Seventy-five years after the U.S. atomic bombings of
Japan, we remain perched on the precipice of
unparalleled catastrophe.
By Helen Caldicott
August 06, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - My birthday is August
7, sandwiched between the anniversary dates for the
bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (on August 6 and
August 9, 1945, respectively). I was six years old when
the first bomb fell. My course in life was
predetermined.
On September 2, 1945, when the local fire siren
suddenly blared, my teacher asked, “What is that?” and I
knew: The war was over.
It had been a really scary time in Melbourne,
Australia, as the Japanese had
threatened to invade us. Dad dug an air-raid shelter
in our back garden, and the windows were blacked out
while the city’s searchlights scanned the skies at
night.
Elated, I walked home on that lovely sunny afternoon
picking flowers along the way. It would be years later
before I learned the awful truth about how the war
ended.
What rained down on those two Japanese cities
seventy-five years ago was destruction on a scale never
seen before or since. People exposed within half a mile
of the atomic fireball were seared to piles of smoking
char in a fraction of a second as their internal organs
boiled away. The small black bundles stuck to the
streets and bridges and sidewalks of Hiroshima numbered
in the thousands.
A little boy was
reaching up to catch a red dragonfly with his hand
against the blue sky when there was a blinding flash and
he disappeared. He turned into gas and left his shadow
behind on the pavement, a haunting relic later moved to
the Hiroshima Museum. A woman was running while holding
her baby; she and the baby were turned into a charcoal
statue.
In all, about 120,000 people were
killed immediately by the two bombs, and tens of
thousands more died later due to radiation exposure.
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In 1957, when I was eighteen, I read a book by Nevil
Shute, an English novelist who ended up in Australia.
On the Beach described how the city of
Melbourne awaited a deadly cloud of radiation from a
nuclear war that was triggered by an accident in the
northern hemisphere, killing everything. Men drank their
last gin and tonics in the Melbourne Club while the
government dispensed cyanide capsules so parents could
kill their children quickly to avoid the agonizing
symptoms of radiation poisoning.
At the time, I was in medical school, where I learned
about radiation biology—the classic experiments of
Hermann J. Muller, who in the 1920s
irradiated Drosophila fruit flies inducing
genetic mutations and morphological abnormalities.
Concurrently, the United States and the Soviet Union
were testing nuclear weapons in the atmosphere,
bombarding huge populations with radioactive
fallout.
In my naiveté, I couldn’t understand what these men
thought they were doing because the mutagenic and
carcinogenic effects of ionizing radiation were well
known in scientific circles. Madame Curie had
died of aplastic anemia secondary to radium, an
alpha emitter polluting her bones; her daughter
died of leukemia, and many of the early radiologists
who exposed themselves randomly to X-rays
died from malignancies.
Einstein
wrote: “The unleashed power of the atom has changed
everything save our modes of thinking and we thus drift
toward unparalleled catastrophe.” Robert Oppenheimer,
watching the
world’s first nuclear explosion in Alamogordo, New
Mexico, in 1945,
muttered to himself, “I am become death, the
destroyer of worlds” from the Hindu scripture, the
Bhagavad Gita.
The scientists knew that they had discovered the
seeds of human destruction.
So, in full awareness of its newfound ability to
destroy the human race, what did the world do next?
The United States and the Soviet Union decided to
outdo each other by conducting a nuclear arms race,
building tens of thousands of nuclear weapons. Between
1945 and 1998, the United States
conducted more than 1,000 nuclear tests,
producing cancer in tens of thousands of people. It
has
built more than 70,000 atomic and hydrogen bombs;
the Soviets and later the Russian Federation had tried
to keep up,
building at least 55,000 of their own.
Arms control agreements over the years have managed
to reduce stockpiles to about
14,000 nuclear weapons today, in the possession of
nine nations: the United States, Russia, the United
Kingdom, France, China, India, Pakistan, Israel, and
North Korea. The United States and Russia still lead the
pack, each with more than
6,000 total weapons, including about 1,600 each that
are actively deployed.
The United States needs to rise to its full moral
and spiritual height and lead the world to sanity
and survival.
A nuclear “exchange” between these two superpowers
would take little over one hour to complete. A
twenty-megaton bomb (the equivalent of twenty million
tons of TNT) would
excavate a hole three-quarters of a mile wide and
800 feet deep, converting all buildings and people into
radioactive fallout that would be shot up in the
mushroom cloud. Within six miles in all directions every
living thing would be
vaporized. Twenty miles from the epicenter, huge
fires would erupt, as winds of up to 500 miles per hour
would suck people out of buildings and turn them into
missiles traveling at 100 miles per hour. The fires
would coalesce, incinerating much of the United States
and causing most nuclear power plants to melt down,
greatly exacerbating radioactive fallout.
Potentially billions of people would die hideously
from acute radiation sickness, vomiting, and bleeding to
death. As thick black radioactive smoke engulfed the
stratosphere, the Earth would, over time, be
plunged into another ice age—a “nuclear winter,”
annihilating almost all living organisms.
Seventy-five years after the dawn of the nuclear age,
we are as ready as ever to extinguish ourselves. The
human race is clearly an evolutionary aberrant on a
suicidal mission. Our planet is in the intensive care
unit, approaching several terminal events.
Will we gradually burn and shrivel life on our
wondrous Earth by emitting the ancient carbon stored
over billions of years to drive our cars and power our
industries, or will we end it suddenly by creating a
global gas oven?
The International Energy Agency
said recently that we only have six months left to
avert the effects of global warming before it is too
late. Earlier this year, the Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists
moved its Doomsday Clock to 100 seconds to midnight,
the closest it’s ever been.
In truth, the U.S. Department of Defense is a
misnomer; it is actually the Department of War, Death,
and Suicide. Hundreds of billions of dollars of U.S.
taxpayer money are spent annually by corporations such
as Lockheed Martin, Boeing, BAE Systems, and Raytheon
Technologies Corporation to create and build the most
hideous weapons of destruction.
Brilliant people employed by these massive
corporations, mostly men, are deploying their brainpower
to devise better and more hideous ways of killing.
President Donald Trump is right when he says we need
to make friends with the Russians, for it is Russian
bombs that might well annihilate the United States.
Indeed, we need to foster friendship with all nations
and reinvest the trillions of dollars spent on war,
killing, and death, saving the ecosphere by powering the
world with renewable energy including solar, wind, and
geothermal, and planting trillions of trees.
Such a move would also free up billions of dollars
that could be reallocated to such purposes as providing
free medical care for all U.S. citizens, along with free
education, housing for the homeless, and care for those
with mental illness.
The United States needs to rise to its full moral and
spiritual height and lead the world to sanity and
survival. I know this is possible because, in the 1980s,
millions of wonderful people rose up, nationally and
internationally, in opposition to the arms race and the
Cold War.
But what is the present reality in the United States?
There are 450 Minuteman III missiles
operational on the Great Plains—in Montana, North
Dakota, and Wyoming. In each missile silo are two
missileers, who control and launch the missiles which
contain one or two hydrogen bombs. Planes armed with
hydrogen bombs stand ready to take off at any moment,
and nuclear submarines silently plow the oceans ready to
launch.
Both the United States and Russia have nuclear
weapons targeted at military facilities and population
centers. Nuclear war could happen at any time, by
accident or design. The late Stephen Hawking
warned in 2014 that artificial intelligence, now
being deployed by the military, could become so
autonomous that it could start a nuclear war by itself.
This threat is largely ignored by politicians and the
mainstream media, who continue to practice psychic
numbing as we stumble blindly toward our demise.
How come the physicists, engineers, and military
personnel who have laced the world with nuclear weapons
ready to launch never factored into their equations the
probability that an immature, petulant man-baby could
hold the trigger for our destruction in his hands?
Helen Caldicott is a pediatrician and
founder of the 1978 iteration of Physicians for Social
Responsibility, which won the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize as
part of International Physicians for the Prevention of
Nuclear War. - "Source"
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The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.