The United States' Hypocritical Nuclear Policy 

by Ken Sanders

www.dissidentvoice.org
February 17, 2005
  
   
 With all of the recent talk about North Korea's not-so-surprising admission
that it possesses nuclear weapons, as well as Iran's refusal to cease its
pursuit of nuclear technology, it is worth considering the United States'
own policy. That policy, such as it is, basically boils down to this: the
U.S. and its proxies (e.g., Israel) may possess nuclear weapons. Everybody
else is a global threat. 

Speaking of global threats, the U.S. twice used nuclear weapons in 1945, in
the Japanese cities Nagasaki and Hiroshima, resulting in tens of thousands
of civilian deaths and innumerable injuries, both immediate and gradual. No
other nation, terrorist organization, or individual has proven itself as
deadly and dangerous as the United States, the world's only nuclear
aggressor. 

It is estimated that as of January 2005 the U.S. has approximately 5,300
nuclear warheads stockpiled, as well as nearly 5,000 additional warheads
maintained in inactive status. The U.S. has over 2,000 strategic warheads
ready for rapid deployment. The U.S. Energy Department is working on the
development of a nuclear "bunker buster," officially known as the Robust
Nuclear Earth Penetrator. The Energy Department has also initiated an
"Advanced Concepts" research program whereby it is exploring new kinds of
nuclear weapons technologies, specifically a low-yield (less than 5
kilotons) "mini-nuke." Such research was made possible when, at the request
of the Bush administration, Congress in 2004 repealed a 1994 law that
prohibited development of any low-yield weapons. To date, approximately
$16.8 million has already been spent on bunker-buster research with an
additional $8.5 million currently requested in Bush's budget. 

As reflected by the foregoing, as well as in its Nuclear Posture Review of
2001, the United States endeavors to make nuclear weapons more "usable" and
envisions an enlarged range of circumstances in which they could be used,
including against non-nuclear attacks or threats. Indeed, despite the fact
that the State Department declared in 2003 that the U.S. does not target any
countries with nuclear weapons, the U.S. has repeatedly reserved the right
to preemptively use nuclear and conventional weapons against nations or
groups threatening to use of weapons of mass destruction. 

As with any do-as-we-say-not-as-we-do policy, the United States' policy of
researching and developing new nuclear weapons and technologies undermines
its credibility when it advocates nonproliferation and condemns "rogue
states" for pursuing their own nuclear technologies. Further undermining
U.S. credibility is the Bush administration's arrogant rejection of and
withdrawal from numerous nonproliferation treaties. For instance, the United
States rejected the Enforcement Protocol of the Biological Weapons
Convention which would have established a formal regime to ensure that
nations lived up to their commitment to destroy and not produce, stockpile,
or transfer biological weapons. Bush's rationale for rejecting it -- Iran
supported it. 

Likewise, in 2001 Bush withdrew the U.S. from the Anti-Ballistic Missile
Treaty, declaring that it hindered the ability of the U.S. to develop new
weapons. That was the point, after all. 

In 2004, the Bush administration voiced its opposition to and rejection of
inspections and verification as part of the Fissile Materials Cutoff Treaty.
According to the Bush administration, it opposes inspections and
verification on the premise that the FMCT cannot be "effectively
verifiable." This opposition to the FMCT puts the U.S. at odds with
Australia, Canada, and Japan. 

Additionally, Bush has refused to submit the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty
to the Senate for ratification or to categorically commit to halting all
future tests. Without U.S. ratification of the CTBT, the treaty cannot enter
into force. Nonetheless, Bush has said, in no uncertain terms, that he will
not submit the CTBT to the Senate and that the U.S. may resume nuclear
testing. Evidencing this intent to resume nuclear testing, Bush's Nuclear
Posture Review calls for reducing the time frame for conducting tests from 3
years to 18 or even 12 months of a Presidential decision to do so. Congress
has approved funds for this time reduction. 

Most recently, the U.S. has been trying to remove Mohammed El Baradei as
head of the U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency. Why? Not because El
Baradei is ineffective. Rather, the U.S. wants El Baradei gone because he
questioned U.S. intelligence on Iraq (he was right) and is critical of U.S.
refusal to deal with Iran diplomatically. However, all 15 nations approached
by the U.S., including Britain, Canada, and Australia, refused to back El
Baradei's ouster. Indeed, a majority of the IAEA board asked El Baradei to
serve for another five years. 

Would the world be safer if North Korea or Iran did not have nuclear
weapons? Certainly. It would be safer still if the U.S. adopted a coherent
and sincere nuclear policy that led by example. However, as long as the U.S.
pursues newer and "better" nuclear weapons while simultaneously undermining
international efforts at nonproliferation, it will only enhance rather than
diminish the nuclear threat. 

Ken Sanders is an attorney based in Tucson, Arizona. Visit his weblog at:
www.politicsofdissent.blogspot.com/.  He can be reached at:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Feb05/Sanders0217.htm

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