The Way the World Ends
With all the hype about North Korea, we're forgetting that the
world is still staring down the barrels of thousands of U.S. and
Russian ICBMs
By Helen Caldicott
10/23/06 "PEJ"
-- -- It is difficult to underestimate the problems
associated with North Korea's recent nuclear weapons test.
Following a small atomic explosion in a mountainous area of
North Korea of less than one kiloton -- the Hiroshima bomb was
13 kilotons -- the U.S. administration is encouraging draconian
economic sanctions to be enacted against a desperately poor
country where millions of people are malnourished and that will
further ostracize a paranoid regime, while the rest of the world
looks on with horror as the nuclear arms race threatens to
spiral out of control.
While lateral proliferation is indeed an incredibly serious
problem as ever-more countries prepare to enter the portals of
the nuclear club, one consistent outstanding nuclear threat that
continues to endanger most planetary species is ignored by the
international community.
In fact, the real "rogue" nations that continue to hold the
world at nuclear ransom are Russia and the United States.
Contrary to popular belief, the threat of a massive nuclear
attack -- whether by accident, human fallibility or malfeasance
-- has increased.
Of the 30,000 nuclear weapons in the world today, the United
States and Russia possess 96 per cent of them. Of these, Russia
aims most of its 8,200 strategic nuclear warheads at U.S. and
Canadian targets, while the U.S. aims most of its 7,000
offensive strategic hydrogen bombs on Russian missile silos and
command centres. Each of these thermonuclear warheads has
roughly 20 times the destructive power of the bomb dropped on
Hiroshima, according to a report on nuclear weapons by the
National Resources Defense Council, a U.S. environmental group.
Of these 7,000 U.S. strategic weapons, 2,500 are deployed on
intercontinental ballistic missiles that are constantly
maintained on hair-trigger alert ready for immediate launching,
while the U.S. also maintains some 2,688 hydrogen bombs on
missiles in its 14 Trident submarines, most ready for
instantaneous launching.
According to the Center for Defense Information, a group that
analyzes U.S. defence policy, in the event of a suspected
attack, the commander of the U.S. Strategic Air Command has only
three minutes to decide if a nuclear attack warning is valid. He
has 10 minutes to locate the president for a 30-second briefing
on attack options, and the president then has three minutes to
decide to launch the warheads and to consider which pre-set
targeting plan to use.
Once launched, the missiles would take 10 to 30 minutes to reach
their Russian targets.
An almost identical situation prevails in Russia, except unlike
the combined U.S. and Canadian NORAD early-warning equipment,
the Russian system is decaying rapidly, its early-warning
satellites are almost non-functional and it now relies on a
relatively primitive over-the-horizon radar to warn it of an
imminent secret first-strike attack from the United States.
The Russian military and political leaders are suitably paranoid
about this extraordinary post-Cold-War situation. So much so
that in January 1995 president Boris Yeltsin came to within 10
seconds of launching his nuclear armada when the launch of a
Norwegian weather satellite was misinterpreted in Moscow as a
pre-emptive U.S. nuclear attack.
Most towns and cities with populations over 50,000 on the North
American continent are targeted with at least one hydrogen bomb.
Only 1,000 bombs exploding on 100 cities could induce nuclear
winter and the end of most life on earth. There are fewer than
300 major cities in the Northern hemisphere.
Such is the redundancy of nuclear weapons. A U.S. Foreign
Military Studies Office report of January 2002, "Prototypes for
Targeting America, a Soviet Military Assessment," states that
New York City, for example, is the single most important target
in the Atlantic region after major military installations. A
U.S. Congressional Office of Technology Assessment report,
commissioned in the 1980s but still relevant, estimated that
Soviet nuclear war plans had two one-megaton bombs aimed at each
of three airports that serve New York, one aimed at each of the
major bridges, two at Wall Street and two at each of four oil
refineries. The major rail centres and power stations were also
targeted, along with the port facilities.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency estimates that New York
City would be obliterated by nuclear blasts and the resulting
firestorms and fallout.
Millions of people would die instantly. Survivors would perish
shortly thereafter from burns and exposure to radiation.
Terrifyingly, the early warning systems of both Russia and the
U.S. register false alarms daily, triggered either by wildfires,
satellite launchings or solar reflections off clouds or oceans.
Of more immediate concern in both the United States and Russia
is the threat of terrorists or hackers entering and disrupting
the computerized early warning systems and command centres.
Therefore, as the world tries to come to terms with a possible
tiny new entrant into the nuclear club, the U.S. Security
Council, the U.S. administration, the U.S. Congress, the
Canadian government and the Kremlin fail to recognize the most
serious danger -- thousands of hydrogen bombs maintained on
tenuous hair-trigger alert.
What has induced this state of global psychic numbing, and why
are these issues never officially addressed?
Now that Russia and the U.S. maintain a friendly working
relationship, it is time to reinvigorate the extraordinary
precedent established by Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev in
Reykjavic in 1988, to urgently agree to abolish nuclear weapons
bilaterally.
Only then will the nuclear superpowers have the moral authority
to legitimately and actively promote multilateral nuclear
disarmament through the United Nations and to police other
countries to discourage lateral proliferation.
France and China have already agreed to abolish their nuclear
weapons should the superpowers disarm. Israel, Pakistan and
India, who have not signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty, would
need extra pressure.
Nobel Laureate Mohamed ElBaradei, director of the International
Atomic Energy Agency, has called for a clear road map for
nuclear disarmament to be established.
Time is not on our side.
Helen
Caldicott is a pediatrician and president of the
Washington-based Nuclear Policy Research Institute. She is the
author of Nuclear Power is Not the Answer.