Why Today's Peace Activists Should Not Be Discouraged: An Example
From 1958
by
Lawrence S. Wittner
by Lawrence S. Wittner
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After nearly
five years of bloody, costly war in Iraq, with no end in sight,
many peace activists feel discouraged. Protest against the war and
the rise of antiwar public opinion seem to have had little effect
upon government policy.
But, in fact,
it is too early to say. Who really knows what impact peace activism
and widespread peace sentiment have had in the past five years or
will have in the near future? Certainly not historians, who will
spend decades pulling together such information from once secret
government records and after-the-fact interviews.
What historians
can do, of course, is assess the impact of popular protest on events
in the more distant past. And here the record provides numerous
intriguing illustrations of the power of protest.
One example
along these lines occurred fifty years ago, in 1958, when the Soviet
and U.S. governments stopped their nuclear explosions and commenced
negotiations for a nuclear test ban treaty.
Ever since
the first explosion of an atomic bomb, at Alamogordo, in July 1945,
the great powers had been engaged in a deadly race to develop, test,
and deploy what they considered the ultimate weapon, the final guarantee
of their "national security." The United States, of course,
had the lead, and used this with devastating effect upon Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. But, in 1949, the U.S. monopoly on nuclear weapons
was cracked by the Soviet Union. In 1952, the British also entered
the nuclear club. As the nuclear arms race accelerated, all three
powers worked on producing a hydrogen bomb a weapon with a thousand
times the destructive power of the bomb that annihilated Hiroshima.
Within a short time, all of them were testing H-bombs for their
rapidly-growing nuclear arsenals.
The nuclear
tests which, by late 1958, numbered at least 190 (125 by the United
States, 44 by the Soviet Union, and 21 by Britain) were conducted
mostly in the atmosphere and, in these cases, were often quite dramatic.
Enormous explosions rent the earth, sending vast mushroom clouds
aloft that scattered radioactive debris (fallout) around the globe.
The H-bomb test of March 1, 1954, for example which the U.S. government
conducted at Bikini atoll in the Marshall Islands, a U.N. trust
territory in the Pacific was so powerful that it overran the
danger zone of 50,000 square miles (an area roughly the size of
New England). Generating vast quantities of radioactive fallout
that landed on inhabited islands and fishermen outside this zone,
it forced the evacuation of U.S. weather station personnel and Marshall
Islanders (many of whom subsequently suffered a heavy incidence
of radiation-linked illnesses, including cancer and leukemia). In
addition, the Bikini test overtook a Japanese fishing boat, the
Lucky Dragon, which received a heavy dose of radioactive ash that
sickened the crew and, eventually, killed one of its members.
Recognizing
that these nuclear tests were not only paving the way for mass destruction
in the future, but were already beginning to generate sickness and
death, large numbers of people around the world began to resist.
Prominent intellectuals, such Albert Schweitzer, Bertrand Russell,
and Linus Pauling, issued public appeals to halt nuclear testing.
Pacifists sailed protest vessels into nuclear test zones in an attempt
to disrupt planned weapons explosions. Citizens' antinuclear organizations
sprang up, including the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy
(better known as SANE) in the United States, the Campaign for Nuclear
Disarmament in Great Britain, and dozens of others in assorted nations.
In the United States, the 1956 Democratic presidential candidate,
Adlai Stevenson, made a halt to nuclear testing a key part of his
campaign. Antinuclear pressures even developed within Communist
dictatorships. In the Soviet Union, top scientists, led by Andrei
Sakharov, appealed to Soviet leaders to halt nuclear tests.
Polls during
1957 and 1958 in nations around the globe reported strong public
opposition to nuclear testing. In the United States, 63 percent
of respondents favored a nuclear test ban; in Japan, 89 percent
supported a worldwide ban on the testing and manufacture of nuclear
weapons; in Britain, 76 percent backed an agreement to end nuclear
tests; and in India (with the survey sample limited to New Delhi),
90 percent thought the United States should unilaterally halt its
nuclear tests. In late 1957, pollsters reported that the proportion
of the population viewing H-bomb testing as harmful to future generations
stood at 64 percent in West Germany, 76 percent in Norway, 65 percent
in Sweden, 59 percent in the Netherlands, 60 percent in Belgium,
73 percent in France, 67 percent in Austria, and 55 percent in Brazil.
Within the
ranks of the U.S. government, this public aversion to nuclear testing
was regarded as bad news, indeed. The Eisenhower administration
was firmly committed to nuclear weapons as the central component
of its national security strategy. Thus, halting nuclear testing
was viewed as disastrous. In early 1956, Lewis Strauss the chair
of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and the top figure in setting
the administration's nuclear weapons policy insisted: "This
nonsense about ceasing tests (that is tantamount to saying ceasing
the development) of our nuclear weapons plays into the hands of
the Soviets." The United States, he told Eisenhower, should
hold nuclear tests "whenever an idea has been developed which
is ready for test."
And yet, other
administration officials felt hard-pressed by the force of public
opinion. In a memo written in June 1955, Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles noted that, although the United States needed a nuclear
arsenal, "the frightful destructiveness of modern weapons creates
an instinctive abhorrence to them." Indeed, there existed "a
popular and diplomatic pressure for limitation of armament that
cannot be resisted by the United States without our forfeiting the
good will of our allies and the support of a large part of our own
people." Consequently, "we must . . . propose or support
some plan for the limitation of armaments."
But Dulles
equivocated over specific plans, and the administration increasingly
felt the heat. In September 1956, with Stevenson's call for an end
to nuclear testing now part of the presidential election campaign,
Eisenhower ordered an administrative study of a test ban, citing
"the rising concern of people everywhere over the effect of
radiation from tests, their reaction each time a test was reported,
and their extreme nervousness over the prospective consequences
of nuclear war." Given opposition from other officials, this
study, too, went nowhere. Even so, Eisenhower remained gravely concerned
about the unpopularity of nuclear testing. In a meeting with Edward
Teller and other nuclear weapons enthusiasts in June 1957, the president
told them that "we are . . . up against an extremely difficult
world opinion situation," and "the United States could
[not] permit itself to be 'crucified on a cross of atoms.' "
There was not only "the question of world opinion . . . but
an actual division of American opinion . . . as to the harmful effects
of testing."
By early 1958,
the outside pressures were becoming so powerful that Dulles began
a campaign to halt U.S. nuclear tests unilaterally. Having learned,
through the CIA, that the Soviet government was about to announce
a unilateral suspension of its tests, he called together top administration
officials on March 23 and 24 and proposed that Eisenhower issue
a statement saying that, after the U.S. government completed its
nuclear test series that year, there would be no further U.S. nuclear
testing. "It would make a great diplomatic and propaganda sensation
to the advantage of the United States," Dulles explained, and
"I feel desperately the need for some important gesture in
order to gain an effect on world opinion." But Strauss and
Defense Department officials fought back ferociously, while Eisenhower,
typically, remained indecisive. Testing was "not evil,"
the president opined, "but the fact is that people have been
brought to believe that it is." What should be done in these
circumstances? Nothing, it seemed. Eisenhower remained unwilling
to challenge the nuclear hawks in his administration.
However, after
March 31, 1958, when the Soviet government announced its unilateral
testing moratorium, the U.S. hard line could no longer be sustained.
With the Soviet halt to nuclear testing, recalled one U.S. arms
control official, "the Russians boxed us in." On April
30, Dulles reported that an advisory committee on nuclear testing
that he had convened had concluded that, if U.S. nuclear testing
continued, "the slight military gains" would "be
outweighed by the political losses, which may well culminate in
the moral isolation of the United States." The following morning,
Eisenhower telephoned Dulles and expressed his agreement.
Thereafter,
the president held steady. Meeting on August 12 with Teller and
other officials, he reacted skeptically to their enthusiastic reports
about recent weapons tests. "The new thermonuclear weapons
are tremendously powerful," he observed, but "they are
not . . . as powerful as is world opinion today in obliging the
United States to follow certain lines of policy." Ten days
later, after a showdown with the Defense Department and the AEC,
Eisenhower publicly announced that, as of October 31, the United
States would suspend nuclear testing and begin negotiations for
a test ban treaty.
As a result,
U.S., Soviet, and British nuclear explosions came to a halt in the
fall of 1958. Although the French government conducted its first
nuclear tests in early 1960 and the three earlier nuclear powers
resumed nuclear testing in late 1961, these actions proved to be
the last gasps of the nuclear hawks before the signing of the Partial
Test Ban Treaty of 1963 a measure resulting from years of public
protest against nuclear testing. Against this backdrop, the 1958
victory for the peace movement and public opinion should be regarded
as an important break in the nuclear arms race and in the Cold War.
Thus,
if peace activists feel discouraged today by the continuation of
the war in Iraq, they might well take heart at the example of their
predecessors, who recognized that making changes in powerful institutions
requires great perseverance. They might also consider the consequences
of doing nothing. As the great abolitionist leader, Frederick Douglass,
put it in 1857: "If there is no struggle, there is no progress."
March
11, 2008
Lawrence
S. Wittner [send him mail]
is Professor of History at the State University of New York/Albany
and co-editor of the new book, Peace
Action: Past, Present, and Future.
This
article originally appeared in the History
News Network.
Copyright
© 2008 History News Network. Reprinted with author's permission.
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S. Wittner Archives
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