possible preemptive use
of nuclear weapons against Iranian nuclear facilities. Although George
Bush dismissed such reports as “wild speculation,” he did
not deny them. The reports should awaken the American people to some
relevant issues. First, our political and military leaders are considering
the preemptive first-use of nuclear weapons, an act that would undoubtedly
constitute aggressive war and a crime against humanity. Second, these
leaders hold open the possibility of using nuclear weapons against a
non-nuclear weapons state, despite official pledges not to do so. Third,
the decision about whether or not to use nuclear weapons preemptively
rests in the hands of a single individual, the president.
The framers of our Constitution could not have imagined the circumstances
of the Nuclear Age, in which the possibility exists of one leader triggering
a nuclear holocaust, yet they wisely stipulated that the consent of
Congress, the political arm of the people, would be necessary to initiate
any war.
We need an open and vigorous discussion in every village, town and
city about the anti-democratic and anti-Constitutional tendencies inherent
in the presidential control of nuclear weapons. Without such discussion,
we relegate the fate of the country and the world to the whims of a
single individual.
In addition, an equally fundamental question must be confronted –
have nuclear weapons increased or decreased our security as a nation?
In today’s world, nuclear weapons are a far more powerful tool
in the hands of a weak actor than in the hands of a powerful state.
Thus, Pakistan can deter India and China can deter the US and Russia.
A powerful state, such as the US, has everything to lose and very little
to gain from the possession of nuclear weapons. This concern isn’t
being effectively addressed in the US.
The more the US relies on nuclear weapons, the more likely it is that
other countries will do so as well. The most reasonable course for the
US to take is to provide leadership to bring the world back from the
nuclear precipice by working to achieve global nuclear disarmament.
An argument can be made that a small number of nuclear weapons are
needed for deterrence until they are all eliminated. But any threat
or use of nuclear weapons for purposes other than minimum deterrence
will certainly encourage other states to seek their own nuclear arsenals,
if only to prevent being bullied by nuclear weapons states. This is
the position that North Korea and Iran find themselves in today.
Current US nuclear policy favors allies, such as Israel and India,
and threatens perceived enemies, such as Iran and North Korea. We are
already engaged in an aggressive, illegal, protracted and costly war
against Iraq, initiated on the false basis that it had a nuclear weapons
program. Iran, because of its uranium enrichment, is currently within
US gun sights.
There is no conceivable US use of nuclear weapons, with their powerful
and unpredictable consequences, that would not turn the US into a pariah
state. The US engenders animosity by pushing beyond the limits imposed
by minimum deterrence and failing to take seriously its disarmament
obligations under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. It also creates
a climate in which other states may seek to develop nuclear arsenals
and in which these weapons may end up in the hands of terrorists. This
should be a major concern for all Americans because it could lead to
US cities being the targets of nuclear weapons used by extremist groups.
Polls show that Americans, like most other people in the world, favor
nuclear disarmament. However, as a nation, we neither press for it nor
question the nuclear policies of our government. But we refrain from
such actions at our peril, for a bad decision involving nuclear weapons
could destroy us. Inattention and apathy leave the weapons and the decision
to use them beyond our reach.
Thus, we continue with nuclear business as usual, drifting toward the
catastrophic day when our policies will lead either to nuclear weapons
again being used by us or, as likely, against us by extremist organizations
that cannot be deterred by threat of retaliation. We are long past time
to bring our nuclear policies back onto the public agenda and open them
to thoughtful public discourse.
David Krieger is the president of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
Find out more at the Foundation’s website www.wagingpeace.org
and its blog, www.wagingpeace.org/blog.
<<
back to main
<<
back to archive