Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

NUCLEAR HOLOCAUST: CLOCK TICKS CLOSER TO MIDNIGHT

- By Ameen Izzadeen

Hibakusha in Japanese means bomb-affected persons and the word is exclusivel­y used to refer to the survivors of atomic explosions at Hiroshima or Nagasaki in August 1945. Today, there are about 170,000 Hibakusha and they are fast becoming extinct. In 20 years or so, there may be none.

The Hibakusha live with the horrid memory of the devastatio­n that visited them in the form of atomic bombs which the United States dropped on the two cities, killing more than 350,000 people, mostly civilians, in a war crime that remains unaddresse­d and unpunished. While the perpetrato­r justified the use of the atomic bombs on the basis it was necessary to end the war that had killed some 60-80 millions of people, the victims wondered what sins they had committed other than being the citizen of a country that had dragged them into a war. The Hibakusha, sometimes, wished they had been dead – for they are still traumatise­d not only by what happened seven decades ago, but also by discrimina­tion their descendant­s face, particular­ly with regard to marriage. But they are happy to be alive mainly for one reason: they could relate the horror and be peace messengers to eliminate nuclear weapons. Their stories are etched in the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum. They were so touching that only an evil-incarnate would come out of it and say that nuclear weapons should stay.

In May 2016, then US President Barack Obama made a historic visit to Hiroshima Peace Memorial. Becoming the first sitting US president to visit Hiroshima, Obama called for a “moral revolution” to counter the evil the technology of today churned out in the form of weapons of mass destructio­n.

“Technologi­cal progress without an equivalent progress in human institutio­ns can doom us,” Obama said.

Shorn of any compunctio­n to stockpile nuclear weapons, what we see today is moral decadence, instead of progress in human institutio­ns. It was only last month that the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists (BAS), an advocacy group seeking to eliminate the threat of nuclear weapons, decided to keep the Doomsday Clock at two minutes to midnight.

The time on the hypothetic­al clock symbolises how close the Earth is to destructio­n from nuclear war and other threats such as global warming.

With some de-escalation in global tensions after talks between the US and North Korea in May last year, it was expected that the clock’s time would be put back by a few more minutes. Alas, it was not to be. The reason: Nuclear powers, especially the US, Russia and China are now on an open arms race, which has seen a major escalation in recent weeks and months.

The clock’s present position indicates that the situation is much graver than what the world faced during the Cuban missile crisis. The 13-day crisis, from October 12 to October 26, 1963, over the deployment of Russian missiles in Cuba, did not warrant the Doomsday Clock keepers to bring the minute hand closer to 12 and warn the world of a likely catastroph­e. Instead, they put back the clock from 7 to 12 to 12 to 12. This was because the crisis became a catalyst for several positive developmen­ts. Significan­t among them was the setting up of a hotline between US and Soviet leaders. Within months, they also signed the Partial Test Ban Treaty outlawing undergroun­d nuclear weapons testing. It was the first treaty addressing the nuclear weapons threat. This led to several bilateral arms treaties such as the Anti-ballistic Missiles (ABM) Treaty of 1972, the Intermedia­te-range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty of 1987 and the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) of 1991, in addition to the internatio­nal treaties such as the Non-proliferat­ion Treaty and the Comprehens­ive Test Ban Treaty. But today, the big powers, especially the US and Russia, are moving in the opposite direction. Instead of disarmamen­t, they are ditching key treaties and moving towards rearmament, deployment and enhancemen­t. What is also alarming is that the very designs of their modern weapons could become an inadverten­t trigger for a nuclear holocaust that will make the Earth uninhabita­ble.

On February 1, less than two weeks after Doomsday Clock scientists warned of the danger the world faced from nuclear weapons, President Trump withdrew from the INF treaty, citing Russia’s noncomplia­nce. Since October last year, the Trump administra­tion had been threatenin­g to pull out of the INF treaty, claiming Russia had, in a clear breach of the treaty, deployed landbased cruise missiles capable of reaching countries in Europe.

On February 2, Russia did the same, and accused the US of violating the provisions of the INF treaty, which required the two countries to eliminate their nuclear and convention­al ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges of 500 to 5,500 kilometers.

Next year, the START treaty which limits the number of nuclear weapons the two nations could hold comes up for renewal. Given the present oneupmansh­ip mode in Us-russia relations, the prospect of a renewal is beset by uncertaint­y. Besides, there is also an arms race amid a blame game. In March last year, addressing the Federal Assembly, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin made a computer animation presentati­on that showcased Russia’s latest weapons to counter the US threat, which he said was arising from Washington’s 2002 withdrawal from the Anti-ballistic Missile Treaty. Putin bragged that no anti-ballistic missile system – Ronald Reagan’s Star Wars -- would be able to detect or stop Russia’s weapons. He warned Russia was ready to “annihilate” any attacker who would use nuclear weapons against it.

One need not be a rocket scientist to know that a nuclear arms race only guarantees MAD -- Mutually Assured Destructio­n. Apart from the US and Russia, the race also involves China, with six other nations with nuclear weapons running at some distance behind. China, not bound by a bilateral nuclear weapons agreement with the US, feels it has been surrounded by US bases and has armed itself with intermedia­te-range nuclear weapons to face any challenge.

The world’s disarmamen­t community has another worry – the dual-purpose design of modern missiles. They can carry nuclear or convention­al payload and it is difficult to say what it carries. This poses a danger of an accidental nuclear war. It is likely that an incoming Russian or Chinese missile carrying convention­al payload could be misunderst­ood by the US to be a nuclear missile and provoke it to launch a nuclear attack in response.

Sadly, life goes on for many people who are unaware of the dangers the current arms race and nuclear weapons pose. The people, especially from nuclear weapons states, must pressurise their leaders to enter into a comprehens­ive nuclear disarmamen­t treaty aimed at eliminatin­g not only nuclear weapons, but also any miscalcula­tions that could trigger an accidental nuclear holocaust prior to that.

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