Tuesday, August 11, 2020
"The United States urgently needs a leader who will have
the courage to look at, think hard about, and speak openly about the dire
perils posed by our country's vast nuclear arsenal."
A coalition
of progressive groups on Tuesday delivered a petition with over 4,800
signatures to the presidential campaigns of President Donald Trump and
presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden urging both 2020
candidates to incorporate "a vision for peace and serious nuclear
disarmament" into their platforms.
"We
need Joe Biden to pull us back from this new nuclear arms race, which can only
undermine our security and starve the economy of critical public health
needs."
—Jonathan King, co-chair of Massachusetts Peace Action
The
organizations behind the petition include CodePink, WAND, WILPF, and
Massachusetts Peace Action. CodePink co-director Jodie Evans noted in
a statement that the delivery comes just days after the 75th anniversary of
the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the U.S. government
towards the end of the Second World War.
"Seventy-five
years later, the United States remains one of only a handful of countries in
the world which refuses to agree to a No First Use policy
as our elected officials continue to pour billions into the production and
maintenance of nuclear weapons," Evans said. "Instead of funding the
production of nuclear weapons and escalating tensions with China, we need to
come together as a global community to address a real existential threat:
climate change."
After the
U.S. bombed the pair of Japanese cities, experts from the Manhattan Project
founded the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists. In January, the group set its
symbolic Doomsday Clock at 100 seconds to midnight, warning that
"humanity continues to face two simultaneous existential dangers—nuclear
war and climate change—that are compounded by a threat multiplier,
cyber-enabled information warfare, that undercuts society's ability to
respond."
Alan Robock,
distinguished professor of climate science at Rutgers University and another
petition backer, echoed that warning Tuesday. "Even a 'limited' nuclear
war between nuclear-armed nations can cause untold local death and destruction,
as well as global climate and agricultural catastrophes, because of the climate impacts of
smoke from fires ignited by nuclear weapons," Robock said.
Another
petition backer, Max Tegmark, also issued a grave assessment. Tegmark,
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology physics professor and
Future of Life Institute president, said that "the greatest threat to U.S.
national security is an accidental nuclear war, which has almost occurred
multiple times. This risk will grow if we breach the Comprehensive Test Ban
Treaty, triggering further mistrust and proliferation."
Trump,
throughout his first term, has been sharply
criticized by peace advocates and nuclear weapons experts alike
for continuing to
develop the U.S. arsenal and tearing up both
decades-old and more
recent arms treaties that aim to curb the chances of a global
catastrophe.
"President
Trump is withdrawing from nuclear weapons treaties and agreements with Russia,
talking about renewing nuclear weapons testing in violation of the
Comprehensive Test Ban treaty, and supporting spending $2 trillion of our tax
dollars over the next 30 years upgrading our nuclear weapons triad," said
Jonathan King, co-chair of Massachusetts Peace Action. "We need Joe Biden
to pull us back from this new nuclear arms race, which can only undermine our
security and starve the economy of critical public health needs."
The groups
are urging Biden—and Trump—to "add strong nuclear disarmament planks"
to their platforms, and provided a list of five key principles and policies to
enact:
- No First Use of Nuclear Weapons;
- Promote the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty—no new
nuclear weapons testing;
3. 3. Cancel the
provocative, destabilizing, and enormously expensive $2.0 trillion nuclear
weapons modernization program;
- Lead with diplomacy in resolving international
conflicts; and
- Designate national and international nuclear
disarmament a central goal.
As Thermonuclear
Monarchy author Elaine Scarry put it: "The United States urgently
needs a leader who will have the courage to look at, think hard about, and
speak openly about the dire perils posed by our country's vast nuclear
arsenal."
The petition
groups specifically urged Biden to include in his campaign one or more
proponents of nuclear disarmament, such as former Secretary of Defense William
Perry Bruce Blair, a former missile launch officer and co-founder of Global
Zero; or General Lee Butler, the former head of Strategic Nuclear Command.
The
coalition's message to Biden says in part that "President Trump's pulling
out of the Iran treaty and the Intermediate Nuclear Forces treaty has increased
the danger of accidental or intentional nuclear exchanges. The investment in
upgrading nuclear weapons is provocative and destabilizing, and a terrible
misuse of national resources during this Covid-19 crisis."
"One of
the reasons that the richest country on earth faces the Covid-19 epidemic
without adequate tests, masks, protective equipment, and treatments is the
diversion of the nation's tax dollars into ever more expensive and dangerous
nuclear weapons, such as those proposed in the nuclear weapons
modernization," the message continues. "Cutting the funding of these
unnecessary programs will free up funds desperately needed for healthcare,
education, infrastructure and climate programs."
Ira Helfand,
co-president of the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War,
also acknowledged the ongoing pandemic Tuesday.
"Despite
the enormous immediate crisis posed by Covid and the economy, we cannot lose
sight of the existential threat posed by nuclear weapons," Hefland
said. "The danger of nuclear war is great and growing. Joe Biden needs to
have a comprehensive plan, such as the Back from the Brink platform, for dealing
with this threat and eliminating these weapons before time runs out."
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Donations can be sent
to Max Obuszewski, Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 431 Notre Dame Lane, Apt. 206,
Baltimore, MD 21212. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski2001 [at]
comcast.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"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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