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Hiroshima, Nagasaki and North Dakota: WMD Here
By Bill Quigley

On August 6, 1945 the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima .
Three days later, the US dropped another atomic bomb on Nagasaki . These
nuclear weapons killed over 100,000 people, almost all civilians, and
injured many tens of thousands more.

Fr. Carl Kabat, 72, Greg Boertje-Obed, 51, and Michael Walli, 57, sit in
jail in North Dakota awaiting a federal criminal trial because of weapons
of mass destruction and because of Hiroshima and Nagasaki . I visited them
last week. Their crime? They tried to disarm one of the 1700+ nuclear
weapons in North Dakota.

On June 26, 2006, they went to the silo of a Minuteman III first-strike
nucclear missile and wrote on it "If you want peace, work for justice."
Then they hammered on its lock and poured some of their own blood over it.
They waited to be arrested and have been in jail ever since. If convicted,
they face imprisonment of up to ten years for criminal damage to federal
property.   The Minuteman III is a first-strike intercontinental nuclear
missile with a range of over 6000 miles and carries 27 times the
destructive power of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima . There are over one
hundred fifty Minuteman III missiles planted in the grounds in silos in
just the northern part of North Dakota.

Fr. Kabat has been a Catholic priest for over forty years. Greg
Boertje-Obed was a First Lieutenant in the US Army. Mike Walli served two
tours in Vietnam . All three men were born in small towns or rural areas
of the Midwest . Walli and Boertje-Obed are members of the Loaves and
Fishes Catholic Worker community in Duluth , Minnesota . Together they are
called the "Weapons of Mass Destruction Here Plowshares."

The Plowshares movement seeks to follow the instructions of Isaiah (2:4)
and Micah (4:3) to "beat your swords into plowshares."   At the time of
their arrest, the three specifically linked their actions to Hiroshima and
Nagasaki . "Two of the most terrible war crimes occurred on August 6th and
9th, 1945. On August 6th, 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb
on the city of Hiroshima , Japan , killing more than 100,000 people
(including U.S. prisoners of war). Three days later the U.S. dropped an
atomic bomb on the city of Nagasaki , Japan , killing more than 50,000
people. Use of these weapons of mass destruction on civilian populations
were abominable crimes against humanity."   They went on to say " U.S.
leaders speak about the dangers of other nations acquiring nuclear
weapons, but they fail to act in accordance with the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty which commits the U.S. to take steps to disarm
its weapons of mass destruction. We act in order to bring attention to
people's responsibility for disarming weapons of state terrorism. We can
begin the process of exposing U.S. weapons of mass destruction, naming
them as abominations that cause desolation, and transforming them to
objects that promote life."

Mike Walli enlisted in the army as a young man. With the experience of two
tours in Vietnam , he said "This is not about our national defense. The
hundreds of Minuteman III nuclear weapons are offensive weapons of mass
destruction. Martin Luther King, Jr. preached that the United States is
the chief purveyor of violence in the world. We must become a
people-oriented society rather than a thing-oriented society. We must kick
the war economy habit."

Greg Boertje-Obed, who, after his time as an officer in the military,
married and is the father of an eleven year old daughter, told me "There
is a sense of righteousness and harmony that comes from being in jail on
August 6. When I was in the military, I was trained to fight and "win" a
nuclear war. It became clear that all the preparations for a nuclear war
were wrong. In contrast Jesus taught "Love your enemies.don't fear those
who can kill the body. those who live by the sword will die by the sword."
Now is the time to turn away from the ways of violence. Treat others the
way we want to be treated. Now is the time to take steps to help the
starving, ill, orphaned, weak, war-oppressed, and down-trodden all over
the world. It is time to turn away from the bomb and the possibility of
ending all life on our planet and to end the nuclear nightmare.

Fr. Carl Kabat spent several years in the Philippines and Brazil . "August
6th and August 9th are appropriate times to be in jail," he reflected. "We
are here to witness against the insanity of nuclear weapons. When these
bombs were dropped on the Japanese I was too young to realize what had
happened. Those bombings were war crimes that we, even today, do not
acknowledge. The indiscriminate killing of children, women, old people and
everyone else certainly cannot be accepted under any just theory of war.
Perhaps the fact that we are in jail can help us as a nation remember the
criminality of those days in the past. None of us can make up for the
killings in the past, but there is a possibility that our being in jail
during this time might help stop such insanity from being repeated in the
future."

North Dakota is home to more nuclear weapons than any other of the 50
states. The Bureau of Atomic Scientists estimated that the state contained
more than 1700 nuclear warheads, not counting the ones planted in concrete
silos in the ground.   A friendly cab driver in Bismarck told me "If North
Dakota seceded from the Union , we would be the world's third
most-powerful nuclear state."

The Weapons of Mass Destruction Here Plowshares hope their actions will
invite the people of North Dakota , and the rest of the US , to do
something about our nation's nuclear weapons of mass destruction in light
of many issues of justice, including the deaths of tens of thousands of
civilians in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.


Bill Quigley is a human rights lawyer and professor of law at Loyola
University New Orleans.  He's also a legal advisor with the Weapons of
Mass Destruction Here Plowshares.

You can write Fr. Carl Kabat, Greg Boertje-Obed, or Mike Walli
c/o Southwest Multi-County Correctional Center
66 Museum Drive
Dickinson, ND 58601

You can contact their community c/o Loaves and Fishes Catholic Worker
Community at 218.728.0629.

You can email Bill Quigley at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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