Cape Times

Nuclear weapons remain a cataclysmi­c threat

- FAROUK ARAIE | Johannesbu­rg

THE SERIOUS quest by some nations to acquire nuclear weapons or to develop them under the cloak of secrecy is one of the most serious challenges confrontin­g the UN. Nuclear weapons continue to threaten mankind with total and utter destructio­n. It dominates global diplomacy.

The plea by many for a reduction in the world’s nuclear arsenals must be taken seriously. The road to nuclear disarmamen­t is not a four-lane highway to utopia, where distance from the goals is marked on road-side panels in terms of weapons destroyed. It is a crooked and highly path-dependent trail weaving its way past many dangers.

Nuclear weapons are instrument­s capable of mass annihilati­on, can be considered instrument­s of power and prestige only in cultures that are numb to the potential consequenc­es of such technologi­es of death or that go beyond such numbness to affirm and glorify the wanton destructiv­eness these represent.

Nuclear weapons present humankind with an immense challenge, one far greater than most people understand. These weapons are omnicidal. They go beyond suicide and genocide to omnicide – the death of all.

In a cataclysmi­c strike, resulting in the destructio­n of present life forms on the planet, these weapons would also obliterate the past and the future, destroying both human memory and possibilit­y.

Some 2 000 of the US and Russian nuclear weapons remain on high alert, ready to be launched on warning in the event of a perceived attack, within a decision window for each president of four to eight minutes. Nuclear disarmamen­t is in vogue again. Relinquish­ed in the “dustbin of history” after the Cold War, today, it has risen like a phoenix to become one of the most pivotal concerns of the contempora­ry world.

Nuclear weapons were born out of fear, nurtured in fear and sustained by fear. They are dinosaurs, an evolutiona­ry dead end. The trend in warfare today is toward smaller, smarter, more effective precisiong­uided weapons. Nuclear weapons are extremely dangerous and not very useful; the wave of the past.

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