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WORD
COUNT
649
MAY 2, 2007
BUILD
MORE NUKES? FORGET IT – by Devin Helfrich
Over
the past year, a group of nuclear physicists has been studying a site on
the banks of a beautiful river. Hidden from international nuclear
inspectors, they are drawing up plans for a new facility, possibly along
this river, designed to perform research on plutonium and build new
nuclear bombs by the year 2020.
Where
is this river? Is it the Volga in Russia, the Karun in Iran, or Kuryong-gang
in North Korea? Actually, it is none of those. These scientists are all
looking at the Savannah River on the border of South Carolina and
Georgia, only a few miles from where Tiger Woods played in the Masters.
Buried
deep within the volumes of the Bush administration's annual budget
proposal is an initial request for funds to start rebuilding its nuclear
weapons infrastructure–-at a price tag of over $150 billion. One
possible location for this new H-bomb plant is the Savannah River site
in South Carolina.
Why, in
a world where the United States is legitimately worried about countries
like Iran and North Korea building new nukes, is the Bush administration
rebuilding its own nuclear weapons complex? While common in Washington,
this type of hypocrisy is astonishing elsewhere.
In the
early 1990s, the Cold War ended and with it the "need" for a massive
nuclear weapons program–-or so sensible people thought. After initial
reductions in the number of nuclear warheads and delivery systems, the
current administration has, since its early days in office, envisioned a
revitalized role for them. As Thomas P. D'Agostino, acting
under-secretary for nuclear security in the National Nuclear Security
Administration, testified to the House Armed Services Subcommittee that
the administration's plans "would restore us to a level of [nuclear
weapon] capability comparable to what we had during the Cold War."
The
administration has a grab bag full of justifications for this new bomb
plant, called "Complex 2030" for the date it will be completed. If one
doesn't fit, try another. At the forefront was the argument that the
plutonium inside existing nuclear warheads would be susceptible to
age-related failures, with the oldest rendered "unreliable" within two
decades and thus needing replacement. This assertion was recently proved
inaccurate when a panel of scientists using the government's own data
concluded in a congressionally mandated report that plutonium within
existing nuclear weapons would be "reliable" for a minimum of at least
85 years.
Adjusting, the DOE line then began to focus on the claim that Complex
2030 and the new bomb plant are needed in order to continue downsizing
the current weapons stockpile. The agency's argument is that by
rebuilding nuclear weapons facilities, DOE will feel confident in its
ability to produce new nuclear weapons when needed, and thus be able to
reduce the number of active warheads. This is a strange argument: A
shiny new nuclear weapons complex that would be capable of pumping out
125 to 200 new nukes a year to help the United States reach the goal of
a world free of nuclear weapons.
For
those who don't want new nuclear weapons, take heart. Money talks in
Washington and the über-steep price tag for an obsolete weapon has many
members of Congress doing a double take. Rep. Peter Visclosky, (D-Ind.),
chair of the House subcommittee that funds nuclear weapons, believes
that there should be a thoughtful evaluation of "why the United States
needs to build new nuclear warheads at this time."
Congress should step up and confront the legacy of vested interests from
this country's half-century old nuclear weapons industry. As Robert
Civiak, a former White House budget official in the first Bush and
Clinton administrations stated, "The weapons labs are more interested in
job security than national security." Rather than let tens of billions
of dollars slip out of the treasury for building the most dangerous
weapon in human history, Congress should reevaluate U.S. nuclear weapons
policy with an honest scrutiny.
--
Devin
Helfrich is a legislative assistant with the Friends Committee on
National Legislation in Washington, D.C., and works on defense and
foreign policy issues.
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