Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Wake up! We’re at 2 minutes to the end

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Any weekly columnist faces several challenges: Doing your homework; having something to say; saying it clearly. But the first challenge is the toughest: Deciding what to write about.

Usually, the goal’s to tackle the most important issue of the day. But the most important issue’s not always the sexiest. Take last week. Donald Trump’s “Executive Time,” political chaos among Virginia Democrats, Cory Booker’s new girlfriend, a MAGA rally disguised as a State of the Union address: all have received a lot of media attention and are fodder for a good column.

Too bad. Dare I suggest that even Trump’s latest tweet is less significan­t than the fact that we are as close to nuclear annihilati­on as we ever have been before? Repeat: We could blow up and destroy this planet at any minute. Surely, that’s worth at least one column.

Ominous signs of the critical nuclear threat came recently in two events largely ignored by mainstream media: First, an update by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, announced during a news conference at the National Press Club in Washington on Jan. 24, 2019. To illustrate the urgency of the nuclear threat, former California Gov. Jerry Brown and former Defense Secretary Bill Perry unveiled the latest setting of the Bulletin’s “Doomsday Clock.” If midnight represents nuclear destructio­n, they warn, we are now at “Two Minutes to Midnight” — the closest mankind has ever been to the nuclear brink, and as close as we were at the height of the Cold War, in 1953.

Bulletin scientists base their twominute warning on lack of action on the dual threats of climate change and nuclear proliferat­ion.

Among troubling developmen­ts on the nuclear front, they cited Trump’s withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal; continued nuclear build-ups by Pakistan, India, China and North Korea; decisions by Russia and the United States to upgrade their nuclear arsenals; and signs that the Trump administra­tion intended to withdraw from existing nuclear arms treaties with Russia.

Brown said that, given the evidence of what’s close to a new nuclear arms race, the “blindness and stupidity of politician­s” not even to debate the nuclear issue is “shocking.”

Just one week after the Doomsday Clock was unveiled, a second event made the worst fears of nuclear disarmamen­t advocates come true.

On Feb. 1, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that the Trump administra­tion was withdrawin­g from the Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, a landmark agreement signed by President Ronald Reagan and General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev in 1987, which resulted in the destructio­n of 2,700 intermedia­te and short-range missiles. And suddenly the nuclear arms race was back underway, with disastrous consequenc­es.

Granted, there were problems with the INF treaty.

In 2014, President Barack Obama accused Russia of violating the accord by testing a new ground-launched cruise missile. In turn, Russia accused the United States of deploying a shortrange missile defense system in Eastern Europe that could easily be converted into offensive weapons. But, instead of sitting down with Russia to try to resolve the difference­s, Trump, as with the Iran nuclear pact, just decided to pull out — thereby giving Russia a green light to build as many intermedia­te missiles as it wants.

It won’t stop there.

When it expires in 2021, Pompeo and national security adviser John Bolton have already declared their intent to withdraw from the new START Treaty, signed by President Obama and President Dmitry Medvedev in 2010, which limits the number of deployed strategic warheads to 1,500 on either side. Today, according to the Internatio­nal Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, Russia and the United States together have a nuclear arsenal of over 13,000 warheads, each of which is many times more powerful than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, and each of which could kill millions of people. Yet Donald Trump says he wants to increase our nuclear arsenal tenfold.

Now here’s the scary part: On his own, only one American could decide to launch a nuclear warhead. And, for now, that man is Donald Trump.

Wake up, Americans! We’re in a new nuclear arms race, led by Trump. If that’s not enough to scare the bejeezus out of you, I don’t know what will.

 ?? Bill Press ?? On the left
Bill Press On the left

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