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Los
Angeles Times/Commentary
Wednesday 29 January 2003
Our
Nuclear Talk Gravely Imperils Us
Notion of a First-Strike Use in Iraq
Carries the Seed of World Disaster
By Edward M. Kennedy
A dangerous
world just grew more dangerous. Reports that the administration is contemplating
the preemptive use of nuclear weapons in Iraq should set off alarm bells that
this could not only be the wrong war at the wrong time, but it could quickly
spin out of control.
Initiating the use of nuclear weapons would make a conflict with Iraq potentially
catastrophic. President Bush had an opportunity Tuesday night to explain why
he believes such a radical departure from long-standing policy is justified
or necessary. At the very minimum, a change of this magnitude should be brought
to Congress for debate before the U.S. goes to war with Iraq.
The reports of a preemptive nuclear strike are consistent with the extreme views
outlined a year ago in President Bush's Nuclear Posture Review and with the
administration's disdain for long-standing norms of international behavior.
According to these reports, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld has directed
the U.S. Strategic Command to develop plans for employing nuclear weapons in
a wide range of new missions, including possible use in Iraq to destroy underground
bunkers.
Using the nation's nuclear arsenal in this unprecedented way would be the most
fateful decision since the nuclear attack on Hiroshima. Even contemplating the
first-strike use of nuclear weapons under current circumstances and against
a nonnuclear nation dangerously blurs the crucial and historical distinction
between conventional and nuclear arms. In the case of Iraq, it is preposterous.
Nuclear weapons are in a class of their own for good reasons -- their unique
destructive power and their capacity to threaten the very survival of humanity.
They have been kept separate from other military alternatives out of a profound
commitment to do all we can to see they are never used again. They should be
employed only in the most dire circumstances -- for example, if the existence
of our nation is threatened. It makes no sense to break down the firewall that
has existed for half a century between nuclear conflict and any other form of
warfare.
A nuclear bomb is not just another item in the arsenal.
Our military is the most powerful fighting force in the world. We can fight
and win a war in Iraq with precision bombing and sophisticated new conventional
weapons. The president has not made a case that the threat to our national security
from Iraq is so imminent that we even need to go to war -- let alone let the
nuclear genie out of the bottle.
By raising the possibility that nuclear weapons could be part of a first strike
against Iraq, the administration is only enhancing its reputation as a reckless
unilateralist in the world community -- a reputation that ultimately weakens
our own security. The nuclear threat will further alienate our allies, most
of whom remain unconvinced of the need for war with Iraq. It is fundamentally
contrary to our national interests to further strain relationships that are
essential to win the war against terrorism and to advance our ideals in the
world.
This policy also deepens the danger of nuclear proliferation by, in effect,
telling nonnuclear states that nuclear weapons are necessary to deter a potential
U.S. attack and by sending a green light to the world's nuclear states that
it is permissible to use them. Is this the lesson we want to send to North Korea,
Pakistan and India or any other nuclear power?
The use of nuclear weapons in Iraq in the absence of an imminent, overwhelming
threat to our national security would bring a near-total breakdown in relations
between the U.S. and the rest of the world. At a minimum, it would lead to a
massive rise in anti-Americanism in the Arab world and a corresponding increase
in sympathy for terrorists who seek to do us harm. Our nation, long a beacon
of hope, would overnight be seen as a symbol of death, destruction and aggression.
In the introduction to his national security strategy last fall, the president
declared: "The gravest danger our nation faces lies at the crossroads of
radicalism and technology." On that he was surely right -- and the administration's
radical consideration of the possible use of our nuclear arsenal against Iraq
is itself a grave danger to our national interests, our nation and all that
America stands for.
-------
Democratic Sen. Edward M. Kennedy represents Massachusetts.
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