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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (3278)3/12/2002 6:47:20 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
The Fallout of Desperation When in doubt, nuke 'em.
The Los Angeles Times
March 12, 2002

E-mail story

Robert Scheer:
The Fallout of Desperation
When in doubt, nuke 'em.

The news that the Pentagon had secret contingency
plans to fight terrorism with nuclear weapons has the
marks not of considered military doctrine but rather
of an infantile tantrum born of the Bush
administration's frustration in making good on its
overblown promise to end the terrorist scourge.


There is desperation in the air; the giant that is
America feels humbled by the Lilliputian terrorists
who have not been brought fully to account. There
still is not a clear line of command connecting the
hijackers with Al Qaeda and Taliban leaders whom
the president has yet to capture, "dead or alive."
Neither has there been progress on the source of the
anthrax that killed five people and crippled the U.S.
Postal Service, except the disconcerting evidence
that this particular evil seems to be home-grown.


Nuclear weapons also are a made-in-the-U.S.A.
product, and given that we are the only nation to
have used them, one would expect that we would have a special responsibility to
eschew their future use.

Instead, the administration's plan not only targets the three "axis of evil"
nations--Iran, Iraq and North Korea--but Syria, Libya, Russia and China as well.

Consider the absurdity: We risk escalating a worldwide nuclear arms race to
nuke a shadow terrorist enemy whose most effective military action to date was
begun with box cutters.
Clearly, that threat could have been met best by taking
the modest steps of maintaining armed air marshals on civilian planes and
employing better-trained airport security guards.

Nuking our own or anyone else's airports would not have saved the World Trade
Center and the human beings who were there Sept. 11. The hijackers succeeded
because our $30-billion-a-year intelligence apparatus failed to perform and we
consistently coddled Saudi Arabia's backers of religious hate even after their
minions blew up our embassies.


Having squandered the Clinton-led Israel-Palestine peace initiatives, President
Bush watched from the sidelines as the Mideast caldron, the source of most of
the world's terrorist threats, boiled to overflowing. The enduring terrorist threat
has little to do with the caves of Afghanistan and everything to do with the failure
to secure the Mideast peace promised by Bush's father's Gulf War.


Clearly, Arab-Israeli peace should be the highest order in a war on terrorism.
This administration, however--whether to gain poll approval or because of its
allegiance to military contractors--has raised the military options above any
diplomatic efforts. So why not also throw some nuclear weapons into the mix?


Because it is ludicrous. Does anyone really believe that nuclear weapons might
save the lives of Israelis and Palestinians, when it assuredly would incinerate
them? Or that targeting Russia and China for potential nuclear attacks would
lead those nations to embrace further moves toward nuclear stability and arms
control? Or cause them to be less threatened by our announced plan to scrap the
Antiballistic Missile Treaty and build a missile defense?

In fact, Chinese or Russian military planners would be attacked by their own
hard-liners if they failed to respond to this report by placing even greater
emphasis on making their own nuclear forces more robust, survivable and again
on hair-trigger alert in anticipation of an American first strike. To encourage
heightened fears of U.S. nuclear intentions at a time when the Russians and
Chinese are our allies in the war against terrorism is dizzyingly
counterproductive.

We need to encourage those countries and other nuclear powers to think of
nuclear weapons as dangerous junk that at best will boomerang and destroy all
that they care about. As the anthrax example demonstrates, our own investment
in weapons of mass destruction can easily turn into our own undoing.

What madness to even entertain the thought that nuclear weapons are anything
other than the means to the world's destruction. What we need instead is a
U.S.-led worldwide campaign to shun nuclear weapons as inherently genocidal,
to effectively end proliferation of nuclear weapons technology and material and
to treat those nations that dally in the business of nuclear arms as barbarians in
need of restraint.

It is we who have defined rogue nations as those bent on developing weapons of
mass destruction. How then can we so cavalierly entertain the idea of again
leading the world down the path to nuclear Armageddon?

latimes.com *

Robert Scheer writes a syndicated column.