"Divine Strake" Explosive in Nevada on June 2, 2006
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Nuclear Madness
Katrina vanden Heuvel, The Nation, 04/25/2006
First the Bush Administration undermines the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) by supplying India with nuclear
technology, then it flirts with the use of tactical nuclear
weapons against Iran.
The Administration's reckless nuclear politics has led thirteen
of the nation's pre-eminent physicists--including five Nobel
laureates--to join generals and intelligence officers as the
latest to speak out.
In a letter to President Bush--barely reported in the media--the
scientists call the planned use of nuclear weapons against Iran
"gravely irresponsible" with "disastrous consequences for the
security of the United States and the world." They note that
"the NPT will be irreversibly damaged by the use or even the
threat of use of nuclear weapons by a nuclear nation against a
non-nuclear one…."
Further highlighting just how dangerously out-of-step the Bush
administration is with a sane nuclear policy, one-time hardliner
and Reagan administration arms negotiator, Max Kampelman, called
for the elimination of all weapons of mass destruction in a New
York Times op-ed on Monday. "I have never been more worried
about the future for my children and grandchildren than I am
today," he writes. (For a moment, I thought Kampelman was
channeling Jonathan Schell's extraordinary Nation special issue
calling for the abolition of nuclear weapons.)
The hypocrisy of the Bush Administration in dealing with Iran is
staggering. On the one hand it speaks of diplomacy while it also
secretly plans regime change and the use of tactical nuclear
weapons. And all the while the charge is led by a little
man/would-be cowboy with a messianic vision who finds himself at
the helm of the most powerful nation in history.
The least we must do as citizens at this critical moment is
follow the lead of these wise physicists and demand that our
representatives call for publicly taking the nuclear option
against non-nuclear adversaries off of the table. And then we
should heed Kampelman's call to bring back a measure of idealism
to our politics, and "find a way to move from what 'is'--a world
with a risk of increasing global disaster--to what 'ought' to
be, a peaceful, civilized world free of weapons of mass
destruction."
If a former Reaganite can summon the imagination to envision
such a world, so must we.
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Divine Strake
"...it is the first time in Nevada that you'll see a mushroom
cloud over
Las Vegas since we stopped testing nuclear weapons."
--James Tegnelia, head of the Defense Threat Reduction Agency
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/nevada.htm