A Powerful Peace
If the nuclear powers wish to be safe from nuclear weapons, they must surrender their own.
With each year that passes, nuclear weapons provide their possessors with less safety while provoking more danger. Possession of nuclear arms provokes proliferation. Both nourish the global nuclear infrastructure, which in turn enlarges the possibility of acquisition by terrorist groups.
The step that is needed to break this cycle can be as little doubted as the source of the problem. The double standard of nuclear haves and have-nots must be replaced by a single standard, which can only be the goal of a world free of all nuclear weapons.
What is it that prevents sensible steps toward nuclear abolition from being taken? The answer cannot be in doubt, either. It is the resolve of the world's nuclear powers to hold on to their nuclear arsenals. Countries that already have nuclear arms cite proliferation as their reason for keeping them, and those lacking nuclear arms seek them in large measure because they feel menaced by those with them.
A double-standard regime is a study in futility -- a divided house that cannot stand. Its advocates preach what they have no intention of practicing. It is up to the nuclear powers to take the first step.
Their nuclear arsenals would be the largest pile of bargaining chips ever brought to any negotiating table. More powerful as instruments of peace than they ever can be for war, they would likely be more than adequate for winning agreements from the non-nuclear powers that would choke off proliferation forever.
The art of the negotiation would be to pay for strict, inspectable, enforceable nonproliferation and nuclear-materials-control agreements in the coin of existing nuclear bombs. What would be the price to the nuclear powers, for example, of a surrender by the nuclear-weapons-free states of their rights to the troublesome nuclear fuel cycle, which stands at the heart of the proliferation dilemma? Perhaps reductions by Russia and the United States from two thousand to a few hundred weapons each plus ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty?
Further reductions, now involving the other nuclear powers, might pay for establishment and practice of inspections of ever-greater severity, and still further reductions might buy agreements on enforcement of the final ban on nuclear arms. When nuclear weapons holdings reached zero, former nuclear weapons states and non-nuclear weapons states, abolitionists all, would exercise a unanimous will to manage, control, roll back, and extirpate all nuclear weapon technology.
A world from which nuclear weapons had been banned would, of course, not be without its dangers, including nuclear ones. But we must ask how they would compare with those now approaching.
Let us suppose that the nuclear powers had agreed to move step by step toward eliminating their own arsenals. The iron chains of fear that link all the nuclear arsenals in the world would then be replaced by bonds of reassurance. Knowing that Russia and the United States were disarming, China could agree to disarm. Knowing that China was disarming, India could agree to disarm. Knowing that India was ready to disarm, Pakistan could agree to disarm as well. Any country that decided otherwise would find itself up against the sort of united global will so conspicuous by its absence today.
During the Cold War, the principal objection in the United States to a nuclear-weapon-free world was that you could not get there. That objection melted away with the Soviet Union, and today the principal objection is that even if you could get there, you would not want to be there. The arguments usually begin with the observation that nuclear weapons can never be disinvented, and that a world free of nuclear weapons is therefore at worst a mirage, at best a highly dangerous place to be. It is supposedly a mirage because, even if the hardware is removed, the know-how remains. It is said to be highly dangerous because the miscreant re-armer, now in possession of a nuclear monopoly, would be able to dictate terms to a helpless, terrorized world or, alternately, precipitate a helter-skelter, many-sided nuclear arms race.
This conclusion seems reasonable until you notice that history has taught an opposite lesson. Repeatedly, even the greatest nuclear powers have actually lost wars against tiny, backward nonnuclear adversaries without being able to extract the slightest utility from their colossal arsenals. Think of the Soviet Union in Afghanistan, or the U.S. in Vietnam, or Britian in Suez.
If, in the 60 years of the nuclear age, no great power has won a war by making nuclear threats against even tiny, weak adversaries, then how could a nuclear monopoly by a small country enable it to coerce and bully the whole world? The danger cannot be wholly discounted, but it is surely greatly exaggerated.
If the nuclear powers wish to be safe from nuclear weapons, they must surrender their own. They should collectively offer the world's non-nuclear powers a deal of stunning simplicity, inarguable fairness, and patent common sense: we will get out of the nuclear weapon business if you stay out of it. Then we will all work together to assure that everyone abides by the commitment.
The united will of the human species to save itself from destruction would be a force to be reckoned with.
Jonathan Schell wrote this article as part of A Just Foreign Policy, the Summer 2008 issue of YES! Magazine. Jonathan is the Harold Willens Peace Fellow at the Nation Institute and a senior visiting lecturer at Yale. He has written many books. This article is adapted from his latest, The Seventh Decade: The New Shape of Nuclear Danger.
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15 Comments so far
Show AllPandora's box has been opened, and all the nuclear weapons have been built. More will be assembled, more sophisticated. The "big" countries (US, UK, Russia, China, Israel - only "big" because they have nukes), think they can dictate to the rest of the World, they can ask, they can threaten, they can sanction, they can attack, if things go badly, they may use!
We have this situation at the moment, but it is not a nuclear power who is seen as the danger, it is Iran, who have no nuclear weapons capability at the moment, or the forseeable future.
I see more danger in countries such as the US, Israel or Pakistan (under a different leader) using nuclear weapons, than I do a terrorist group.
mistersensible:
You ask what weapons are available to enforce compliance. The only one they will understand. Complete and total trade embargo. Nothing goes in and nothing comes out. It would be a terrible hardship on the poor, but the only reason we don't see the poor in many countries, including the US, rising up and overthrowing the rogue establishments is because our basic needs are being met. If we were faced with going hungry or overthrowing the government responsible for putting us there, which do you think most people would choose? The Russian October Revolution came about because the people were starving, their economy was in the trashcan. The only way real change can come about is in response to a crisis. That's why the problem of global warming and developing alternative, green energy sources is not being realistically addressed. Americans are willing to pay $4, $5, or more per gallon for gas just to continue to drive. We need a crisis and hopefully one, or maybe several, are just on the horizon, starting with the current financial one. Getting rid of nuclear weapons would go a long way toward achieving world peace but I can't see it actually happening unless massive numbers of people see the horrors of their use first hand. And my heart cries knowing that's what it would take.
our current philosophical\educational frame is not working...we need continual development of an education\philosophy based on, and encouraging, a deep study of philosophy, beginning with our own psychology, physiology and sociology, with a firm grounding in logic and scientific thinking, beginning with mathematics, physics and chemistry, and a clear understanding of the intimate relationship between all things constituting our planet...each bound to the other, continually exchanging the actual molecules that make up our entire, tiny world...only a permanent, personal revolution in how one views one's place in this world, including one's rights AND one's responsibilities will allow...time must be reclaimed and reallocated to include actively nurturing one's own mind (regulating input and output via choice and reflective thought) and one's own body (regulating input and output via choice and training), to learn how to equitably satisfy your own minimal needs, and beneficially deposit your own minimal waste...our current system is based on aging humans maintaining utter stupidity about the world and their place in it as they buy, consume and discard products 'that must come from somewhere and must go somewhere, but I don't know eitherwhere' throughout their lives, only to be replaced by new, equally stupid, consumers...we need one based on a love of knowledge: of self, of surroundings, and of the very real consequences of choice, and the very real moral and ethical issues regarding...how to let go of our current philosophical frame, and develop another? Hmmm...perhaps we should pass the pipe around a few times and think on this together for a while...
I'm all for getting rid of nukes on a worldwide scale, but what weapons are available to enforce compliance? And, just exactly how do we get from here to there when most of Earth's super-powers routinely and defiantly snub their noses at world court mandates?
For the elites, nukes are just another means to an end - domination. Oh yes, a particulary horrible means, but dont' fall in the trap where you burn all your energy categorizing and weighing the elites' various means and methods of domination. Save yourself the trouble. Instead, focus on the end itself - domination, and squish it.
There will never be peace, nor reliable disarmament, until there is a communist world. Capitalism is the cause of war and poverty today. Anybody who proposes hairbrained reformist schemes like this article does is a fool or a knave. Do you really think that Pakistan, Israel, USA, Russia or other terrorist-run nations will give up their bombs?
If you really want peace, build the party of proletarian socialist revolution. Maybe that sounds dogmatic to some, but so does insisting that water is made of hydrogen and oxygen. Nothing else will ever work, and I defy anyone to show an historical precedent that global capitalism can be reformed.
Not even a mention of Israel, who right now is driving the entire Middle East towards procuring nuclear weapons due to their refusal to even admit possession of these weapons or sign any treaties.
And while China and Pakistan should concern us, there is no place more volatile than the ME, and no country more likely to use these weapons than Israel.
Guess none of this occurred to Mr Schell.
Gravity's Rainbow (aka tommy_slothrop):
Yes, I read the article. I'm the only one who quoted from the article in my comment.
Maybe I wasn't clear, but trying to eliminate nuclear weapons while leaving the current nuclear club with a monopoly on the nuclear fuel cycle (as Schell proposes) seems unlikely to achieve the stated objective.
Brian Brademeyer,
Did you read the article? The author does a pretty good job of addressing your concern. If you disagree, it's up to you to refute what he says.
elmysterio August 6th, 2008 3:36 pm
Thats the truth.
Tsunami August 6th, 2008 5:29 pm
What goes around, comes around. If you use nukes on someone, someone will use nukes on you.
Not if they don't have them. Lets hope no one else does.
What goes around, comes around. If you use nukes on someone, someone will use nukes on you.
Maybe the gun inventor didn't know that his contraption could kill him too, but todays inventors should know that.
"The real threat to U.S. military power is nuclear proliferation, because if every little country has nuclear weapons it becomes very tricky for the United States to engage in military action."
Immanuel Wallerstein
Unless conservatives go away
We'll give up our nukes when they're pried from our cold, dead fingers.
Brian Brademeyer: I'm sorry, but we can't put the nuclear genie back in the bottle. It's much too late for that. The technology and know-how exists as a fundamental part of physics. As much as I deplore nuclear weapons and what they stand for, abolishing them would allow a single actor to blackmail the world. Until we, as a species, disavow war and violence completely, we won't be able to do away with these horrible weapons.
"What would be the price to the nuclear powers, for example, of a surrender by the nuclear-weapons-free states of their rights to the troublesome nuclear fuel cycle, which stands at the heart of the proliferation dilemma?"
So the current nuclear club would control the nuclear-power fuel cycle? Sounds like a continuation of a futile double standard, to me.
End both nuclear arms AND nuclear power!