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The following document is from http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20030303&s=schell
The Case Against the War
by JONATHAN SCHELL
[from the March 3, 2003 issue of the Nation]
"All of us have heard this term 'preventive war' since the earliest
days of Hitler. I recall that is about the first time I heard it. In
this day and time...I don't believe there is such a thing; and, frankly,
I wouldn't even listen to anyone seriously that came in and talked about
such a thing."
--President Dwight Eisenhower, 1953,
upon being presented with plans to wage
preventive war to disarm Stalin's Soviet Union
"Our position is that whatever grievances a nation may have, however
objectionable it finds the status quo, aggressive warfare is an illegal
means for settling those grievances or for altering those
conditions."
--Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson,
the American prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials,
in his opening statement to the tribunal
I. The Lost War
In his poem "Fall 1961," written when the cold war was at its
zenith, Robert Lowell wrote:
All autumn, the chafe and jar
of nuclear war;
we have talked our extinction to death.
This autumn and winter, nuclear danger has returned, in a new form,
accompanied by danger from the junior siblings in the mass destruction
family, chemical and biological weapons. Now it is not a crisis between
two superpowers but the planned war to overthrow the government of Iraq
that, like a sentence of execution that has been passed but must go
through its final appeals before being carried out, we have talked to
death. (Has any war been so lengthily premeditated before it was
launched?) Iraq, the United States insists, possesses some of these
weapons. To take them away, the United States will overthrow the Iraqi
government. No circumstance is more likely to provoke Iraq to use any
forbidden weapons it has. In that event, the Bush Administration has
repeatedly said, it will itself consider the use of nuclear weapons. Has
there ever been a clearer or more present danger of the use of weapons
of mass destruction?
While we were all talking and the danger was growing, strange to say,
the war was being lost. For wars, let us recall, are not fought for
their own sake but to achieve aims. Victory cannot be judged only by the
outcome of battles. In the American Revolutionary War, for example,
Edmund Burke, a leader of England's antiwar movement, said, "Our
victories can only complete our ruin." Almost two centuries later, in
Vietnam, the United States triumphed in almost every military
engagement, yet lost the war. If the aim is lost, the war is lost,
whatever happens on the battlefield. The novelty this time is that the
defeat has preceded the inauguration of hostilities.
The aim of the Iraq war has never been only to disarm Iraq. George Bush
set forth the full aim of his war policy in unmistakable terms on
January 29, 2002, in his first State of the Union address. It was to
stop the spread of weapons of mass destruction, not only in Iraq but
everywhere in the world, through the use of military force. "We must,"
he said, "prevent the terrorists and regimes who seek chemical,
biological or nuclear weapons from threatening the United States and the
world." He underscored the scope of his ambition by singling out three
countries--North Korea, Iran and Iraq--for special mention, calling them
an "axis of evil." Then came the ultimatum: "The United States of
America will not permit the world's most dangerous regimes to threaten
us with the world's most destructive weapons." Other possible war
aims--to defeat Al Qaeda, to spread democracy--came and went in
Administration pronouncements, but this one has remained constant.
Stopping the spread of weapons of mass destruction is the reason for war
given alike to the Security Council, whose inspectors are now searching
for such weapons in Iraq, and to the American people, who were advised
in the recent State of the Union address to fear "a day of horror like
none we have ever known."
The means whereby the United States would stop the prohibited
acquisitions were first set forth last June 1 in the President's speech
to the graduating class at West Point. The United States would use
force, and use it pre-emptively. "If we wait for threats to fully
materialize, we will have waited too long," he said. For "the only path
to safety is the path of action. And this nation will act." This
strategy, too, has remained constant.
The Bush policy of using force to stop the spread of weapons of mass
destruction met its Waterloo last October, when Assistant Secretary of
State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs James Kelly was informed by
Vice Foreign Minister Kang Sok Ju of North Korea that his country has a
perfect right to possess nuclear weapons. Shortly, Secretary of State
Colin Powell stated, "We have to assume that they might have one or
two.... that's what our intelligence community has been saying for some
time." (Doubts, however, remain.) Next, North Korea went on to announce
that it was terminating the Agreed Framework of 1994, under which it had
shut down two reactors that produced plutonium. It ejected the UN
inspectors who had been monitoring the agreement and then announced its
withdrawal from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, under whose terms
it was obligated to remain nuclear-weapon-free. Soon, America stated
that North Korea might be moving fuel rods from existing reactors to its
plutonium reprocessing plant, and that it possessed an untested missile
capable of striking the western United States. "We will not permit..."
had been Bush's words, but North Korea went ahead and apparently
produced nuclear weapons anyway. The Administration now discovered that
its policy of pre-emptively using overwhelming force had no application
against a proliferator with a serious military capability, much less a
nuclear power. North Korea's conventional capacity alone--it has an army
of more than a million men and 11,000 artillery pieces capable of
striking South Korea's capital, Seoul--imposed a very high cost; the
addition of nuclear arms, in combination with missiles capable of
striking not only South Korea but Japan, made it obviously prohibitive.
By any measure, totalitarian North Korea's possession of nuclear weapons
is more dangerous than the mere possibility that Iraq is trying to
develop them. The North Korean state, which is hard to distinguish from
a cult, is also more repressive and disciplined than the Iraqi state,
and has caused the death of more of its own people--through starvation.
Yet in the weeks that followed the North Korean disclosure, the
Administration, in a radical reversal of the President's earlier
assessments, sought to argue that the opposite was true. Administration
spokespersons soon declared that the North Korean situation was "not a
crisis" and that its policy toward that country was to be one of
"dialogue," leading to "a peaceful multilateral solution," including the
possibility of renewed oil shipments. But if the acquisition by North
Korea of nuclear arms was not a crisis, then there never had been any
need to warn the world of the danger of nuclear proliferation, or to
name an axis of evil, or to deliver an ultimatum to disarm it.
For the North Korean debacle represented not the failure of a good
policy but exposure of the futility of one that was impracticable from
the start. Nuclear proliferation, when considered as the global
emergency that it is, has never been, is not now and never will be
stoppable by military force; on the contrary, force can only exacerbate
the problem. In announcing its policy, the United States appeared to
have forgotten what proliferation is. It is not army divisions or tanks
crossing borders; it is above all technical know-how passing from one
mind to another. It cannot be stopped by B-2 bombers, or even Predator
drones. The case of Iraq had indeed always been an anomaly in the wider
picture of nonproliferation. In the 1991 Gulf War, the US-led coalition
waged war to end Iraq's occupation of Kuwait. In the process it stumbled
on Saddam Hussein's program for building weapons of mass destruction,
and made use of the defeat to impose on him the new obligation to end
the program. A war fought for one purpose led to peace terms serving
another. It was a historical chain of events unlikely ever to be
repeated, and offered no model for dealing with proliferation.
The lesson so far? Exactly the opposite of the intended one: If you want
to avoid "regime change" by the United States, build a nuclear
arsenal--but be sure to do it quietly and fast. As Mohamed ElBaradei,
the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, has
said, the United States seems to want to teach the world that "if you
really want to defend yourself, develop nuclear weapons, because then
you get negotiations, and not military action."
Although the third of the "axis" countries presents no immediate crisis,
events there also illustrate the bankruptcy of the Bush policy. With the
help of Russia, Iran is building nuclear reactors that are widely
believed to double as a nuclear weapons program. American threats
against Iraq have failed to dissuade Iran--or for that matter, its
supplier, Russia--from proceeding. Just this week, Iran announced that
it had begun to mine uranium on its own soil. Iran's path to acquiring
nuclear arms, should it decide to go ahead, is clear. "Regime change" by
American military action in that half-authoritarian, half-democratic
country is a formula for disaster. Whatever the response of the Iraqi
people might be to an American invasion, there is little question that
in Iran hard-liners and democrats alike would mount bitter, protracted
resistance. Nor is there evidence that democratization in Iraq, even in
the unlikely event that it should succeed, would be a sure path to
denuclearization. The world's first nuclear power, after all, was a
democracy, and of nine nuclear powers now in the world, six--the United
States, England, France, India, Israel and Russia--are also democracies.
Iran, within striking range of Israel, lives in an increasingly
nuclearized neighborhood. In these circumstances, would the Iranian
people be any more likely to rebel against nuclearization than the
Indian people did--or more, for that matter, than the American people
have done? And if a democratic Iran obtained the bomb, would pre-emption
or regime change then be an option for the United States?
The collapse of the overall Bush policy has one more element that may be
even more significant than the appearance of North Korea's arsenal or
Iran's apparently unstoppable discreet march to obtaining the bomb. It
has turned out that the supplier of essential information and technology
for North Korea's uranium program was America's faithful ally in the war
on terrorism, Pakistan, which received missile technology from Korea in
return. The "father" of Pakistan's bomb, Ayub Qadeer Khan, has visited
North Korea thirteen times. This is the same Pakistan whose nuclear
scientist Sultan Bashiruddin Mahood paid a visit to Osama bin Laden in
Afghanistan a few months before September 11, and whose nuclear
establishment even today is riddled with Islamic fundamentalists. The
BBC has reported that the Al Qaeda network succeeded at one time in
building a "dirty bomb" (which may account for Osama bin Laden's claim
that he possesses nuclear weapons), and Pakistan is the likeliest source
for the materials involved, although Russia is also a candidate.
Pakistan, in short, has proved itself to be the world's most dangerous
proliferator, having recently acquired nuclear weapons itself and passed
on nuclear technology to a state and, possibly, to a terrorist group.
Indeed, an objective ranking of nuclear proliferators in order of menace
would place Pakistan (a possessor of the bomb that also purveys the
technology to others) first on the list, North Korea second (it peddles
missiles but not, so far, bomb technology), Iran (a country of growing
political and military power with an active nuclear program) third, and
Iraq (a country of shrinking military power that probably has no nuclear
program and is currently under international sanctions and an
unprecedented inspection regime of indefinite duration) fourth. (Russia,
possessor of 150 tons of poorly guarded plutonium, also belongs
somewhere on this list.) The Bush Administration ranks them, of course,
in exactly the reverse order, placing Iraq, which it plans to attack,
first, and Pakistan, which it befriends and coddles, nowhere on the
list. It will not be possible, however, to right this pyramid. The
reason it is upside down is that it was unworkable right side up. Iraq
is being attacked not because it is the worst proliferator but because
it is the weakest.
The reductio ad absurdum of the failed American war policy was
illustrated by a recent column in the Washington Post by the
superhawk Charles Krauthammer. Krauthammer wants nothing to do with soft
measures; yet he, too, can see that the cost of using force against
North Korea would be prohibitive: "Militarily, we are not even in
position to bluff." He rightly understands, too, that in the climate
created by pending war in Iraq, "dialogue" is scarcely likely to
succeed. He has therefore come up with a new idea. He identifies China
as the solution. China must twist the arm of its Communist ally North
Korea. "If China and South Korea were to cut off North Korea, it could
not survive," he observes. But to make China do so, the United States
must twist China's arm. How? By encouraging Japan to build nuclear
weapons. For "if our nightmare is a nuclear North Korea, China's is a
nuclear Japan." It irks Krauthammer that the United States alone has to
face up to the North Korean threat. Why shouldn't China shoulder some of
the burden? He wants to "share the nightmares." Indeed. He wants to stop
nuclear proliferation with more nuclear proliferation. Here the nuclear
age comes full circle. The only nation ever to use the bomb is to push
the nation on which it dropped it to build the bomb and threaten others.
As a recommendation for policy, Krauthammer's suggestion is
Strangelovian, but if it were considered as a prediction it would be
sound. Nuclear armament by North Korea really will tempt neighboring
nations--not only Japan but South Korea and Taiwan--to acquire nuclear
weapons. (Japan has an abundant supply of plutonium and all the other
technology necessary, and both South Korea and Taiwan have had nuclear
programs but were persuaded by the United States to drop them.) In a
little-noticed comment, Japan's foreign minister has already stated that
the nuclearization of North Korea would justify a pre-emptive strike
against it by Japan. Thus has the Bush plan to stop proliferation
already become a powerful force promoting it. The policy of pre-emptive
war has led to pre-emptive defeat.
General Groves Redux
Radical as the Bush Administration policy is, the idea behind it is not
new. Two months after the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Gen. Leslie
Groves, the Pentagon overseer of the Manhattan Project, expressed his
views on controlling nuclear proliferation. He said:
If we were truly realistic instead of idealistic, as we appear to be
[sic], we would not permit any foreign power with which we are
not firmly allied, and in which we do not have absolute confidence, to
make or possess atomic weapons. If such a country started to make atomic
weapons we would destroy its capacity to make them before it has
progressed far enough to threaten us.
The proposal was never seriously considered by President Truman and,
until now, has been rejected by every subsequent President. Eisenhower's
views of preventive war are given in the epigraph at the beginning of
this article. In 1961, during the Berlin crisis, a few of Kennedy's
advisers made the surprising discovery that Russia's nuclear forces were
far weaker and more vulnerable than anyone had thought. They proposed a
preventive strike. Ted Sorensen, the chief White House counsel and
speechwriter, was told of the plan. He shouted, "You're crazy! We
shouldn't let guys like you around here." It never came to the attention
of the President.
How has it happened that President Bush has revived and implemented this
long-buried, long-rejected idea? We know the answer. The portal was
September 11. The theme of the "war on terror" was from the start to
strike pre-emptively with military force. Piece by piece, a bridge from
the aim of catching Osama bin Laden to the aim of stopping proliferation
on a global basis was built. First came the idea of holding whole
regimes accountable in the war on terror; then the idea of "regime
change" (beginning with Afghanistan), then pre-emption, then the broader
claim of American global dominance. Gradually, the most important issue
of the age--the rising danger from weapons of mass destruction--was
subsumed as a sort of codicil to the war on terror. When the process was
finished, the result was the Groves plan writ large--a reckless and
impracticable idea when it was conceived, when only one hostile nuclear
power (the Soviet Union) was in prospect, and a worse one today in our
world of nine nuclear powers (if you count North Korea) and many scores
of nuclear-capable ones.
The Administration now hints, however, that although its overall
nonproliferation policy might be in trouble, the forcible disarmament of
Iraq still makes sense on its own terms. Bush now claims that "different
threats require different strategies"--apparently forgetting that the
Iraq policy was announced with great fanfare in the context of a global
policy of preserving the world from weapons of mass destruction. The
mainstream argument, shared by many doubters as well as supporters of
the war, is that if Iraq is shown to possess weapons of mass
destruction, its regime must be attacked and destroyed. Thus the only
question is whether Iraq has the weapons. A team of "realist" analysts,
organized by Stephen Walt of Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of
Government and John Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago, have given
a convincing response: They are prepared to live with a nuclear-armed
Iraq. "The United States can contain a nuclear Iraq," they write. They
argue that Hussein belongs, like his idol Stalin, in the class of
rational monsters. The idea that he is not deterrable is "almost
certainly wrong." He wants power; he knows that to engage again in
aggression is to insure his overthrow and likely his personal
extinction. The record of his wars--against Iran, against Kuwait--shows
him to be brutal but calculating. He is 65 years old. Time will solve
the problem, as it did with the Soviet Union.
What is of most desperately immediate concern, however, is that
America's pre-emptive war will lead directly to the use of the weapons
whose mere possession the war is supposed to prevent. In the debate over
the inspections now going on in Iraq, it sometimes seems to be forgotten
that Iraq either does possess weapons of mass destruction (as
Colin Powell has just asserted at the UN) or does not possess
them, and that each alternative has consequences that go far beyond the
decision whether or not to go to war. If Iraq does not have these
weapons, then the war will be an unnecessary, wholly avoidable
slaughter. If Iraq does have the weapons, then there is a likelihood
that it will use them. Why else would Saddam Hussein, having created
them, bring on the destruction of his regime and his personal extinction
by hiding them from the UN inspectors? And if in fact he does use them,
then the United States, as it has made clear, will consider using
nuclear weapons in retaliation. Powell has asserted that Saddam has
recently given his forces fresh orders to use chemical weapons. Against
whom? In what circumstances? Is it possible that this outcome--a
Hitlerian finale--is what Hussein seeks? Could it be his plan, if
cornered, to provoke the United States into the first use of nuclear
weapons since Nagasaki?
We cannot know, but we do know that White House Chief of Staff Andrew
Card has stated that if Iraq uses weapons of mass destruction against
American troops "the United States will use whatever means necessary to
protect us and the world from a holocaust"--"whatever means" being
diplomatese for nuclear attack. The Washington Times has revealed
that National Security Presidential Directive 17, issued secretly on
September 14 of last year, says in plain English what Card expressed
obliquely. It reads, "The United States will continue to make clear that
it reserves the right to respond with overwhelming force--including
potentially nuclear weapons--to the use of [weapons of mass destruction]
against the United States, our forces abroad, and friends and allies."
Israel has also used diplomatese to make known its readiness to
retaliate with nuclear weapons if attacked by Iraq. Condoleezza Rice has
threatened the Iraqi people with genocide: If Iraq uses weapons of mass
destruction, she says, it knows it will bring "national obliteration."
(Threats of genocide are flying thick and fast around the world these
days. In January, Indian Defense Minister George Fernandes threatened
that if Pakistan launched a nuclear attack on India--as Pakistan's
President Pervez Musharraf has threatened to do if India invades
Pakistan--then "there will be no Pakistan left when we have responded.")
William Arkin writes in the Los Angeles Times that the United
States is "drafting contingency plans for the use of nuclear weapons."
STRATCOM--the successor to the Strategic Air Command--has been ordered
to consider ways in which nuclear weapons can be used pre-emptively,
either to destroy underground facilities or to respond to the use or
threats of use of weapons of mass destruction against the United States
or its forces.
Oil and Democracy
Other critics of the war have concluded from the disparity in America's
treatment of Iraq and North Korea that the Administration's aim is not
to deal with weapons of mass destruction at all but to seize Iraq's oil,
which amounts to some 10 percent of the world's known reserves. The very
fact that the Bush Administration refuses even to discuss the oil
question (the war "has nothing to do with oil," Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld has said) suggests that the influence of oil is moving
powerfully in the background. One is tempted to respond to Rumsfeld that
if the Administration is not thinking about the consequences of a war
for the global oil regime, it is culpably neglecting the security
interests of the United States. However, there is in fact no
contradiction between the goals of disarming Iraq and seizing its oil.
Both fit neatly into the larger scheme of American global dominance.
Still other critics place the emphasis not on oil but on political
reform of Iraq and even the entire Middle East. Thomas Friedman of the
New York Times is prepared to support Hussein's overthrow, but
only if we "do it right"--which is to say that we devote the "time and
effort" to creating "a self-sustaining, progressive, accountable Arab
government" in Iraq. And this delightful government (can we have one at
home, too, please?), in turn, must become "a progressive model for the
whole region." "Our kids" can grow up in "a safer world" only "if we
help put Iraq on a more progressive path and stimulate some real change
in an Arab world that is badly in need of reform." Fouad Ajami, of Johns
Hopkins University, likewise wants the United States to get over its
"dread of nation-building" and spearhead "a reformist project that seeks
to modernize and transform the Arab landscape," now mired in
"retrogression and political decay." Michael Ignatieff, director of the
Carr Center for Human Rights at Harvard, is also of the "do it right"
school. His starting point, however, is the need to disarm Iraq. In his
essay in the New York Times Magazine "The American Empire: The
Burden," he begins by noting that if Saddam Hussein is permitted to have
weapons of mass destruction, he will have a "capacity to intimidate and
deter others, including the United States." Being deterred in a region
of interest is evidently unacceptable for an imperial power, and forces
it to remove the offending regime. Yet if the regime is to be removed, a
larger imperial agenda becomes inescapable. By this reasoning Ignatieff
arrives at the same destination as Friedman and Ajami: The United States
must mount "an imperial operation that would commit a reluctant republic
to become the guarantor of peace, stability, democratization and oil
supplies in a combustible region of Islamic peoples stretching from
Egypt to Afghanistan." We arrive at a new formula that has no precedent
for dealing with nuclear danger: nonproliferation by forced
democratization. Ignatieff acknowledges that a republic that turns into an empire risks "endangering its identity as a free people"--thus menacing democracy at home by trying to force it on others abroad. Nevertheless, he wants the United States to take on "the burden of empire."
The Bush Administration, however, has given little encouragement to the
evangelists of armed democratization. Notoriously, it has kept silent
regarding its plans for postwar Iraq and its neighbors. But if its
actions in the "war on terror" are any guide, democracy will not be
required of Washington's imperial dependencies. The Bush Administration
has been perfectly happy, for example, to extend its cooperation to such
allies as totalitarian Turkmenistan and authoritarian Uzbekistan and
Kazakhstan--not to speak of such longstanding autocratic allies of the
United States as Egypt and Saudi Arabia. The United States has in fact
never insisted on democracy as a condition for good relations with other
countries. Its practice during the cold war probably offers as accurate
a guide to the future as any. The United States was pleased to have
democratic allies, including most of the countries of Europe, but was
also ready when needed to install or prop up such brutal, repressive
regimes as (to mention only a few) that of Reza Pahlavi in Iran, Saddam
Hussein in Iraq (until he invaded Kuwait), Mobutu Sese Seko in Zaire
(now Congo), Fulgencio Batista in Cuba, Park Chung Hee in South Korea, a
succession of civilian and military dictators in South Vietnam, Lon Nol
in Cambodia, Suharto in Indonesia, Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippines,
the colonels' junta in Greece, Francisco Franco in Spain and a long list
of military dictators in Argentina, Chile, Brazil, Uruguay, Guatemala,
El Salvador and Nicaragua.
The Administration has in any case made its broader conception of
democracy clear in its actions both at home and abroad. In this
conception, the Administration decides and others are permitted to
express their agreement. (Or else they become, as the President has said
threateningly to the UN, "irrelevant"--although it's hard to imagine
what it means to say that the assembled representatives of the peoples
of the earth are irrelevant. Irrelevant to what?) Just as the
Administration welcomed a Congressional expression of support for the
Bush war policy but denied it the power to stop the war if that were to
be its choice, and just as the Administration "welcomes" a vote for war
in NATO and the UN but denies either NATO or the UN the right to prevent
unilateral American action, so we can expect that the people of Iraq or
any other country the United States might "democratize" would be "free"
to support but not to oppose American policy. (Imagine, for example,
that the people of Iraq were to vote, as so many other free peoples,
including the American people, have done before them, to build nuclear
arsenals--perhaps on the ground that their enemy Israel already has them
and Iran was building them. Would the Bush Administration accept their
decision?)
We do not have to wait for war in Iraq, however, to consider the likely
impact of Washington's new policies on democracy's global fortunes. The
question has already arisen in the period of preparation for war. The
Bush Administration has not forced the world to read between the lines
to discover its position. It proposes for the world at large the same
two-tier system that it proposes for the decision to go to war and for
the possession of weapons of mass destruction: It lays claim to absolute
military hegemony over the earth. "America has, and intends to keep,
military strengths beyond challenge, thereby making the destabilizing
arms races of other eras pointless, and limiting rivalries to trade and
other pursuits of peace," the President said in his speech at West
Point. The United States alone will be the custodian of military power;
others must turn to humbler pursuits. The sword will rule, and the
United States will hold the sword. As the Yale historian John Lewis
Gaddis has pointed out, the policies of unilateral pre-emption,
overthrow of governments and overall military supremacy form an integral
package (the seizure of Middle Eastern oilfields, though officially
denied as a motive, also fits in). These elements are the foundations of
the imperial system that Ignatieff and others have delineated.
However, empire is incompatible with democracy, whether at home or
abroad. Democracy is founded on the rule of law, empire on the rule of
force. Democracy is a system of self-determination, empire a system of
military conquest. The fault lines are already clear, and growing wider
every day. By every measure, public opinion in the world--its democratic
will--is opposed to overthrowing the government of Iraq by force. But
why, someone might ask, does this matter? How many divisions do these
people have, as Stalin once asked of the Pope? The answer, to the extent
that the world really is democratic, is: quite a few. In a series of
elections--in Germany, in South Korea, in Turkey--an antiwar position
helped bring the winner to power. In divided Korea, American policy may
be on its way to producing an unexpected union of South and
North--against the United States. Each of these setbacks is a critical
defeat for the putative American empire. In January, the prime ministers
of eight countries--Italy, Britain, Spain, Portugal, Denmark, Poland, the Czech
Republic and Hungary--signed a letter thanking the United States
for its leadership on the Iraq issue; but in every one of those
countries a majority of the public opposed a war without UN approval.
The editors of Time's European edition asked its readers which
nation posed the greatest threat to world peace. Of the 268,000 who
responded, 8 percent answered that it was North Korea, 9 percent Iraq
and 83 percent said the United States. Britain's Prime Minister Tony
Blair is prepared to participate in the war without UN support, but some
70 percent of his people oppose his position. The government of
Australia is sending troops to assist in the war effort, but 92 percent
of the Australian public opposes war unsanctioned by the UN. Gaddis
rightly comments that empires succeed to the extent that peoples under
their rule welcome and share the values of the imperial power. The above
election results and poll figures suggest that no such approval is so
far evident for America's global pretensions. The American "coalition"
for war is an alliance of governments arrayed in opposition to their own
peoples.
In a defeat parallel to--and greater than--the military defeat before
the fact in the field of proliferation, the American empire is thus
suffering deep and possibly irreversible political losses. Democracy is
the right of peoples to make decisions. Right now, the peoples of the
earth are deciding against America's plans for the world. Democracy,
too, has pre-emptive resources, setting up impassable roadblocks at the
first signs of tyranny. The UN Security Council is balking. The United
States' most important alliance--NATO--is cracking. Is the American
empire collapsing before it even quite comes into existence? Such a
judgment is premature, but if the mere approach to war has done the
damage we already see to America's reputation and power, we can only
imagine what the consequences of actual war will be.
II. The Atomic Archipelago
The Administration has embarked on a nonproliferation policy that has
already proved as self-defeating in its own terms as it is likely to be
disastrous for the United States and the world. Nevertheless, it would
be a fatal mistake for those of us who oppose the war to dismiss the
concerns that the Administration has raised. By insisting that the world
confront the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, President
Bush has raised the right question--or, at any rate, one part of the
right question--for our time, even as he has given a calamitously
misguided answer. Even if it were true--and we won't really know until
some equivalent of the Pentagon Papers for our period is released--that
his Administration has been using the threat of mass destruction as a
cover for an oil grab, the issue of proliferation must be placed at the
center of our concerns. For example, even as we argue that
containment of Iraq makes more sense than war, we must be clear-eyed in
acknowledging that Iraq's acquisition of nuclear weapons or other
weapons of mass destruction would be a disaster--just as we must
recognize that the nuclearization of South Asia and of North Korea have
been disasters, greatly increasing the likelihood of nuclear war in the
near future. These events, full of peril in themselves, are points on a
curve of proliferation that leads to what can only be described as
nuclear anarchy.
For a global policy that, unlike the Bush policies, actually will
stop--and reverse--proliferation of all weapons of mass destruction is
indeed a necessity for a sane, livable twenty-first century. But if we
are to tackle the problem wisely, we must step back from the current
crisis long enough to carefully analyze the origins and character of the
danger. It did not appear on September 11. It appeared, in fact, on July
16, 1945, when the United States detonated the first atomic bomb near
Alamogordo, New Mexico.
What is proliferation? It is the acquisition of nuclear weapons by a
country that did not have them before. The first act of proliferation
was the Manhattan Project in the United States. (In what follows, I will
speak of nuclear proliferation, but the principles underlying it also
underlie the proliferation of chemical and biological weapons.) Perhaps
someone might object that the arrival of the first individual of a
species is not yet proliferation--a word that suggests the
multiplication of an already existing thing. However, in one critical
respect, at least, the development of the bomb by the United States
still fits the definition. The record shows that President Franklin
Roosevelt decided to build the bomb because he feared that Hitler would
get it first, with decisive consequences in the forthcoming war. In
October 1939, when the businessman Alexander Sachs brought Roosevelt a
letter from Albert Einstein warning that an atomic bomb was possible and
that Germany might acquire one, Roosevelt commented, "Alex, what you are
after is to see that the Nazis don't blow us up." As we know now, Hitler
did have an atomic project, but it never came close to producing a bomb.
But as with so many matters in nuclear strategy, appearances were more
important than the realities (which were then unknowable to the United
States). Before there was the bomb, there was the fear of the bomb.
Hitler's phantom arsenal inspired the real American one. And so even
before nuclear weapons existed, they were proliferating. This sequence
is important because it reveals a basic rule that has driven nuclear
proliferation ever since: Nations acquire nuclear arsenals above all
because they fear the nuclear arsenals of others.
But fear--soon properly renamed terror in the context of nuclear
strategy--is of course also the essence of the prime strategic doctrine
of the nuclear age, deterrence, which establishes a balance of terror.
Threats of the destruction of nations--of genocide--have always been the
coinage of this realm. From the beginning of the nuclear age--indeed,
even before the beginning, when the atomic bomb was only a gleam in
Roosevelt's eye--deterrence and proliferation have in fact been
inextricable. Just as the United States made the bomb because it feared
Hitler would get it, the Soviet Union built the bomb because the United
States already had it. Stalin's instructions to his scientists shortly
after Hiroshima were, "A single demand of you, comrades: Provide us with
atomic weapons in the shortest possible time. You know that Hiroshima
has shaken the whole world. The equilibrium has been destroyed. Provide
the bomb--it will remove a great danger from us." England and France,
like the United States, were responding to the Soviet threat; China was
responding to the threat from all of the above; India was responding to
China; Pakistan was responding to India; and North Korea (with
Pakistan's help) was responding to the United States. Nations
proliferate in order to deter. We can state: Deterrence equals
proliferation, for deterrence both causes proliferation and is the fruit
of it. This has been the lesson, indeed, that the United States has
taught the world in every major statement, tactic, strategy and action
it has taken in the nuclear age. And the world--if it even needed the
lesson--has learned well. It is therefore hardly surprising that the
call to nonproliferation falls on deaf ears when it is preached by
possessors--all of whom were of course proliferators at one time or
another.
The sources of nuclear danger, present and future, are perhaps best
visualized as a coral reef that is constantly growing in all directions
under the sea and then, here and there, breaks the surface to form
islands, which we can collectively call the atomic archipelago. The
islands of the archipelago may seem to be independent of one another,
but anyone who looks below the surface will find that they are closely
connected. The atomic archipelago indeed has strong similarities to its
namesake, the gulag archipelago. Once established, both feed on
themselves, expanding from within by their own energy and momentum. Both
are founded upon a capacity to kill millions of people. Both act on the
world around them by radiating terror.
India and the Bomb: The Proliferator's View
India's path to nuclear armament, recounted in George Perkovich's
masterful, definitive India's Nuclear Bomb, offers essential
lessons in the steps by which the archipelago has grown and is likely to
grow in the future. India has maintained a nuclear program almost since
its independence, in 1947. Although supposedly built for peaceful uses,
the program was actually, if mostly secretly, designed to keep the
weapons option open. But it was not until shortly after China tested a
bomb in 1964 that India embarked on a concerted nuclear weapons program,
which bore fruit in 1974, when India tested a bomb for "peaceful"
purposes. Yet India still held back from introducing nuclear weapons
into its military forces. Meanwhile, Pakistan, helped by China, was
working hard to obtain the bomb. In May of 1998, India conducted five
nuclear tests. Pakistan responded with at least five, and both nations
promptly declared themselves nuclear powers and soon were engaged in a
major nuclear confrontation over the disputed territory of Kashmir.
Indian Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh has explained the reasons for
India's decision in an article in Foreign Affairs. India looked
out upon the world and saw what he calls a "nuclear paradigm" in
operation. He liked what he saw. He writes, "Why admonish India after
the fact for not falling in line behind a new international agenda of
discriminatory nonproliferation pursued largely due to the internal
agendas or political debates of the nuclear club? If deterrence works in
the West--as it so obviously appears to, since Western nations insist on
continuing to possess nuclear weapons--by what reasoning will it not
work in India?" To deprive India of these benefits would be "nuclear
apartheid"--a continuation of the imperialism that had been overthrown
in the titanic anticolonial struggles of the twentieth century. The
Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, under which 183 nations have agreed to
forgo nuclear arms, and five who have them (the United States, England,
France, Russia and China) have agreed to reduce theirs until they are
gone, had many successes, but in India's backyard, where China had
nuclear arms and Pakistan was developing them, nuclear danger was
growing. Some have charged that the Indian government conducted the 1998
tests for political rather than strategic reasons--that is, out of a
desire for pure "prestige," not strategic necessity. But the two
explanations are in fact complementary. It is only because the public,
which observes that all the great powers possess nuclear arsenals,
agrees that they are a strategic necessity that it finds them
prestigious and politically rewards governments that acquire them.
Prestige is merely the political face of the general consensus,
ingrained in strategy, that countries lacking nuclear weapons are
helpless--"eunuchs," as one Indian politician said--in a nuclear-armed
world.
Curiously, the unlimited extension in 1995 of the NPT, to which India
was not a signatory, pushed India to act. From Singh's point of view,
the extension made the nuclear double standard it embodied permanent.
"What India did in May [1998] was to assert that it is impossible to
have two standards for national security--one based on nuclear
deterrence and the other outside of it." If the world was to be divided
into two classes of countries, India preferred to be in the first class.
As Singh's account makes clear, India was inspired to act not merely by
the hypocrisy of great powers delivering sermons on the virtues of
nuclear disarmament while sitting atop mountains of nuclear
arms--galling as that might be. He believed that India, with
nuclear-armed China and nuclearizing Pakistan for neighbors, was living
in an increasingly "dangerous neighborhood." The most powerful tie that
paradoxically binds proliferator to deterrer in their minuet of
genocidal hostility is not mere imitation but the compulsion to respond
to the nuclear terror projected by others. The preacher against lust who
turns out to take prostitutes to a motel after the sermon sets a bad
example but does not compel his parishioners to follow suit. The
preacher against nuclear weapons in a nation whose silos are packed with
them does, however, compel other nations to follow his example, for his
nuclear terror reaches and crosses their borders. The United States
terrorizes Russia (and vice versa); both terrorize China; China
terrorizes India; the United States terrorizes North Korea; North Korea
terrorizes Japan; and so forth, forming a web of terror whose further
extensions (Israel terrorizes...Iran? Egypt? Syria? Libya?) will be the avenues of future proliferation.
It is thanks to this web that every nuclear arsenal in the world is
tied, directly or indirectly, to every other, rendering any partial
approach to the problem extremely difficult, if not impossible.
The devotion of nations to their nuclear arsenals has only been
strengthened by the hegemonic ambition of the United States. Hitherto,
the nuclear double standard lacked a context--it was a sort of anomaly
of the international order, a seeming leftover from the cold war,
perhaps soon to be liquidated. America's imperial ambition gives it a
context. In a multilateral, democratic vision of international affairs,
it is impossible to explain why one small group of nations should be
entitled to protect itself with weapons of mass destruction while all
others must do without them. But in an imperial order, the reason is
perfectly obvious. If the imperium is to pacify the world, it must
possess overwhelming force, the currency of imperial power. Equally
obviously, the nations to be pacified must not. Double
standards--regarding not only nuclear weapons but conventional weapons,
economic advantage, use of natural resources--are indeed the very stuff
of which empires are made. For empire is to the world what dictatorship
is to a country. That's why the suppression of proliferation--a new
imperial vocation--must be the first order of business for a nation
aspiring to this exalted role.
India's Bomb: The Possessor's View
It's equally enlightening to look at India's proliferation from the
point of view of a nuclear possessor, the United States. Nuclear
arsenals are endowed with a magical quality. As soon as a nation obtains
one it becomes invisible to the possessor. Nuclear danger then seems to
emanate only from proliferation--that is, from newcomers to the nuclear
club, while the dangers that emanate from one's own arsenal disappear
from sight. Gen. Tommy Franks, designated as commander of the Iraq war,
recently commented, "The sight of the first mushroom cloud on one of the
major population centers on this planet is something that most nations
on this planet are willing to go a long ways out of the way to prevent."
His forgetfulness of Hiroshima and Nagasaki might seem nothing more than
a slip of the tongue if it did not represent a pervasive and deeply
ingrained attitude in the United States. Another revealing incident was
Secretary of State Powell's comment that North Korea, by seeking nuclear
weapons, was arming itself with "fool's gold." But the military
establishment that Powell once led is of course stuffed to bursting with
this fool's gold. Another example of the same habit of mind (I have
chosen American examples, but the blindness afflicts all nuclear powers)
was provided by some comments of President Bill Clinton shortly after
India's tests of 1998. He said, "To think that you have to manifest your
greatness by behavior that recalls the very worst events of the
twentieth century on the edge of the twenty-first century, when
everybody else is trying to leave the nuclear age behind, is just wrong.
And they [the Indians] clearly don't need it to maintain their
security." Wise words, but ones contradicted by more than a half-century
of the nuclear policies, including the current ones, of the nation he
led.
The reactions of some of America's most prominent thinkers on the
nuclear question to India's proliferation were also instructive. Almost
immediately, their belief in the virtues of nuclear arms began to
surface through the antiproliferation rhetoric. Henry Kissinger, for
instance, judiciously mocked Clinton's "unique insight into the nature
of greatness in the twenty-first century...the dubious proposition that
all other nations are trying to leave the nuclear world behind," and
"the completely unsupported proposition that countries with threatening
nuclear neighbors do not need nuclear weapons to assure their security."
Kissinger, more consistent than Clinton, found India's and Pakistan's
tests "equally reasonable." He thought Washington's best course was to
help its new nuclear-armed friends achieve "stable mutual deterrence,"
and "give stabilizing reassurances about their conventional security."
Kissinger even saw a silver lining for American interests in the hope
that nuclear-armed India would help the United States "contain China"
(the very China to which Krauthammer now turns to disarm North Korea).
It was Kissinger's view, not Clinton's, that soon prevailed. America's
own love affair with the bomb asserted itself. At first, the United
States imposed sanctions on both countries, but soon they were lifted.
In December of 2000 President Clinton paid the first visit by an
American President to India since 1978, confirming that becoming a
nuclear power was indeed the path to international prestige. The United
States now has growing programs of military cooperation with both
countries.
Kissinger merely adjusted to the irreversible fait accompli of
South Asian proliferation, as a realist should. He saw the tension
between America's love of its own nuclear bombs and its hatred of
others', and understood the problems this might cause for America's own
arsenal. Could nonproliferation get out of control? Might it reach
America's shores? "The administration is right to resist nuclear
proliferation," he wrote, "but it must not, in the process, disarm the
country psychologically."
III. One Will for One World
War in Iraq has not yet begun, but its most important lesson, taught
also by the long history of proliferation, including the Indian chapter
just discussed, is already plain: The time is long gone--if it ever
existed--when any major element of the danger of weapons of mass
destruction, including above all nuclear danger, can be addressed
realistically without taking into account the whole dilemma. When we
look at the story of proliferation, whether from the point of view of
the haves or the have-nots, what emerges is that for practical purposes
any distinction that once might have existed (and even then only in
appearance, not in reality) between possessors and proliferators has now
been erased. A rose is a rose is a rose, anthrax is anthrax is anthrax,
a thermonuclear weapon is a thermonuclear weapon is a thermonuclear
weapon. The world's prospective nuclear arsenals cannot be dealt with
without attending to its existing ones. As long as some countries insist
on having any of these, others will try to get them. Until this axiom is
understood, neither "dialogue" nor war can succeed. In Perkovich's
words, after immersing himself in the history of India's bomb, "the
grandest illusion of the nuclear age is that a handful of states
possessing nuclear weapons can secure themselves and the world
indefinitely against the dangers of nuclear proliferation without
placing a higher priority on simultaneously striving to eliminate their
own nuclear weapons."
The days of the double standard are over. We cannot preserve it and we
should not want to. The struggle to maintain it by force,
anachronistically represented by Bush's proposed war on Iraq, in which
the United States threatens pre-emptive use of nuclear weapons to stop
another country merely from getting them, can only worsen the global
problem it seeks to solve. One way or another, the world is on its way
to a single standard. Only two in the long run are available: universal
permission to possess weapons of mass destruction or their universal
prohibition. The first is a path to global nightmare, the second to
safety and a normal existence. Nations that already possess nuclear
weapons must recognize that nuclear danger begins with them. The shield
of invisibility must be pierced. The web of terror that binds every
nuclear arsenal to every other--and also to every arsenal of chemical or
biological weapons--must be acknowledged.
If pre-emptive military force leads to catastrophe and deterrence is at
best a stopgap, then what is the answer? In 1945, the great Danish
nuclear physicist Niels Bohr said simply, in words whose truth has been
confirmed by fifty-eight years of experience of the nuclear age, "We are
in a completely new situation that cannot be resolved by war." In a
formulation only slightly more complex than Bohr's, Einstein said in
1947, "This basic power of the universe cannot be fitted into the
outdated concept of narrow nationalisms. For there is no secret and
there is no defense; there is no possibility of control except through
the aroused understanding and insistence of the peoples of the world."
Both men, whose work in fundamental physics had perhaps done more than
that of any other two scientists to make the bomb possible, favored the
abolition of nuclear arms by binding international agreement. That idea,
also favored by many of the scientists of the Manhattan Project, bore
fruit in a plan for the abolition of nuclear arms and international
control of all nuclear technology put forward by President Truman's
representative Bernard Baruch in June 1946. But the time was not ripe.
The cold war was already brewing, and the Soviet Union, determined to
build its own bomb, said no, then put forward a plan that the United
States turned down. In 1949 the Soviet Union conducted its first atomic
test, and the nuclear arms race ensued.
For the short term, the inspections in Iraq should continue. If
inspections fail, then containment will do as a second line of defense.
But in the long term, the true alternative to pre-emptive war against
Iraq, war one day against North Korea, war against an unknowable number
of other possible proliferators, is to bring Bohr and Einstein's
proposal up to date. A revival of worldwide disarmament negotiations
must be the means, the abolition of all weapons of mass destruction the
end. That idea has long been in eclipse, and today it lies outside the
mainstream of political opinion. Unfortunately, historical reality is no
respecter of conventional wisdom and often requires it to change course
if calamity is to be avoided. But fortunately it is one element of the
genius of democracy--and of US democracy in particular--that encrusted
orthodoxy can be challenged and overthrown by popular pressure. The
movement against the war in Iraq should also become a movement
for something, and that something should be a return to the
long-neglected path to abolition of all weapons of mass destruction.
Only by offering a solution to the problem that the war claims to solve
but does not can this war and others be stopped.
The passage of time since the failure in 1946 has also provided us with
some advantages. No insuperable ideological division divides the nuclear
powers (with the possible exception, now, of North Korea), as the cold
war did. Their substantial unity and agreement in this area can be
imagined. Every other nonnuclear nation but one (the eccentric holdout
is Cuba) already has agreed under the terms of the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty to do without nuclear weapons. Biological and
chemical weapons have been banned by international conventions (although
the conventions are weak, as they lack serious inspection and
enforcement provisions).
The inspected and enforced elimination of weapons of mass destruction is
a goal that in its very nature must take time, and adequate
time--perhaps a decade, or even more--can be allowed. But the decision
to embrace the goal should not wait. It should be seen not as a distant
dream that may or may not be realized once a host of other unlikely
prerequisites have been met but as a powerful instrument to be used
immediately to halt all forms of proliferation and inspire arms
reductions in the present. There can be no successful nonproliferation
policy that is not backed by the concerted will of the international
community. As long as the double standard is in effect, that will cannot
be created. Do we need more evidence than the world's disarray today in
the face of Iraq's record of proliferation? Today's world, to paraphrase
Lincoln, is a house divided, half nuclear-armed, half
nuclear-weapons-free. A commitment to the elimination of weapons of mass
destruction would heal the world's broken will, and is the only means
available for doing so. Great powers that were getting out of the mass
destruction business would have very short patience with nations, such
as Iraq or North Korea, getting into that business. The Security Council
would act as one. The smaller powers that had never made their pact with
the devil in the first place would be at the great powers' side. Any
proliferator would face the implacable resolve of all nations to
persuade it or force it to reverse its course.
Let us try to imagine it: one human species on its one earth exercising
one will to defeat forever a threat to its one collective existence.
Could any nation stand against it? Without this commitment, the
international community--if I may express it thus--is like a nuclear
reactor from which the fuel rods have been withdrawn. Making the
commitment would be to insert the rods, to start up the chain reaction.
The chain reaction would be the democratic activity of peoples demanding
action from the governments to secure their survival. True democracy is
indispensable to disarmament, and vice versa. This is the power--not the
power of cruise missiles and B-52s--that can release humanity from its
peril. The price demanded of us for freedom from the danger of weapons
of mass destruction is to relinquish our own.
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