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AT A CRITICAL
MOMENT IN HUMAN HISTORY
SO BIZARRE AS TO BE BEYOND BELIEF*
A Keynote Address by
Mel Hurtig
Association of World Citizens Conference
University of San Francisco
August 2, 2005
*words from an article by Robert
S. McNamara, Foreign Policy, May/June 2005
In what follows, I acknowledge
with gratitude and admiration the invaluable work of Douglas
Roche, O.C. formerly Canada's Ambassador for Disarmament and
currently Chairman of the Middle Powers Initiative. Roche's analysis
of the May, 2005 Seventh Review Conference of the Non-Proliferation
Treaty is perceptive and extremely important.
While all of us in this room
are fully aware of the dismaying failure of the crucial Seventh
Review Conference on the Non-Proliferation Treaty which took
place in New York in May, I very much doubt if one in a thousand
around the world paid attention to the month-long deliberations
or have any even vague idea of their importance, or the inevitable
tragic consequences of the enormously disappointing Conference
results.
Not only was no progress made
on the vitally important issues of nuclear disarmament, proliferation,
abolishing testing and the continuing upgrading and refinement
of nuclear weapons and their delivery systems, but in a shocking
betrayal to the world's aspirations for peace, disarmament and
redirecting arms funding to badly-needed humanitarian use, clear-cut
widely agreed-to commitments made in the previous 1995 and 2000
Reviews were either ignored or repudiated.
It's impossible not to single
out the administration of George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and Donald
Rumsfeld for the Conference failure. Time and again the U.S.
blocked crucial references to earlier commitments and continued
to stubbornly refuse to join the widely-supported Comprehensive
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.
While most countries wanted a
strengthened Non-Proliferation Treaty, the U.S. clearly wanted
it weakened.
And, while many U.S. allies,
including seven NATO states called for specific steps to quicken
nuclear disarmament, and almost 2,000 NGOs presented thoughtful,
passionate pleas and warnings about the growing dangers of proliferation,
and while well-reasoned plans for verification and the elimination
of nuclear arsenals were presented and overwhelmingly supported,
the U.S. frustrated any such progress towards goals almost universally
supported.
Having already backed away from
the vitally important ABM Treaty, having refused to back the
Test Ban Treaty, having embarked on the dangerous, escalating,
so-called missile defence fiasco, having already budgeted for
the refinement of its nuclear weapons, having planned for the
development of new nuclear weapons and the horrendous prospect
of the weaponization of space, having agreed to a dangerous new
provocative nuclear agreement with India, the U.S. is now clearly
identifiable as the major threat to world peace and to the very
survival of the human race.
The mayor of Hiroshima has eloquently
warned of the terrible consequences, as have numerous others
such as Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Mohamed ElBaradei, Robert
McNamara, Canada's Douglas Roche, and John Polanyi, Sir Joseph
Rotlat, and many other respected world leaders and admired authorities.
Conversely, and remarkably, not
a single high-ranking U.S. official bothered to attend the New
York Conference.
Meanwhile, in most Western democracies,
the media has done a miserable job of informing citizens about
the horrible and increasing danger of an apocalyptic nuclear
Armageddon.
With the U.S., and to a somewhat
lesser degree France and Britain essentially repudiating their
previous commitments to the Programme of 13 Practical Steps for
the elimination of their nuclear weapons, with new weapons and
their delivery systems being planned by the nuclear weapon states,
is it any wonder that around the world non-nuclear states (north
Korea and Iran among them) are logically saying that if the major
nuclear powers refuse to pay attention to the will of the overwhelming
majority, to their previous clear-cut promises, or to the explicit
direction of the International Court of Justice, is it any wonder
that these currently non-nuclear states are concluding that their
own best interests oblige them to acquire an arsenal of nuclear
weapons?
And why would they not do so
given the pathetic failure in New York, and the aggressive, militaristic
behaviour of the Bush government and the widespread emergence
of the Pakistani nuclear black market?
Bear in mind that what needs
to be done has been already widely- agreed-to. A non-reversible
program for the destruction of all strategic and tactical nuclear
weapons is essential. A fissile material cut off treaty must
be rushed into force. All strategic nuclear weapons must be promptly
taken off alert status. Stockpiles of nuclear materials must
be much more heavily guarded and converted for peaceful uses.
While the world continues to fear the despicable, murderous terrorist
activities that have shocked the U.S., Europe, the Middle East
and Asia, the inevitability of terrorist access to plutonium
and/or enriched uranium has been growing for years. The potential
for a massively horrendous, unprecedented slaughter of innocents
is no longer a remote possibility.
In all of this, as I spelled
out in my last book, it's essential to consider the actions and
responses of both Russia and China. Both countries have reacted
to the aggressive posture of the U.S. and the huge increases
in American military spending by increasing and modernizing their
own military strength and by developing formidable new weapons.
Russia is carrying out research and missile tests for new "state-of-the-art
nuclear missile systems" and "a unique new generation
of nuclear weapons," including "new maneuverable warheads",
increased road-mobile weapons and new ICBMs and cruise missiles.
China is developing improved long-range missiles carrying multiple
nuclear warheads and rapidly expanding its ballistic missile
submarine force, and increasing its own number of nuclear weapons.
Recent ominous Chinese threats to attack the U.S. with nuclear
weapons in response to American aggression or interference re
Taiwan were neither frivolous nor unplanned.
At the same time, while Russia
and China conduct unprecedented joint military exercises, both
have also repeatedly come down firmly on the side of peace and
disarmament, repudiating the U.S. abandonment of the Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty, the plans for the weaponization of space, the
failure of the U.S. to ratify the 1996 Comprehensive Test ban
Treaty (now ratified by 120 countries), the Conference on Disarmament
paralysis, the American proposals for the development of new
nuclear weapons, the U.S. pre-emptive nuclear strike policy and
the American lowering of the threshold for the use of nuclear
weapons.
Meanwhile, the European Union's
position and its 43 New York suggestions relating to disarmament
and non-proliferation would have definitely strengthened the
NPT.
As the New Agenda Coalition (Sweden,
Egypt, Ireland, New Zealand, Mexico, Brazil and South Africa)
pointed out at the New York Conference, there are now some 30,000
nuclear weapons in existence, almost as many as those that existed
when the NPT came into force 35 years ago! Moreover, there is
now the clear potential for a disastrous major new nuclear arms
race.
The 119-member states of the
Non-Aligned Movement warned that We must all call for an end
to this madness and seek the elimination and ban on all forms
of nuclear weapons and testing as well as the rejection of the
doctrine of nuclear deterrence.
At the end of the New York Conference,
delegates described the results as "extremely regrettable"
(Japan), "profoundly disappointing" (Norway), "unfortunate"
(Ukraine), and they expressed "frustration" (Chile
and Brazil).
Ambassador Paul Meyer of Canada
condemned "the hubris that demands the priorities of the
many be subordinated to the preferences of the few.."
During the Conference, a massive
accumulation of evidence showed how the U.S. was ignoring its
previous disarmament promises and how it still plans to have
over 5,000 operational nuclear weapons in 2012, how it has no
plans to reduce its nuclear deployments or discontinue the maintenance
of thousands of nuclear weapons on high alert, how it is currently
budgeting over $22 million for research into new nuclear weapons
and providing additional funding for new delivery systems, how
it intends to modify and update its existing nuclear weapons
and ballistic missiles and develop a "global strike"
capacity that will facilitate the delivery of nuclear weapons,
anywhere on earth, in a few hours at the most. Moreover, the
U.S. is now spending some $40 billion a year on its nuclear forces,
far more than the total of all military spending for most countries
and a 150 per cent increase over its nuclear weapons spending
during the Cold War.
And of course all of this is
in addition to the over $100 billion already spent on the so-called
"Missile Defense" program, which many believe is in
reality a precursor for the weaponization of space.
And the result?
As The Western States Legal Foundation
put is so well, "there is a growing possibility of a new
nuclear confrontation that may overshadow the Cold War in its
complexity." Moreover, the American "implication that
the selective use of nuclear weapons in ordinary warfare is lawful
and legitimate [implies that] if it is legal and moral for one
country to use nuclear weapons. it is legitimate for any country
to do so."
As Tri-Valley CARES of Livermore,
California put it The United States is conducting a one-nation
arms race against itself to upgrade its nuclear weapons and capabilitiesan
approach that undercuts international efforts to discourage nuclear
weapons development in countries like North Korea and Iran.
Moreover, in the words of the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, nations such as Egypt,
Japan, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Taiwan will very likely initiate
nuclear weapons programmes, increasing both the risk of the use
of the weapons and the diversion of weapons and fissile materials
into the hands of terrorists.
Carnegie should also have included
a host of other countries, such as Brazil and South Africa.
Douglas Roche draws attention
to The New York Times article by the distinguished 97-year-old
Sir Joseph Rotlat, where the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize winner warns
of a nuclear arms race. To gloss over the hypocrisy of the nuclear
weapons states, which are modernizing nuclear weapons and ensconcing
them in their ongoing military doctrine, while urging abstinence
on everyone else is stunning.
Throughout the Conference there
were many excellent suggestions about the ways to diminish the
threat of a nuclear catastrophe, including those by informed
critics of nuclear power. Unfortunately, it's now clear that
in many ways relating to nuclear matters the world is rapidly
headed down exactly the wrong path.
Among the proposals from Mohamed
ElBaradei were a five-year moratorium on new uranium enrichment
and plutonium separation facilities, and the conversion of all
nuclear reactors now using highly enriched uranium to low grade
uranium which cannot be used for bombs.
As the International Physicians
for the Prevention of Nuclear War points out, the NPT has been
the foundation for non-proliferation and disarmament for 35 years,
and the vast majority of its members support its goals and obligations
without question. But today, the Treaty is essentially in shreds,
and the world is plunging towards the abyss.
Among the many eloquent recent
warnings of the potential for catastrophe, one of the most forceful
has come from Robert S. McNamara, U.S. Secretary of Defence from
1961 to 1968[1] McNamara says U.S. reliance on nuclear weapons
is immoral, illegal, militarily unnecessary and dreadfully dangerous.
U.S. policy "has only grown more dangerous and diplomatically
destructive." The average U.S. warhead has a destructive
power 20 times that of the Hiroshima bomb. 2000 are on hair-trigger
alert, ready to be launched on 15 minutes warning.
The whole situation seems so
bizarre as to be beyond belief. On any given day, as we go about
our business, the president is prepared to make a decision within
20 minutes that could launch.a nuclear holocaust.
[Our policy] raises troubling
questions as to why any other state should restrain its nuclear
ambitions.
In his article, McNamara describes
the horrendous destruction which would be caused by only a single
1 megaton weapon. It's chilling reading. As for U.S. policy The
statement that our nuclear weapons do not target populations
per se was and remains totally misleading in the sense that the
so-called collateral damage of large nuclear strikes would include
tens of millions of innocent civilian dead.
This in a nut shell is what nuclear
weapons do: They indiscriminately blast, burn and irradiate with
a speed and finality that are almost incomprehensible. This is
exactly what countries like the United States and Russia, with
nuclear weapons on hair-trigger alert; continue to threaten every
minute of every day in this new 21st century.
There is no way to effectively
contain a nuclear strike to keep it from inflicting enormous
destruction on civilian life and property, and there is no guarantee
against unlimited escalation once the first nuclear strike occurs.
McNamara goes on to estimate
the destructive power of a U.S.-Russian nuclear exchange at at
least 65,000 times that of the Hiroshima bomb. He describes current
U.S. policy as We, with the strongest conventional military force
in the world, require nuclear weapons in perpetuity, but you
are never to be allowed even one nuclear weapon.
He concludes with an ominous
warning: The knowledge of how to construct a simple gun-type
nuclear device, like the one that was dropped on Hiroshima, is
now widespread. ..Former Secretary of Defence William J. Perry
said just last summer "I have never been more fearful of
a nuclear detonation than now. There is a greater than 50 percent
probability of a nuclear strike on U.S. targets within a decade.
I share his fears. We are at a critical moment in human history.
I want to end my remarks here
today in San Francisco with a brief description of how some of
us mobilized successfully to keep Canada out of the so-called
U.S. missile defence plans.
It wasn't easy. Long before most
Canadians and most of the media had any idea of the implications,
after a cabinet meeting in Ottawa, Canada's Minister of Defence
met with Donald Rumsfeld in Washington and, in no uncertain terms,
promised Canada's participation. When we learned about this,
many of us were appalled. And the more we learned about the profound
implications, the more we became determined, if at all possible,
to reverse the government's decision, a decision that had been
made with virtually no public debate.
Early on, the public opinion
polls, for what they were worth, sided with the Liberal government
in Ottawa. Most Canadians had absolutely no idea what the dangers
of the U.S. plans were. When asked questions like Should Canada
join with the U.S. in building a missile defence system which
will stop rogue states from dropping a nuclear bomb on your home,
destroying you and your family and friends?
Most Canadians, of course, answered
"yes". Early polls were roughly 60 per cent in favour
of participation, but with a surprisingly strong 40 per cent
opposed. The government was firmly committed. Having stayed out
of the Iraq war, much to the displeasure of the Bush administration,
timid, colonial-minded politicians and bureaucrats in Ottawa
were offering missile defence as a mending mea culpa.
But those of us who understood
the significant danger of a new arms race, the prospects for
the weaponization of space, the horrendous costs of a system
that would never work, the hidden offensive military first-strike
implications, the increasing possibility of a nuclear nightmare
in a situation of certain escalation, destabilization and insecurity.those
of us who studied and understood these dangers became even more
determined to try to stop Canada's participation.
In countries like the U.S. and
Canada, with heavy degrees of media concentration in the hands
of men on the far right of the political spectrum, getting the
message and the truth out is never easy.
We did it in several ways, one
of the most important being the internet. While the right-wing
press and television essentially parroted the Ottawa and Washington
official propaganda lines, we brought in our own skilled experts
to new conferences, and began a steady stream of internet releases
including expert testimony from some of the most brilliant scientist,
economists, political scientists and others with expertise not
previously available to the public.
We worked with wonderful people
and organizations in Washington, such as the Center for Defense
Information, physicists at MIT and many others, including our
own Canadian experts. We published books, papers, studies and
articles full of information most Canadians were not aware of.
My own weekly e-mail to some 1,500 across the country would be
recirculated to, on average, some 100,000. Many of my colleagues
across the country had their own extensive lists.
And we prevailed. After several
months, the polls turned in our favour. After seven consecutive
polls, the last one showing 65 per cent of Canadians opposed,
the government, much to the displeasure of the Prime Minister,
felt that Canada's participation was so increasingly unpopular
that it had no choice. Canada announced we would not be joining
in the American plans.
There were many elements in our
successful battle. But, if I had to credit one above all others,
it was our success in getting expert information out over the
internet that made the most difference. It's a lesson that I
know many of you will want to employ in the future, because in
the end, given reliable unbiased information, the public will
make the right choice, even in the face of well-financed military-industrial
misinformation, ignorant editorials and myopic columnists, and
concerted government propaganda.
Thank you for inviting me to
speak to you today. It's a great honour and I wish you well in
your continuing deliberations.
[1] Foreign Policy, May, June,
2005
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