Expert's Picks

>From Hiroshima to Armageddon: A Reading List.

By George Perkovich

Sunday, July 31, 2005; Page BW07 
On Aug. 6, the world will mark the 60th anniversary of the atomic 
bombing of Hiroshima. Out of the countless books written since then 
to try to make sense of the forces unleashed by the mushroom cloud, 
here are one nuclear expert's choices of the best -- the essential 
atomic bookshelf.
The first nuclear explosion, six decades ago, was code-
named "Trinity." When that fiery cloud erupted over the New Mexican 
desert, its chief creator, J. Robert Oppenheimer, famously intoned a 
verse from the sacred Hindu script the Bhagavad Gita: "Now I am 
become death, the destroyer of worlds." Twenty-nine years later, 
Indian nuclear technologists sent coded word of their first nuclear-
test explosion by telling their prime minister, "The Buddha smiled." 
The bomb brings people as close as they can get to divine power and 
rouses their imaginations accordingly. But as the best literature on 
nuclear issues suggests, protecting civilization from atomic 
destruction depends on secular wisdom and will. This was less a 
problem during the Cold War, when -- despite slogans like "better 
dead than red" -- the main nuclear antagonists did not let their 
core differences prevent them from negotiating rules to keep from 
blowing each other up. Today, however, many of the countries, sects 
and terrorist groups reaching for nuclear weapons are unwilling to 
find common earthly ground for establishing rules that all can live 
by. We still await books to give us the language and perspective to 
make sense of the post-Cold War nuclear challenge -- one in which 
the chances of planetary annihilation are lower but the chances of a 
regional nuclear war (India-Pakistan, Iran-Israel, U.S.-China in the 
Taiwan Strait) or a city-shattering catastrophe (al Qaeda getting 
its hands on a nuke) are far higher.
The earliest books on nuclear weapons can be read as explorations of 
a modern Fall. The New Yorker devoted its Aug. 31, 1946, issue to 
John Hersey's Hiroshima , which described the hellish fury and 
suffering of atomic blast and fire. Masuji Ibuse's novel Black Rain 
(1965) makes the experience intimate through the plain words and 
deeds of unexpecting victims.
Hiroshima's collective meaning continues to evolve -- was it 
original nuclear sin, righteous self-defense or something in 
between? The book that best captures the span of marshaled fact and 
argument is Hiroshima's Shadow (1996), a compilation of historical 
documents and essays by some of the 20th century's greatest American 
and international writers, edited by Kai Bird and Lawrence 
Lifschultz.
Outstanding stories continue to be published of the bomb-builders in 
the United States, Britain, the Soviet Union, France, China, Israel 
and India. (North Korea and Pakistan's nuclear stories remain 
shrouded in secrecy.) Richard Rhodes's The Making of the Atomic Bomb 
(1986) focuses on the American program and remains the best-told 
example of this genre. David Holloway's Stalin and the Bomb: The 
Soviet Union and Atomic Energy, 1939-1956 (1994) and Avner Cohen's 
Israel and the Bomb (1998) also deserve special mention. Each 
country treats its own bomb-builders as demigods, and this trend 
would continue were Iran, Saudi Arabia or any other country to 
acquire nuclear weapons. (The father of Pakistan's atomic program, 
the infamous A.Q. Khan, was basically a thief and gray-market 
procurement wizard who has helped spread nuclear weapons know-how 
around the world, but he's treated as a scientific genius in 
Pakistan.) As long as some nations are allowed to have nuclear 
weapons, other people are going to want heroes to build them too, 
whether their governments are good or bad.
The Cuban missile crisis of 1962 elicited the fear of doomsday in 
ways that Americans had never experienced. Art cannot rival the 
intense drama of real life as recorded in The Kennedy Tapes: Inside 
the White House During the Cuban Missile Crisis , edited by Philip 
D. Zelikow and Ernest R. May (2002). In these pages, we observe the 
varieties of human strength and weakness, folly and wisdom, that are 
brought to bear when men choose to wager the fate of whole peoples 
on actions taken with imperfect information.
After Cuba, the Cold War antagonists spent trillions of dollars 
building elaborate arsenals and control systems to implement 
apocalyptic strategies of deterrence. In The Wizards of Armageddon 
(1983), Fred Kaplan elucidated how the nuclear strategists Herman 
Kahn, Thomas C. Schelling, Albert Wohlstetter and others believed 
that, by thinking the unthinkable, they were preventing it from 
occurring. Robert Jervis's able critique of the deterrence edifice 
in The Meaning of the Nuclear Revolution: Statecraft and the 
Prospect of Armageddon (1989) remains insightful, while Atomic 
Audit: The Costs and Consequences of U.S. Nuclear Weapons Since 1940 
(1998), edited by Stephen I. Schwartz, is the only comprehensive 
attempt to assess the full costs of the nuclear weapons enterprise 
in any country. Still, to read these accounts of the Cold War 
nuclear standoff today is to remember, or perhaps to discover, how 
surreal the world of nuclear deterrence is.
Not all Cold War scenarios have faded, of course. In John A. 
McPhee's The Curve of Binding Energy (1974), a brilliant, pensive, 
nuclear weapons designer named Ted Taylor guides McPhee through the 
shadows of the bomb. At one point, Taylor stands with McPhee at the 
foot of one of the World Trade Center towers and exclaims, "What an 
artifact that is!" The expert then explains the various ways that an 
unsophisticated, tiny (half a kiloton) bomb could destroy one or 
both towers. Back in 1973, this arms designer feared that the 
nuclear industry and the U.S. government were not taking seriously 
the security requirements necessary to keep terrorists from 
acquiring fissile materials. This was a time when a dramatic 
expansion of nuclear industry was "inevitable," as the industry and 
its many governmental champions say it is again today. A quarter-
century later, the nuclear-power boom that we prepared for has not 
happened, and the terrorism that we did not prepare for has 
happened. The economy thrived without an expansion of nuclear 
energy, and terrorists took down the towers without the bomb.
What we miss most in nuclear literature are the voices of the people 
long viewed as unworthy to hold the bomb. Michael Ondaatje's lyrical 
novel The English Patient (1992) pivots to its end when the British-
Indian sapper, nicknamed Kip, hears on his scratchy radio that the 
United States has bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He sinks to his 
knees and screams, then rises, grabs his rifle and races into the 
ruined villa to accost the patient being cared for there. Kip is 
told that the burned man is not truly English. "I don't care," the 
colonial subject exclaims. "When you start bombing the brown races 
of the world, you're an Englishman." Ondaatje, from Sri Lanka, 
conveys a feeling deeply held in much of the world: "They would 
never have dropped such a bomb on a white nation."
Today, religious sectarianism fuels terrorism and conflict in the 
Middle East and casts shadows over nonproliferation challenges in 
Iran and South Asia. Christian evangelism is strong among America's 
future nuclear-war planners at the U.S. Air Force Academy. But there 
is no reason to think that the apocalyptic power of nuclear 
materials can be channeled only by our tribe and not by children of 
other gods. In this pluralistic world, only secular politics can 
produce the concepts and language needed to identify the common 
ground on which passionate and wary groups can agree to live and let 
live. A new literature, in new voices, must be written to inform 
this new politics. •
George Perkovich is vice president for studies at the Carnegie 
Endowment for International Peace and the author of "India's Nuclear 
Bomb."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-
dyn/content/article/2005/07/28/AR2005072801558.html?
referrer=emailarticle








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