The urgency of stopping the next US war in the Middle
East is upon us.

The US has drawn up plans to level a massive aerial
assault against Iran.
By Dr. Jorge E. Hirsch

04/23/06 "ICH" -- -- Thirteen of the nation’s most
prominent physicists have written a letter to
President Bush, calling U.S. plans to reportedly use
nuclear weapons against Iran “gravely irresponsible”
and warning that such action would have “disastrous
consequences for the security of the United States and
the world.”

The physicists include five Nobel laureates, a
recipient of the National Medal of Science and three
past presidents of the American Physical Society, the
nation’s preeminent professional society for
physicists.

The letter echoes a petition signed by over 1800
physicists and scientists across the US and the world

Join Dr. Jorge E. Hirsch, Professor of Physics, UCSD
To deliver the letter to President Bush Wednesday
April 26, 5 PM, Lafayette Park, opposite the White
House, Washington, DC


Letter to President Bush

The Honorable George W. Bush

President of the United States
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington, DC 20500

Dear Mr. President: Recent articles in the New Yorker
and Washington Post report that the use of tactical
nuclear weapons against Iran is being actively
considered by Pentagon planners and by the White
House. As members of the profession that brought
nuclear weapons into existence, we urge you to refrain
from such an action that would have grave consequences
for America and for the world.

1800 of our fellow physicists have joined in a
petition opposing new US nuclear weapons policies that
open the door to the use of nuclear weapons in
situations such as Iran's. These policies represent a
"radical departure from the past", in the words of
Linton Brooks, National Nuclear Security
Administration director. Indeed, since the end of
World War II, US policy has considered nuclear weapons
"weapons of last resort", to be used only when the
very survival of the nation or of an allied nation was
at stake, or at most in cases of extreme military
necessity. Instead, the new US nuclear weapons
policies have significantly lowered the threshold for
the potential use of nuclear weapons, as clearly
evidenced by the fact that they are being considered
as another tool in the toolbox to destroy underground
installations that are "too deep" to be destroyed by
conventional weapons. This is a major and dangerous
shift in the rationale for nuclear weapons. In the
words of the late Joseph Rotblat, Nobel Peace Prize
recipient for his efforts to prevent nuclear war, "the
danger of this policy can hardly be over-emphasized".
Nuclear weapons are unique among weapons of mass
destruction: they unleash the enormous energy stored
in the tiny nucleus of an atom, an energy that is a
million times larger than that stored in the rest of
the atom. The nuclear explosion releases an immense
amount of blast energy and thermal and nuclear
radiation, with deadly immediate and delayed effects
on the human body. Over 100,000 human beings died in
the Hiroshima blast, and nuclear weapons in today's
arsenals have a total yield of over 200,000 Hiroshima
bombs.

Using or even merely threatening to use a nuclear
weapon preemptively against a nonnuclear adversary
tells the 182 non-nuclear-weapon countries signatories
of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty that their
adherence to the treaty offers them no protection
against a nuclear attack by a nuclear nation. Many are
thus likely to abandon the treaty, and the nuclear
non-proliferation framework will be damaged even
further than it already has, with disastrous
consequences for the security of the United States and
the world.

There are no sharp lines between small "tactical"
nuclear weapons and large ones, nor between nuclear
weapons targeting facilities and those targeting
armies or cities. Nuclear weapons have not been used
for 60 years. Once the US uses a nuclear weapon again,
it will heighten the probability that others will too.
In a world with many more nuclear nations and no
longer a "taboo" against the use of nuclear weapons,
there will be a greatly enhanced risk that regional
conflicts could expand into global nuclear war, with
the potential to destroy our civilization.

It is gravely irresponsible for the U.S. as the
greatest superpower to consider courses of action that
could eventually lead to the widespread destruction of
life on the planet. We urge you to announce publicly
that the U.S. is taking the nuclear option off the
table in the case of all nonnuclear adversaries,
present or future, and we urge the American people to
make their voices heard on this matter.

Sincerely,

Philip Anderson, Michael Fisher, David Gross, Jorge
Hirsch, Leo Kadanoff, Joel Lebowitz, Anthony Leggett,
Eugen Merzbacher, Douglas Osheroff, Andrew Sessler
George Trilling, Frank Wilczek, Edward Witten

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