Saddam Hussein Can't Blackmail Us With a Fissionable Softball
by
Robert Higgs
In
his speech at Cincinnati on October 7, President George W. Bush,
seeking to rally support for his authorization to launch a military
invasion of Iraq, portrayed the threat posed by the Iraqi regime
in lurid terms. The Iraqis, he asserted, possess dreaded chemical
and biological "weapons of mass destruction," and they seek to develop
a nuclear weapon. "If the Iraqi regime is able to produce, buy,
or steal an amount of highly enriched uranium a little larger than
a single softball," the president warned, "it could have a nuclear
weapon in less than a year." And then? "Saddam Hussein would be
in a position to blackmail anyone who opposes his aggression. He
would be in a position to dominate the Middle East. He would be
in a position to threaten America."
Bush
urged that "we cannot wait for the final proof the smoking
gun that could come in the form of a mushroom cloud." Reiterating
that Saddam can "develop a nuclear weapon to blackmail the world,"
the president opined that "the situation could hardly get worse"
and therefore that the United States must eliminate the grave Iraqi
threat before it comes to fruition.
This
view of the world is so grotesquely out of proportion, so preposterously
hyperbolic, that one scarcely knows what to make of it. The president,
along with all those who find his presentation compelling, seems
to have forgotten everything about the long Cold War, and he seems
oblivious to nearly everything about the current world situation.
For
some forty years, the United States lived under constant threat
of nuclear attack by the Soviet Union. For those who have forgotten,
the Soviet regime was not composed of poets and flower peddlers.
If Saddam Hussein is, as the president insists, "a ruthless and
aggressive dictator," what was Joseph Stalin? What was Leonid Brezhnev?
Nor
did the rulers of the USSR play single-softball with respect to
nuclear warheads. By the mid-1980s, the Soviet arsenal contained
more than 10,000 strategic nuclear warheads and some 30,000 nonstrategic
nuclear warheads. Unlike Iraq, which has no capability to deliver
a nuclear weapon at long range, the USSR had more than 6,000 nuclear
warheads mounted on more than a thousand intercontinental ballistic
missiles, most of them programmed to strike targets in the United
States within half an hour of launch. In addition, thousands of
submarine-launched nuclear weapons and more than a thousand nuclear
bombs carried by long-range jet aircraft augmented the Soviet threat.
Yet,
notwithstanding the tens of thousands of Soviet nuclear warheads
and their sophisticated delivery vehicles kept in constant readiness,
the United States was not "blackmailed" by the USSR. Odd that now
the United States should quake at the prospect of a single Iraqi
softball of fissionable material.
The
United States itself, of course, created an awesome nuclear arsenal
(not to speak of its vast stocks of chemical and biological weapons).
Even today, after substantial post-Cold War cutbacks, the US nuclear
arsenal contains more than 3,000 strategic nuclear warheads and
thousands of nonstrategic nuclear weapons. Given that the United
States is the only country ever to have used nuclear weapons in
warfare, its willingness to use such weapons cannot be doubted.
Whereas
Saddam Hussein has never threatened to use nuclear weapons against
the United States, the United States has threatened to use such
weapons against Iraq, most notably when President George H. W. Bush
sent a letter to Saddam Hussein in January 1991, warning him against
using chemical or biological weapons to fight the US and other forces
about to attack Iraq, and not so subtly suggesting that nuclear
retaliation might ensue if he did.
The
Iraqi dictator was deterred in 1991; he can be deterred just as
well in 2002 or any future year. He understands fully that any use
of weapons of mass destruction suitcase nukes, deadly germs,
nerve gas, or anything else by him or any agent of his against
the United States will elicit his immediate destruction, most likely
by means of US nuclear retaliation. Nothing in his history suggests
that he is suicidal; on the contrary, he works extraordinarily hard
at personal survival.
If
the Iraqis understand the nuclear threat they face from the Americans,
other regimes now understand that they too might become targets.
According to the Bush administration's secret Nuclear Posture Review
provided to Congress by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in January
2002, a partial copy of which was obtained by the Los Angeles
Times, "The Bush administration has directed the military to
prepare contingency plans to use nuclear weapons against at least
seven countries [China, Russia, Iraq, North Korea, Iran, Libya,
and Syria] and to build smaller nuclear weapons for use in certain
battlefield situations." Leaders around the world have taken note
of the new US nuclear posture. They surely understand that although
the United States does not speak softly, it does carry a big stick.
Clearly,
then, given the constellation of forces and the understandings of
all the parties regarding action and reaction, Iraq poses no nuclear
threat to the American people or anyone else. President Bush's hyperventilation
about the "mushroom cloud" is nothing but hot air, intended to inspire
fear where such fear has no rational basis.
Unfortunately,
we cannot say the same about nuclear threats from other quarters.
The continuing existence of vast nuclear-weapons stockpiles and
delivery systems in Russia constitutes a tremendous threat to the
safety of humankind. Even if the Russians resist the deliberate
employment of those weapons, the likelihood of accidental launches
or catastrophic failures of their command-and-control system remains
far from trivial. If President Bush really wanted to do something
to allay the nuclear threat to the American people, he would put
the full weight of his administration behind the most expeditious
dismantling of as many of the Russian weapons as possible. The $1
billion a year the United States is spending currently to improve
the security of Russian nuclear storage facilities is pathetically
slight in proportion to the seriousness of the threat those ill-secured
facilities pose to the world.
Also
significant, though seldom mentioned by the establishment media,
are the more than 100 nuclear warheads believed to be in the Israeli
arsenal. Little imagination is required to conceive of the targets
the Israelis probably have in mind for those weapons. Bush seeks
to inspire fear of nuclear attack in the residents of New York,
Chicago, and San Francisco, but the residents of Baghdad, Damascus,
and Teheran have far more reason to be afraid of finding themselves
on the receiving end of such an attack.
Nor
should we overlook the nuclear warheads and long-range missiles
in the hands of the Pakistanis. Unlike Iraq, Pakistan has spawned,
nurtured, and harbored countless thousands of Muslim holy warriors
keen to harm the United States. Evidently, the Bush administration
feels comfortable with Pakistani dictator General Pervez Musharraf
because he is "our son of a bitch," but today's military strongman
may be tomorrow's deposed dictator, and nobody knows how friendly
toward the United States the replacement son of a bitch will be.
A hostile, nuclear-armed, Islamist regime in Pakistan might make
the Taliban look like cute kindergarteners.
In
sum, a nuclear threat does exist, in fact, several of them, but
the mythical softball in Baghdad is not among them. That President
Bush and his warmongering advisers are hellbent to invade Iraq is
all too clear. That Iraq's nuclear program justifies such an invasion
is the sheerest nonsense.
October
11, 2002
Robert
Higgs [send him mail]
is senior fellow in political economy at the Independent
Institute, editor of The
Independent Review,
and author of Crisis
and Leviathan
and the editor of Arms,
Politics, and the Economy.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
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