Even Nukes
Grow Old
By Eric
Margolis
August 17,
2013 "Information
Clearing House"
- Everything grows old. I’m told one day the
stars and planets will turn to dust. So I suppose
it’s no surprise that America’s arsenal of nuclear
weapons is also showing signs of advancing age, and
may have to be replaced.
One would
think that the growing decrepitude of our nukes
would be a fine time to dismantle and junk these
horrible weapons. President Barack Obama has
fulsomely preached for the past seven years on the
need to get ride of the nukes. Very nice.
Yet once
away from the microphones, Obama has let the
military-industrial-financial complex generate plans
to refresh and update the US nuclear arsenal in a
massive project estimated to cost at least $1
trillion.
No major
effort has been made to assemble the world’s
declared and undeclared nuclear powers and hammer
out a plan to junk all nukes and make sure they are
not replaced. On the contrary, it’s full speed ahead
in the devil’s workshop.
The US Air
Force wants to replace by 2044 all of its 1960’s
vintage Minuteman ICBMs with 642 new ground-based,
silo-launched ICBMs. Some $7 billion was already
spent over the past two decades modernizing them.
Way back in
the early 1980’s, I was invited to inspect the US
Air Force’s Space Command HQ and Air Defense Command
buried deep inside Cheyenne Mountain in Colorado. I
was shown a hanger-size room filled with a hundred
upright computers, all whizzing away. An officer
whispered to me, ‘ my laptop has more power than all
these computers together.’ Similarly, advancing
technology has left many of our defense systems
either outmoded or totally obsolete. So some renewal
may be necessary.
New ICBM’s
are still not enough for the US Air Force. The
flyboys also want a new nuclear-armed cruise missile
to replace the venerable 80’s vintage AGM-86B
carried by B-52 heavy bombers and the yet to be
built B-21 stealth bomber.
Meanwhile
the US Navy, always a darling of Congress, is
planning to replace its Ohio class nuclear-armed
submarines with a new, more powerful class of 12
subs that will each carry 16 Trident D5 missiles.
Each missile can fly well over 8,000 km and carry
8-10 warheads.
Many other US nuclear-powered warships, both
underwater and surface, will need new nuclear
plants.
A trillion
dollars is a lot of money even for the world’s
wealthiest nation. Many will question such a huge
expenditure at a time when bridges across the US are
collapsing, airports are decaying, the air traffic
control system is obsolete, and 44 million people
live on food stamps.
We need
those nukes badly, say the Pentagon’s top brass,
their civilian supporters in Congress, and the
booming US arms industry, which looks set for a
record year. We must defend ourselves against the
Russians and Chinese!
Russia has
a powerful triad of air, sea and ground-launched
nuclear missiles. Some are being modernized. Moscow
has made clear that given its sharp reduction in
land forces, increasingly reliance will be placed on
strategic and tactical nuclear forces. This
important new policy should cause Washington to
think twice about its current dangerous policy of
putting a military squeeze on Russia in Ukraine,
Crimea, the Baltic and Black Seas.
China is
also slowly developing its nuclear forces, but they
remain modest for a world power and focused on
deterring a foreign nuclear strike. So far, China
appears only interested in its own region.
In short,
neither Russia nor China has tipped the current
nuclear balance of terror. Unfortunately,
Washington’s updating its nuclear arsenal will
likely cause them to upgrade their strategic nuclear
forces.
The next US
president will inherit this problem. Everyone says
they hate nukes but we can’t seem to break the
habit. Candidate Donald Trump rightly asked what the
purpose of these weapons is, and was blasted for
asking this proper question. The biased media keeps
claiming Trump can’t be trusted with the red button.
But it was Hillary Clinton that actually threatened
to use them against Iran if it dared attack Israel.
Instead of
debating transgender toilets, American voters should
be demanding: `Mr President/or Mrs President, get
rid of our nukes!’
Eric S.
Margolis is an award-winning, internationally
syndicated columnist. His articles have appeared in
the New York Times, the International Herald Tribune
the Los Angeles Times, Times of London, the Gulf
Times, the Khaleej Times, Nation – Pakistan,
Hurriyet, – Turkey, Sun Times Malaysia and other
news sites in Asia.
http://ericmargolis.com |