FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
March 12, 2002
Scott Lynch, Communications Director
202.862.9740 x 3030
mobile 703.725.5680
Bush administration's
nuclear policy termed "schizophrenic and dangerous"
Washington DC: "The recent
leak of classified sections of the Bush administration's Nuclear Posture
Review shows that Bush's nuclear policies are schizophrenic and dangerous.
Twelve years after the end of the Cold War, Bush policies are pushing
the world closer to the use of nuclear weapons, " said Kevin Martin,
Executive Director for Peace Action.
The revelations in the L.A. Times show
that under the NPR the President intends to produce a wide array of
new nuclear weapons and to expand the conditions under which nuclear
weapons would be used. Bush's NPR is the first nuclear review to target
non-nuclear nations and the first to list the nations Pentagon planners
are slating for nuclear targeting. The nations listed are non-nuclear
weapons nations, Iraq, Iran, North Korea, Libya and Syria and nuclear
weapons powers China and Russia.
"On one hand, in the wake of the revelations,
we have Condoleezza Rice saying that, 'The only way to deter the use
(of a weapon of mass destruction) is to be clear it would be met with
a devastating nuclear response.' And, on the other hand, we have George
Bush saying that he has to have his pet project, Star Wars missile defense,
because the rogue nations could not be deterred with nuclear weapons,"
continued Martin.
The administration's NPR lowers the bar
for nuclear weapons use. According to the March 11 L.A. Times, "It
says the weapons could be used in three types of situations: against
targets able to withstand non-nuclear attack; in retaliation for attack
with nuclear, biological or chemical weapons; or 'in the event of surprising
military developments'."
Martin concluded by saying, "Under
Bush's schizophrenic nuclear policy we wind up with the worst of both
worlds. His NPR shreds any vestige of integrity that the U.S. has left
in relation to the Non-Proliferation Treaty-by building new nuclear
weapons and targeting non-nuclear states, Bush specifically breaks our
treaty obligations to the world. This encourages nuclear proliferation
by further legitimizing nuclear weapons. At the same time, existing
nuclear states-Russia, China, India and Pakistan-are forced by Bush's
Star Wars plans to increase or modify their nuclear arsenals so as to
avoid having them be nullified by a U.S. missile defense system, should
it ever exist.
"Taken together, Bush's policy of
new nuclear weapons, first strike nuclear targeting and the attempt
to build a workable missile defense will look to the rest of the world
like a country building an offensive nuclear capability. A world leader-an
only superpower-who, by example, eschews the laws, treaties and norms
that enable global cooperation is a world leader that is setting the
stage for nuclear proliferation and nuclear war. In the end, Bush is
creating a nuclear legacy that will have tragic results for the entire
world."
Peace Action, (formerly Sane and The
Freeze), is the nation's largest peace and disarmament organization.
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