Bush Abandons Plan for New Nukes
by
Lawrence S. Wittner
by Lawrence S. Wittner
Confronted with
strong opposition from disarmament groups and from Congress, the
Bush administration has abandoned its plan to develop a nuclear
bunker buster.
This
new weapon, formally known as the Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator,
became the symbol of the Bush administrations plan to build
up the U.S. nuclear arsenal and wage nuclear war. The administration
alleged that the bunker buster was necessary to destroy deeply buried
and hardened enemy targets, and that thanks to the fact that
it would explode underground it would produce minimal collateral
damage. But critics charged that, with more than 70 times the destructive
power of the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima, a single bunker buster
might kill millions of people. This contention was reinforced by
an April 2005 report from a National Academy of Sciences panel,
which claimed that such a device, exploded underground, would likely
cause the same number of casualties as a weapon of comparable power
exploded on the earths surface.
In
addition, building the weapon symbolized the Bush administrations
flouting of the U.S. governments commitments to nuclear arms
control and disarmament. Under the terms of the nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) of 1968, the nuclear powers including the United
States agreed to move toward elimination of their own nuclear
arsenals. And, in fact, after much hesitation, this is what they
began to do, through treaties and unilateral action, over the ensuing
years. Therefore, it came as a shock to the arms control community
when the Bush administration pulled out of the ABM Treaty, opposed
ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and pressed Congress
for funding to build new nuclear weapons, including mini-nukes
and bunker busters.
Given
the symbolic, high-profile status of the bunker buster, groups like
the Union of Concerned Scientists, the Council for a Livable World,
the Friends Committee on National Legislation, and Peace Action
worked hard to defeat it mobilizing public opposition and lobbying
fiercely against congressional funding. Last year, their efforts
paid off, when Congress, despite its Republican majority, refused
to support the weapons development. A key opponent was Representative
David Hobson, the Republican chair of the House Energy and Water
Appropriations Committee, who insisted that the U.S. government
could hardly expect other nations to honor their NPT commitments
if it ignored its own.
With
the Bush administration determined to secure the new weapon, bunker
buster funding came to the fore again this year. Debate on the proposal
was intense. U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) insisted that
building the bunker buster sends the wrong signals to the
rest of the world by reopening the nuclear door and beginning the
testing and development of a new generation of nuclear weapons.
Ultimately, both the Senate and the House rejected the administration
measure. The administrations only remaining hope lay in pushing
through a scaled-back version of its plan, for $4 million. Championed
by U.S. Senator Pete Domenici (R-NM), long an avid supporter of
nuclear weapons development in his home state, the bill passed the
Senate but was again blocked in the House, where Representative
Hobson once more led the way. In recent months, a House-Senate conference
committee grappled with the legislation, but without making a decision
on it.
Finally,
on October 25, Senator Domenici pulled the plug on the funding proposal,
announcing that it was being dropped at the request of the Energy
Department. An administration official explained that a decision
had been made to concentrate on a non-nuclear bunker buster. Naturally,
the arms control and disarmament community was overjoyed. According
to Stephen Young, a senior analyst with the Union of Concerned Scientists,
this is a true victory for a more rational nuclear policy.
Although the reason for the administrations abandonment of
its new nuclear weapon program remains unclear, it does appear that
it resulted from public pressure, Democratic opposition, and a division
on the issue among Republicans.
Of
course, much more has to be done before the world is safe from the
nuclear menace. Some 30,000 nuclear weapons remain in existence,
with about 10,000 of them in the hands of the U.S. government.
But
the story of the bunker busters defeat illustrates that, even
in relatively unpromising circumstances, it is possible to rein
in the nuclear ambitions of government officials.
November
2, 2005
Lawrence
S. Wittner [send him mail]
is Professor of History at the State University of New York/Albany.
His latest book is Toward
Nuclear Abolition: A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement,
1971 to the Present (Stanford University Press).
This
article originally appeared on the History
News Network.
Copyright
© 2005 History News Network. Reprinted
with author's permission.
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