OBAMA'S NUCLEAR CHALLENGE
By Jonathan Schell
The Nation
March 30, 2009
"So today, I state clearly and with conviction America's commitment to seek
the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons," President Obama
said at the open-air rally in Prague on April 5. With these words came a
change in the global air, as if a window had been opened a crack in a dark
room that had been sealed shut for decades. On only two previous occasions
had an American president proposed the abolition of nuclear arms. The first
was Truman's proposal at the United Nations in 1946 to place all nuclear
technology under international control and devote it entirely to peaceful
purposes, and so to strangle the nuclear age in its cradle. Stalin's Soviet
Union, bent on developing the bomb, would not agree.
The second was the summit meeting at Reykjavik, Iceland, in 1986, where
President Reagan and General Secretary Gorbachev came within an ace of agreeing
to full nuclear disarmament. Their bid foundered on Reagan's Strategic Defense
Initiative, which he would not give up and Gorbachev would not accept. Thereafter
the pronuclear consensus was restored. Its chief assumption, embodied in
the doctrine of deterrence, was that safety from nuclear weapons paradoxically
depended on their continued presence. Unremitting readiness to carry out
genocide and worse had somehow been accepted as an inescapable commitment
of even the greatest civilizations.
Obama's words disrupted this collective suicidal trance. He placed his commitment
in an appropriate context: Prague had been the scene of Czech protests against
Soviet domination, and Obama saluted those "who helped bring down a nuclear-armed
empire without firing a shot." The reference was doubly fitting. In the
first place, the popular movement broke the spell of omnipotence that had
surrounded the totalitarian empire. Like the bomb, the Soviet Union had
been shielded by a reputation of immovability. The resistance movements
in Czechoslovakia and elsewhere, using the "power of the powerless," in
the phrase of Václav Havel, gave the lie to this illusion. They revealed
the possibility of "the impossible" and made it happen. Obama acknowledged
the parallel with nuclear disarmament when he took note of those "who hear
talk of a world without nuclear weapons and doubt whether it is worth setting
a goal that seems impossible to achieve," and, advising Czechs to remember
the lessons of their Velvet Revolution, declared fatalism "a deadly adversary."
In the second place, it was that same resistance, together with Gorbachev's
perestroika, that by ending the cold war opened the clearest path to nuclear
disarmament since 1946. Now that the rivalry that had been used to justify
the threat of annihilation had been liquidated, might it be possible to
eliminate the weapons that posed that threat? Might this "impossible" thing
also be possible? The first three post-cold war presidents passed up the
opportunity. Obama has seized it.
Unfortunately, as soon as he announced the goal of abolition, he added that
it would not "be achieved quickly, perhaps not in my lifetime." With those
words, the crack of the window seemed to narrow, the moral gloom thickened
and the fatalism he had just renounced settled in again. Sighs of relief
were almost audible among the upholders of the pronuclear consensus. As
The Economist noted, "The world may never get to zero. But it would help
make things a lot safer along the way if others act in concert. If North
Korea and Iran can keep counting on the protection of China and Russia in
their rule-breaking, progress will be all too slight." In other words, a
likely insincere commitment to abolition is to be a new talking point in
stopping others from joining the nuclear club, which, for its part, will
go on as before.
A further sentence in Obama's speech gave support to such views. Speaking
of the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT), the president said, "The
basic bargain is sound: countries with nuclear weapons will move toward
disarmament, countries without nuclear weapons will not acquire them." But
moving toward disarmament is not the same as disarming. It is one thing
to say to the world, "We all must do without nuclear weapons," and quite
another to say, "You must do without nuclear weapons, and we will keep 1,500
of them for as long as we are all alive." In the latter case, the abolition
commitment would become one more layer of hypocrisy in a situation already
overloaded with it. But after more than sixty years of deceptive promises,
the countries that do without nuclear weapons will not accept a "bargain"
that gives a new lease on life to a double standard they already reject.
These fears are mitigated by the agenda of measures Obama announced as first
steps toward abolition. A wish list of arms controllers of recent years,
they include ratifying the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty; negotiating a
fissile material cutoff treaty; negotiating mutual cuts in nuclear warheads
with Russia, perhaps to a level of 1,500 or 1,000; and fortifying the NPT.
These proposals would be welcome in any context, but they take on added
meaning when viewed as way stations on a journey to a nuclear-weapons-free
world. Most interesting, perhaps, was Obama's promise to host a Global Summit
on Nuclear Security in the next year. Will it concentrate solely on nonproliferation
or acknowledge the indispensable link between that goal and full nuclear
disarmament? The answer, of course, will not depend on Obama alone. He has
brought the nuclear dilemma back into public view. But his vision is a work
in progress, a ground of contention on which all who desire disarmament
are invited to exert themselves.
Was Obama's speech historic? Not yet. It was an invitation to participate
in history. It will be historic if we make it so. Obama says he is prepared
to postpone abolition until he has died. He is 47. I wish him long life.
Let us free the world of nuclear weapons while he is still among us.
Jonathan Schell is the Harold Willens Peace Fellow at The Nation Institute and
teaches a course on the nuclear dilemma at Yale. He is the author of The
Seventh Decade: The New Shape of Nuclear Danger.