The Power of Protest

http://japanfocus.org/-Lawrence_S_-Wittner/1848

The campaign against nuclear weapons was not simply an ideological 
movement; it was a potent political force.

by Lawrence S. Wittner

[Introduction: Six decades into the nuclear age, it is worth 
reflecting on the fact that the United States remains the only nation 
to have detonated a nuclear weapon in combat, that Japan alone among 
nations has experienced nuclear attack, and that for all the terror 
unleashed in subsequent wars, no nation has launched nuclear weapons 
on an enemy since 1945. What forces have prevented nuclear war, and 
what lessons can be drawn from this experience for the future? 
Lawrence Wittner finds important answers to these questions in the 
world anti- nuclear movement.

Japan has played an important role in this world movement from its 
inception. The Japanese antinuclear movement began in response to the 
atomic bombing of Japan. In 1946, citizens' groups in Hiroshima, 
meeting to commemorate the sufferings of the population, gradually, 
turned to agitation against the nuclear arms race. By warning the 
world of the horrors of nuclear war, hibakusha and their supporters 
believed, the suffering and the deaths of hundreds of thousands of 
citizens of Hiroshima and Nagasaki would acquire transcendent 
meaning. Although U.S. censorship and other restraints barred 
publication detailing the horror inflicted by the atomic bombs, a 
campaign against the Bomb gradually gathered strength.

That campaign took off as a mass movement after March 1954, when U.S. 
nuclear testing irradiated the crew of a Japanese fishing boat, the 
Lucky Dragon and citizens of Bikini. This led to an antinuclear 
petition initiated by women and eventually signed by 32 million 
people in the largest anti-nuclear protest ever. The movement quickly 
became international. In August 1955, tens of thousands of delegates 
-- most of them Japanese -- convened in Hiroshima for the First World 
Conference Against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs. The Japan Council 
Against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs (Gensuikyo) was organized to 
continue the antinuclear crusade in Japan, which continued to rage in 
the following years.

However, the Cold War partisanship of the Japan Communist Party (JCP) 
within Gensuikyo generated intense friction inside the organization. 
Consequently, in 1965 the Japan Socialist Party, Sohyo, and other 
organizations calling for a more evenhanded approach critical of the 
nuclear stance of all nuclear powers created a rival group, the Japan 
Congress Against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs (Gensuikin). Attempts in 
the late 1970s and early 1980s to foster greater cooperation between 
the two organizations resulted in another outpouring of nuclear 
disarmament activism in the early 1980s. Hundreds of thousands of 
Japanese demonstrated against nuclear weapons in Hiroshima and Tokyo. 
Once again, tens of millions of people signed antinuclear petitions. 
Although this activism fell off in subsequent years, the idea of 
nuclear disarmament, a centerpiece of Japanese pacifism, has retained 
enormous popular appeal. Polls in 1998 showed that 78 percent of the 
Japanese public favored the complete destruction of nuclear weapons.

In a post-9/11 world with a single superpower, what strategies will 
anti-nuclear activists devise to prevent nuclear war? With Japan 
dispatching troops to Iraq in violation of its own constitution, and 
with rising pressures to revise the constitutional ban on war, the 
issues are particularly salient for Japan. The answer to that 
question may hinge on the ability of anti-war and anti-nuclear 
activists to unify their movements. By Japan Focus coordinator]
--

One of the most striking facts about the modern world is that, for 
the past 58 years, we have managed to avoid nuclear war. After all, a 
nation that has developed weapons tends to use them. For example, 
immediately after the U.S. government built nuclear weapons, it 
employed them to destroy Japanese cities. Just as startling, a nation 
that has devoted vast resources to developing weapons usually does 
not get rid of them -- at least until it develops more powerful weapons.

But since August 1945, no nation has attacked another with nuclear 
weapons, and only a relatively small number of nations have chosen to 
build them. Also, those nations that have developed nuclear weapons 
have for the most part accepted nuclear arms control and disarmament 
measures: the Partial Test Ban Treaty; the Strategic Arms Limitation 
Treaties (I and II); the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty; 
the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaties (I and II); and the 
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. Why have they adopted these policies 
of nuclear restraint?

The answer lies in a massive grassroots campaign that has mobilized 
millions of people in nations around the globe: the world nuclear 
disarmament movement. Indeed, the history of nuclear restraint 
without the nuclear disarmament movement is like the history of civil 
rights legislation without the civil rights movement.

A message from the masses

Nuclear restraint did not come naturally to government officials, who 
initially viewed nuclear weapons as useful additions to their 
nations' military might.

This certainly included U.S. officials. Learning of the successful 
destruction of Hiroshima, President Truman called the atomic bomb 
"the greatest thing in history" and moved forward with the nuclear 
annihilation of Nagasaki. He also ordered the creation of a vast 
nuclear arsenal for the United States, including hydrogen bombs.

Truman's successor, Dwight Eisenhower, came to office with no 
interest whatsoever in nuclear arms controls or disarmament. Instead, 
Eisenhower favored what he called "massive retaliation" and the 
integration of nuclear weapons into conventional war. Nuclear 
weapons, Eisenhower declared, should "be used exactly as you would 
use a bullet or anything else." John F. Kennedy campaigned for the 
Presidency by pledging a U.S. nuclear buildup to close the supposed 
"missile gap" between the United States and the Soviet Union.

Even Jimmy Carter -- as much a man of peace as any who has reached 
the White House -- championed the development of the neutron bomb and 
the MX missile. Ronald Reagan, of course, entered office as an 
opponent of every nuclear arms control treaty signed by his 
Democratic and Republican predecessors. Furthermore, he talked glibly 
about fighting and winning nuclear wars. His successor, George H. W. 
Bush, halted nuclear arms control and disarmament negotiations in one 
of his first acts in office.

But they all came around to rejecting nuclear war and championing 
nuclear arms control and disarmament measures.

This reversal occurred because of a massive, worldwide campaign of 
public protest against the nuclear arms race and nuclear war. Atomic 
scientists, pacifists, professional groups, religious bodies, unions, 
intellectuals, and just plain folks were horrified at the nuclear 
recklessness of government officials -- including their own -- and 
demanded nuclear disarmament. Powerful anti-nuclear groups sprang up 
around the world. In the United States, they included the Federation 
of American Scientists, the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy 
(SANE), Women Strike for Peace, Physicians for Social Responsibility, 
and the Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign. These constituencies 
demanded that the nuclear arms race stop, that nuclear disarmament 
begin, and that nuclear war be banned. For the most part, the general 
public agreed. During the 1980s, polls found that 70 to 80 percent of 
Americans supported the Nuclear Freeze proposal for a Soviet-American 
treaty to halt the testing, development, and deployment of nuclear 
weapons. The waging of nuclear war inspired widespread popular revulsion.

This public resistance to nuclear weapons startled government 
officials and gradually pushed them back from implementing their 
nuclear ambitions. As U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles put 
it, there had developed "a popular and diplomatic pressure for 
limitation of armament that cannot be resisted by the United States 
without our forfeiting the good will of our allies and the support of 
a large part of our own people." When the Soviet Union began a 
unilateral halt to nuclear testing in 1958, the U.S. government could 
no longer resist. Testing was "not evil," Eisenhower remarked in 
exasperation, but "people have been brought to believe that it is!" 
And so the U.S. and British governments joined the Russians in 
halting nuclear testing. When some Eisenhower administration 
officials called for greater flexibility in the use of nuclear 
weapons, the President brushed them off. "The use of nuclear 
weapons," he said, "would raise serious political problems in view of 
the current state of world opinion."

The Kennedy administration also felt besieged by protests against 
nuclear weapons. According to the minutes of a November 1961 National 
Security Council meeting, "the President voiced doubts that we could 
ever test in Nevada again for domestic political reasons," while the 
U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Adlai Stevenson, "pointed up 
the difficulty of testing at Eniwetok." Ultimately, Kennedy turned to 
Norman Cousins, the founder and co-chair of SANE, and urged him to 
use his meeting with Nikita Khrushchev to smooth the path toward a 
nuclear test ban treaty. That's just what Cousins did, and the result 
was the Partial Test Ban Treaty of 1963. Jerome Wiesner, Kennedy's 
White House Science adviser, gave the major credit for the treaty to 
SANE and Women Strike for Peace. According to McGeorge Bundy, 
Kennedy's national security adviser, the treaty "was achieved 
primarily by world opinion."

When it came to the Vietnam War, Bundy recalled, the U.S. government 
did not dare to use nuclear weapons. Why? There would have been a 
terrible public reaction abroad, Bundy said; even more significant 
was the prospect of public upheaval in the United States, for -- as 
he recalled -- "no president could hope for understanding and support 
from his own countrymen if he used the bomb." Explaining his own 
restraint in the war, Richard Nixon recalled bitterly that, had he 
used nuclear weapons or bombed North Vietnamese dikes, "The resulting 
domestic and international uproar would have damaged our foreign 
policy on all fronts."

Taking "yes" for an answer

Even the hawkish Ronald Reagan had the good sense to get out of the 
way of the political steamroller. In an effort to dampen popular 
protest against his nuclear buildup, he endorsed the "zero option -- 
a proposal to remove all the intermediate range nuclear missiles from 
Europe. Then he dropped plans to deploy the neutron bomb. Then he 
agreed to abide by the provisions of SALT II -- though it was never 
ratified and, during the 1980 campaign, he had condemned it as an act 
of "appeasement." Although Reagan proceeded with the deployment of 
U.S. missiles in Western Europe, he was so rattled by the massive 
protests against them that, in October 1983, he told his startled 
secretary of state: "If things get hotter and hotter and arms control 
remains an issue, maybe I should go see [Soviet Premier Yuri] 
Andropov and propose eliminating all nuclear weapons." And, despite 
protests from his advisers, he did propose that, in a remarkable 
speech in January 1984. Moreover, as early as April 1982 he began 
declaring publicly that "a nuclear war cannot be won and must never 
be fought." He added, "To those who protest against nuclear war, I 
can only say: 'I'm with you!'"

All this happened during Reagan's first term in office, during the 
reigns of Leonid Brezhnev, Andropov, and Konstantin Chernenko in the 
Soviet Union -- before the advent of Mikhail Gorbachev.

Gorbachev's rise to power in March 1985 removed the Soviet stumbling 
block in the path of arms control and disarmament agreements, for the 
new Soviet party leader was a movement convert. Gorbachev's "New 
Thinking" -- by which he meant the necessity for peace and 
disarmament in the nuclear age -- came from a well-known anti-nuclear 
statement by Albert Einstein in 1946, reiterated in the famous 
Russell-Einstein appeal of 1955. Gorbachev's advisers have frequently 
pointed to the powerful influence of the nuclear disarmament campaign 
upon the Soviet leader, and Gorbachev himself declared that the new 
thinking took into consideration the conclusions and demands of the 
antiwar organizations and anti-nuclear activists.

Gorbachev met frequently with leaders of the nuclear disarmament 
movement and often followed their suggestions. On the advice of 
nuclear disarmament activists, he initiated and later continued a 
unilateral Soviet nuclear testing moratorium, decided against 
building a Star Wars antimissile system, and split the issue of Star 
Wars from the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty, thus taking the 
crucial step toward the 1987 agreement that removed all 
intermediate-range nuclear missiles from Europe.

When Gorbachev suddenly called the U.S. bluff by agreeing to remove 
all the Euromissiles (the zero option), it horrified NATO's hawks -- 
including Margaret Thatcher in Britain, the Christian Democrats in 
West Germany, and key Republican leaders in the United States, such 
as Robert Dole, Jesse Helms, and Henry Kissinger. But, as U.S. 
Secretary of State George Shultz recalled: "If the United States 
reversed its stand now . . . such a reversal would be political 
dynamite!" Or, as Kenneth Adelman, Reagan's hawkish director of the 
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, put it: "We had to take yes for 
an answer."

In response to anti-nuclear agitation during these years, there were 
also important shifts in other lands. New Zealand banned nuclear 
warships in its ports; Australia refused to test MX missiles. India 
halted work on nuclear weapons, and its prime minister, Rajiv Gandhi, 
joined with Gorbachev in calling for nuclear abolition. The 
Philippines adopted a nuclear-free constitution and shut down U.S. 
military bases that housed nuclear weapons. South Africa scrapped its 
nuclear weapons program. No new nations joined the nuclear club.

Although the movement began to decline in the late 1980s, it retained 
some influence. President George H. W. Bush and his secretary of 
state, James Baker, felt that Reagan had moved too fast and too far 
toward nuclear disarmament and abruptly halted disarmament 
negotiations. But their reluctance soon collapsed.

The U.S. and British governments wanted to significantly upgrade 
short-range nuclear forces in Western Europe. However, a number of 
West European governments, frightened at the prospect of a revival of 
public protest, resisted. When Gorbachev unilaterally removed 
short-range missiles from Eastern Europe, thus encouraging popular 
protests against the missiles in Western Europe, Baker was horrified. 
"We were losing the battle for public opinion. We had to do 
something," he wrote in his memoirs. "NATO could not afford another 
crisis over deploying nuclear weapons. The alliance . . . would not 
be able to survive." Thus, the Bush administration backed off and 
agreed to negotiate missile reductions. Eventually, in a sharp 
departure from past practice, it unilaterally withdrew its 
short-range missiles from Western Europe.

Stopping the tests

The impact of the anti-nuclear movement upon nuclear testing was even 
more direct. Since the mid-1980s, disarmament groups around the world 
had been working to stop underground nuclear weapons explosions. 
Thanks to their pleas, Gorbachev initiated and continued his 
unilateral nuclear testing moratorium. But, after eighteen months of 
Reagan administration rebuffs to the moratorium and to a test ban 
treaty, in February 1987 the Soviets resumed testing. This setback, 
however, only heightened anti-nuclear agitation.

Protesters organized large demonstrations at the Nevada Test Site. 
Police arrested thousands of Americans each year for nonviolent civil 
disobedience. Inspired by these actions, a massive 
Nevada-Semipalatinsk nuclear disarmament movement emerged in the 
Soviet Union, eventually forcing the closure of the Soviet nuclear test sites.

Meanwhile, sympathetic members of Congress introduced a variety of 
bills to halt U.S. nuclear testing. In 1991, pressed hard by 
disarmament groups, they pushed for action again. The final 
legislation, passed in the summer of 1992, halted underground nuclear 
testing for nine months, placed strict conditions on further U.S. 
testing, and required test ban negotiations and an end to U.S. 
testing by late 1996.

Having halted U.S. and Soviet nuclear testing, the movement pushed on 
in the following years to secure the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty 
(CTBT). During his presidential campaign, Bill Clinton -- recognizing 
the popular appeal of ending nuclear testing -- had pledged to 
support the test ban treaty. But after he entered the White House in 
January 1993, Clinton began to renege. Disarmament groups and 
anti-nuclear members of Congress stirred up a test ban campaign later 
that year, and the administration extended the U.S. nuclear testing 
moratorium, pressed other nuclear powers to join it, and began 
worldwide efforts to secure a treaty. Finally, in September 1996, 
representatives of countries around the world celebrated the signing 
of the CTBT. Speaking at the U.N. ceremonies, U.S. Amb. Madeleine 
Albright declared: "This was a treaty sought by ordinary people 
everywhere, and today the power of that universal wish could not be denied."

That is the good news.

What can be done?

The bad news is that since the end of the Cold War popular pressure 
against nuclear weapons has waned, and -- as a result -- hawkish 
government officials have felt freer to go about their traditional 
business of preparing for war, including nuclear war. India and 
Pakistan became nuclear weapons powers and threatened one another 
with nuclear annihilation. The U.S. Senate rejected ratification of 
the CTBT. And the administration of George W. Bush -- playing upon 
fears generated by 9/11 -- has withdrawn from the Anti-Ballistic 
Missile Treaty, opposed the CTBT, and laid plans for building new 
nuclear weapons.

Decades of struggle against the Bomb offer some strategic lessons. 
One is that the threat nuclear weapons pose to human survival 
provides a very effective basis for sparking mass mobilization 
against them. Even so, playing on fear can backfire, for hawkish 
forces can use it to make the case for more nuclear weapons. 
Consequently, disarmament advocates must not only stress the dangers 
of a nuclear buildup, but also provide a practical, positive 
alternative. On a short-term basis, this means nuclear arms control 
and disarmament under international control; on a long-term basis, 
the strengthening of international authority to prevent war and aggression.

Furthermore, because the mass media usually avoid discussing nuclear 
weapons issues and because much of the public would prefer not to 
think about nuclear annihilation, many people are ignorant about 
their governments' nuclear ambitions. Therefore, to stir up mass 
mobilization against nuclear weapons, disarmament groups must work 
overtime at raising popular consciousness about what governments are 
doing to prepare for nuclear war.

Finally, in order to develop that consciousness-raising campaign, as 
well as sensible alternatives to preparing for nuclear war, 
disarmament groups (and other civil society organizations) need to 
adopt a common focus for their efforts. They did this (more or less) 
in connection with halting nuclear testing, coordinating the European 
Nuclear Disarmament campaign, and organizing the Nuclear Freeze campaign.

There are also more profound lessons. Left to themselves, governments 
gravitate toward nuclear weapons and nuclear war as a means of 
defending national interests. Nor is this surprising, for the 
nation-state system has produced arms races and wars throughout its 
history. Fortunately, nations can be compelled to reverse themselves. 
When the nuclear disarmament movement has mobilized substantial 
popular pressure, it has succeeded in curbing the nuclear arms race 
and preventing nuclear war.

What the movement has done before, it can do again.
--

Lawrence S. Wittner, professor of history at the State University of 
New York-Albany, is the author of Toward Nuclear Abolition: A History 
of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement, 1971 to the Present 
(2003). This article appeared in the July-August 2004 issue of the 
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.

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