Lost in all the uproar about the proliferation of nuclear technology, and the inevitable consequent weaponry in North Korea and Iran, is the murky argument against their possession of such know-how. Why is the nuclear club restricting its monopoly membership?
The club’s original five members, US, Russia, China, Great Britain,
and France, has grown to nine or ten members, depending on who’s counting.
Non-signatories of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), who now have
such weapons, include Pakistan, India, and Israel. North Korea withdrew its
membership in 2002.
A little
talked about, yet very important issue is the existing worldwide total number
of warheads--estimated to be in excess of 20,000--that are aimed at various
military targets and population centers around the globe. Why so many--given
that number could destroy our planet several times over? One can only guess at
the brilliance behind such planning, and it conjures up images of the
preparation that went into such masterful strokes such as Vietnam and Agent
Orange, and the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan. Also, given that these
weapons have a limited shelf (or silo) life, and disregarding the huge cost of
building them in the first place, what of the price of maintenance, and now of
replacement? Congress mandated the never discussed Reliable Replacement Warhead
(RRW) program in 2004 “to improve the reliability, longevity, and
certifiability of existing [nuclear] weapons and their components.” Lots of
money for defense contractors involved here.
Whenever this subject comes up, the US’s arsenal is benignly
described as a “deterrent force,” meaning that no one would dare attack us for
fear of retaliation—read annihilation (or “obliteration” as Hillary Clinton once
warned Iran it faced). The deterrent argument’s thrust is that by owning
nuclear weapons others are deterred from attacking you. This rationale
obviously does not apply to nuclear wannabes Iran and North Korea. After all,
if ever we wanted to mount an attack on either of these nations, it wouldn’t do
for them to have big bombs riding atop missiles that might be launched in
retaliation.
Another argument for restriction is that these governments are
unstable “rogue” states and their weaponry could easily fall into terrorist
hands. This argument has been effective with the American public because it
plays the fear card. The “wolf is at the door” claim is not new to us. A
frightened populace has been proven time and again to be a controllable
populace--one that is quite willing to give up basic freedoms while entrusting
their safety to a few “brilliant” bureaucrats. These are the “smartest people
in the room” who plot the fate of the world--in fortified, undisclosed
locations that will ensure their survival in case of nuclear war. Never mind
that they are of the same ilk as those who decided that we should fill our
arsenals with more than enough nuclear warheads to end civilization as we know
it, and other previously mentioned colossal blunders.
Also disregarded is the notion that if nukes are a defensive weapon
for us (even though the previous administration threatened to violate that
premise) why wouldn’t they be the same for every nation? Why would North Korea,
or Iran, want to launch what would amount to a Kamikaze attack on anyone?
Surely they know that their country would be in ashes shortly after such a
blunder. This result is spelled out in the Mutually Assured Destruction
corollary to the deterrence strategy. (It has a wonderfully descriptive acronym--MAD!)
By the way, what standing do the nuclear-tipped nations have to deny
other nations the same capability? Is it like an exclusive country club that
has racial or social barriers to entry? Would the presence of such weapons
deter the current nuclear powers ability to blackmail others into doing their
bidding?
Let’s face it, the US has become a militaristic enterprise that
feeds on controlling the activities of other nations. We now have a military
presence in 135 countries around the globe. For what purpose? Take a wild guess.
Finally, if our deterrence strategy is indeed sound, then we have
nothing to worry about. In fact it’s so good it should be expanded to include
everyone. Just think, if every country had nuclear weapons then no one would be
attacking anyone else for fear of retaliation, and there would be no wars--because
everyone would be…deterred!
Sounds good to me.
1 comment:
MAD says it all
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