Still talking nuclear bombs? Really?
- Share via
CHASING DOWN THE MUSE
Excuse me! My muse is furious. My muse is frightened and confused.
Has President George Bush and his administration completely lost
their minds? Just when did nuclear weapons become part of our
“conventional” arsenal? When did a so-called limited nuclear assault
slip beyond the range of unconscionable? Am I missing something here?
Let’s be sneaky. Let’s play word games. Let’s give those weapons a
cute name -- “Bunker Busters” -- so that we’ll somehow go unconscious
and not remember that what we are really talking about here are
thermo-nuclear weapons -- atomic bombs.
And to counter what? Weapons of mass destruction? Pardon me, but
the last time I looked, nuclear weapons were the ultimate tool for
mass destruction. If you’ve got any reservations, and the stomach,
take a close look at the aftermath of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Look
closely at the lack of buildings. Look at the shadows of the people
who were literally vaporized. This is not tenable. We’ve spent half
of a century working to rid the globe of a nuclear threat. How can it
be that here, in my own country, the president and his advisors have
decided that a nuclear bomb is OK to use after all. And not in
retaliation, which we’ve all held as the worst-case scenario, back-up
position, but as a first-strike option.
I grew up with “duck and cover” drills, as if our student desks
would actually protect us from radiation. I grew up amid an arms race
with Russia, when the unthinkable -- nuclear war -- was the threat to
end all threats. I grew up believing that to step into the nuclear
arena meant the end to life as we know it. We shoot. They shoot. All
the lights go out.
The Cold War looks like child’s play against the scenarios being
proposed by our government. Shifting nuclear weapons from their
special category sanction and placing them alongside conventional
weapons rejects every fiber of moral strategizing and negotiations
that we have struggled for over decades. We have been the leader in
disarmament talks, non- proliferation treaties and test ban
agreements. How can we expect countries like North Korea to dismantle
their nuclear weapons program, when obviously, we are re-defining and
expanding our own.
Sept. 11 was a tragedy of overwhelming proportions, as horrific to
the current generation as the attack on Pearl Harbor was 62 years
ago. It altered the social fabric of our country and filled our
populace with fears that haunt our everyday. Terrorism is real, alive
and expanding, and for peace loving people, it needs to be cut out
like a cancer. This doesn’t mean, however, to undo in minutes, what
has taken decades to negotiate and agree upon worldwide. There are no
winners in a nuclear conflagration.
If the Washington-driven media has somehow soothed you into
thinking that this “new” use of nuclear detonations is safe, then the
findings of Robert Nelson might shed a different light. In his
article, “Low-Yield Earth-Penetrating Nuclear Weapons,” he writes:
“No earth-burrowing missile can penetrate deep enough into the earth
to contain an explosion with a nuclear yield even as small as 1% of
the 15-kiloton Hiroshima weapon. The explosion simply blows out a
massive crater of radioactive dirt, which rains down on the local
region with an especially intense and deadly fallout.”
You too, could have a crater in your own back yard!
Take a look around. Small children play in grassy fields. We walk
our dogs along the shoreline and parks. We hold and cherish our
families and community and work together to make each day richer and
of more meaning. Our are lives filled with almost unimaginable beauty
and wealth. We have come so far.
Am I afraid of biological weapons? Terrified. Am I grateful that
we have a strong and robust military and defense program? More than
ever. Do I want to see our nation become the first in 50 years to use
nuclear weapons in a first strike? No. Are we willing to stand in
front of the global community that we have led and say, “Gee. Sorry.
We changed our minds about the nukes.” Or can we continue to force
ourselves to step to the negotiating table, when the work is the
hardest, and the rest of the world does not agree with our position.
Can we listen, not just posture, and strive to foster what is good
among men?
I hold the United States of America as my sacred homeland, built
upon the blood of those men and women who sought freedom from
repression. I believe that we have grown to be the eminent world
power because of a government called democracy, in which we all have
a voice in the structural workings. It rests upon our shoulders to
speak out so our representatives can know our voices. Let them know
what you think. While you still can.
* CATHARINE COOPER is a local designer, photographer and writer
who thrives off beaten trails. She can be reached at
[email protected] or (949) 497-5081.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.