July 10, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
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"FPIF"
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It was exactly 60 years ago that Bertrand Russell
and Albert Einstein gathered together with a group of leading
intellectuals in London to
draft and sign a manifesto in which they denounced the
dangerous drive toward war between the world’s Communist and
anti-Communist factions. The signers of this manifesto included
leading Nobel Prize winners such as Hideki Yukawa and Linus
Pauling.They were blunt, equating the
drive for war and reckless talk of the use of nuclear weapons
sweeping the United States and the Soviet Union at the time, as
endangering all of humanity. The manifesto argued that
advancements in technology, specifically the invention of the
atomic bomb, had set human history on a new and likely
disastrous course.
The manifesto stated in harsh terms the choice
confronting humanity:
Here, then, is the problem which we
present to you, stark and dreadful and inescapable: Shall we
put an end to the human race; or shall mankind renounce war?
The Russell-Einstein Manifesto forced a
serious reconsideration of the dangerous strategic direction in
which the United States was heading at that time and was the
beginning of a recalibration of the concept of security that
would lead to the signing of the Nonproliferation Treaty in 1968
and the arms control talks of the 1970s.
But we take little comfort in those
accomplishments today. The United States has completely
forgotten about its obligations under the Nonproliferation
Treaty, and the words “arms control” have disappeared from the
conversation on security. The last year has seen the United
States confront Russia in Ukraine to such a degree that many
have spoken about the risks of nuclear war.
As a result, on June 16 of this year Russia
announced that it will add
40 new ICBMs in response to the investment of the United
States over the last two years in upgrading its nuclear forces.
Similar tensions have emerged between Japan
and China over the Senkaku/Diaoyutai Isles and between the
United States and China over the South China Sea. Discussions
about the possibility of war with China are showing up in the
Western media with increasing frequency, and a deeply disturbing
push to militarize American relations with Asia is emerging.
But this time, the dangers of nuclear war are
complemented by an equal, or greater, threat: climate change.
Even the commander of the U.S. Pacific Command, Admiral Samuel
Locklear, told the
Boston Globe in 2013 that climate change “is probably the
most likely thing that is going to happen . . . that will
cripple the security environment, probably more likely than the
other scenarios we all often talk about.’’
More recently, Pope Francis issued a detailed,
and blunt, encyclical dedicated to the threat of climate change
in which he charged:
It is remarkable how weak international
political responses (to climate change) have been.
Consequently the most one can expect is superficial
rhetoric, sporadic acts of philanthropy and perfunctory
expressions of concern for the environment, whereas any
genuine attempt by groups within society to introduce change
is viewed as a nuisance based on romantic illusions or an
obstacle to be circumvented.
As the 60th anniversary of the
Russell-Einstein Manifesto drew near, I became increasing
disturbed by the complete inaction among the best-educated and
best-connected in the face of the most dangerous moment in
modern history and perhaps in human history, grimmer even than
the catastrophe that Russell and Einstein contemplated. Not only
are we facing the increased likelihood of nuclear war, but there
are signs that climate change is advancing more rapidly than
previously estimated. Science Magazine recently
released a
study that predicts massive marine destruction if we follow
the current trends, and even the glaciers of the Southern
Antarctic Peninsula, once thought to be the most stable, are
observed to be
melting rapidly. And yet we see not even the most
superficial efforts to defend against this threat by the major
powers.
I spoke informally about my worries with my
friend John Feffer, director of Foreign Policy in Focus and
associate of the Asia Institute. John has written extensively
about the need to identify climate change as the primary
security threat and also has worked closely with Miriam
Pemberton of the Institute for Policy Studies on efforts to move
the United States away from a military economy. Between the two
of us we have put together a slightly updated version of the
manifesto that highlights climate change — an issue that was not
understood in 1955 — and hereby have published it in the form of
a petition that we invite anyone in the world to sign. This new
version of the manifesto is open to the participation of all,
not restricted to that of an elite group of Nobel Prize winners.
I also spoke with David Swanson, a friend from
my days working on the Dennis Kucinich campaign for the
Democratic nomination back in 2004. David now serves as director
of World Beyond War, a broad effort to create a consensus that
war no longer has any legitimate place in human society. He
offered to introduce the manifesto to a broad group of activists
and we agreed that Foreign Policy in Focus, the Asia Institute
and World Beyond War would co-sponsor the new manifesto.
Finally, I sent the draft to Noam Chomsky who
readily offered to sign it and offered the following comment.
Last January the famous Doomsday Clock was
moved two minutes closer to midnight, the closest it has
been since a major war scare 30 years ago. The accompanying
declaration, which warned that the constant threat of
nuclear war and “unchecked climate change” severely threaten
human civilization, brings to mind the grim warning to the
people of the world just 60 years ago by Bertrand Russell
and Albert Einstein, calling on them to face a choice that
is “stark and dreadful and inescapable: Shall we put an end
to the human race; or shall mankind renounce war?” In all of
human history, there has never been a choice like the one we
face today.
The declaration on the 60th anniversary of the
Russell-Einstein Manifesto is displayed below. We urge all
people who are concerned about humanity’s future and about the
health of the Earth’s biosphere to join us in signing the
declaration, and to invite friends and family members to sign.
The statement can be signed at the
petition page on DIY RootsAction website:
Declaration on the 60th
Anniversary of the Russell-Einstein Manifesto
July 9, 2015
In view of the growing risk that
in future wars weapons, nuclear and otherwise, will be employed
that threaten the continued existence of humanity, we urge the
governments of the world to realize, and to acknowledge
publicly, that their purpose cannot be furthered by a world war,
and we urge them, consequently, to find peaceful means for the
settlement of all matters of dispute between them.
We also propose that all
governments of the world begin to convert those resources
previously allocated to preparations for destructive conflict to
a new constructive purpose: the mitigation of climate change and
the creation of a new sustainable civilization on a global
scale.
This effort is endorsed by Foreign Policy in
Focus, the Asia Institute, and World Beyond War, and is being
launched on July 9, 2015.
You can sign, and ask everyone you know to
sign, this declaration here:
http://diy.rootsaction.org/p/man
Why is this declaration important?
Exactly 60 years ago today, leading
intellectuals led by Bertrand Russell and Albert Einstein
gathered in London to sign a manifesto voicing their concern
that the struggle between the Communist and anti-Communist blocs
in the age of the hydrogen bomb guaranteed annihilation for
humanity.
Although we have so far avoided the nuclear
war that those intellectuals dreaded, the danger has merely been
postponed. The threat, which has reemerged recently with the
conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, has only grown more
dire.
Moreover, the rapid acceleration of
technological development threatens to put nuclear weapons, and
many other weapons of similar destructiveness, into the hands of
a growing circle of nations (and potentially even of “non-state
actors”). At the same time, the early possessors of nuclear
weapons have failed to abide by their obligations under the
Non-Proliferation Treaty to destroy their stockpiles.
And now we are faced with an existential
threat that may rival the destructive consequences even of a
full-scale nuclear war: climate change. The rapacious
exploitation of our resources and a thoughtless over-reliance
upon fossil fuels have caused an unprecedented disruption of our
climate. Combined with an unmitigated attack on our forests, our
wetlands, our oceans, and our farmland in the pursuit of
short-term gains, this unsustainable economic expansion has
brought us to the edge of an abyss.
The
original 1955 manifesto states: “We are speaking on this
occasion, not as members of this or that nation, continent, or
creed, but as human beings,” members of the human species “whose
continued existence is in doubt.”
The time has come for us to break out of the
distorted and misleading conception of progress and development
that has so seduced us and led us towards destruction.
Intellectuals bear a particular responsibility
of leadership by virtue of their specialized expertise and
insight regarding the scientific, cultural, and historical
forces that have led to our predicament. Between a mercenary
element that pursues an agenda of narrow interests without
regard to consequences and a frequently discouraged, misled, and
sometimes apathetic citizenry stand the intellectuals in every
field of study and sphere of activity. It falls to us that it
falls to decry the reckless acceleration of armaments and the
criminal destruction of the ecosystem. The time has come for us
to raise our voices in a concerted effort.
Initial Signers
Noam Chomsky, professor emeritus, MIT
Last January the famous Doomsday Clock was
moved two minutes closer to midnight, the closest it has
been since a major war scare 30 years ago. The accompanying
declaration, which warned that the constant threat of
nuclear war and “unchecked climate change” severely threaten
human civilization, brings to mind the grim warning to the
people of the world just 50 years ago by Bertrand Russell
and Albert Einstein, calling on them to face a choice that
is “stark and dreadful and inescapable: Shall we put an end
to the human race; or shall mankind renounce war?” In all of
human history, there has never been a choice like the one we
face today.
Helen Caldicott, author
It was the Russell Einstein manifesto on
the threat of nuclear war 60 years ago that started me upon
my journey to try to abolish nuclear weapons. I then read
and devoured the three volumes of Russell’s autobiography
which had an amazing influence upon my thinking as a young
girl.
The manifesto was so extraordinarily
sensible written by two of the world’s greatest thinkers,
and I am truly amazed that the world at that time took
practically no notice of their prescient warning, and today
we are orders of magnitude in greater danger than we were 60
years ago. The governments of the world still think in
primitive terms of retribution and killing while the nuclear
weapons in Russia and the US are presently maintained on
hair trigger alert, and these two nuclear superpowers are
practicing nuclear war drills during a state of heightened
international tension exacerbated by the Ukrainian situation
and the Middle East. It is in truth sheer luck that we are
still here on this lovely planet of ours.
Larry Wilkerson, retired United States Army
Colonel and former chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin
Powell.
From central Europe to Southwest Asia,
from the South China Sea to the Arctic, tensions are on the
rise as the world’s sole empire is roiled in peripheral
activities largely of its own doing and just as largely
destructive of its power and corruptive of its leadership.
This, while humanity’s most pressing challenge–planetary
climate change–threatens catastrophe for all. Stockpiles of
nuclear weapons add danger to this already explosive
situation. We humans have never been so powerfully
challenged–and so apparently helpless to do anything about
it.
Benjamin R. Barber, president, Global
Parliament of Mayors Project
Naomi Klein, author of
This Changes Everything
David Swanson, director, World Beyond War
John Feffer, director, Foreign Policy in Focus
Emanuel Pastreich, director, The Asia
Institute
Leah Bolger, chair, coordinating
committee, World Beyond War
Ben Griffin, coordinator, Veterans
For Peace UK
Michael Nagler, founder
and president, The
Metta Center for Nonviolence
John Horgan, science
journalist & author of The End of War
Kevin Zeese, co-director, Popular Resistance.
Margaret Flowers, M.D., co-director of Popular
Resistance
Dahr Jamail, staff reporter, Truthout
John Kiriakou, associate fellow, Institute for
Policy Studies and CIA Torture Whistleblower
Kim Hyung yul, president of the Asia Institute
and professor of history, Sook Myung University
Choi Murim, professor of medicine, Seoul
National University
Coleen Rowley, retired FBI agent and former
Minneapolis Division legal counsel
Ann Wright, retired U.S. Army
Colonel and former US diplomat
Mike Madden, vice president, Veterans For
Peace, Chapter 27 (veteran of the US Air Force)
Chante Wolf, 12 year Air Force, Desert
Shield/Storm veteran, member of Chapter 27, Veterans For Peace
William Binney, former NSA technical director,
World Geopolitical & Military Analysis and co-founder of the
SIGINT Automation Research Center.
Jean Bricmont, professor, Université
Catholique de Louvain