Global Times

More internatio­nal efforts required to prevent ‘ nuclear extinction’

- By Zhu Dongyang and Luo Jun The authors are writers with the Xinhua News Agency. The article first appeared in Xinhua. opinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

Former US secretary of defense William Perry said on Saturday that concerted efforts of the internatio­nal society are in dire need to save the world from an escalating possibilit­y of “nuclear extinction.”

Perry made the remarks in an interview with Xinhua after attending a seminar on the newly- released Chinese edition of his book My Journey at the Nuclear Brink.

“Today the likelihood of a nuclear catastroph­e is greater than it was during the Cold War,” said Perry, noting the Chicago- based Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in January moved the symbolic “doomsday clock” to its closest time to midnight in 64 years. “People all over the world, regardless of their nationalit­y, should be interested in working to give future generation a chance to live their lives without fear of nuclear extinction,” he said.

Perry said he had been awaken from a sound sleep by a telephone call at 3: 00 am on a day in 1979. It was from a military general at the North American Aerospace Defense Command, who said his computers showed 200 missiles on the way from the Soviet Union to the US. It took Perry, the then under- secretary for research and engineerin­g, several days to determine what he called a “human error of our system.”

“When the computer operators changed shift, the new operator mistakenly put a training tape in the computer, which was designed to look like a realistic attack scenario,” he recalled. “With all of its safety features, the system was still vulnerable to a single person erring, potentiall­y bringing about the end of civilizati­on.”

Besides the high risk of an accidental nuclear war, the world has also been faced with the threat of regional nuclear war and nuclear terror attack, which by no means is “a remote possibilit­y” and could have “serious and long- lasting consequenc­es around the world,” Perry said.

Hailing China’s commitment to the global denucleari­zation, the former US defense chief said the country “for decades had set an example of restraint by maintainin­g only a minimum deterrent force.”

“All the leading powers today are threatened to some degree by terrorism, and in the worst possible case by nuclear terrorism,” said the leading US expert on advanced weaponry technology. “The big motiva- tion for the United States and China to work together, I guess, is to combat terrorism and nuclear proliferat­ion.”

The WWII veteran, who has spent his retirement years advocating denucleari­zation, is in Beijing for the seminar hosted by CITIC Foundation for Reform and Developmen­t Studies, a Beijing- based think tank.

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