Pentagon Fireworks
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Chip Ward
by Tom Engelhardt and
Chip Ward
One of the
least noticed success stories of George Bush's years in power has
been his administration's ability to focus the world's attention
so singularly first on Saddam Hussein's "nuclear program"
remember that yellowcake brick road? which had absolutely
no
basis in reality; then on a meager (though frightening) North
Korean nuclear force (of questionable use), and finally on a questionable
Iranian nuclear bomb, which, according to the latest National
Intelligence Estimate, is perhaps ten years away and yet somehow
has been ever in our midst.
The near-civilization-destroying
Israeli
nuclear arsenal is hardly ever even noted. The Pakistani/Indian
arsenals, aimed at each other on a hair-trigger and constantly being
upgraded, are rarely in the news (though they may be the most obvious
flashpoint for a nuclear conflagration on the planet). Above all,
the great nuclear arsenals of the two Cold War superpowers, those
MAD (or mutually assured destruction) creations, have been allowed
to slip into obscurity without faintly slipping into oblivion. The
Russians are again upgrading their aging nuclear forces and, with
an ever shakier military, have, if anything, become more reliant
on nuclear power for great-power status; while the Bush administration
has been eager to upgrade the already gargantuan
American arsenal with various kinds of mini-nukes, "bunker busters,"
and other weapons of mass destruction.
Everyone knows
that the only nuclear weapons ever used against civilian populations
came out of the American arsenal on August 6th and 9th, 1945, obliterating
the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Everyone also knows
that, since then, no power on Earth has ever used nuclear weapons
against civilian populations an absolute truth that absolutely
isn't so. In fact, the vast
program of nuclear testing that the U.S. undertook in the American
West from the 1950s into the early 1990s has taken a terrible disease
toll on "downwinders," particularly the citizens of Utah and Nevada
(and wherever else fallout landed in the U.S., not to say, on the
planet) as did the Russian nuclear testing program on its citizenry
(as did the French program, though they were more canny and tested
their bombs not outside Avignon but in the South Seas).
The power
of nuclear weapons was so beyond normal comprehension that the scientific
director of the Manhattan Project, "the father of the atomic bomb,"
Robert Oppenheimer, on observing the first atomic test, immediately
invoked the powers of the gods. As he described it (taken from Richard
Rhodes book, The
Making of the Atomic Bomb):
"We
waited until the blast had passed, walked out of the shelter and
then it was extremely solemn. We knew the world would not be the
same. A few people laughed, a few people cried. Most people were
silent. I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita:
Vishnu is trying to persuade the Prince that he should do his duty
and to impress him he takes on his multi-armed form and says, ‘Now
I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.' I suppose we all thought
that, one way or another."
Now, the most
religiously zealous administration in our history is invoking the
"divine" power to destroy untold millions in seconds in the happy
pursuit and maintenance of global nuclear superiority. The Bush
administration is, in fact, strikingly eager to proliferate in its
supposed war against nuclear proliferation and so is willing once
again to turn Americans into nuclear guinea pigs. Chip Ward, whose
book Canaries
on the Rim took up the earlier round of testing in the Western
U.S., returns to the subject below, giving those Fourth of July
fireworks a slightly different meaning. ~ Tom
Fireworks
Deferred: Divine Strake, Hellish Repercussions
By Chip
Ward
Shock and
awe is coming home. The Bush administration is planning to conduct
future preemptive wars with "mini-nukes" and, to that end, wants
to set off a nuclear-sized explosion at the government's Nevada
Test Site, sixty-five miles northwest of Las Vegas. So far, the
Department of Defense's latest testing plan code named "Divine
Strake" has been thwarted by the organized citizens of Utah
and Nevada, but the clock is running out. The DOD announced the
plan in April and scheduled the blast for early June. After an initial
public outcry in the region, it was postponed for two weeks, then
postponed again until "September or later." Those unfamiliar with
the nightmarish ambitions and skewed reasoning of the nation's wannabe
nuclear-warriors may find Divine Strake unfathomable. Sadly, the
inhabitants of America's original Ground Zero where our nuclear
and chemical weapons were honed during the Cold War know
that thinking all too well. It's a dirty shame...
Dirt Bomb:
Imagine a fertilizer bomb 280 times more powerful than the one Tim
McVeigh used to blow apart the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma
City enough to take down an entire city. Imagine that bomb
as fifty times more powerful than our largest conventional weapon
the Massive Ordinance Air Blast Bomb, or MOAB, that has to
be shoved by hand out of the belly doors of a specially fitted cargo
plane and carries the nickname, "the Mother of All Bombs." But the
bomb we are imagining is way too large to be delivered by any known
conventional method. It would take two cargo planes to deliver the
explosive fuel that will be packed into a pit thirty-six feet deep
by thirty-two feet in circumference. Imagine, then, that this massive
pile of explosives is to be set off on an arid, windswept desert
floor made of a fine, dry soil that has been contaminated by decades
of exposure to nuclear radiation. Although the explosive fuel itself
will not be radioactive thus avoiding an obvious violation
of international treaties that ban aboveground nuclear tests
the dirt and debris that drifts downwind may very well be radioactive,
a possibility that the Pentagon is not keen to know more about.
Now, picture
what happens after the load is fired off. If you see a gigantic,
thick, and rolling mushroom cloud of toxic dirt that climbs 10,000
feet into the atmosphere, then you agree with the Department of
Defense's own expectations. That toxic cloud will drift and fall
eastward over Utah, Colorado, the Midwest, or wherever the wind
carries it.
If your mental
image of that mushroom cloud is vivid, then you are of a certain
age. Maybe you also live in this neck of the West and so are familiar
with the phenomenon from the hundred-plus aboveground atomic explosions
set off at the Nevada Test Site in the 1950s or the more than 800
"underground" explosions that continued until 1992. Most of those
underground tests turned out to be "leakers," often producing smaller
mushroom clouds that escaped through cracks fissured into the ground
as the explosions displaced millions of tons of earth instantly
and the surface of the desert collapsed into immense craters. The
radiation that was vented then drifted far and wide.
Divine Strake,
the latest experiment in irradiating Americans, was postponed briefly
when a public outcry ensued; then postponed indefinitely when the
protests continued to mount and Utah's powerful Senator Orin Hatch
joined Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson and various Nevada politicians
calling for more risk assessment first. Although an exact date to
conduct Divine Strake has not been set, the Department of Defense
is still intent on conducting their experiment as early as this
autumn, according to the latest DoD announcement.
The citizens
of Las Vegas, the nation's sex-alcohol-and-gambling mecca, and the
puritanical Mormon citizens of Utah might seem unlikely political
allies except for the fact that they share a legacy of cancer
and chronic illness, a consequence of the last time our military
rolled the nuclear dice on the Nevada desert floor. Recent research
reveals that most of the nation also suffers from that legacy of
illness, they just aren't as aware of it as the "downwinders" of
Nevada and Utah who actually saw the clouds of fallout heading their
way. Once again, the citizens of those two states find themselves
on the front lines of a struggle with profound international repercussions.
For us, Divine Strake is a weapon of mass déjà vu.
Dirty Lies:
As in earlier decades, planning documents obscure what is happening;
official reassurances are misleading; and the tests are facilitated
by federal agencies whose hallmarks are being distant, secretive,
inaccessible, and arrogant. Last time the Nevada Test Site was active,
the citizens of Utah and Nevada living directly downwind were described
in a classified military report as "a low use segment of the population."
In other words, expendable. Today, sanitized language cloaks the
same old disregard for the consequences of military testing, again
masking a willingness to sacrifice the health of citizens on the
altar of nuclear hegemony.
Listen to
Irene Smith, a spokesperson for the Pentagon's Defense Threat Reduction
Agency that will help facilitate the explosion. According to her,
the test would not be a nuclear simulation at all, but would merely
"assess computer programs to reduce uncertainties in target characterization,
target function, layout, operational status, and geotechnical features."
Oh, okay. Another Pentagon spokesperson, David Rigby, put it a tad
more directly. The purpose of Divine Strake, he stated, was "to
develop better predictive tools for defeating hardened underground
targets." Then he added, "It is not a precursor to a nuclear test."
Unsaid: whether
or not it's a precursor to such a test, it is certainly a precursor
to nuclear use. What, after all, are they predicting? They want
to know what size nuclear warhead will take out a hardened underground
target in a geologic formation much like the one where we suspect
Iran is developing nuclear weapons. A tunnel has already been drilled
through the jointed limestone directly below the site where Divine
Strake would be exploded. North Korea is thought to have similar
tunnels to hide its nuclear weapons-making facilities. Other nations
have built such underground retreats for their national leaders,
much as we did in hillsides around Washington D.C. Then there are
underground facilities for shielding the aircraft of potentially
hostile powers of the future like a hardened "airbase" at
Feidong, China. The descriptions the Department of Defense has offered
of Divine Strake paint the military as cautious and responsible
in trying to determine the size of the smallest nuclear warhead
that could destroy such buried targets. Forget the fact that every
target on their hit list is surrounded by innocent civilians who
will certainly be killed, just as every target is upwind from everyone
else on the planet.
Dirty Joke:
Then there's that name Divine Strake. Strake, not strike,
which might seem logical under the circumstances. "Strake" is either
an obscure nautical term meaning a line of horizontal planking running
the length of a ship's hull or the aerodynamic surface mounted on
the fuselage of an aircraft to control airflow. Why it has been
used in this faux-nuclear context is not clear. Apparently, war
planners regard the test as a platform, support, or control for
something else but what? Or maybe, consciously or not, strake
is an amalgam of "strike" and "mistake." Anyway, whatever one makes
of "strake," "divine" conveys a breathtakingly unabashed and self-righteous
hubris. It's also a clear case of linguistic bait n' switch since
there is nothing divine about slaughtering innocents or destroying
whole landscapes, unless of course it is death we are worshipping
and our own power to play God and decide the fates of untold numbers
of people.
If we wonder
how the rest of the world, especially Islamic cultures, hear these
words, we have only to think how we would hear them if they were
used by Iranians to describe a weapons program they were developing
with the obvious purpose of targeting us. Proof of fanaticism, we
would insist. Maybe we are in a holy war, after all, at least in
the minds of those fashioning the weapons to fight it. While Islamacists
set off car bombs and call it "jihad," we prepare a simulated
nuclear explosion and label it "divine." The people of Utah and
Nevada may be forgiven if they feel like hostages caught in the
crossfire of warring zealots.
Dirty Trick:
If Divine Strake happens, its mushroom cloud will rise like an extended
middle finger to Congress, which killed funding for the "Robust
Nuclear Earth Penetrator," a nuclear weapon the Bush administration
has been eager to develop to penetrate the earth to hardened bunkers
below, and has otherwise refused to fund the development of a new
set of mini-nukes it also desperately wants, or to fund the rapid
re-activation of the Nevada Test Site so it can resume testing for
such "mini-nukes." Testing has always been a key component of developing
new weapons of mass destruction war planners cannot use such
a weapon if they are not sure what it does on the ground. Since
large-scale testing stopped in 1992, the Nevada Test Site has been
operating with a skeleton crew.
Deprived of
the means to develop a new class of bunker-buster nuclear weapons
that can drill deep into the earth, the Bush administration's war
gamers are now planning to simply blow-up nuclear warheads above
such targets. If they can't dig the bastards out, they want to know
just what size nuke will cave-in their hideouts from above. Whatever
the Pentagon says, Divine Strake will closely resemble the destructive
yield of a B-61 nuclear warhead, one of the smallest in the arsenal.
Eventually, war planners will argue that they need to build a new
class of even smaller nukes so as to avoid the casualties and damage
that the bigger ones in the American nuclear arsenal would cause
such is the mad humanitarian logic of nuclear warriors.
The underlying
willingness to launch a "preventive" nuclear war to prevent a nuclear
war, as expressed in such planning, has already become embarrassing
and so must now be hidden. As late as 2005, budget documents describing
the Tunnel Target Defeat Advanced Concept and Technology Demonstration
Series (of which the Divine Strake is a key component) still made
it clear that their overall purpose was to "improve war fighters
confidence in selecting the smallest proper nuclear yield necessary
to destroy underground facilities." Similarly, the Divine Strake
piece of the puzzle was clearly identified as a nuclear simulation.
But 2006 budget documents covering the same plans erased all references
to nuclear simulation and nuclear weapons. As has so often been
the case in the Bush era, satisfied that they could alter reality
simply via a new description of reality, Pentagon spokespeople now
insist that the project that looked, walked, and quacked like a
nuclear duck was just a conventional war chicken that, gosh, only
resembles a duck. Or, as spokesperson Rigby proclaimed, "The planned
detonation has been redefined."
Dirty Job:
Reactivating the semi-comatose Nevada Test Site is considered crucial
to the development of a new set of nuclear warheads. Hence, the
rush to test by any means necessary even with a crude, mammoth
fertilizer bomb. Unstated in the official documentation, and seldom
considered by critics, the Department of Defense is also desperate
to start up the testing again for another reason entirely: The human
infrastructure that developed and managed America's nuclear arsenal
is retiring or dying off.
We stopped
underground testing in 1992 and haven't developed a new nuclear
weapon since the W88 Trident II warheads over a decade ago. The
human knowledge-and-experience base that learned how to handle nuclear
weaponry and the skill sets that can only be attained firsthand
are melting away over time. Reviving the Nevada Test Site would
give the Department of Energy that runs the facility for the DoD
a valuable training ground to rebuild that knowledge base. It would
also give a new generation of technicians and engineers the hands-on
experience they need to keep the nuclear ball rolling. If they can
get the Test Site up and running soon, even for a fertilizer bomb,
the veteran technicians left over from the Cold War will still be
available to instruct and mentor the nuclear newbies. Unfortunately
for them, time is not on their side.
Eat Dirt:
As citizens immediately downwind demanded evidence that Divine Strake
would not raise soils still contaminated by generations of previous
nuclear explosions, Pentagon spokespeople offered the usual assurances,
even while admitting that they had little in the way of data to
back them up. Nothing resembling an environmental impact assessment
had been done, but the implication was that the Pentagon's word
should be good enough. Richard Miller, an industrial health technician,
has documented that six nuclear detonations from the 1950s were
conducted within eight miles of the proposed Divine Strake site,
contaminating the surface soil with radioactive debris that could
be dangerous for many decades to come. Local activists who have
visited the Nevada Test site note that DoD employees do not allow
them to pick up and carry off stones from the area because, they
were told, even dirt sometimes sets off the Geiger counters wielded
by the guards at the gate.
Contrary to
Pentagon claims that the 10,000 foot mushroom cloud from Divine
Strake should dissipate within a mile or two of the explosion, Miller's
research shows that a similarly large debris column that leaked
from the "Baneberry" underground test in 1970 was caught up in the
jet stream and carried all the way to Canada before falling out.
Climate scientists who are studying how dust from storms in Mongolia
coats Colorado mountain snowpack would not find this surprising;
nor would scientists who suspect that high background levels of
mercury in Western states can be explained by the prevailing winds
sweeping across toxic residues from open-pit gold mining in Nevada
and carrying mercury as well as other harmful chemicals hundreds
of miles downwind.
Miller's
previous studies of fallout patterns from the Nevada Test site
showed that, according to the government's own reports, radioactive
materials from both aboveground and underground tests traveled much
farther than previously assumed and in greater concentrations
some hot clouds of fallout settled on places in the Midwest and
even on the New York/New Jersey metropolitan areas. Back in the
1950s and 60s, radiation from the Nevada testing grounds reached
deep into food chains, contaminating grain harvests and milk production
sometimes thousands of miles away. Although airborne debris from
a non-nuclear explosion will contain less harmful materials than
the debris from an actual nuclear blast, no analysis has been done
of how arsenic and other naturally occurring toxins as well as the
more exotic toxins that will result from blowing up 700 tons of
ammonium nitrate will be dispersed into the wind. Clearly, however,
whatever is in that dirt ball will land on playgrounds, lawns, farms,
cattle, and watersheds. We have learned the hard way from pollution,
cancer, and global climate change that we all live downwind and
downstream from one another; that, through a complex global food
web, we also eat each others' dirt.
Salt of
the Earth: During the first era in which the Nevada Test Site
practiced for the Apocalypse, the people immediately downwind were
naïve, trusting, and mostly silent. No more. By now the stories
about misshapen calves, miscarried babies, and children with leukemia
who died in the wake of atomic testing have become common lore.
Everyone here can name a victim. Cancer continues to stalk downwinders
decades after the last exposure. Birth defects and chronic illness
are showing up in their children and grandchildren. Because health
is complex, dynamic, synergistic, variable, and its patterns emerge
slowly and because no effort has been made to track those
exposed and collect data legal proof of the harm that came
with the atomic winds is hard to come by and accountability is nowhere
to be found. Congress did agree to compensate those who were most
obviously exposed to fallout, but applicants had to document their
exposure and the illnesses that followed and, in the process, jump
through a bewildering set of bureaucratic hoops. Most will die before
they see a check.
Polls show
that the citizens of Utah and Nevada are as overwhelmingly opposed
to new atomic weapons testing at the Nevada Test Site as they are
to having the waste from the nation's commercial nuclear power plants
dumped in their deserts. The same grassroots groups that have led
the campaigns against proposed nuclear-waste repositories at Yucca
Mountain, Nevada, and Skull Valley, Utah, responded quickly to the
Divine Strake plan and mobilized media campaigns, Congressional
lobbying, and sign-carrying demonstrations.
In the face
of immediate and widespread opposition, the DoD agreed to hold town-hall
meetings in Las Vegas and in St. George, Utah. Preston Truman, director
of Downwinders, a local
organization that represents the victims of Cold War era nuclear
testing, predicts that those public hearings will only lead "to
escalating demands for hearings from Las Vegas to Boise. Instead
of quieting the ticked-off natives, the delay will give us time
to organize and pressure elected representatives to draw a line
and say ‘no' we will not allow another generation of us to be created."
Local politicians
understand that they will be judged by whether they can halt the
explosion and that they will win important bragging rights if they
succeed. They also know that postponements are not the same as a
cancellation and that there is no guarantee the Pentagon will not
eventually have its way. We know from experience that military planners
are tenacious in pursuit of pet projects and will do everything
in their power to ignore or thwart a public that disagrees with
them. Vanessa Pierce, an organizer for HEAL
Utah, a grassroots group that has led the opposition to shipping
and storing nuclear waste to Utah, warns that "weapons designers
will do whatever it takes to get their fix."
The Real
Dirt: It is not hard to imagine that some future enemy might
threaten our nuclear hegemony by constructing the radioactive equivalent
of a car bomb what Mike
Davis has termed "the poor man's air force" in some cave
or bunker. It is harder to imagine why war planners think that the
development of a new class of bunker-busting bombs would be a "deterrent,"
or that we can meet the threats we face by blowing up nuclear warheads
above bunkers and tunnels. Do war planners seriously think we could
use our nuclear weapons "preventively" on underground targets without
horrific consequences to regional populations that would unleash
such hatred and condemnation as well as the desire for revenge and
violence as to render such a strike as impractical as it is immoral?
This
much is clear to those of us who live immediately downwind from
the Nevada Test Site and other hellish places like Utah's Dugway
Proving Grounds where the military did open-air tests with nerve
agents that sickened hundreds of workers and unknown numbers of
nearby residents, or Hanford, Washington, where the weapons were
loaded with their nuclear fuel, also contaminating groundwater,
soil, and the bloodstreams of hundreds of workers in the process.
Once again in a new age of nuclear testing, American citizens will
be the first victims of our own weapons of mass destruction. We
will not be shredded or incinerated as an enemy would be. Domestic
civilian casualties will sicken and die slowly.
If
there is a next time, we will not go unnoticed again, but neither
will we be able to prove that our suffering resulted from military
testing according to the narrow legal standards that apply. There
will yet again be little or no accountability; and, like unwilling
guinea pigs in some ghastly experiment, we will live with uncertainty
and doubt while waiting for the results of our own military folly
to unfold in our tissues, our blood, our chromosomes, and our bones.
As an elderly woman walking a picket line in St. George to protest
Divine Strake said, "This is supposed to be about national security.
I don't feel more secure. Do you?"
July
1, 2006
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture. Chip Ward is a political activist,
writer, and a library administrator. He is the author of Canaries
on the Rim: Living Downwind in the West (Verso) and Hope's
Horizon: Three Visions for Healing the American Land (Shearwater/Island
Press).
Copyright
© 2006 Chip Ward
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