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No Nukes/No Empire: The Abolition of Nuclear Weapons Requires the End of the U.S. Empire
[A version of this essay was delivered to the "Think outside the Bomb" event in Austin, TX, on June 14, 2010.]
If we are serious about the abolition of nuclear weapons, we have to place the abolition of the U.S. empire at the center of our politics.
That means working toward a world free of nuclear weapons demands we not only critique the reactionary wing of the U.S. power structure, the Bushes and Cheneys and Rumsfelds -- call them the reckless hawks. A serious commitment to a future free of nuclear weapons demands critique of moderate wing, the Obamas and Bidens and Clintons -- call them the reasonable hawks. The former group is psychotic, while the latter is merely cynical. After eight years of reckless reactionary psychotics, it's easy to be lulled into a false sense of security by reasonable moderate cynics. But we should remember that a hawk is a hawk.
The next step is asking whose interests are advanced by the hawks. Even though in the post-World War II era the hawks have sometimes differed on strategy and tactics, they have defended the same economic system: a predatory corporate capitalism. Let's call those folks the vultures. Different groupings of hawks might be associated with different groupings of vultures, giving the appearance of serious political conflict within the elite, but what they have in common is much more important than their differences. The political empire of the contemporary United States serves the corporate empires that dominate not only the domestic but the global economy, and it all depends on U.S. military power, of which the nuclear arsenal is one component.
George W. Bush was the smirking frat-boy face of the U.S. empire. Barack Obama is the smiling smart-guy face of the U.S. empire. Whoever is at the helm, the U.S. political/economic/military empire remains in place, shaky at the moment, but still the single greatest threat to justice and peace on the planet. Any serious project to rid the world of the particular threat of nuclear weapons has to come to terms with the more general threat of the empire.
We shouldn't expect our leaders, Republican or Democrat, to agree with that assessment of course. And they don't. Here's a paragraph from the Obama administration's 2010 Nuclear Posture Review:
The conditions that would ultimately permit the United States and others to give up their nuclear weapons without risking greater international instability and insecurity are very demanding. Among those conditions are success in halting the proliferation of nuclear weapons, much greater transparency into the programs and capabilities of key countries of concern, verification methods and technologies capable of detecting violations of disarmament obligations, enforcement measures strong and credible enough to deter such violations, and ultimately the resolution of regional disputes that can motivate rival states to acquire and maintain nuclear weapons. Clearly, such conditions do not exist today. http://www.defense.gov/npr/
docs/2010%20Nuclear%20Posture% 20Review%20Report.pdf
Nowhere on the list is a recognition of a more crucial fact: nuclear abolition depends on the death of the American empire. The reason that is not on the list is because nuclear weapons are a key component of U.S. empire-building. That is as true today as it was when Harry S Truman dropped the first nuclear weapon to end World War II and begin the Cold War. Although tonight we want to focus on the present, it's useful to return to that moment to remind ourselves of the harsh reality of empires. Though the culture can't come to terms with this history, the consensus of historians is that the U.S. decision to drop atomic weapons on Japan had little to do with ending WWII and everything to do with sending a message to the Soviet Union. The barbaric act that ended the barbarism of WWII opened up a new chapter in the tragedy of empire, leading to more barbarism in the U.S. assault on the developing world over the past six decades. Even though it was clear that after WWII the United States could have lived relatively secure in the world with its considerable wealth and extensive resources, the greed that drives empire demanded that U.S. policy-makers pursue a policy not of peace but of domination, as seen in this conclusion of the State Department's Policy Planning Staff in 1947: "To seek less than preponderant power would be to opt for defeat. Preponderant power must be the object of U.S. policy."[1] Preponderant power means: We run the world. We dictate the terms of the global economy. Others find a place in that structure or they risk annihilation. No challenge from another system or another state is acceptable. In service of this quest, elites created the mythology of the Cold War -- that we were defending ourselves against a Soviet empire bent on destroying us -- which was grafted easily onto the deeper U.S. mythology about a shining city upon the hill and Manifest Destiny, about the divine right of the United States to dominate. As a result, much of the U.S. public is easily convinced of the righteousness of the U.S. imperial project and persuaded to believe the lie that we maintain nuclear weapons only as a deterrent. The reality should blunt the self-congratulatory instinct: U.S. nuclear weapons were created to project power, not protect people. In his book Empire and the Bomb, Joseph Gerson lists 39 incidences of "nuclear blackmail," of which 33 were made by U.S. officials.[2] That helps explain the subtitle of his book, "How the US Uses Nuclear Weapons to Dominate the World." Not surprisingly, Obama has said he does not envision abolition in the foreseeable future. In his famous Prague speech in April 2009, he said: So today, I state clearly and with conviction America's commitment to seek the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons. I'm not naive. This goal will not be reached quickly -- perhaps not in my lifetime. It will take patience and persistence. But now we, too, must ignore the voices who tell us that the world cannot change. We have to insist, "Yes, we can." http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_ Yes, the world can change --- if the dominant military power in the world, the United States, can change. If the United States could give up the quest to consume a disproportionate share of the world's resources and disavow its reliance on securing that unjust distribution of wealth through the largest and most destructive military in the history of the world, things could change. That's why most U.S. elites are interested in non-proliferation, not abolition. The goal of abolition will remain safely out of reach, on the horizon, just beyond our ability to accomplish in the near future -- while the United States continues to imagine a future in which the rest of the world accepts U.S. domination. Since countries threatened by the empire won't accept non-proliferation unless there is a meaningful commitment to abolition and a scaling back of imperial designs, the U.S. policy will fail. That's because it's designed to fail. U.S. policy is designed to keep a hold on power and wealth, and the people running the country believe nuclear weapons are useful in that quest. That's why the Nuclear Posture Review of the Obama administration is not all that different from the Bush administration's, as Zia Mian (an analyst at Princeton University's Program on Science and Global Security) pointed out at a gathering of activists preceding the May 2010 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference. That's why Obama's policy includes a commitment to nuclear weapons, conventional missile defense, and modernization of the nuclear complex. That's why Obama is increasing expenditures on nuclear weapons, now over $50 billion a year, for modernization. Our task is to make sure we aren't conned by politicians, either those who push the fear button or pull on our hope strings. When we take up questions of military strategy and weapons, our task is to understand the underlying political and economic systems, name the pathologies of those systems, identify the key institutions in those systems, withhold our support from those institutions when possible, create alternative institutions when possible, and tell the truth. We may support cynical politicians and inadequate policy initiatives at times, but in offering such support we should continue to tell the truth. This commitment to telling the truth about our leaders, Republican and Democrat alike, also means telling the truth about ourselves. I have argued that any call for the elimination of nuclear weapons that does not come with an equally vociferous call for the elimination of the U.S. empire is empty rhetoric, and that a call for the end of an empire also must come with a deep critique of our economic system. I want to end by taking the argument one step further: Such critiques ring hollow if we don't engage in critical self-reflection about how many of us in the United States have grown comfortable in these systems. We decry injustice but spend little time talking about how our own material comfort is made possible by that injustice. A serious commitment to the end of nuclear weapons, the end of empire, the end of a predatory corporate capitalist system demands that we also commit to changing the way we live. We cannot wake up tomorrow and extract ourselves from all these systems. There are no rituals of purification available to cleanse us. But we can look in the mirror, honestly, and start the hard work of reconfiguring the world. [1] Quoted in Melvyn Leffler, A Preponderance of Power: National Security, the Truman Administration, and the Cold War (Stanford, CA.: Stanford University Press, 1992), pp. 18-19. [2] Joseph Gerson, Empire and the Bomb: How the US Uses Nuclear Weapons to Dominate the World (London: Pluto Press, 2007), pp. 37-38.
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18 Comments so far
Show AllThe USA should keep some of its nuclear arsenal. But, the number should be put into some realistic number of ready to go weapons.
I would propose something on the order of a few hundred total on subs, bombers and land based missiles. All others should be disassembled or destroyed.
That number would assure that the USA is never invaded, as small a chance as that may be.
Nukes are dooms day weapons. They are a last resort weapon. They should be held as such, and not as part of a realistic "defense."
Nukes are like having rocket launchers, hand grenades, and land mines for home defense. This is ridiculous.
It's true, the retention of nuclear weapons will keep us safe from invasion.
Likewise, acquisition of nuclear weapons by every other state, including Iran, Syria, Lebanon, Venezuela, Palestine/Gaza and any other nation that has something the US or Israel wants will also keep them from being invaded.
A million or so Iraqis (a majority women and children) are dead because the US could crush them with conventional weapons without fear of effective retaliation.
That's why the US wants nonproliferation, because they want to be the only one in the room with a gun.
One has to wonder, however.
At the end of WWII, NAZI Germany was found with millions of sarin gas artillery shells. Yet, Hitler did not use that weapon against the allies or the Russians.
If he had, it may well have stopped the defeat of Germany.
Then sixty years later, Iraq did not produce and use nerve gas against US troops invading. If Husein had used produced and used those gases, it may have well stopped an invasion, too.
Why didn't those too nutty rulers use those "poor mans atomic weapons?"
DCH, nor did Vasili Arkhipov, the Soviet Empire's sub commander in the Cuban Missile crisis launch his unanticipated nuclear torpedoes, despite the fact that the American Empire depth charged his boat, and that a Soviet political officer held a gun to his head.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vasili_Arkhipov
One might speculate that the cancer of 'empire-thinking' is preeminent in the American sector of this insane global Empire --- which may be why the US is currently and nominally the HQ of this damn global corporatist EMPIRE.
As Vonnegut would say, "and so it goes".
Best,
Alan MacDonald
No Nukes/No Empire: The Abolition of Nuclear Weapons Requires the End of the U.S. Empire
Therein lies the reason that it will never happen.
The United States will never rid itself of its nuclear weapons. That's like asking Hugh Hefner to amputate his penis.
You mean cut off his Johnson?
It is interesting when a thoughtful article is based upon a tautology yet needs an entire book fully to address what is wrong with the writer's reasoning. Start here.
"From day to day it is impossible to predict the past."
--Russian aphorism
"Though the culture can't come to terms with this history, the consensus of historians is that the U.S. decision to drop atomic weapons on Japan had little to do with ending WWII and everything to do with sending a message to the Soviet Union. The barbaric act that ended the barbarism of WWII opened up a new chapter in the tragedy of empire, leading to more barbarism in the U.S. assault on the developing world over the past six decades."
The Greek etymology of =barbarism= is =foreign=, which is a silly description of World War.
Atom bombing Japan was not a U.S. decision. The decision had to be made by President -the buck stops here- Truman, whom FDR had literally blackmailed into accepting the status as his running mate in 1944. Truman had no political desire to be VP! THEN, contemptuously, Franklin Roosevelt never said one word to his VP about the Manhattan Project. Not one word.
At Potsdam Truman did not demand the surrender of Japan. What he demanded, in writing, was the egregiously humiliating, UNCONDITIONAL surrender of Japan. Not comprehending what he had done in his communication, a single fucking adjective determined the fate of this planet. Later, in an unguarded moment, Truman said: "We had made the bomb, so we used it." That was honest, and that would have been true of any nation who made it.
To whit, the famous 1939 "heads up" letter from Albert Einstein to President Roosevelt - that precipitated the Manhattan District Project - envisioned a race with European scientists for an atomic bomb. Neither Leo Szilard nor Albert Einstein envisioned competition with Asian or Japanese scientists for such a thing. Yet their scientists were quite aware of the potential destructive atomic power of uranium. Japan had its own ??? Project working upon the development of an atomic bomb. One of the worst WHAT IF scenarios in history is that of the nation that raped Nanking becoming the first nation to produce an atomic bomb. Would any morality have restrained that nation from using it upon the United States?
The best metaphor remains that of: "Letting the Nuclear Genie out of the bottle." No matter what scenario we concoct about humanitarian control, the genie is not going back into the bottle. As one of the Manhattan Project Family descendants, this is like a small pebble inside my shoe.
Trylon
"The Greek etymology of =barbarism= is =foreign=, which is a silly description of World War."
You know full well that in modern context, "barbarism" does not mean foreign. What it meant when used by the ancient Greeks is completely utterly irrelevant. Nothing more than a pathetic attempt at rhetorical distraction.
"Atom bombing Japan was not a U.S. decision. The decision had to be made by President -the buck stops here- Truman, whom FDR had literally blackmailed into accepting the status as his running mate in 1944. Truman had no political desire to be VP! THEN, contemptuously, Franklin Roosevelt never said one word to his VP about the Manhattan Project. Not one word."
The US president made the decision. Was he ejected from office for making that decision? Impeached? Prosecuted? Were Americans on the streets protesting the decision? It was a US decision.
"o whit, the famous 1939 "heads up" letter from Albert Einstein to President Roosevelt - that precipitated the Manhattan District Project - envisioned a race with European scientists for an atomic bomb. Neither Leo Szilard nor Albert Einstein envisioned competition with Asian or Japanese scientists for such a thing. Yet their scientists were quite aware of the potential destructive atomic power of uranium. Japan had its own ??? Project working upon the development of an atomic bomb. One of the worst WHAT IF scenarios in history is that of the nation that raped Nanking becoming the first nation to produce an atomic bomb. Would any morality have restrained that nation from using it upon the United States? "
Interesting, but irrelevant. By the time the US used the bombs, Japan was in no military condition to be able to produce nuclear bombs, much less drop them on American soil.
"Would any morality have restrained that nation from using it upon the United States?"
did any morality restrain the US?
no - and to prove it - they dropped two.
(at least Truman got rid of his nooks)
vdb
We cannot know.
By the time the atomic products of the Manhattan Project were available, victory had been achieved in Europe. Suppose we had had two atomic bombs available and more in production by spring 1943? 1. Would we have used them in Europe upon Caucasians? 2. Would we have demanded surrender, and then used them in response to arrogant refusal? We'll never know.
The Japanese received warning from the conference at Potsdam that a new-era, super weapon was now held over their heads, and asked them to surrender, else it be used. Suppose that, in response, they had surrendered? We will never know because the fools wrote text that sounded to the Japanese like surrender would involve stripping their sacred Emperor naked and submitting him to sequential corn holing by his round-eyed superiors.
In 1954 the United States made three separate offers of an atomic bomb to France, as it became more obvious that their Expeditionary Forces were going to be destroyed at Dien Bien Phu. France said thanks, but no thanks.
But the insanity of weapons designers was to on one hand base a defense on "mutually assured destruction"and on the other to design enhanced radiation devices,neutron bombs(to kill people ,but leave property intact),and tactical nukes to make up for perceived conventional inadequacies.Both these developments were in the direct pursuit of empire. Cruise missiles and neutron bombs never made us more secure and are perceived as first strike weapons escalating tensions.
So who will be the first Nuclear power to unilaterally disarm and give up "Empire building"?
After you sir!
peace
Removed by author.
The U.S.'s thousands of nuclear war heads have been the terrorist threat against the backdrop of which the Empire of military bases has been deployed all over the globe.
Remove the nukes and the Empire starts looking very vulnerable to guerrila insurgencies.
The abolition of Empire is what requires the abolition of nuclear weapons.
By all appearances, Empire will not be abolished by a process of sane, healthy, moral, and rational deliberation. Instead, it will wither away in tandem with the decaying economy, the depletion of the fossil sources of energy, and the ever increasing deterioration of the ecosphere. A slow, agonizing, compelled death.
Please pardon my redundancy, all, but I am loth to let this pass:
There is nothing whatsoever moderate about 0bama, Clinton, Biden, or the Democrat-ish Congress. They have escalated the wars and general abuse and carnage.
To be precise, the Cheney administration was not psychotic, but psychopathic: given a moral Washington, they would stand trial and be ruled fit to do so.
That psychopathy consists significantly of cynicism.
The 0bama administration's cynicism is psychopathic. If your janitor blew up weddings, tortured children in front of their parents, claimed the right to kill people by fiat, placed millions of people in harms way for money, and lied more or less constantly, would you decide is not psychopathic just because he is cynical?
No degree of Republican insanity makes the Democrats a jot more sane.
I am absolutely in agreement with Robert Jensen's observation: "If we are serious about the abolition of nuclear weapons, we have to place the abolition of the U.S. empire at the center of our politics." The American imperialism has reached a dead-end in its what the Senator Fulbright called as the "Arrogance of Power".
I would like to give the following links to my blogs on American imperialism whether nuclear or economic:
PAX AMERICANA. WAS HIROSHIMA NECESSARY?
http://balpatil.sulekha.com/blog/post/2009/08/pax-americana-was-hiroshima-necessary.htm
TOYNBEE DRAWS A PARALLEL BETWEEN ROMAN EMPIRE AND THE US
http://balpatil.sulekha.com/blog/post/2009/07/toynbee-draws-a-parallel-between-roman-empire-and.htm
Robert, congratulations on providing the most candid, and open article on the real global corporate/financial/political/militarist EMPIRE I have ever seen in CD --- or anywhere else.
Your 'matter of fact' presentation of this reality that a global (nominally American headquartered) corporatist EMPIRE exists in plain sight is wonderful and breath of fresh-air in terms of public acknowledgment that this EMPIRE is a compelling reality, and that we have to deal with it.
Although the number of intellectuals and academics who have also been candidly acknowledging and writing about this 'reality' of global corporatist EMPIRE has increased markedly in the last decade is encouraging, the fact that the corporatist dominated and propagandist media (both print/TV and supposedly alternative internet) that still do not talk openly about this 'biggest problem for the world' is shocking and highly disappointing.
The EMPIRE, of course is the single, signal, and seminal causal cancer behind most/all of our various 'symptom problems' of; imperialist wars abroad, global economic crises, domestic social injustices, torture, vast economic inequality, spying, existential environmental disasters, faded democracy, etc, etc. is very clear --- but never reported.
Unfortunately, but intentionally contrived, the EMPIRE is allowed to hide in plain sight in the burning kitchen of our lost democracy as it is disguised by a facade of TWO-Party 'Vichy' sham government (aided by an equally 'Vichy' corporatist media.
Have you noted the recent progress just achieved by Kevin Zeese, David Beito, and Ralph Nader in a Global People’s Anti-EMPIRE Movement?
I still find that the anti-Empire community that openly discusses the aspects, techniques, dangers, and possible confrontation strategies against this damn global EMPIRE is very moderate in size -- and get's almost no traction in any media, even supposedly left leaning progressive on-line sites.
Best efforts in confronting the Empire, as there appears to be no 'hope' for 'change' from our current "won't even whisper the word Empire' empty-suit president.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
PS. I have not yet read "Bomb Power" by Garry Wills, but it sounds like you and he are coming at a confrontation with the EMPIRE from a similar perspective and philosophy.
Great to see you on CD, hope to see more of your ideas, and I will catch-up on your books (which I am ashamed to have not yet read).
I like the metaphor of the hawks and the vultures. They can have their spats but it's what they have in common - predation - that's important to understand.
Robert Jensen is wise, clear and prophetic. His essays have been informing and inspiring me for years.