Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Launch-ready unnecessar­y

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Sorry to disappoint thriller fans, but in real life, there is no nuclear button. The president’s command and control over nuclear forces is more sophistica­ted than that.

To facilitate an agonizing decision in an emergency, an aide follows the president everywhere carrying the nuclear “football,” containing the communicat­ions links and launch procedures.

In an emergency, a president first authentica­tes himself using a code, then picks from options prepared in advance. The order would be transmitte­d to a Pentagon command center to be carried out. Legally, the president has the sole authority to do this. Obviously, in such an emergency, there is no time for a Cabinet meeting or consultati­on with Congress. The whole system is designed to be streamline­d and the process short.

But the process is not black-andwhite. There is always a human factor.

If a president issued an order to launch nuclear weapons while the country was at peace and not under nuclear attack, a duty officer in the command center might well question why. Others in the military probably would, too. Another scenario, more worrisome: What if a president is in the middle of a chaotic, nonnuclear war and impulsivel­y decided to escalate to nuclear? Chain of command and military discipline are essential. But so is common sense of those involved.

Opportunit­ies exist today for Congress and Biden to reduce the nuclear danger. Both Russia and the United States could take nuclear missiles off launch-ready alert, or at least find ways to lengthen the time a president has to make a decision and reduce the chances of a catastroph­ic miscalcula­tion. Any change in alert procedures must be negotiated bilaterall­y with Russia, and verifiable, but both countries would benefit from backing away from the precipice.

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