Dear Donald Trump: This Is Why Nuclear Weapons Are Bad

http://www.wired.com/2016/08/dear-donald-trump-nuclear-weapons-bad/

THIS MORNING ON his show Morning Joe host Joe Scarborough said that
according to one of Donald Trump’s foreign policy advisors, the
Republican nominee recently asked why the United States can’t use
nuclear weapons.

“Three times he asked at one point if we had them why can’t we use
them,” Scarborough said, as the panel seated around him fell silent.

And it’s only Wednesday, y’all.

Listen. We know most of you out there are well aware of the dangers
and lasting effects of nuclear weapons. And, of course, it’s possible
this is all a misunderstanding (the Trump campaign didn’t respond to
WIRED’s request for comment). But this report, combined with other
comments Trump has made about nuclear war in the past, form a
rough—and terrifying—outline of what a potential Trump nuclear
doctrine would be.

Like so many of Trump’s statements on thorny national security issues,
his public pronouncements on nuclear weapons have often been
contradictory. He has, in the same breath, said he is against nuclear
proliferation, and that “it’s going to happen, anyway.”

“At some point we have to say, you know what, we’re better off if
Japan protects itself against this maniac in North Korea,” he said
during a CNN-moderated town hall in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. “We’re
better off, frankly, if South Korea is going to start to protect
itself.”

He told The New York Times that nuclear capability is “the biggest
problem the world has” during the same interview in which suggested
more countries should have them, saying, “Would I rather have North
Korea have them with Japan sitting there having them also? You may
very well be better off if that’s the case.”

That Trump would flip flop on policy with such speed and regularity is
standard fare for his campaign. But security experts like John Noonan,
a former missile combat crew commander and national security advisor
to Jeb Bush and Mitt Romney, say that when it comes to nuclear
warfare, that type of say-anything attitude is flat out dangerous. (If
you’re interested, you should probably check out his entiretweetstorm
on the subject.)

“When you’re in the nuclear business and talking about nuclear
weapons, your statements are policy,” Noonan says. Already, he says,
Trump’s words may well be informing the calculus of other countries
that could just as easily arm themselves, but have held off because of
the United States’ commitment to deterrence.

If Trump continues to signal that US commitment to nuclear deterrence
could wane during his administration, Noonan says, “What you’re
looking at is not only a great destabilizing of a robust and sturdy
security architecture. You’re looking at potentially one of the widest
expansions of nuclear proliferation in history.”

At the heart of Trump’s argument on nuclear power seems to be the idea
that it’s better for every country to be able to defend itself against
nuclear war than for the US to do it for them. With this approach,
Trump seems to be washing his hands of a time-tested precedent in
which the United States plays a key role in disarming foreign
countries’ nuclear programs.

What’s more, Noonan says, the United States’ nuclear power is
strongest when used as a bargaining chip between nations. What effect
it would have against ideological terrorists such as ISIS is unclear.
But Trump seems poised to use it as a tool in the ground fight against
ISIS, a plan Noonan says would “backfire spectacularly.”

“There’s a difference between communicating with a foreign power like
the Soviet Union, Moscow, or China, and using these with something
like ISIS,” he says.

All of this might be a predictable stance for Trump, a candidate who
is proudly isolationist and has framed the US as the world’s punching
bag throughout this election cycle. Except for the fact that he is
talking about nuclear warfare—a threat that is so destructive, it has
no victors. It leaves its targets victims and its first movers
vulnerable. As Ronald Reagan once said, “A nuclear war cannot be won
and must never be fought.”

That much may be painfully obvious to most of us, but it seems the guy
who’s now vying to be the most powerful man in the world didn’t get
the memo about why nuclear war is a bad thing. So here’s a primer.

First, American Security

Before we get around to the ethics of deploying nuclear weapons on
entire civilizations and the planet, we’ll start with the logic
Trump’s “America First” position suggests he’s most likely to respond
to: national security.

Yes, the United States is home to a substantial share of nuclear
weapons around the world. But it’s not the only country that has them.
According to the Nuclear Threat Initiative, there are 16,000 nuclear
weapons spread throughout China, India, Israel, France, North Korea,
Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Meanwhile,
Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal is growing in a time of increasing unrest
in the neighboring Middle East.

Trump knows all this, but he’s missing the key point. The best way for
the US to guarantee other nations won’t abuse their nuclear power is
for the US not to flex its own. This is known as the strategy of
Mutually Assured Destruction; it’s the backbone of our nuclear
deterrence policy and it’s worked for decades. Moreover, even from the
beginning nuclear weapons were designed to not be used, but rather to
act as the ultimate ace up the sleeve that you never play. As the
famous quote from the movie WarGames goes, “The only winning move is
not to play.” To Trump’s question about using the nukes, he’s really
asking, wouldn’t a threat of nuclear force scare the United States’
foreign enemies? The answer is sure. But it should also scare anyone
who knows that a retaliatory attack is now far more possible than it
was when the US bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki during World War II.

As Noonan puts it, “The ensuing backlash against the United States by
allies and adversaries alike, as well as the inevitable swelling in
ISIS’s ranks in response to such a brutal use of power would be a
colossal strategic loss for the United States. It’s something ISIS
would want.”

Second, the Moral Problem

Still, it’s hard to overstate the ethical argument against nuclear
weapons. Though the actual numbers are unknowable, estimates say that
in Hiroshima, the atomic bomb killed approximately 80,000 people,
mainly civilians, instantly. More than 100,000 more would later die
from radiation and after effects. Another 70,000 plus people were
killed in the bombing of Nagasaki.

The Radiation Effects Research Foundation, which is a collaboration
between the United States and Japan, is still studying the effects of
radiation exposure. Meanwhile, areport by the International Committee
of the Red Cross and the Japanese Red Cross Society recently found
that some 70 years after the blasts, Japanese hospitals are still
treating patients for radiation-related illnesses, as well as
post-traumatic stress disorder.


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Peace Is Doable

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