The nuclear weapons game

I’m not sure that there was any other recourse but to impose sanctions on North Korea, but I’m not confident that they will work and I am sure that the so-called military option would be a deadly mistake.

It might seem fruitless at the moment to cast blame in all of this, especially given the history — both North Korea and the Clinton administration failed to meet the requirements of their own agreement, but the Bush administration exacerbated the situation with its rhetoric and its petty decision not to sit face to face with North Korean leaders. Granted, Kim Jong-il is not particularly stable and trusting him would be foolish, but public condemnations and inclusion in the “Axis of Evil” only inflamed the situation and created more of an incentive for the dictator to move forward with weapons.

Perhaps more important in all of this is the seeming willingness of President George Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and others in the administration to use American nukes. This kind of public stance — on several occasions they have talked about using nukes — by the world’s sole superpower can only leave those less-powerful nations identified as dangerous (Iran, North Korea, Syria, any Arab nation not willing to toe the administration’s crooked line) looking for an equalizer. That’s why it makes it difficult to argue with the North Korean ambassador when he calls the Security Council’s action a “double standard” (this is not an endorsement of the North Korean position, only an observation).

Kofi Annan, the United Nations secretary general, said this year that “the international community seems almost to be sleepwalking” down a path where states, after long living without nuclear arms, now feel compelled to revisit their logic.

He warned of a new arms race — not one of superpowers, but of regional powers. “Perhaps most damaging of all,” he concluded, “there is also a perception that the possession of nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction offers the best protection against being attacked.”

The goal needs to be not only nonproliferation — which means stopping the spread of nukes to new nations and possibly to terrorist groups — but a pulling back from the precipice, a relegation of nuclear weapons to the dustbins of history. I admit that the technology will always be there, but an international effort designed to make the world nuclear-free, while probably little more than wishful thinking, is something that could change the way all of us think about the weapons. The president is right when he denounces the spread of nukes to rogue nations, but he is wrong not to realize that all who seek nukes and all who have them and those who contemplate using them are rogue nations. It is a double standard and one that only encourages their spread.

Only the United States can lead on this issue, because we are the biggest nuclear power on the block. It is up to us to demonstrate our own resolve by reducing our stocks of weapons and stating publicly that they will not be used except in the most extreme of defensive circumstances — and not even then. We can help remove the need for the equalizer from the world stage.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

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Author: hankkalet

Hank Kalet is a poet and freelance journalist. He is the economic needs reporter for NJ Spotlight, teaches journalism at Rutgers University and writing at Middlesex County College and Brookdale Community College. He writes a semi-monthly column for the Progressive Populist. He is a lifelong fan of the New York Mets and New York Knicks, drinks too much coffee and attends as many Bruce Springsteen concerts as his meager finances will allow. He lives in South Brunswick with his wife Annie.

One thought on “The nuclear weapons game”

  1. i don\’t even think it was a nuclear thing. the N Korean\’s detonated a metric ton of TNT and that\’s how they got the \”seizmic activity\” they referred to.

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