Bernie Sanders
Urges Congress to Stop Donald Trump Launching Nuclear
Arms Race
By Charlotte England
December 26, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Independent" -
Democrat
speaks out after President-elect appears to reverse
decade's-old policy of disarmament
Bernie Sanders has urged Congress to stop Donald Trump
launching a Cold War-style nuclear arms race.
"It's a miracle a nuclear weapon hasn't been used in war
since 1945," the Vermont Senator said in a post on
Twitter. "Congress can't allow the Tweeter in Chief to
start a nuclear arms race."
Earlier on Friday, the US President-elect was asked to
clarify the meaning behind an ambiguous tweet in an
interview with MSNBC.
He did not
specify which country or countries he was referring to,
but his post on the social media site on Thursday used
very similar language to a statement made by Russian
Premier Vladimir Putin just hours earlier.
"The United
States must greatly strengthen and expand its nuclear
capability until such time as the world comes to its
senses regarding nukes," Mr Trump said in a tweet read
by some as a challenge to the former Soviet Union
country.
Laicie Heeley,
a nuclear expert at the Stimson Center, a nonpartisan
anti-nuclear proliferation think-tank in Washington,
told AFP news agency it was “reckless” for Mr
Trump to tweet on the topic without offering details.
“To make such a
loaded statement without context or follow-up is
irresponsible at best,” she said.
“We could be
talking about a return to the Cold War here, when the
threat of a nuclear catastrophe was very real,“ she
said. ”Russian rhetoric is already moving in that
direction. It wouldn't take a lot to bring us back
there.”
Minutes after
Mr Trump’s follow up remarks were reported on MSNBC, his
secretary Sean Spicer said in several television
interviews that there would be no arms race because the
President-elect would make sure that other countries
trying to step up their nuclear capabilities, such as
Russia and China, would decide not to participate.
“He’s going to
ensure that other countries get the message that he’s
not going to sit back and allow that,” Mr Spicer told
NBC. “And what’s going to happen is they will come to
their senses, and we will all be just fine."
In his annual
news conference on Friday, Russian President Vladimir
Putin downplayed suggestions there was a risk of a new
Cold War-style weapons race, dismissing comments made by
the US President-elect as “nothing new”.
He added that
his plan to bolster Russia’s nuclear weapons was simply
a necessary response to the US missile defence system.
“It’s not us
who have been speeding up the arms race,” he said.
He added that
he did not have a problem with the President-elect,
saying that if Mr Trump invited him, he would even visit
the US.
Mr Trump also
made it clear that on a personal level he still feels
something of an affinity with Mr Putin, quoting the
Russian president in an unrelated tweet posted to his
account late on Friday night.
During his
election campaign, Mr Trump suggested the US expand its
nuclear arsenal.
He also
suggested that “better off” other countries that are
traditionally US allies, including Japan and South
Korea, should have nuclear capabilities, to make them
less dependent on Washington.
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