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Showing posts sorted by date for query NORTH KOREA NUKES. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Saturday, February 24, 2024

When Nukes Are Illegal Only Criminals Will Have Nukes


 
 FEBRUARY 23, 2024
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Image by Egor Myznik.

Dangnabbit, that’s where we are at.

The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), or the Nuclear Weapon Ban Treaty, is a legally binding international agreement that comprehensively prohibits nuclear weapons with the ultimate goal being their total elimination. It was adopted on 7 July 2017, opened for signature on 20 September 2017, and entered into force on 22 January 2021.

Not too surprisingly, the criminal outlaw nations who have nukes don’t like it. As has long been said in the USA, “when guns are made illegal, only criminals will have guns.” Surprise, surprise, surprise, this logic also applies to nuclear weapons!

What outlaw nations have nuclear weapons? Here is the list of the nine most wanted: United States, Russia, UK, France, China, India, Pakistan, North Korea, and Israel. A true “rogues gallery.”

The outlaw nations not only have their criminal arsenals in defiance of the law of nations, but they are making “more and more useable” (tactical v strategic, little v big) nukes and spending billions to do so. Every dollar spent on nukes is a theft from the schools, the hospitals, infrastructure, and communities to pay for crimes rather than uplift in the communities taxed to buy the outlaw weapons. Seems odious.

Almost seems criminal, when you think of it that way. Almost seems to be “an Axis of Evil” opposed to all humankind. Almost seems like they “have no decency left.”

Unnerving also is the “discussion” taking place among nuke criminals is the need to “use” nukes possibly in the many wars around the globe. Some suspect this topic is being raised to “normalize” the use of nukes among the peoples of the world.

Of course, this flies in the face of every study done, all of which conclude that if the nuke “red line” is crossed, and a nuke is used in combat, then retaliation will occur, to which retaliation will occur, and the nuke war will climb the escalation ladder until they are all launched. After all, use ‘em or lose ‘em applies to the “strategic thinking,” which being part of “military intelligence” is FUBAR.

The results of such a full nuke war is “omnicide” which means “murder of everyone.” Thankfully, some humans will probably survive the initial detonations, though the nuclear pollution and dissemination of radioactive isotopes, as was the result of atmospheric testing in the 50s and 60s, will contribute to further distribute death and disease. A “nuclear winter” from the sun-obscuring dust elevated by the detonations will kill crops and food and water sources will become vectors for ingestion of radioactive isotopes by the “lucky” survivors. Such a result seems criminal, too, and “inhuman?”

The outlaw gang of nine, like criminal gangs everywhere, have a vested interest in their continuation, no matter what the rest of humanity thinks of their thuggery, and so they did not vote on the TPNW, and encouraged their allies to oppose it too. Sometimes, it seems, criminals think they are above the law and they act like it.

Sometimes, though they claim to be allies of some and enemies of others, they all share the same goal: survival in power, just like Capone and his competition. I suspect that, at some level, the “Gang of Nine” are all allied, and dividing the “rackets” amongst themselves (“prostitution for Al, numbers for Blackie, drugs for Homer”) for their mutual benefit, not yours nor humanity’s.

Governments are supposed to be the opposite of criminal gangs, because government is subject to the rule of law. That is why, despite having guns, they are not outlaws but law enforcement.

Being obtuse, I am not able to understand why a government that refuses to abide by the law is not an outlaw. Or, why such a government is not a criminal gang and ought to be treated as such?

History is rife with examples of outlaw governments, from which one would hope humanity learns lessons. One lesson that ought to be learned is, once a government reveals itself to be indistinguishable from a criminal gang, unmoored from law, beware.

It will soon degenerate into more criminality, more war, more destruction and finally, in order to stay in power, will turn on its own people to survive. Slippery slope slide eh, voila, concentration camps! Can’t have those pesky peons protesting. You are either with us or against us.

Well, now that nukes are criminal, only criminals have nukes. That is our reality. That is our world.

What to do? Identify those responsible, those profiting, those enabling and haul them into the dock to stand accused as enemies of all humankind.

The legal mechanisms and precedent exist to do so; Nuremberg and Tokyo War Crimes Trials among them, planning war crimes in time of peace is a war crime: a crime against peace and humanity. At least, shun them, vote against them, or just say no. Do not hire the hitman. Instead, support mass nonviolent hits on a Xi, or a Vlad, a Jung-un or a Joe.

The outlaws are outed. Now they must be routed. The survival of humanity, and the rule of law, demands it. So do your kids…. Remember that ancient wisdom, you can’t hug a child with nuclear arms.

Kary Love is a Michigan attorney.

Tuesday, December 19, 2023

 

What Daniel Ellsberg Knew About Doomsday

In my childhood, we at least acknowledged the ominous existence of nuclear weapons, no matter how weirdly. I’m thinking about those times we kids spent at school “ducking and covering” under our desks, practicing for… yes, the atomic annihilation of New York City by the Soviet Union. Even at 12, I was certainly aware that the rickety wooden desk just over my head wouldn’t provide much protection from the most powerful weapon ever invented. Still, we children and our parents lived through that relatively hot period of the Cold War deeply aware that the world could indeed be blown out from under us at any moment.

Walking around New York City at the time, you regularly passed yellow “fallout shelter” signs and, as we grew up, the movies we saw were remarkably populated with nuclear horrors (from the giant irradiated ants of Them! to Godzilla, that monster brought to life by atomic testing at Bikini Atoll). Today, the strange thing is that the world-ending weaponry of my childhood has only grown more horrific as global arsenals have continued to expand. The U.S. now has an estimated 5,200 sea, air, and land-based nuclear weapons that could obviously devastate several Earth-sized planets. And of course, there are now nine nuclear powers, not just the two of my early childhood. Worse yet, future nuclear arsenals, whether in the U.S., China, Russia, North Korea, or Israel, are only likely to grow ever larger and more ominous.

And yet today, perhaps because — miracle of all miracles — since August 9, 1945, no country has ever used such a weapon again, nukes are barely acknowledged in our daily lives or, for that matter, in our culture. In that sense, Daniel Ellsberg, about whom TomDispatch regular Norman Solomon writes movingly today, was a model for us all.

The man who, in the midst of the Vietnam War, risked life in prison to leak the Pentagon Papers to the New York Times was, in fact, quite a character.  I met him once and, at least in my presence, he simply never stopped talking about subjects that should obsess us all. Today, Solomon, author most recently of War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine, focuses not on what Ellsberg was most famous for but on the degree to which he spent the rest of his life warning us about the nuclear danger we’re still facing. He died six months ago, but until then, as much as those interviewing him may have wanted to discuss subjects related to the Pentagon Papers, he was far more interested in warning us about the possibility of nuclear war and how to avert it.

That’s the focus of Solomon’s article, adapted from the Second Annual Ellsberg Lecture that he gave last month at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where Ellsberg’s archives are located and where the Ellsberg Initiative for Peace and Democracy is based. ~ Tom Engelhardt


Unilateral Sanity Could Save the World

by Norman Solomon

Top American officials in the “national security” establishment are notably good at smooth rhetoric and convenient silences. Their scant regard for truth or human life has changed remarkably little since 1971 when Daniel Ellsberg risked decades in prison to leak the Pentagon Papers to the world. During the years between then and his death six months ago, he was a tireless writer, speaker, and activist.

Most people remember him, of course, as the whistleblower who exposed voluminous official lies about the Vietnam War by providing 7,000 top-secret pages of classified documents to the New York Times and other newspapers. But throughout his adult life, he was transfixed above all by the imperative of preventing nuclear war.

One day in 1995, I called Dan and suggested he run for president. His reply was instant: “I’d rather be in prison.” He explained that, unlike typical candidates, he couldn’t stand to offer opinions on subjects he really knew little or nothing about.

However, for more than five decades, Ellsberg didn’t hesitate to publicly address what he really did know all too much about – the patterns of government secrecy and lies that sustained America’s wars in one country after another, along with the chronic deceptions and delusions at the core of the nuclear arms race. He had personally seen such patterns of deceit at work in the upper reaches of the warfare state. As he told me, “That there is deception – that the public is evidently misled by it early in the game… in a way that encourages them to accept a war and support a war – is the reality.”

And how difficult was it to deceive the public? “I would say, as a former insider, one becomes aware: it’s not difficult to deceive them. First of all, you’re often telling them what they would like to believe – that we’re better than other people, we are superior in our morality and our perceptions of the world.”

Dan had absorbed a vast array of classified information during his years working near the top of the U.S. war machine. He knew countless key facts about foreign policy and war-making that had been hidden from the public. Most importantly, he understood how mendacity could lead to massive human catastrophes and how routinely the key figures in the Pentagon, the State Department, and the Oval Office openly lied.

His release of the Pentagon Papers in 1971 – revealing crucial history about the Vietnam War while it was still underway – exposed how incessant deception got wars started and kept them going. He had seen up close just how easy it was for officials like Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara to suppress doubts about American war-making and push ahead with policies that would, in the end, lead to the deaths of several million people in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. And Dan was haunted by the possibility that someday such deception might lead to a nuclear holocaust that could extinguish almost all human life on this planet.

In his 2017 book The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner, he highlighted this all-too-apt epigraph from philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche: “Madness in individuals is something rare. But in groups, parties, nations, and epochs, it is the rule.” The ultimate madness of policies preparing for thermonuclear war preoccupied Dan throughout his adult life. As he wrote,

“No policies in human history have more deserved to be recognized as immoral, or insane. The story of how this calamitous predicament came about, and how and why it has persisted for over half a century is a chronicle of human madness. Whether Americans, Russians, and other humans can rise to the challenge of reversing these policies and eliminating the danger of near-term extinction caused by their own inventions and proclivities remains to be seen. I choose to join with others in acting as if that is still possible.”

A Global Firestorm, a Little Ice Age

I don’t know whether Dan liked Italian philosopher Antonio Gramsci’s aphorism about “pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will,” but it seems to me an apt summary of his approach to the specter of nuclear annihilation and an unfathomable end to human civilization. Keeping his eyes relentlessly on what few of us want to look at – the possibility of omnicide – he was certainly not a fatalist, yet he was a realist about the probability that a nuclear war might indeed occur.

Such a probability now looms larger than at any other time since the Cuban missile crisis in October 1962, but its most essential lessons seem to have been lost on President Biden and his administration. Eight months after that nearly cataclysmic faceoff six decades ago between the United States and the Soviet Union, President John Kennedy spoke at American University about the crisis. “Above all,” he said then, “while defending our own vital interests, nuclear powers must avert those confrontations which bring an adversary to a choice of either a humiliating retreat or a nuclear war. To adopt that kind of course in the nuclear age would be evidence only of the bankruptcy of our policy, or of a collective death wish for the world.”

But Joe Biden has seemed all too intent on forcing his adversary in the Kremlin, Vladimir Putin, into just such “a humiliating retreat.” The temptation to keep blowing a presidential bugle for victory over Russia in the Ukraine war has evidently been too enticing to resist (though Republicans in Congress have recently taken a rather different tack). With disdain for genuine diplomacy and with a zealous desire to keep pouring huge quantities of armaments into the conflagration, Washington’s recklessness has masqueraded as fortitude and its disregard for the dangers of nuclear war as a commitment to democracy. Potential confrontation with the world’s other nuclear superpower has been recast as a test of moral virtue.

Meanwhile, in U.S. media and politics, such dangers rarely get a mention anymore. It’s as if not talking about the actual risks diminishes them, though the downplaying of such dangers can, in fact, have the effect of heightening them. For instance, in this century, the U.S. government has pulled out of the Anti-Ballistic MissileOpen Skies, and Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces arms-control treaties with Russia. Their absence makes nuclear war more likely. For the mainstream media and members of Congress, however, it’s been a non-issue, hardly worth mentioning, much less taking seriously.

Soon after becoming a “nuclear war planner,” Dan Ellsberg learned what kind of global cataclysm was at stake. While working in the Kennedy administration, as he recalled,

“What I discovered, to my horror, I have to say, is that the Joint Chiefs of Staff contemplated causing with our own first [nuclear] strike 600 million deaths, including 100 million in our own allies. Now, that was an underestimate even then, because they weren’t including fire which they felt was too incalculable in its effects. And of course, fire is the greatest casualty-producing effect of thermonuclear weapons. So, the real effect would have been over a billion not 600 million, about a third of the Earth’s population then at that time.”

Decades later, in 2017, Dan described research findings on the “nuclear winter” that such weaponry could cause:

“What turned out to be the case 20 years later in 1983, confirmed in the last 10 years very thoroughly by climate scientists and environmental scientists, is that that high ceiling of a billion or so was wrong. Firing weapons over the cities, even if you called them military targets, would cause firestorms in those cities, like the one in Tokyo in March of 1945, which would loft into the stratosphere many millions of tons of soot and black smoke from the burning cities. It wouldn’t be rained out in the stratosphere, it would go around the globe very quickly, and reduce sunlight by as much as 70 percent, causing temperatures like that of the Little Ice Age, killing harvests worldwide and starving to death nearly everyone on Earth. It probably wouldn’t cause extinction. We’re so adaptable. Maybe 1 percent of our current population of 7.4 billion could survive, but 98 or 99 percent would not.”

Facing the Hell of Thermonuclear Destruction

In his book The Doomsday Machine, Dan also emphasized the importance of focusing attention on one rarely discussed aspect of our nuclear peril: intercontinental ballistic missiles, or ICBMs. They are the most dangerous weapons in the arsenals of the atomic superpowers when it comes to the risk of setting off a nuclear war. The U.S. has 400 of them, always on hair-trigger alert in underground silos scattered across Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, and Wyoming, while Russia deploys about 300 of its own (and China is rushing to catch up). Former Defense Secretary William Perry has called ICBMs “some of the most dangerous weapons in the world,” warning that “they could even trigger an accidental nuclear war.”

As Perry explained, “If our sensors indicate that enemy missiles are en route to the United States, the president would have to consider launching ICBMs before the enemy missiles could destroy them. Once they are launched, they cannot be recalled. The president would have less than 30 minutes to make that terrible decision.” So, any false indication of a Russian attack could lead to global disaster. As former ICBM launch officer Bruce Blair and former vice chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General James Cartwright wrote: “By scrapping the vulnerable land-based missile force, any need for launching on warning disappears.”

During an interview with me in 2021, Dan made a similar case for shutting down ICBMs. It was part of a recording session for a project coordinated by Judith Ehrlich, co-director of the Oscar-nominated documentary “The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers.” She would go on to create an animated six-episode “Defuse Nuclear War Podcast with Daniel Ellsberg.” In one of them, “ICBMs: Hair-Trigger Annihilation,” he began: “When I say that there is a step that could reduce the risk of nuclear war significantly that has not been taken but could easily be taken, and that that is the elimination of American ICBMs, I’m referring to the fact that there is only one weapon in our arsenal that confronts a president with the urgent decision of whether to launch nuclear war and that is the decision to launch our ICBMs.”

He went on to stress that ICBMs are uniquely dangerous because they’re vulnerable to being destroyed in an attack (“use them or lose them”). In contrast, nuclear weapons on submarines and planes are not vulnerable and

“can be called back – in fact they don’t even have to be called back, they can… circle until they get a positive order to go ahead… That’s not true for ICBMs. They are fixed location, known to the Russians… Should we have mutual elimination of ICBMs? Of course. But we don’t need to wait for Russia to wake up to this reasoning… to do what we can to reduce the risk of nuclear war.”

And he concluded: “To remove ours is to eliminate not only the chance that we will use our ICBMs wrongly, but it also deprives the Russians of the fear that our ICBMs are on the way toward them.”

While especially hazardous for human survival, ICBMs are a humongous cash cow for the nuclear weapons industry. Northrop Grumman has already won a $13.3 billion contract to start developing a new version of ICBMs to replace the currently deployed Minuteman III missiles. That system, dubbed Sentinel, is set to be a major part of the U.S. “nuclear modernization plan” now pegged at $1.5 trillion (before the inevitable cost overruns) over the next three decades.

Unfortunately, on Capitol Hill, any proposal that smacks of “unilateral” disarmament is dead on arrival. Yet ICBMs are a striking example of a situation in which such disarmament is by far the sanest option.

Let’s say you’re standing in a pool of gasoline with your adversary and you’re both lighting matches. Stop lighting those matches and you’ll be denounced as a unilateral disarmer, no matter that it would be a step toward sanity.

In his 1964 Nobel Peace Prize speech, Martin Luther King Jr. declared, “I refuse to accept the cynical notion that nation after nation must spiral down a militaristic stairway into the hell of thermonuclear destruction.”

It’s easy to feel overwhelmed and powerless on the subject. The narratives – and silences – offered by government officials and most media are perennial invitations to just such feelings. Still, the desperately needed changes to roll back nuclear threats would require an onset of acute realism coupled with methodical activism. As James Baldwin wrote: “Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced.”

Daniel Ellsberg was accustomed to people telling him how much he inspired them. But I sensed in his eyes and in his heart a persistent question: Inspired to do what?

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Books, John Feffer’s new dystopian novel, Songlands (the final one in his Splinterlands series), Beverly Gologorsky’s novel Every Body Has a Story, and Tom Engelhardt’s A Nation Unmade by War, as well as Alfred McCoy’s In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power, John Dower’s The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World War IIand Ann Jones’s They Were Soldiers: How the Wounded Return from America’s Wars: The Untold Story.

Norman Solomon is co-founder of RootsAction.org and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy. His books include War Made EasyMade LoveGot War, and most recently War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine (The New Press). He lives in the San Francisco area.

Copyright 2023 Norman Solomon

Sunday, October 22, 2023

Closer to midnight

Editorial 
October 22, 2023 

FOR a world already in flames, a fresh nuclear arms race would be an unmitigated catastrophe. Yet the growing gulf between Russia and the US — fuelled primarily by the Ukraine crisis — means that cooperation on nuclear arms reduction has practically stalled, with both states eyeing each other with suspicion. A significant recent development in this regard came in the shape of Russia’s State Duma voting to revoke Moscow’s ratification of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. As the name of the 1996 document suggests, it seeks to prevent the testing of atomic weapons worldwide. All nuclear powers have largely respected the status quo, with no tests in decades, with the exception of North Korea, which tested devices in 2017. Russia has not tested nuclear weapons since the end of the Soviet Union. But with growing tension between Moscow and Washington, there is a danger that either state could alter its nuclear posture. Russia is believed to possess the world’s largest stockpile of nukes, followed by the US. However, Washington has little moral ground to criticise the Russians on the CTBT move as unlike Moscow, it never ratified the treaty. Earlier this year, Russia also withdrew from the bilateral New START treaty it had signed with America.

While there is no need for panic, both Russia and the US need to give top priority to maintaining the nuclear status quo, and preferably one day reducing their massive stockpiles. During the Cold War there were too many instances where a nuclear exchange was closely averted. The current global situation is just as — if not more — unstable, which means that efforts at arms control and preventing the resumption of nuclear testing should be redoubled by the international community. Pakistan also lives in a ‘nuclear neighbourhood’, and renewed arms tests may further vitiate the situation in South Asia. Therefore, instead of rolling back nuclear protocols, these must be strengthened by all states.

Published in Dawn, October 22th, 2023

Wednesday, August 30, 2023

UN chief warns that rise in global distrust and improvements in nukes are ‘recipe for annihilation’

ASSOCIATED PRESS • August 30, 2023

United Nations General Secretary António Guterres addresses a news conference during the BRICS summit in Johannesburg, South Africa, Thursday, Aug. 24, 2023.
 (Themba Hadebe/AP)


UNITED NATIONS — An alarming rise in global distrust and division coupled with efforts by countries to improve the accuracy and destructive power of nuclear weapons is "a recipe for annihilation," the United Nations chief warned Tuesday.

In a statement marking the International Day Against Nuclear Tests, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said that with nearly 13,000 nuclear weapons stockpiled around the world, "a legally binding prohibition on nuclear tests is a fundamental step in our quest for a world free of nuclear weapons."

The Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty has 196 member states — 186 have signed it and 178 have ratified it, including eight in the last 18 months. But the pact has taken effect because it needs ratification by the eight nations that had nuclear power reactors or research reactors when the U.N. General Assembly adopted the treaty in 1996.

At a high-level meeting of the 193-member assembly to observe the day there was no indication that those eight countries — the United States, China, Egypt, Iran, Israel, North Korea, India and Pakistan — were moving toward ratification.

Iranian diplomat Heidar Ali Balouji said his country "shares the frustration of non-nuclear weapon states against any delays in ending nuclear testing," but he made no mention of ratifying the treaty. He said that "the cornerstone for ridding the world of nuclear threats" rests squarely with countries with nuclear weapons.

U.N. disarmament chief Izumi Nakamitsu told delegates she stood before them "with a sense of urgency" because while the treaty has provided the foundation for "the global taboo against nuclear testing," trends are undermining it.

"The rising tide of nuclear risk threatens to engulf the hard-won gains in nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation achieved over the last three decades," she said. "This includes the gains made against the testing of nuclear weapons" which has been done only by North Korea in the 21st century.

Robert Floyd, head of the U.N. nuclear test ban treaty organization, said, "Globally we're facing challenging, worrying times." But, he added, "Momentum towards universality is increasing: Recently, both Somalia and South Sudan made public commitments to sign and ratify the treaty."

The Netherlands' U.N. ambassador, Yoka Brandt, speaking on behalf of 28 mainly Western nations, said it is of "vital importance and urgency" to have the treaty enter into force.


Russia's invasion of Ukraine and its "threats of nuclear use and testing seriously undermine" and negatively affect disarmament and nuclear nonproliferation efforts, he said.

The group, where the United States is an observer, also condemned North Korea's six nuclear tests since 2006 "in the strongest terms" and expressed deep concern that Pyongyang is reportedly preparing for a seventh test, Brandt said.

European Union Charge d' Affaires Silvio Gonzato said Russia's announcement of its readiness to conduct a nuclear test is inconsistent with its ratification of the treaty, "and risks undermining confidence in the treaty in these turbulent times."

The EU also demands that North Korea comply with U.N. Security Council sanctions banning any nuclear testing, saying that the North "cannot and will never have the status of a nuclear weapon state," Gonzato said.

The date to protest nuclear testing commemorates the closing of the former Soviet Union's nuclear test site at Semipalatinsk, now part of Kazakhstan, on Aug. 29, 1991.

Kazakhstan's U.N. ambassador, Akan Rakhmetullin, reminded the world's diplomats that following the first atomic bomb detonation in 1945, "at least eight nations have carried out a total of 2,056 nuclear tests, around one-quarter of them in the atmosphere, causing severe long-term harm and suffering to humanity and the entire planet."

Kazakhstan is "extremely anxious" over increasing geopolitical tensions, threats to use nuclear weapons and "the trend towards nuclear sharing, which can lead to further proliferation and weapons accumulation," he said.

Ambassador Teburoro Tito of the tiny Pacific island nation of Kiribati said the United States and Britain carried out 33 nuclear tests on Kiritimati, its atoll also known as Christmas Island, in the 1950s and 1960s.

The tests left a "tragic legacy" for the atoll's 500 residents who received little protection, Tito said. Many complained afterward of untreatable illnesses and health complications, "most of which resulted in death," he said. There were numerous cases of cancer, congenital disabilities and abnormalities with newborn babies, he said.

Tito urged the U.S. and United Kingdom to support citizens of Kiritmati who "continue to suffer from not only physical medical problems caused by radiation exposure, but also post traumatic and intergenerational harm from these weapons of mass destruction."

Tuesday, August 08, 2023

Oppenheimer: Beyond the Hollywood Lens

 IEH JODAT – SAM ROSENTHAL

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Christopher Nolan’s new biographical thriller film, Oppenheimer, chronicles the life of J. Robert Oppenheimer, known as the “father of the atomic bomb.” In Nolan’s typical Hollywood-for-thinking-people style, the film strikes an ambiguous tone, neither triumphal nor admonishing of Oppenheimer and his team’s dubious accomplishment. As we follow Oppenheimer’s life and professional trajectory, we’re presented with the image of a person living through an era of uncertainty. Oppenheimer himself is depicted as conflicted, maybe even tormented, by his pivotal role in creating and developing this weapon of mass murder, while his own government finds Oppenheimer alternately to be an object of worship and suspicion, culminating in his investigation by the House Un-American Activities Committee.

What the film fails to explicitly portray, however, is the profound global effect that Oppenheimer’s personal saga and his work with the Manhattan Project – the secret U.S.-funded research and development program during the Second World War which led to the successful creation of the atomic bomb – still have on the world today. As Danish physicist Neils Henrik David Bohr (played by Kenneth Branagh) warns Oppenheimer in the film, “The power you are about to reveal will forever outlive [World War II], and the world is not prepared.” Even to this day, one can make a strong argument that humanity is still not prepared for the power that Oppenheimer and his team unleashed on the world. Oppenheimer has been largely received as a historical document, and it is, but seen through another lens, it could almost serve as a public service announcement, reminding us of the very real and imminent threat that nuclear weapons still pose.

The arrival of Oppenheimer, during a time of heightened global tensions among the most powerful nuclear powers in the world, brings a feeling of profound portent. In January of this year, the “Doomsday Clock,” which is managed by the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, was moved to 90 seconds until midnight, serving as a haunting reminder of the immediate risk of a human-made nuclear catastrophe. This is the closest the clock has been to midnight since its inception in 1947. A cursory look at geopolitical history from 1947 through the present reveals several moments of intense tension between nuclear powers: the first hydrogen bomb test, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the proliferation of nuclear weapons into India and Pakistan. That the Bulletin believes the nuclear risk today exceeds that of these earlier historical moments should fill us all with a deep sense of dread.

Our epoch, too, is marked by a worrisome decline in diplomatic dialogue and cooperation between nuclear powers. In Oppenheimer’s time, there were just one, then two, nuclear powers, bound together by the paradoxical, but compelling, logic of mutually assured destruction. Today, combined, China, Israel, North Korea, Russia, France, Pakistan, the United Kingdom and the U.S. own roughly 12,500 nuclear weapons, many of which are far more powerful than “Little Boy,” the bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima. An additional six bases in five NATO countries host U.S. nuclear weapons, increasing the physical dispersion of these weapons of mass destruction and death. Recently, Russia’s Vladimir Putin announced he had deployed Russian nukes to neighboring Belarus; this comes after he earlier raised the specter of using nuclear weapons in the Ukraine War. There should be little doubt that the use of a nuclear weapon on the European continent would trigger a full-scale nuclear war and a near-certain global apocalypse.

So, when we go to see Oppenheimer this summer, we can view it for what it is — a Hollywoodified summation of one of the most consequential scientific breakthroughs in world history — but we should also remember that the world that Oppenheimer created remains our reality today. The threat of nuclear weapons is far from a relic of a bygone era, and it remains a contemporary concern. So, long after the theater lights fade, and we are no longer immersed in the theatrics, we should think about the grave implications of this reality — and collectively work to avert the haunting specter of a nuclear calamity.

This first appeared on Progressive Hub.

Oppenheimer, the Hero? Selling America by the Trinitrotoluene Ton


 
 AUGUST 4, 2023
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Photograph Source: Los Alamos National Laboratory – https://about.lanl.gov/history-innovation/badges/

As a physicist and baby boomer whose parents both served in World War II, I had to see Christopher Nolan’s cinematic creation about one of the twentieth century’s most enigmatic figures, J. Robert Oppenheimer, the self-styled Destroyer of Worlds known as Oppie to most. Having seen the 1980 BBC miniseries on the Manhattan Project with Sam Waterston, read numerous books on the mysterious workings at Los Alamos, and taught quantum mechanics (the same subject Oppie first taught), I knew a bit of his story, but I was keen to see how Hollywood depicted what some consider the defining moment of modern history, of which Oppie was lead architect. I should have known better. At least they got the physics right.

The figures for Hiroshima and Nagasaki are well known in all their statistical horror – 34 kilotons of TNT, 68,000 buildings destroyed, 170,000 people dead (10,000 per square mile) from two 1,800-foot “air bursts.” Some of the hundreds of thousands of surviving hibakusha were so badly disfigured they would never again show themselves in public or have children because of the fear of birth defects. Not that such horror is shown in Oppenheimer the movie as the human consequences of detonating an atomic bomb are oddly neutered throughout.

Oppenheimer is not about a bomb or the destruction of two cities at the end of a war. It’s about the rise, fall, and rise of its creator, ever tormented at the hands of a divided American political class. Is he a Red? A security risk? Is he a reformed anti-war activist? Nobody knows, the dichotomy of his persona presented on par with the duality of energy and matter, spectacle and reality, life and death. The movie excelled in turning destruction into victory, Oppie’s victory, while the bomb becomes essentially a $2-billion McGuffin exploded two-thirds in.

And so for two hours we get a biopic of the man who oversaw the building of a bomb, followed by some prosecutorial drama between Lewis Strauss, the head of the US Atomic Energy Commission, the pronunciation of whose name is whimsically dramatized. Strauss orchestrated Oppie’s downfall by having his security clearance renewal denied in 1954 amid a growing Cold War of “missile gaps” and “Red scares.” All because Oppie was against developing the “Super,” which could unearth even more destruction from the unseen mysteries of matter (a more powerful fusion H-bomb detonated by an already well-developed fission A-bomb). Oppie’s undoing may have started at a 1949 General Advisory Committee meeting after he stated that the destructive power of the H-bomb is unlimited and that such a “weapon of genocide … should never be produced.”[1] Could sanity prevail after the madness, mass destruction, and horrors of world war? Maybe curses could be returned to Pandora’s box. Maybe Prometheus could be freed. Unfortunately, the possibility of a non-nuclear world doesn’t look good in digital detail.

In the preface to the 2005 book upon which the movie is based, American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin, Oppie’s answer to nuclear annihilation is to eliminate nuclear weapons altogether. Yet the movie is more interested in Oppie’s political comeuppance than exploring any Faustian bargain. Enrico Fermi says nothing, while Niels Bohr gets one memorable line, “New world. New Weapons,” and little else. The movie and book both consider Oppie’s maltreatment as the unique selling point. American exceptionalism is delivered via technical superiority and political infighting without a depiction of mass carnage or real victims.

In truth, many scientists were opposed to the use of atomic weapons. Often called the Father of the Bomb because of his famous energy-matter equation and 1939 letter to Roosevelt, Einstein said, “Had I known the Germans would not succeed in producing an atomic bomb, I never would have lifted a finger.”[2] He also sent a second letter to Roosevelt dated March 25, 1945, about the lack of contact between scientists and the government, but FDR died before he could read it. Einstein would spend the rest of his life campaigning for arms control, reduced militaries, and a “supernational” security authority.

Fermi wanted the focus after the war to shift from making weapons to peaceful aims, hoping “to devote more and more activity to peaceful purposes and less and less to the production of weapons.”[3] Bohr even met FDR to talk about “atomic diplomacy” with the Soviets and limit the escalation of a coming new conflict in an unholy arms race, shelved by Winston Churchill. And so the bomb-making spree began, estimated at $5 trillion for the US and likely as much or more for the Soviets in the decades of insanity that followed. Imagine $10 trillion spent on Shiva’s other incarnations?

Okay, that’s what Oppenheimer wasn’t about, so what is it about? The three hours did pass by quickly, so I must have been entertained despite an often-intrusive musical score. Part battle between the boffins and the brass. Could the head military honcho General Leslie Groves control the supposed free-thinking lefty scientists like Oppie, Enrico Fermi, and Leo Szilard to deliver the bomb before the Nazis and afterwards when their consciences returned in peacetime? It’s one thing to build a doomsday machine to deter future aggression that can never be used, but a whole other world-ending deal to use it. Could Oppie and Co. be controlled after their nuclear toolmaking was over?

Part stargazing. Matt Damon was suitably gruff as the pragmatic Groves, more socially maladroit than the suave on-screen Oppenheimer played by Cillian Murphy, although the gruff Groves oddly turned to mumbles in 1956 about the horror of ground zero, including the effects of lingering radiation and the pain of living with mutated genes. The real Groves grimly stated that an atomic blast was “a very pleasant way to die.”[4] Okay, blockbusters don’t do ugly, so instead we get Groves bullying a recalcitrant scientist who expressed doubts about the project: “How about because this is the most important fucking thing to ever happen in the history of the world?” Arrogant, gruff, and cinematic fiction. Artistic license.

Was Oppenheimer an anti-war movie? That rendering is problematic when so much screen time is dedicated to building the bomb, while no scenes of real people dying are shown, the ultimate reality of the biggest-ever effing weapon of mass destruction. Nor are there scenes of arms talks, protest marches, or a ticking Doomsday Clock? Millions of people were and are against nuclear weapons, not just the mute master-creator.

Was Oppenheimer serious about arms reduction as suggested by the black-and-white versus colour temporal jumps to build up, tear down, and reconstruct Oppie’s supposed activist credentials? That possibility gets lost in the conflated spectacle of personal redemption within an odious political culture, Oppie unstuck in time like poor Billy Pilgrim in Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-Five. Vonnegut’s book was based on the real fire-bombing of Dresden, six months before Hiroshima and Nagasaki, where Vonnegut as a POW survived. Anti-war on every page. In Oppenheimer, however, we get Oppie’s pain as he is tortured over and over again. You can almost see his liver being pecked out.

Oppenheimer is a movie about vendettas and settling scores. Oppie versus Strauss, Oppie versus Groves (somewhat), Oppie versus Truman (and the military-industrial complex), and the US v. Germany, Japan, and Russia. Japan paid for Pearl Harbor. They were always going to pay, even if the goal of the Manhattan Project was to beat Germany to the bomb. Exonerated and yet humiliated at the same time, Oppie is cut down to size by Gary Oldman’s Harry Truman, who says to him in the Oval Office, “You think anyone in Hiroshima, Nagasaki, gives a shit who built the bomb? They care who dropped it. I did.” That is, the United States, just or unjust.

Forget the misfit prophet versus establishment theme as in genius Mozart versus jealous Salieri. Ditto overcoming personal doubts about the harm caused in life and death. Not when an old lover’s suicide is made out to be more important than the hundreds of thousands who perished on August 6 and 9.

Redemption of a reputation? How can a Destroyer of Worlds’ reputation be redeemed? In From Faust to Strangelove, Roslynn Haynes noted that physicists could no longer be considered innocents after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, their moral superiority questioned as was “their ability to initiate a new, peaceful society.”[5] Indeed, we still have wars despite the weapons (roughly 12,500 nuclear weapons at last count[6]). Physics may be to blame in all its rock-turning obsession, aided by unlimited government spending.

Are we meant to see ourselves in a flawed Destroyer of Worlds’ life? In America’s flaws? We are all post-war tech children now, controlled by so much military cum commercial material: transistors, microwaves, the internet (AI robot drone delivery vehicles coming soon). Much of the science and engineering of today comes from military development. We are children of the bomb, but how can we be faulted other than by some artificially manufactured sin?

Alas, tools always get used. And so 12,500 theoretically impotent yet real world-destroyers await their eventual use. As a former US air force ICBM operator noted, “a good day in nuclear missile operations is a quiet one,” which fortunately for him and us most days were.[7] I don’t want to know about a bad day. Was that Nolan’s message? – nuclear annihilation is inevitable unless we do something. Even in a sanitized spectacle that denies real pain.

Oppenheimer didn’t dare to explore the reasons behind dropping atomic bombs on two cities in a country where the war was essentially over: revenge, arrogance, and superiority. That movie would be called Black Rain, showing how one can be more than intellectually opposed to killing. That Oppie had more than just figurative blood on his hands. The wrong Greek myth was employed. The wrong script.

Indeed, Oppenheimer suffers from the same criticism levelled by the anti-war wife of a buddy of Kurt Vonnegut’s in Slaughterhouse-Five, which he then turns into the theme of his book. Nolan needed a Mary O’Hare to tell him that war is not glory. It never is. That no one’s reputation can be redeemed by mass destruction. As Mary accuses him in the introduction: “You’ll pretend you were men instead of babies, and you’ll be played in the movies by Frank Sinatra and John Wayne or some of those other glamorous, war-loving, dirty old men. And war will look just wonderful, so we’ll have a lot more of them. And they’ll be fought by babies like the babies upstairs.”

What a waste to rationalize the horrors of the nuclear era in one man’s rise and fall and rise? Or to glorify making enemies of friends? Or to measure human progress and security in megatons of unusable TNT? Oppie the hero? All that was missing was the cape. “So it goes.”

Notes

[1] Baggott, J., Atomic: The First War of Physics and the Secret History of the Atomic Bomb, p. 456, Icon Books, London, 2019.

[2] Isaacson, W., Einstein: His Life and Universe, p. 485, Simon & Schuster, London, 2007.

[3] Fermi, E., “Discovery of fission,” American Institute of Physics, 1952.

[4] “US Congress, Senate, Special Committee on Atomic Energy,” 79th Congress, Washington, D.C., November 1945.

[5] Haynes, R.D., From Faust to Strangelove: Representations of the Scientist in Western Literature, p. 303, The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 1994.

[6] “Nuclear Weapons: Who Has What at a Glance,” Arms Control Association, June 2023.

[7] Smith, C., “I was a US nuclear missile operator. I’m grateful for the Oppenheimer film,” The Guardian, July 24, 2023.

John K. Whitea former lecturer in physics and education at University College Dublin and the University of Oviedo. He is the editor of the energy news service E21NS and author of Do The Math!: On Growth, Greed, and Strategic Thinking (Sage, 2013)Do The Math! is also available in a Kindle edition. He can be reached at: johnkingstonwhite@gmail.com