United States Policy and Nuclear Abolition
An Address by Rear Admiral Eugene J. Carroll, Jr., USN (Ret.)
to The Olaf Palme Institute,
Stockholm, Sweden,
12 May 1998
You are certainly aware that the United States is committed under Art VI of the
Non Proliferation Treaty to work in good faith for nuclear disarmament. You are
probably also aware that last year President Clinton approved a policy that nuclear
weapons would remain the cornerstone of U.S. security for the indefinite future. It is very
difficult to reconcile these conflicting positions. Disarm or maintain a massive nuclear
warfighting capability? It is impossible to do both. My purpose here is to explain why
President Clinton made his decision, what it means to prospects for the abolition of
nuclear weapons, and what can be done to promote progress toward a non-nuclear world.
First, let me tell you why I am here to advocate the abolition of nuclear weapons. I
have been personally involved with these engines of destruction since the beginning of
the nuclear era. 42 years ago I was a pilot prepared to destroy a European target with a
bomb that would have killed 600,000 people. 20 years ago, as the Director of U.S.
Military Operations in Europe, I was the officer responsible for the security, readiness
and employment of 7,000 nuclear weapons against Warsaw Pact forces in Europe and
Russia, weapons which could never defend anything - only destroy everything. My
knowledge of nuclear weapons has convinced me that they can never be used for any
rational military or political purpose. Their use would only create barbaric, indiscriminate
destruction. In the words of the Canberra Commission, "Nuclear weapons create an
intolerable threat to all humanity..."
Now, to address the reasons for President Clinton's decision concerning the U.S.
nuclear posture. When the nuclear era opened in the U.S. the atom bomb was seen as a
source of immense national power and as an essential contribution to efforts to thwart any
expansionist efforts by Stalin's Soviet Union. It was also seen by the United States
Army, Navy and Air Force as the key to service supremacy. The newly autonomous Air
Force under General Curtis LeMay saw atomic warfare as its primary raison d'etre and
fought fiercely for the dominant role in U.S. atomic plans. The Army and Navy feared
that without atomic weapons in their arsenals they would become irrelevant adjuncts to
strategic air power.
This interservice rivalry led to the rapid proliferation of nuclear missions. Without
going into needless detail, each service acquired its own arsenal of nuclear weapons for
every conceivable military mission: strategic bombardment, tactical warfare, anti-aircraft
weapons, anti-tank rockets and landmines, anti-submarine rockets, torpedoes and depth
charges, artillery shells, intermediate range missiles and ultimately intercontinental range
land and sea-launched ballistic missiles armed with multiple, thermo-nuclear warheads.
The Soviet Union, starting more than 4 years behind America, watched this rapid
expansion of our warfighting weapons with shock and fear and set out to match every
U.S. capability. Despite the obvious fact that the USSR lagged far behind, alarmists in
the Pentagon pointed at Soviet efforts as proof of the need for ever more nuclear forces
and weapons and the arms race continued unabated for 40 years. During this wasteful
dangerous competition the United States built 70,000 nuclear weapons plus air, land and
sea-based delivery vehicles at a total cost of $4,000 billion dollars.
As the Soviets' arsenal grew, Mutual Assured Destruction became a fact and the
two nations finally began tenuous arms control efforts in the 1960's to restrain their
competition. This effort was accelerated in the mid-1980's as a result of world-wide fears
of nuclear war when President Reagan spoke of the Soviet Union as the "evil empire" and
doubled U.S. military spending.
Unfortunately, the excesses of the nuclear arms race had created an extremely
powerful pro-nuclear weapons establishment in the United States. This alliance of
laboratories, weapon builders, aircraft industries and missile producers wielded immense
political power in opposition to nuclear disarmament proposals. Abetted by Generals and
Admirals in the Pentagon this establishment was able to turn arms control efforts into a
talk-test-build process in which talks went slowly and ineffectually while testing and
building went on with great dispatch.
This same establishment remains extremely powerful today and explains why the
United States' continues to spend more than $28,000 million dollars each year to sustain
its nuclear warfighting forces and enhance its weapons despite the formal commitment in
the Non-Proliferation Treaty to take effective measures leading to nuclear disarmament.
Pressure from the establishment is the primary reason why in November, 1997, President
Clinton decreed in Presidential Decision Directive #60 that nuclear weapons will continue
to form the cornerstone of American security indefinitely. This directive also set forth a
number of other policies that are directly contrary to the goals of non-proliferation and
nuclear abolition.
He reaffirmed America's right to make first use of nuclear weapons and
intentionally left open the option to conduct nuclear retaliation against any nation which
employs chemical or biological agents in attacks against the United States or its allies.
He went on to direct the maintenance of the triad of U.S. strategic forces (long range
bombers, land-based ICBM's and submarine-based SLBMs) at a high state of alert which
would permit launch-on-warning of any impending nuclear attack on the U.S. This is the
dangerous doctrine which puts thousands of warheads on a hair trigger, thereby creating
the risk of starting a nuclear war through misinformation and fear as well as through
human error or system malfunction. Finally, his directive specifically authorized the
continued targetting of numerous sites in Russia and China as well as planning for strikes
against so-called rogue states in connection with regional conflicts or crises. In short,
U.S. nuclear posture and planning remain essentially unchanged seven years after the end
of the Cold War. The numbers of weapons are lower but the power to annihilate remains
in place with 7,000 strategic and 5,000 tactical weapons.
This doctrine would be bad enough alone but it is reinforced by continued efforts
to extend and enhance the capabilities of the U.S. nuclear arsenal. A major element of
this process is benignly labeled the Stockpile Stewardship Program costing more than
$4,100 million per year to maintain weapons security as well as test and replace weapon
components to insure full wartime readiness of approximately 12,000 strategic and
tactical bombs and warheads. In March the U.S. Air Force dropped two B61-11 bombs
from a B-2 bomber on a target in Alaska to complete certification of a new design for
earth penetrating weapons, clear proof of U.S. intentions to improve its nuclear
warfighting capabilities.
Furthermore, the Los Alamos National Laboratory recently resumed the
manufacture of plutonium triggers for thermo-nuclear weapons while the Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory is preparing a new capability called the National Ignition
Facility where conditions within an exploding nuclear device can be simulated.
Supplemented with continuing sub-critical explosive tests in Nevada and extremely
sophisticated computer modeling experiments, this new facility will give the U.S. means
not available to other signatories of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty to
develop and validate new nuclear weapons designs.
To give even more evidence of the power of the pro-nuclear establishment, the
U.S. will decide this year on how and when to resume the production and stockpiling of
tritium, the indispensable fuel for thermo-nuclear explosions. The fact is that the military
has enough tritium on hand today for all of its weapons until the year 2006 and enough
for 1,000 warheads and bombs at least until the year 2024. To invest thousands of
millions of dollars for unneeded tritium is a waste of precious resources undertaken solely
to placate and reward the nuclear establishment.
It is particularly alarming and discouraging to see the United States investing
heavily to perpetuate and increase its nuclear warfighting capabilities when only three
years ago it was the dominant force promoting indefinite extension of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). To encourage support for extension the U.S. led in the
formulation of the important declaration of "Principles and Objectives For Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament." More clearly than Article VI of the NPT itself, this
statement reaffirmed commitment to: "The determined pursuit by the nuclear weapons states of systematic and
progressive efforts to reduce nuclear weapons globally, with the ultimate goal of
eliminating those weapons..."
This renewed and strengthened pledge to reduce nuclear capabilities offered as an
inducement for non-nuclear states to agree to extension of the NPT makes the current
U.S. nuclear program an affront to all of the signatories. It is not only a direct violation
of both the letter and spirit of the NPT, it is a provocation which jeopardizes the goal of
non-proliferation. The clear message is that the foremost nuclear power regards its
weapons as key elements of security and military strength, a signal which can only
stimulate other nations to consider the need to create similar capabilities.
What must those who favor nuclear abolition do to counter this threat to non-proliferation? First, as individuals and as organizations, we must redouble our efforts at
home to publicize the dangers created by as many as 35,000 weapons still ready for use in
the world. A broadly based global demand by all non-nuclear states that the nuclear
powers must live up to the letter and spirit of the NPT extension agreement should
precede the first review conference in the year 2000. A call for worldwide public
demonstrations on the order and magnitude of those which supported the nuclear freeze
movement of the 1980's should be made. The nuclear powers must not be permitted to
dictate the results of the review conference in the same manner the United States
dominated the 1995 extension conference.
The message to be stressed is that it is illogical and unrealistic to expect that five
nations can legally possess and threaten to use nuclear weapons indefinitely while all
other nations are forbidden to create a nuclear capability. Pressure to break-out of the
Non Proliferation Treaty is further intensified because one of the nuclear powers is
actively developing new, more threatening weapons and pronouncing them essential to its
future security.
A good strategy is to follow the lead of the 62 Generals and Admirals who signed
an appeal for nuclear abolition in December of 1996. We stated that we could not foresee
the conditions which would ultimately permit the final elimination of all weapons but we
did recognize many steps which could be safely begun now to start and accelerate
progress toward the ultimate goal.
As a first step toward nuclear disarmament, all nuclear powers should positively
commit themselves to unqualified no-first use guarantees for both strategic and tactical
nuclear weapons. Their guarantees should be incorporated in a protocol to the Non-Proliferation Treaty at the review conference in 2000.
Concurrently, the process of actual reduction of weapons should begin with the
United States and Russia. They should proceed immediately with START III
negotiations, particularly since the implementation of START II has been delayed for
four years. Even with the delay Russia cannot afford all of the changes required under
that Treaty and has suggested willingness to proceed with additional reductions because
far deeper reductions by both sides would be less costly.
At the same time, both nations should agree to take thousands of nuclear warheads
off of alert status. This action would reduce the possibility of a nuclear exchange initiated
by accident or human error. Once fully de-alerted, warhead removal (de-mating) should
commence and the warheads stored remotely from missile sites and submarine bases.
Verification measures should include international participation to build confidence
between the parties.
Disassembly of warheads under international supervision should begin in the U.S.
and Russia. When a level of 1,000 warheads is reached in each nation, Great Britain,
France and China should join the process under a rigorous verification regime. De facto
nuclear states, including Israel, should join the process as movement continued toward the
complete and irreversible elimination of all nuclear weapons. Finally, an international
convention should be adopted to prohibit the manufacture, possession or use of nuclear
explosive devices just as current conventions proscribe chemical and biological weapons.
All fissile material should be safely and securely stored under international control.
Verification of this entire process could best be accomplished by U.N. teams
formed and operating in accordance with principles developed by UNSCOM teams
operating in Iraq today. This model provides a precedent already accepted by the five
permanent members of the U.N. Security Council, the nuclear powers.
None of these progressive steps will happen until the community of nations comes
together to make the United States understand that non-proliferation will ultimately fail
unless the U.S. abandons its delusion that nuclear superiority provides long term security.
Even when the dangers of this delusion are understood, progress toward the complete,
final abolition of nuclear weapons will be painfully slow. Nevertheless, the effort must
be made to move toward the day that all nations live together in a world without nuclear
weapons because it is clear that our children cannot hope to live safely in a world with
them.
For more information on the abolition of nuclear weapons, please contact Chris Hellman

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