The Prospects for Survival
By Noam Chomsky
This is Part II of an article adapted from a lecture by Noam
Chomsky on Feb. 28, sponsored by the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation in Santa
Barbara, Calif.
The previous article explored how security is a high priority
for government planners: security, that is, for state power and its primary
constituency, concentrated private power - all of which entails that official
policy must be protected from public scrutiny.
In these terms, government actions fall in place as quite
rational, including the rationality of collective suicide. Even instant
destruction by nuclear weapons has never ranked high among the concerns of
state authorities.
To cite an example from the late Cold War: In November 1983
the U.S.-led North Atlantic Treaty Organization launched a military exercise
designed to probe Russian air defenses, simulating air and naval attacks and
even a nuclear alert.
These actions were undertaken at a very tense moment.
Pershing II strategic missiles were being deployed in Europe. President Reagan,
fresh from the "Evil Empire" speech, had announced the Strategic
Defense Initiative, dubbed "Star Wars," which the Russians understood
to be effectively a first-strike weapon - a standard interpretation of missile
defense on all sides.
Naturally these actions caused great alarm in Russia, which,
unlike the U.S., was quite vulnerable and had repeatedly been invaded.
Newly released archives reveal that the danger was even more
severe than historians had previously assumed. The NATO exercise "almost
became a prelude to a preventative (Russian) nuclear strike," according to
an account last year by Dmitry Adamsky in the Journal of Strategic Studies .
Nor was this the only close call. In September 1983,
Russia's early-warning systems registered an incoming missile strike from the
United States and sent the highest-level alert. The Soviet military protocol
was to retaliate with a nuclear attack of its own.
The Soviet officer on duty, Stanislav Petrov, intuiting a
false alarm, decided not to report the warnings to his superiors. Thanks to his
dereliction of duty, we're alive to talk about the incident.
Security of the population was no more a high priority for
Reagan planners than for their predecessors. Such heedlessness continues to the
present, even putting aside the numerous near-catastrophic accidents, reviewed
in a chilling new book, "Command and Control: Nuclear Weapons, the
Damascus Accident, and the Illusion of Safety," by Eric Schlosser.
It's hard to contest the conclusion of the last commander of
the Strategic Air Command, Gen . Lee Butler, that humanity has so far survived
the nuclear age "by some combination of skill, luck and divine
intervention, and I suspect the latter in greatest proportion."
The government's regular, easy acceptance of threats to
survival is almost too extraordinary to capture in words.
In 1995, well after the Soviet Union had collapsed, the U.S.
Strategic Command, or Stratcom, which is in charge of nuclear weapons,
published a study, "Essentials of Post-Cold War Deterrence."
A central conclusion is that the U.S. must maintain the
right of a nuclear first strike, even against non-nuclear states. Furthermore,
nuclear weapons must always be available, because they "cast a shadow over
any crisis or conflict."
Thus nuclear weapons are always used, just as you use a gun
if you aim it but don't fire when robbing a store - a point that Daniel
Ellsberg, who leaked the Pentagon Papers, has repeatedly stressed.
Stratcom goes on to advise that "planners should not be
too rational about determining ... what an adversary values," all of which
must be targeted. "[I]t hurts to portray ourselves as too fully rational
and cool-headed. . That the U.S. may become irrational and vindictive if its
vital interests are attacked should be a part of the national persona we
project to all adversaries."
It is "beneficial [for ...our strategic posture] that
some elements may appear to be potentially'out of control'" - and thus
posing a constant threat of nuclear attack.
Not much in this document pertains to the obligation under
the Non-Proliferation Treaty to make "good faith" efforts to
eliminate the nuclear-weapon scourge from the earth. What resounds, rather, is
an adaptation of Hilaire Belloc's famous 1898 couplet about the Maxim gun:
Whatever happens
we have got,
The Atom Bomb and
they have not.
Plans for the future are hardly promising. In December the
Congressional Budget Office reported that the U.S. nuclear arsenal will cost
$355 billion over the next decade. In January the James Martin Center for
Nonproliferation Studies estimated that the U.S. would spend $1 trillion on the
nuclear arsenal in the next 30 years.
And of course the United States is not alone in the arms
race. As Butler observed, it is a near miracle that we have escaped destruction
so far. The longer we tempt fate, the less likely it is that we can hope for
divine intervention to perpetuate the miracle.
In the case of nuclear weapons, at least we know in
principle how to overcome the threat of apocalypse: Eliminate them.
But another dire peril casts its shadow over any
contemplation of the future - environmental disaster. It's not clear that there
even is an escape, though the longer we delay, the more severe the threat
becomes - and not in the distant future. The commitment of governments to the
security of their populations is therefore clearly exhibited by how they
address this issue.
Today the United States is crowing about "100 years of
energy independence" as the country becomes "the Saudi Arabia of the
next century" - very likely the final century of human civilization if
current policies persist.
One might even take a speech of President Obama's two years
ago in the oil town of Cushing, Okla., to be an eloquent death-knell for the
species.
He proclaimed with pride, to ample applause, that "Now,
under my administration, America is producing more oil today than at any time
in the last eight years. That's important to know. Over the last three years,
I've directed my administration to open up millions of acres for gas and oil
exploration across 23 different states. We're opening up more than 75 percent
of our potential oil resources offshore. We've quadrupled the number of
operating rigs to a record high. We've added enough new oil and gas pipeline to
encircle the Earth and then some."
The applause also reveals something about government
commitment to security. Industry profits are sure to be secured as
"producing more oil and gas here at home" will continue to be "a
critical part" of energy strategy, as the president promised.
The corporate sector is carrying out major propaganda
campaigns to convince the public that climate change, if happening at all, does
not result from human activity. These efforts are aimed at overcoming the
excessive rationality of the public, which continues to be concerned about the
threats that scientists overwhelmingly regard as near-certain and ominous.
To put it bluntly, in the moral calculus of today's
capitalism, a bigger bonus tomorrow outweighs the fate of one's grandchildren.
What are the prospects for survival then? They are not
bright. But the achievements of those who have struggled for centuries for
greater freedom and justice leave a legacy that can be taken up and carried
forward - and must be, and soon, if hopes for decent survival are to be
sustained. And nothing can tell us more eloquently what kind of creatures we
are.
© 2014 Noam Chomsky
Distributed by The New York Times Syndicate
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