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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rick Slemmer who wrote (439862)8/8/2003 11:52:47 AM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769669
 
Bush now leading the world towards NUCLEAR WAR....there is no doubt he is someone that shouldn't have been elected (yeah right, ELECTED????....sorry APPOINTED)
'Dr Strangeloves' Meet to Plan New Nuclear Era
By Julian Borger
The Guardian

Thursday 07 August 2003

US government scientists and Pentagon officials will gather today behind tight security at a
Nebraska air force base to discuss the development of a modernized arsenal of small,
specialized nuclear weapons which critics believe could mark the dawn of a new era in
proliferation.


This is a confab of Dr Strangeloves. The fact that the Pentagon is barring the public and
congressional staff from this key meeting on US nuclear weapons policy suggests that the
administration seeks to discuss and deliberate on its policies largely in secret.

WHAT IN THIS ADMINSTRATION ISN'T SECRET??????????

The Pentagon has not released a list of the 150 people at the secret meeting, but according to
leaks, they will include scientists and administrators from the three main nuclear weapons
laboratories, Los Alamos, Sandia and Livermore, senior officers from the air force and strategic
command, weapons contractors and civilian defense officials.

Requests by Congress to send observers were rejected, and an oversight committee which
included academic nuclear experts was disbanded only a few weeks earlier.

The purpose of the meeting, at Offutt air force base, only became known after a draft agenda
was leaked earlier this year, which included discussions on a new generation of low-yield
"mini-nukes", "bunker-buster" bombs for possible use against rogue states or organizations
armed with nuclear, biological or chemical weapons.

The session will also debate whether development of the weapons will require the White House
to end the US moratorium on nuclear testing declared in 1992.

Major Michael Shavers, a Pentagon spokesman, said: "We need to change our nuclear
strategy from the cold war to one that can deal with emerging threats."

He said the administration remained committed to the test moratorium (the US has not ratified
the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, but has pledged to observe it). But he said: "The meeting
will give some thought to how we guarantee the efficacy of the [nuclear] stockpile."

While insisting that it has no plans to resume testing, the administration has asked Congress
for funds for a project that would cut down the amount of time it would take for the cold war-era
test site in Nevada to start functioning again.

Yesterday, a steady stream of men in summer suits and uniforms arrived at Omaha airport, to
be met by welcoming parties of air force officers and taken to the Offutt base, 10 miles to the
south in the small town of Bellevue.

The lushly-landscaped base, where the gray shell of a B-52 bomber has been mounted behind
a screen of fruit trees, sits atop a labyrinth of high-tech bunkers from where strategic command
is poised, 24 hours a day, to fight a nuclear war. It inspired the setting for the 1964 film Dr
Strangelove. It is where President George Bush was flown on September 11 2001, when it was
thought that the terrorist attacks could be part of a sustained onslaught on the US.

The place and time of the Offutt meeting is infused with apparently unintended historical irony.
The visitors arrived on the anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing and the last will be leaving on
Saturday, the anniversary of the attack on Nagasaki. The B-29 planes which dropped those
nuclear bombs, Enola Gay and Bock's Car, were both built at Offutt.

The use of those weapons marked the beginning of the cold war and the first nuclear age.
Today's meeting, many observers believe, could mark the start of a second.

"This is a confab of Dr Strangeloves," said Daryl Kimball, head of the Arms Control Association,
a national non-partisan membership organization dedicated to working for arms control.

"The fact that the Pentagon is barring the public and congressional staff from this key meeting
on US nuclear weapons policy suggests that the administration seeks to discuss and deliberate
on its policies largely in secret."

The uncanny echoes of Hiroshima and Nagasaki did not go unnoticed by a handful of Catholic
protesters from Iowa who have gathered at Offutt to mark the anniversaries for the past 25 years.

Blasphemy

Father Frank Cordaro, the leader of the protest group, said: "This is an American blasphemy to
life and to God. They are going to violate another treaty by developing small nuclear weapons.
We had made the promise not to do these weapons, but this sole superpower is just ignoring the
non-proliferation treaty. That's madness."

Today's meeting traces its origins to a report by the National Institute for Public Policy (NIPP)
published in January 2001 as the Bush administration took office. The report argued for a
"smaller, more efficient, arsenal" of specialized weapons. Some deeply buried targets, it argued,
could only be destroyed by "one or more nuclear weapons". Only by developing these new
weapons could the US maintain its deterrent, it said.

Paul Robinson, the head of the Sandia weapons laboratory, who is attending the Offutt meeting,
believes that America's new adversaries would be more successfully deterred if the line between
conventional and nuclear weapons was blurred.

Senior jobs

He argued in a recent commentary in the Albuquerque Tribune that "military strategy is evolving
to consider combinations of conventional and/or nuclear attacks for pre-emption or retaliation."

Many of the NIPP report's authors went on to take senior positions in the administration,
including Linton Brooks, head of the national nuclear security administration which oversees new
weapons projects, Stephen Hadley, the deputy national security adviser, and Stephen Cambone,
undersecretary of defense for intelligence.

The report became the basis for the administration's Nuclear Posture Review in late 2001 which
contemplated the use of nuclear weapons pre-emptively against rogue states, to destroy
stockpiles of nuclear, chemical or biological weapons.

The officials involved in compiling both documents will play a prominent role at Offutt, but
scientists and officials with dissenting views have not been invited.

"I was specifically told I couldn't come," a congressional weapons expert said.

Greg Mello, the head of the Los Alamos Study Group, a watchdog organization, said: "There
will be tons of contractors there from the weapons labs and the weapons plants. Contractors can
come, but Congress can't."

The Pentagon insists that today's meeting is technical rather than policy-making, but critics are
concerned that it is being used to build up momentum behind the development of the weapons,
despite opposition from Congress.

"I'm suspicious that further down the road, they're going to say 'this was decided at Offutt', or
'this comes out of the recommendations at Offutt', a congressional staff member said.