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Nuclear Hypocrisy March 8, 2007
As the
world decides the fate of Iran's
acquisition of nuclear power capability, there is a kind of nuclear hypocrisy
which lurks beneath US claims. One facet is of Iran’s undeclared motives
for acquiring nuclear power, beyond peaceful energy related purposes, is to
counter balance Israel’s nuclear weapons. The other is about our own continued
stockpiling of such weapons even though we have signed the Nuclear Non
Proliferation Treaty.
Some pundits have suggested that the US, if it
indeed desires a nuclear free Middle East, should require Israel to dismantle
its fully developed and massive nuclear capability thus undermining Iran’s
claims for needing such weapons. In fact this appears to be the conclusion of a
study by the Strategic Studies Institute titled
"Getting Ready for a Nuclear-Ready Iran"
If the US does not wish for another Islamic Nuclear Power,
concludes
Henry Sokolski, a co-editor of the study," Israel should freeze and begin to
dismantle its nuclear capability.
It has been a declared and a long standing
objective of the United States to limit the spread of nuclear weapons. After
all, we are the first and only super power to have used them. It is, therefore,
incumbent upon us to deny their future by any nation. The Arab countries of the
Middle East have long lobbied for a nuclear free Middle East which of course
means for Israel to rid itself of its nuclear arsenal. But the US has
steadfastly rejects such a proposal. A more reasoned policy with regard to this
volatile region solicits our fear not only about the potential use of the
weapons themselves but about the political leverage bestowed on those who would
possess them. It is smack of double standards
in our nonproliferation policy since the
early 1960’s what the US has
applied with respect to Israel's weapons of mass destruction. Israel's suspected
arsenal includes chemical, biological, and about 100 to 200 nuclear warheads,
and the capacity to deliver them. If Iran is denied nuclear capability, another
Arab or Muslim country will soon rise to demand the same so long Israel does.
It is no secret that the US,
contrary to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, has been adding to not
reducing its nuclear arsenal. As the United States surges forward in its nuclear
renaissance, the threat of nuclear terrorism and accidental nuclear strikes
remains a grave yet under-funded priority. The administration occasionally
raises the specter of nuclear-armed terrorists. In February 2004, for example,
President Bush warned, “In the hands of terrorists, weapons of mass destruction
would be a first resort.” Despite its rhetoric, however, the administration has
done nothing to accelerate efforts to destroy and safeguard loose nuclear
weapons and bomb-making materials, allocating about $1 billion a year to these
crucial non-proliferation efforts. This is roughly the same amount that the Bush
administration has been spending each day in Iraq.
The contradictions between
what we are demanding of Tehran and other powers, and the capabilities we have
pursued for our own arsenal, are provocative and dangerous – truly nothing short
of nuclear hypocrisy. Dick Cheney is right when he said recently that a
nuclear-armed Iran is not a pleasant prospect, and we have to do something. But
the most effective option is the hardest to swallow. Under the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, the United States agreed to an “unequivocal
undertaking” to “eliminate” its nuclear weapons arsenal. Honoring that
commitment -- and encouraging other declared and undeclared nuclear states to do
the same -- would undercut Tehran’s arguments about why nuclear firepower is
necessary and pave the way to safer world. Leading by a good example should be
our ultimate policy in this dangerous world.
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