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START Now
After 65 years, is there anything new to say about nuclear weapons? Their immense and almost incomprehensible destructive power is well known. Their tenacious endurance as the weapon, even after the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War, is an unavoidable fact as nine nations currently stockpile these world menacers. Their superpower allure to emerging states remains untarnished despite international treaties discouraging proliferation.
This year, on the anniversary of the U.S. bombing of Hiroshima - an act that incinerated more than 70,000 in an instant - the U.S. ambassador to Japan attended a memorial ceremony for the very first time. Ambassador John Roos laid a wreath during the ceremony but did not make a speech or issue a statement. Most notably to the thousands who attended, he did not apologize on behalf of the United States.
Nuclear weapons are once again in the news, not because of something that happened sixty-five years ago this August, but because of what may happen in the Senate in the next month: ratification of the START treaty. But the two events are intimately related.
New START
In April, President Barack Obama and his Russian counterpart President Dmitry Medvedev signed what is known as New START, the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, which will cut the number of long-range nuclear warheads that each side has to about 1,550 nuclear warheads each. The agreement was the culmination of more than a year of negotiations and replaces a Reagan-era treaty. It will need to be ratified in the Senate where a vote could happen as early as September. As with any treaty, a two-thirds majority is required for ratification.
Senate Republicans have signaled a tough fight for the seven or eight votes they may deign to give. Some are holdovers from the George W. Bush era of "peace through strength, not through paper" who view any treaty as an unforgivable compromise. Others are bargain-hunters, seeking to wring major concessions from the administration in exchange for their votes.
Already Obama has conceded on this point, assuring the Republicans that they can expect tens of billions of dollars of new investment in the nuclear weapons complex. The exact number (so far) is $80 billion over the next decade, but to some that is not enough. Senate minority whip Jon Kyl from Arizona, where a number of nuclear facilities are located, is pushing for at least $10 billion more. These funds will go to upgrades at facilities within the nuclear weapons complex and to sophisticated programs aimed at refurbishing and improving the function of the nuclear weapons currently in the stockpile.
The Price of Arms Control
Against the backdrop of Obama's pledge to "seek the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons," the nuclear modernization program is a steep price to pay for a treaty. At the very least, it is a one-step-forward-two-steps-back dance routine that commits the United States to the forward movement of nuclear reductions while also taking us back by investing scarce resources into improving the weapons that we hope to one day eliminate.
Even with all of this horse-trading, ratification is not a fait accompli. Numerous arms control groups in Washington are feverishly working to ensure that the treaty becomes law. At the same time, the Heritage Foundation and other right-leaning outfits churn out a steady diet of disinformation about the treaty and its ramifications. The two sides tirelessly argue with one another over the finer points of verification mechanisms, the true meaning of the (non-binding) preamble, and whether or not the treaty bars the United States from pursuing missile defense technologies. These arguments are important, and I hope that the treaty proponents win in the end. The facts are certainly on their side.
But, in this month that we remember Hiroshima and Nagasaki, that we mourn the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people killed in those two atomic bombings, I would much prefer to be listening to other voices: the voices of the Hibakusha. These are the men and women who witnessed the mushroom clouds, who saw their world destroyed in an instant, who endured a lifetime of physical agony from their wounds and unending mental anguish because of what they experienced. They are not lost in the weeds of complicated treaties. They speak a simple message we all must hear and respond to - never again, no more nuclear weapons, disarmament now.
If Ambassador John Roos had listened in Hiroshima last week, that is what he would have heard. That is what men and women on both sides of the aisle in the Senate should hear as they prepare to cast their vote on New START. That is what Obama, Kyl, and staffers at Heritage should all hear.
New START is just the beginning of the work for nuclear disarmament. And it is work that is 65 years overdue. So delay is not an option.
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3 Comments so far
Show AllOn planet Earth, 8 billion humans could be of single resolve to put the Atomic Genie back into the bottle and seal it for eternity. And it would not happen.
The misunderstanding is that humans deserve to have perpetual domination of Earth, because we have a few redeeming qualities. But, the evidence on Common Dreams is that the experiment with OUR species is a colossal, unmitigated failure. Self consciousness as a survival mechanism was worth trying. It resulted in animals that resolved its collective and additive activities towards two principal goals: defeating death, escaping reality.
The results of those blinkered pursuits are distributed across this fine website. Anyone who deems the human species to be a "success" is an imbecile.
Tell me when and where the next atomic weapon is being used. I'll stand at the epicenter, raise a toast, and quote Walt Whitman:
===
I think I could turn and live with animals, they're so
placid and self-contain'd,
I'd stand and look at them long and long.
They do not sweat and whine about their condition,
They do not lie awake in the dark and weep for their sins,
They do not make me sick discussing their duty to God,
Not one is dissatisfied, not one is demented with the mania
of owning things,
Not one kneels to another, nor to his kind that lived
thousands of years ago,
Not one is respectable or unhappy over the whole earth.
===
-- Walt Whitman
Thank you for all you have done over the years Frida; blessed are the peacemakers. I will dare to quibble(slightly) on your first word of paragraph 5 because as I read it, the first thought in reaction at "bargain hunters" was, "Crap, we'll have to endure Nebraskan Nelson's diatribes again." I don't see any difference between either wing of the MIC party.
I was just talking with my husband yesterday about our hypocrisy about getting our knickers in a twist about other countries, like Iran, getting nuclear armaments now. Why was it OK at the point it was US policy, for US to pursue MAD but it isn't for other countries now that they see a need to pursue these arms. Don't get me wrong, I wish US had never let the genie out of the bottle. I'm not going to argue with others about what Germany or Russia would have done with them if they had been first or if it stopped WWII (didn't). And yes, the more nukes, the higher the chance for more radiation incidents, intentional or not. But we're no better or have more rights as humans to build or use these devices than anyone else.
I agree with ThinKingOutsIDe's post about this issue. Unfortunately, it's part of everyone's human legacy. Yes, if we want less of them then we have to right to build less of them. We even have the right to try to convince others of our folly but we don't have the right to force our will on other governments per threats, like the current situation with Iran.