Published on Tuesday, July 28, 2009 by Huffington Post
Pro-Nuclear Pundits Debunked
On April 5, 2009 President Barack Obama gave a major speech in Prague [1], outlining his vision on nuclear weapons policy. In many ways, Obama's speech was the culmination of a sea change in how the security establishment thinks about nuclear weapons. Led by former Cold Warriors like Henry Kissinger [2]and former Reagan Secretary of State, George Shultz, the emerging bipartisan consensus [3]holds that in the post-9/11 world, nuclear weapons represent a liability, not a strength.
This refreshing approach sees that the only way to avoid uncontrolled proliferation that could result in terrorists obtaining such weapons is to aggressively pursue a step-by-step effort - starting with joint reductions in U.S. and Russian arsenals, the entry into force of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty [4]and the securing of vulnerable nuclear material - aimed at the eventual elimination of nuclear weapons.
President Obama's efforts to reduce and eventually eliminate nuclear weapons have drawn praise and encouragement from a wide range of individuals and organizations, from the arms control community, to retired diplomats and military officials, to the broader public. But they have also drawn harsh criticism - misleading at best and outright deceptive at worst - from a chorus of unreconstructed neo-conservatives and nuclear war theorists who are intent on scaring the public into opposing the President's disarmament agenda. The leaders of this informal network include John Bolton, Richard Perle, Frank Gaffney, and Keith Payne.
Sensible steps that will make the world a safer place -- from pursuing nuclear reductions [5]with
Loud though they may be - shouting their criticism from the pages of the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, the
They accuse the Obama administration of compromising (or worse) U.S. national security by promoting arms control, while trumpeting a collection of Bush administration policies like preemptive war, regime change and unilateralism that have created or seriously inflamed threats to U.S. national security and the U.S. image throughout the world. To add insult to injury, pundits like Gaffney and Perle are also beholden to the defense industry-- one of the few sectors of the economy that has been doing well, in part due to the war policies they helped to set into motion.
John Bolton [6]:
The former Ambassador to the United Nations under President George W. Bush is one of the more prolific pro-nuclear pundits around. For prime time television, he is a "go-to" expert on all things nuclear, appearing regularly on Fox News and other major outlets. In addition, since the beginning of 2009, John Bolton has published at least 35 articles in major newspapers, magazines and websites from his Senior Fellow perch at the American Enterprise Institute. Of those, twenty were critical of some aspect of the Obama administration's nuclear policy and all but four were in major
This is an enviable media sweep. But, it is critical that we remember that John Bolton is not just a run of the mill former administration official with some expertise and a good PR machine.
Anti-Arms Control:
Pro-War:
Bolton helped bring us the war in
Bolton was still trumpeting the old myths that helped sell the
Not content with war against just
We see a reprise of this approach to
In a May 26, 2009 op-ed in the New York Times,
In
Former Ambassador Bolton is the most visible pro-nuclear pundit, but he is not alone.
Richard Perle: [18]
John Bolton and Richard Perle share an institutional affiliation with the American Enterprise Institute, a neoconservative think tank funded in part by corporate donors that provides a platform for many others associated with the Bush administration (including [19]Lynne Cheney, David Frum, John Yoo and Paul Wolfowtiz).
Perle worked tirelessly through 2002 to bring about the invasion of
As a way of building the case for war, Perle also worked to promote the theories of Laurie Mylroie, an AEI colleague who insisted that
Just after the 2003
He now brings this "don't let the facts get in the way of a good story (or a good war)" attitude to the issue of nuclear weapons, co-authoring an op-ed [25] in the Wall Street Journal with Senator Jon Kyl called "Our Decaying Nuclear Deterrent" (June 29, 2009) which (among other things) lamented "woefully inadequate funding" in the nuclear weapons complex, ignoring the increases in nuclear weapons research and development spending over the last decade that have put current spending above Cold War averages [26].
Keith Payne: [27]
Keith Payne weighs in as well. The founder of the National Institute for Public Policy [28], where he remains President and CEO, argued in a recent Wall Street Journal op-ed [29]that Obama-Medvedev agreement on modest nuclear reductions "has the potential to compromise
Dr. Payne has been characterized as "Strangelove-ian" [30] since writing "Victory is Possible," [31]an influential Foreign Policy article on nuclear policy nearly 30 years ago. In it, Payne and co-author Colin S. Gray describe how the
Careful readers of Payne's work since that time can detect strands of the "Victory is Possible" formulation and see it in the policies he has helped shape. For example, NIPP's January 2001 report [32]on
Payne took a leave from NIPP to work in the Bush Pentagon. And, most recently he served on the Congressional Commission on the Strategic Posture of the United States [34], which assessed nuclear weapons capabilities and made a series of recommendations to the Obama administration as it works on a new Nuclear Posture Review.
Frank Gaffney: [35]
Frank Gaffney is founder and head of the Center for Security Policy, which receives healthy contributions from contractors like Boeing and Lockheed Martin. An indefatigable booster of the military industrial complex, Gaffney promotes ballistic missile defense technologies, robust nuclear weapons capabilities and conventional arms sales as ways of ensuring
An indication of how "far out" Gaffney is can be found in his parroting of the far-right claim that Barack Obama is a Muslim who will sell out
Now is he weighing in on nuclear issues [37]--and is only slightly less inflammatory; claiming in a
Contrasting Visions on Achieving Nuclear Security
All of these pundits were outspoken advocates of the Bush administration's now-discredited policy for dealing with weapons of mass destruction, a policy that reached its logical conclusion in the ill-advised invasion and occupation of
The Bush administration's version of arms control was unilateral military action against nations accused of developing weapons of mass destruction. "Peace through strength, not through paper," was the rallying call of the neoconservatives. President Bush derided treaties and international agreements, dismissing them as unnecessary checks on
The war in
Furthermore, the instability created by the U.S.-led war in
Despite the predictable rhetoric from
By way of contrast, the steps outlined by President Obama in
These four men: John Bolton, Richard Perle, Keith Payne and Frank Gaffney are far outside of the growing consensus on the need for decisive action to curb nuclear proliferation, and they have been on the wrong side of history for too long. They should not be considered legitimate nuclear experts and they should not be given free rein over our op-ed pages.
© 2009 Huffington Post
Frida Berrigan is Senior Program Associate at The New America Foundation's Arms and Security Initiative [39], which Senior Fellow William D. Hartung directs.
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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