Tuesday, January 28, 2025

JHU President Ron Daniels renounce all weapons contracts

Ronald J. Daniels  

President, Johns Hopkins University
242 Garland Hall
3400 N. Charles St.
Baltimore, MD 21218

(410) 516-8068 or president@jhu.edu

Dear President Daniels:

We are delivering this letter to you on the fourth anniversary of the United Nations Treaty to Prohibit Nuclear Weapons [TPNW] when it entered into force on January 22, 2021, prohibiting the development, acquisition, possession, use or threat of use of nuclear weapons for those countries that have ratified it.  For forty years now, Maryland anti-nuke and anti-war organizations have called on Johns Hopkins University to end all military research projects.  More recently, students at JHU are echoing our call.  The Hopkins Justice Collective is calling for the university to demilitarize: “In one year alone, Johns Hopkins received more than $1.47 billion in US Department of Defense [sic] funding for the research, development and testing of US military programs and weapons, primarily through the Applied Physics Laboratory [APL].” 

We concur with the Collective’s call for divestment from the following companies: “Elbit, Blackrock, Northrop Grumman, Palantir, General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin and Google.” And we look forward to future efforts of the Hopkins Justice Collective.

In 2019, the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons [ICAN] issued a report  “Schools of Mass Destruction: American Universities in the U.S. Nuclear Weapons Complex” that details the ways in which roughly 50 American colleges and universities are supplying the scientific, technical and human capital necessary to maintain and expand U.S. weapons of mass destruction. Johns Hopkins University had the dubious distinction of being #1.  We are calling on you, as the president of a prestigious university, to contact the White House to welcome the Treaty and to affirm a plan to reduce the United States nuclear arsenal with the ultimate intention of the elimination of all US nuclear weapons.  Your call on the US government would be a positive step towards negotiation of a comprehensive agreement on the achievement and permanent maintenance of a world free of nuclear weapons.  According to a ICAN report, in 2020 the nine nuclear-armed states spent $72.6 billion on nuclear weapons, with the U.S. leading at $37.4 billion, or $70,881 per minute.  Imagine what could be accomplished if this wasteful spending was redirected to social programs.

Currently, the U.S. is pursuing a nuclear weapons build-up which was launched by the Obama-Biden administration that is expected to cost at least $1.7 trillion by 2046. This includes large spending increases on a controversial low-yield smaller nuclear warhead, the total replacement of the intercontinental ballistic missile force, new B-21 strategic bombers, B-52 upgrades, and more destructive nuclear warheads. JHU was awarded a $530,000,000 contract in support of the Ground Based Strategic Deterrent [sic] weapon system. We would rather see the total elimination of the country's land-based nuclear missiles, as these weapons are both an enormous waste of money and—most crucially—an existential threat to humankind. The ICBMs greatly increase the chances that a false alarm or miscalculation will result in nuclear war.

   JHU is also part of the Biden administration's upgrades on the nuclear weapons arsenal through its nuclear weapons research and contributes to the enormous risk presented by nuclear waste from weapons manufacturing piling up at more than 150 sites across the country. The cost is prohibitive to do some type of clean up. Much of the waste will have to remain "safely stored" for 10,000 years or more. 

We would appreciate if a small delegation could meet with you to assist you in the process of disinvesting from  weapons research.  Your university is complicit in the threat posed by nuclear weapons and the environmental crisis presented by nuclear waste.  We want to help you and the university to do the right thing.  Imagine the praise and prestige the university would receive because you renounced weapons research.  Your legacy would be profoundly enhanced.  We look forward to your response.

Sincerely,

Max Obuszewski, Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 431 Notre Dame Lane, Apt. 206, Baltimore , MD 21212

Christine Ashley~ Online and Offline Educator | Social Change Organizer and Recruiter | Non-Profit Management | Visionary 

Jeannie Athey, Maryland Peace Action

Alan Barysh, Author of Coming Of Age In New Milford

Dianne Blais, WILPF US Disarm/End Wars Committee. Fairfax, Va. 

Fr Robert Bossie SCJ, Franklin, WI

Harold H. Burns, Jr., Esquire

Marilyn Carlisle, Baltimore Peace Action

Tom Casey, Pax Christi NY, VFP Associate, WNY Peace Center Resist Militarism Task Force. 

Charlie Cooper

Ronda Cooperstein, Baltimore Peace Action

Jean Cushman, Baltimore Peace Action

Jeanne Dresher

Gwen L. DuBois MD, MPH Prevent Nuclear War-Maryland 

Lucy Duff, 9210 Fowler Lane, Lanham MD 20706

Dat Duthinh, Ph.D., Maryland Peace Action

David Eberhardt, Baltimore Nonviolence Center

Veronica Fellerath-Lowell, Pax Christi USA's Nuclear Disarmament Working Group.

Carol Gilbert, Dorothy Day Catholic Worker

Bruce Gagnon, Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space.

Anne C.W. Greene, former JHU grad student in Mathematics, 17219 Quaker Lane, Sandy Spring, MD 20860

Jim Holmes, Prevent Nuclear War Maryland & Maryland Peace Action

Hopkins Justice Collective

Susan Kerin

Ed Kinane, Syracuse, NY

Barbara Larcom, Ph.D. 1990, The Johns Hopkins University; coordinator, Casa Baltimore/Limay

Claudia Leight

Ed Loring, Open Door Community

Charles Michaels, Esq., Coordinator, Pax Christi Baltimore, 5625 Vantage Point Road, Columbia, MD 21044

Patricia Murphy, Takoma Park

Joan H. Nicholson

Richard Ochs, Baltimore Peace Action

Patrick O’Neil , Fr. Charlie Mulholland Catholic Worker House, 124 Perdue St., Garner, NC 27529  

Bob Perillo, 250 Pilot Ridge Drive, Lewisville, NC 27023

Phillip Runkel, Waukesha, WI

Helen Schietinger

Janice Sevre-Duszynska, Baltimore Nonviolence Center

Ellen Thomas, Proposition One Campaign for a Nuclear Free Future

Greta Zarro, Organizing Director, World BEYOND War

No comments: