No to Nukes
by
Jim Lobe
An
international group of religious and scientific leaders Monday appealed
to the United States and all other nuclear states to pledge never
to use nuclear weapons and to reaffirm their commitments to achieving
total nuclear disarmament.
The
appeal, which was signed by the head of the U.S.
National Council of Churches (NCC) and the president of the
international Catholic peace group Pax Christi, and 74 others
including four Nobel laureates declared the weapons to be
"inherently immoral," and expressed particular concern
over US plans to develop a new generation of nuclear bombs.
"Even
so-called 'mini-nukes' and 'bunker-busters' would have disastrous
effects," the statement declared. "Threatened use of nuclear
weapons in the name of deterrence is morally wrong because it holds
innocent people hostage for political and military purposes."
"Why
do we continue to construct weapons that have the power to destroy
us," asked Reverend Robert Edgar, general secretary of the
NCC, which represents some 140,000 Protestant congregations in the
United States, "rather than build systems and structures that
will save lives and help all persons reach the potential for which
God created them"?
Edgar
said the appeal was being made with a "sense of real urgency,"
particularly in light of new nuclear planning by the George W. Bush
administration and the failure to date of any of the declared nuclear
powers to substantially reduce their stockpiles.
More
than a decade after the end of the Cold War, the United States and
Russia retain about 10,000 tactical and strategic nuclear weapons
each. Together, they account for more than 95 percent of the world's
arsenal.
According
to recent estimates by the Washington-based Center for Defense Information
(CDI), China is next with an estimated 400 warheads, followed by
France (350); Israel, (perhaps 200); Britain (185); India, (60 or
more); and Pakistan, (as many as 48). The Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) says it believes North Korea has had as many as two devices
for several years.
Under
the 1968
Treaty on the Nonproliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), nuclear
countries must not only halt the spread of nuclear weapons to non-nuclear
countries, but also agree to reduce their own arsenals to zero.
In
1996, the International Court of Justice at The Hague ruled that
the NPT required eventual disarmament, a position that was formally
reaffirmed in 2000 by the five permanent members of the United Nations
Security Council.
But
since the Bush administration took power in 2001, Washington has
been ambiguous on the question, and its opposition to the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) seen as a key step toward eventual
disarmament has fanned concerns it does not intend to follow
through on its earlier commitments.
Adding
to these concerns are the administration's efforts to reverse a
unilateral 1993 ban on research and development of low-yield atomic
weapons, such as "mini-nukes" and bunker-busters,"
which Bush officials insist would provide greater flexibility in
dealing with small-scale conflicts, such as last year's war in Iraq,
or with terrorists holed up in remote regions.
Such
weapons could destroy small targets with much less damage from blast
and radiation, according to their proponents.
Democrats
in Congress tried to prevent the administration from going forward
with that research by denying funding for development, but officials
succeeded in prying loose 7.5 million dollars for the project late
last year.
Critics
have strongly assailed the administration for these efforts, arguing
they not only dramatize the value of having nuclear weapons, but
they also undercut the NPT by demonstrating that the world's strongest
nuclear power has no intention of giving them up.
At
the same time, Washington, with 15 of its allies, has launched the
Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI) outside of the U.N. and
NPT frameworks to intercept ships on the high seas believed to be
carrying material or technology that might be intended for illegal
nuclear programs.
"The
US follows a double standard that allows it to develop and threaten
to use nuclear weapons while denying them to smaller countries,"
Hussein Haniff, Malaysian ambassador to the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) which monitors compliance with the NPT
told the Los Angeles Times recently. "We do not
know whether the (NPT) can survive with these policies," he
added.
That
is also a major concern of the backers of the new appeal, which
contains three main parts: all nuclear states must pledge not to
use nuclear weapons and reiterate their commitment to eliminate
them; all non-nuclear states with ambitions to develop or acquire
them must "cease this quest"; and all members of the international
community must carry out an enhanced nonproliferation program to
prevent any nation or organization from obtaining the weapons.
On
the last point, Jonathan Dean, a veteran arms-control diplomat who
signed the appeal on behalf of the Union of Concerned Scientists
(UCS), said the PSI could be helpful, but, "if they're really
serious about it, they would go to the UN Security Council to get
authorization."
"Opposition
to terrorism requires a strong, integrated program of nuclear nonproliferation
and disarmament," the appeal states.
Other
scientists and weapons specialists who signed the document stressed
that the administration's insistence on retaining a nuclear arsenal
and developing new weapons not only risks undermining the NPT and
global nonproliferation efforts, but also makes little military
sense in an era when smaller, more precise conventional weapons
are available.
"Military
leaders don't see any military utility for making these weapons,"
according to Ivan Oerlich, a nuclear physicist at the Federation
of American Scientists (FAS). "It's the civilians who want
them," he said.
"There
is no military mission that cries out for nuclear weapons. These
are weapons in search of a mission."
Indeed,
eight years ago, the former commander of US strategic forces, General
George Lee Butler, joined with 49 other top-ranking retired US,
Soviet and West European military to call for the elimination of
all nuclear weapons.
Nuclear
proliferation, warned Butler, "cannot be contained in a world
where a handful of self-appointed nations both arrogate to themselves
the privilege of owning nuclear weapons and extol the ultimate security
assurances they assert such weapons convey."
The
latest appeal is based more on questions of morality than on utility,
according to its signers, who include Helen Caldicott, founder of
Physicians for Social Responsibility and the Nuclear Policy Research
Institute who shared the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize with International
Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War.
"My
prognosis is, if nothing changes and Bush is reelected, within 10
or 20 years, there will be no life on the planet, or little,"
she said. "It's good to use the words 'sin' and 'evil' (in
this context)," Caldicott added; "it is true that it is
evil to have the power to destroy life on Earth."
Marie
Dennis, who serves on the executive committee of Pax Christi International,
noted the US Catholic Bishops' Conference recently endorsed a global
ban on nuclear weapons as a policy goal, and called on Washington
to issue a no-first-use policy on their use. As recently as one
year ago, in the run-up to its attack on Iraq, the Bush administration
refused to do so.
Non-U.S.
signatories of the appeal include representatives of churches and
civic groups in Russia, Britain, Wales, Germany, Italy, Austria,
Belgium, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Nigeria, South Africa,
Gabon, the Congo, the Philippines, Haiti, Australia and New Zealand.
March
9, 2004
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2004 Inter Press Service
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