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US plans widespread use of nuclear weapons in war
Bush orders Pentagon to target seven nations for attack
By Patrick Martin
11 March 2002
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The Bush administration has told the US military to greatly
expand preparations for the use of nuclear weapons in future wars,
according to press reports on the weekend which have been confirmed
by the Pentagon and White House.
The Pentagon has been directed to develop contingency plans
for nuclear attacks on seven different countries. These include
China and Russia, the two powers which have long been targeted
by the US nuclear arsenal; Iraq, Iran and North Korea, the three
countries demonized by Bush as the axis of evil in
his State of the Union speech; and Libya and Syria.
An initial draft of this report, called the Nuclear Posture
Review, was delivered to Congress on January 8. A copy of
the classified material was obtained by William Arkin, military
columnist for the Los Angeles Times, and the newspaper
reported its contents March 9. The New York Times obtained
the same material a day later.
In addition to the naming of targeted countriesthe first
such list ever made publicthe Nuclear Posture Review outlines
a much broader range of political, strategic and tactical scenarios
under which the US government would use nuclear weapons.
The report says the Pentagon should be prepared to use nuclear
weapons in an Arab-Israeli conflict, in a war between China and
Taiwan, or in an attack from North Korea on South Korea. They
might also become necessary in an attack by Iraq on Israel or
another neighbor, it said.
The last contingency is the one which is most imminent, since
the US is openly preparing for a military assault on Iraq, which
could well provoke the launching of Iraqi Scud missiles against
Israel, as in 1991 during the previous US-Iraq war. Based on the
criteria outlined in the Pentagon review, the firing of such missiles
from mobile truck-mounted launchers could be answered by the dropping
of an atomic bomb on Iraqi military facilities in the western
desert, or even on Baghdad.
When could nuclear weapons be used?
The Pentagon document, for the first time, spells out the determination
of US war planners to use nuclear weapons in a military conflict
in which the opposing side either did not possess nuclear weapons
or had them but did not use them. The language of the report is
broad and open-ended.
The review says nuclear weapons could be employed against
targets able to withstand nonnuclear attack, i.e., under
any circumstances where a conventional US military assault was
proving to be unsuccessful. Such a contingency could develop at
almost any point in Afghanistan, as the recent fighting near Gardez
has shown.
Even more sweeping is the suggestion that nuclear weapons could
be used in the event of surprising military developments.
Pentagon officials told the New York Times that such language
was intended to cover the possible use of new types of weapons
of mass destruction by terrorists, but it could apply equally
well to a terrorist attack like September 11, which the Bush administration
claims came as a total surprise. The Nuclear Posture Review would
seem to authorize nuclear retaliation in the event of any such
attack.
The Pentagon planning document also calls for a wider range
of tactical uses for nuclear weapons, through the development
of smaller-scale and lower-yield warheads that could have a practical
use for such tasks as the destruction of heavily fortified underground
bunkers. The review calls for building more precise warheads
that reduce collateral damage. Developing such warheads
would require the resumption of underground nuclear testing by
the United States.
The report declares: Nuclear attack options that vary
in scale, scope, and purpose will complement other military capabilities.
The Air Force would modify its extended-range cruise missile and
the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter to carry nuclear warheads. Even
US Special Forces operators would be able to call in nuclear strikes,
playing the same intelligence gathering and targeting roles for
nuclear weapons that they did for conventional bombs and missiles
in Afghanistan.
The overall import of these changes is to transform nuclear
bombs from the last resort into weapons which can
be used at will on the battlefield. As one nuclear expert, Joseph
Cirincione of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
observed, This clearly makes nuclear weapons a tool for
fighting a war, rather than deterring them.
The Nuclear Posture Review, despite its ponderous bureaucratic
name, is an intensely political document. When the incoming Reagan
administration sought to reverse three decades of Cold War policy
based on the doctrine of containment, it drafted a new Nuclear
Posture Review in 1981 which discarded the doctrine of Mutual
Assured Destruction and set a goal of achieving nuclear strategic
superiority. Its aim was to ensure that the US would survive a
devastating nuclear exchange with the Soviet Union with enough
intact and unused nuclear weapons to prevail in a
post-apocalypse world.
This lunatic perspective remained the official US military
doctrine until the Clinton administration ordered a review in
1994, which was not completed until 1997, with the issuance of
a new planning document. The Clinton document remains classified,
but press reports suggest that it contained the first language
authorizing the retargeting of US missiles and bombers from Russia
to China, North Korea and several countries in the Middle East.
The Bush administrations nuclear plan is another act
of brazen lawlessness by a government which thumbs its nose at
international obligations. The US is bound, as a signatory to
the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, not to use nuclear weapons
against non-nuclear powers. The Bush directive does not yet violate
the letter of the treaty, but it instructs the Pentagon to make
all the necessary preparations to do so. It is an announcement
in advance that the US government will violate the treaty whenever
it deems it desirable.
A policy of intimidation
The swift White House confirmation of the report in the Los
Angeles Times, and the willingness of the Pentagon officials
to discuss the issuenormally a closely guarded secretsuggest
that the report may be a deliberate leak by the Bush administration,
timed to advance its military and diplomatic agenda by intimidating
both potential adversaries and prospective allies in the Middle
East.
The report was published the day before Vice President Cheney
left Washington for a 10-day trip to Britain and the Middle East
to line up support for the next stage in the US campaign of military
aggression, which is almost certainly the launching of a massive
assault on Iraq. And it comes two days before Bush gives a nationally
televised speech, on the six-month anniversary of the September
11 attacks, in which he is expected to threaten American military
intervention in many more countries, in addition to the current
deployment of troops and military advisers in Afghanistan, Central
Asia, the Philippines, Georgia, Yemen and Colombia.
The British-based Observer newspaper reported March
10 that Cheney was bringing to London a request that the Blair
government contribute 25,000 troops towards the 250,000 which
are projected as necessary for the conquest of Iraq.
The newspaper said that a considerable military buildup towards
ground war in Iraq is already under way, including Special Forces
training of Iraqi exiles and Kurdish forces in the north of Iraq,
the deployment of a battalion of 25 Longbow Apache attack helicopters
in Kuwait, and the overhauling of 5,000 US fighting vehicles,
both tanks and armored cars, which have been in storage in Kuwait
since the 1991 war.
The New York Times, in its analysis of the report, noted
the one-sided and bullying character of the new nuclear doctrine,
writing cynically, unlike the old strategic formula of mutual
assured destruction, or MAD, in which nuclear superpowers deter
each other into a détente, the Pentagons new saber-rattling
is meant to signal something different. That is a unilateral assured
destruction...
The Pentagon report specifically denounces the arms control
treaties between the US and the Soviet Union which were characteristic
of the Cold War, declaring, That old process is incompatible
with the flexibility U.S. planning and forces now require.
The new doctrine makes it clear that it was only the existence
of the USSRdespite the treacherous counterrevolutionary
politics of the Stalinist bureaucracythat blocked American
imperialism from using its nuclear arsenal more or less at will
during the last half century.
With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the United States is
projecting military power into Central Asia, seeking to dominate
the oil-rich region around the Caspian Sea, and preparing for
the second major war in a decade in the Persian Gulf. And now,
with the issuance of this thinly veiled nuclear ultimatum, every
regime in the regionand throughout the worldis put
on notice that if they oppose American policies they can be targeted
for nuclear incineration.
The release of the nuclear planning document must send shock
waves throughout the world. The declaration that nuclear weapons
are to become a practical weapon of war, for the first time since
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, is extraordinarily provocative. It makes
it clear to anyone not blinded by propaganda that the United States
has become the most reckless international bully since German
imperialism in the 1930s and 1940s.
The US government publicly acknowledges it is targeting seven
countrieswhose combined population amounts to a quarter
of the human racefor nuclear attack. These countries must
necessarily assume that the United States intends to carry out
these threats, and they must plan accordingly. But any defensive
countermeasures which they undertake, including the development
of their own weapons of mass destruction to serve as a deterrent,
will be portrayed by the Bush administration as an action which
justifies the attack.
The Bush administrations policies have objective implications.
The new Pentagon doctrine brings the world far closer to the actual
use of nuclear weapons of war, with incalculable consequences
for humanity. Indeed, such a war is all but inevitable unless
other social forces intervene and take the decision out of the
hands of the imperialists. That is the task facing the international
working class.
See Also:
Gangsterism in the guise of diplomacy
US flaunts scheme to use weapons inspections as pretext for war
vs. Iraq
[9 March 2002]
US massacre in eastern Afghanistan
[7 March 2002]
The shadow of dictatorship: Bush established
secret government after September 11
[4 March 2002]
State of the Union speech:
Bush declares war on the world
[31 January 2002]
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