The Ongoing Danger of Nuclear War
by
Lawrence S. Wittner
by Lawrence S. Wittner
Recently by Lawrence S. Wittner: Nuclear
Ban? Start With U.S.
This August,
when hundreds of Hiroshima Day vigils and related antinuclear activities
occur around the United States, many Americans will wonder at their
relevance. After all, the nuclear danger that characterized the
Cold War is now far behind us, isn't it?
Unfortunately,
it is not.
Today there
are nine nuclear-armed nations, with over 23,000 nuclear weapons
in their arsenals. Thousands of these weapons are on hairtrigger
alert.
Admittedly,
some nations are decreasing the size of their nuclear arsenals.
The United States and Russia which together possess about 95 percent
of the world's nuclear weapons plan to sign a treaty this year
that will cut their number of strategic weapons significantly.
But other nations
are engaged in a substantial nuclear buildup. India, for example,
launched the first of its nuclear submarines this July and is also
developing an assortment of land-based nuclear missiles. Meanwhile,
Pakistan has been busy testing ballistic missiles and cruise missiles
that will carry nuclear warheads, as well as constructing two new
reactors to make plutonium for its expanding nuclear arsenal. Israel,
too, is producing material for new nuclear weapons, while North
Korea is threatening to resume its production.
In addition,
numerous nations among them, Iran are suspected of working to
develop a nuclear weapons capability.
But surely
national governments are too civilized to actually use nuclear weapons,
aren't they?
In fact, one
government (that of the United States) has already used atomic bombs
to annihilate the populations of two cities.
Moreover, nations
have come dangerously close to full-scale nuclear war on a number
of occasions. The Cuban missile crisis is the best-known example.
But there are numerous others. In October 1973, during a war between
Israel and Egypt that appeared to be spiraling out of control, the
Soviet government sent a tough message to Washington suggesting
joint or, if necessary, Soviet military action to
bring the conflict to a halt. With President Richard Nixon reeling
from the Watergate scandal and drunk in the White House, his top
national security advisors responded to what they considered a menacing
Soviet move by ordering an alert of U.S. nuclear forces. Fortunately,
cooler heads prevailed in the Kremlin, and the sudden confrontation
eased short of nuclear war.
Of course,
nuclear war hasn't occurred since 1945. But this fact has largely
reflected public revulsion at the prospect and popular mobilization
against it. Today, however, lulled by the end of the Cold War and
the disintegration of the Soviet Union, we are in a period of relative
public complacency. In this respect, at least, the situation has
grown more dangerous. Without countervailing pressure, governments
find it difficult to resist the temptation to deploy their most
powerful weapons when they go to war. And they go to war frequently.
Furthermore,
while nuclear weapons exist, there is a serious danger of accidental
nuclear war. In September 1983, the Soviet Union's launch-detection
satellites reported that the U.S. government had fired its Minuteman
intercontinental ballistic missiles, and that a nuclear attack on
the Soviet Union was underway. Luckily, the officer in charge of
the satellites concluded that they had malfunctioned and, on his
own authority, prevented a Soviet nuclear alert. The incident was
so fraught with anxiety that he suffered a nervous breakdown.
Another nuclear
war nearly erupted two months later, when the United States and
its NATO allies conducted Able Archer 83, a nuclear training exercise
that simulated a full-scale nuclear conflict, with NATO nuclear
attacks upon Soviet nuclear targets. In the tense atmosphere of
the time, recalled Oleg Gordievsky, a top KGB official, his agency
mistakenly "concluded that American forces had been placed
on alert and might even have begun the countdown to nuclear
war." Terrified that the U.S. government was using this training
exercise as a cover behind which it was launching a nuclear attack
upon the Soviet Union, the Soviet government alerted its own nuclear
forces, readying them for action. "The world did not quite
reach the edge of the nuclear abyss," Gordievsky concluded.
But it came "frighteningly close."
Furthermore,
today we can add the danger of nuclear terrorism. Although it is
very unlikely that terrorists will be able to develop nuclear weapons
on their own, the existence of tens of thousands of nuclear weapons
and of the materials to build them in national arsenals opens the
possibility that terrorists will acquire these items through theft
or black market operations.
Overall, then,
the situation remains very dangerous. Dr. Martin Hellman, a Professor
Emeritus of Engineering at Stanford University who has devoted many
years to calculating the prospects of nuclear catastrophe, estimates
that the risk of a child born today suffering an early death through
nuclear war is at least 10 percent. Moreover, he cautions that this
is a conservative estimate, for he has not included the danger of
nuclear terrorism in his calculations.
In June 2005,
Senator Richard Lugar, then the Republican chair of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, produced a committee report that was even less
sanguine. Asked about the prospect of a nuclear attack within the
next ten years, the 76 nuclear security experts he polled came up
with an average probability of 29 percent. Four respondents estimated
the risk at 100 percent, while only one estimated it at zero.
Thus, Hiroshima
Day events provide a useful context for considering the ongoing
nuclear danger and, conversely, the necessity for a nuclear weapons-free
world.
This article
originally appeared on the History News
Network.
August
7, 2009
Lawrence
S. Wittner [send him mail]
is Professor of History at the State University of New York/Albany
and author of several books, including, most recently, Confronting
the Bomb.
Copyright
© 2009 Lawrence Wittner
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