National Post

Ex-U.S. defence chief warns of nuclear peril

'GROWING DANGER’

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• A former U. S. defence secretary is on a mission to warn of a “real and growing danger” of nuclear doom, troubled by the risks of catastroph­e from the very weapons he helped develop.

Atop William J. Perry’s list: a nuclear terror attack in a major U. S. city or a shooting war with Russia that, through miscalcula­tion, turns nuclear. A terrorist attack using a nuclear bomb or improvised nuclear device could happen “any time now — next year or the year after,” he said in a recent interview.

Perry, 88, chooses his words with the precision of a mathematic­ian, which he was before entering the defence world in the mid-1950s. He played a central role in developing and modernizin­g nuclear forces throughout the Cold War — first as a technology whiz-kid and later a threetime senior Pentagon executive. During the 1962 Cuban missile crisis Perry was secretly summoned to Washington to analyze intelligen­ce on Soviet weapons in Cuba.

“Every day that I went to the analysis centre I thought would be my l ast day on earth,” he writes in a newly published memoir, My Journey at the Nuclear Brink. He says he believed then and still believes that the world avoided a nuclear holocaust as much by good luck as by good management.

In the interview, he recounted a harrowing incident in November 1979 when, as a senior Pentagon official, he was awakened by a 3 a. m. phone call from the undergroun­d command centre responsibl­e for warning of a missile attack. The watch officer told Perry his computers were showing 200 nucleararm­ed missiles on their way from the Soviet Union to the United States.

“It was, of course, a false alarm,” Perry said, but it was one of many experience­s throughout the Cold War and beyond that he says have given him a “unique and chilling vantage point from which to conclude t hat nuclear weapons no longer provide for our security — they now endanger it.”

Perry looks at Russia’s nu- clear modernizat­ion and U. S. plans to spend hundreds of billions to update its nuclear arsenal and sees irrational nuclear competitio­n.

“I see an imperative to stop this damn nuclear race before it gets underway again, not just for the cost but for the danger it puts all of us in,” he said.

When the Cold War ended with the dissolutio­n of the Soviet Union, Perry thought the world had dodged a nuclear bullet. In his first book, co- authored in 1999 with the man now running the Pentagon, Ash Carter, Perry argued that the demise of the Soviet system meant nuclear disaster was no longer an “A List” threat.

By 2014, his optimism had faded, in no small part because of the collapse of co-operative relations between Washington and Moscow, which has ended any realistic prospect of new arms control agreements and, in Perry’s view, has put the two countries on a dangerous path toward confrontat­ion.

“We are f acing nuclear dangers today that are in fact more likely to erupt into a nuclear conflict than during the Cold War,” Perry said in a recent speech.

In his book’s preface Perry outlines a nuclear terror scenario, which he calls “my nuclear nightmare, born of long and deep experience.”

In his scenario, a small group ge t s its hands on enough uranium to fashion a crude nuclear bomb, flies it undetected to Washington’s Dulles Internatio­nal Airport and slips the bomb into a warehouse in the District of Columbia. From there it is loaded on a delivery truck and a suicide bomber drives it onto Pennsylvan­ia Avenue midway between the Capitol and the White House. When detonated, it kills 80,000 people instantly, including the president. The news media report a message claiming that five more bombs are hidden in five different U.S. cities, and one will be set off each week.

“The danger of a nuclear bomb being detonated in one of our cities is all too real,” Perry writes. “And yet, while this catastroph­e would result in a hundred times the casualties of 9-11, it is only dimly perceived by the public and not well understood.”

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