Author: Robert Laney

  • Encomium for David Krieger

    Encomium for David Krieger

    NAPF Chair Robert Laney delivered these remarks on October 20, 2019, at the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s 36th Annual Evening for Peace.

    With this assignment to speak about David I feel the dilemma that others have felt in similar circumstances when trying against impossible odds to do justice to a subject too large for their talents and too large for the time allotted. I proceed.

    David Krieger has played a variety of roles in my life and, I suspect, in the lives of our many friends in and around the Foundation, past and present. Many of you already know much of what follows, but please bear with me.

    First, David as our visionary: Since the Foundation’s beginning in 1982 David has personified a vision of a better world than the world in which we live today — a more safe, sane, secure, just, and peaceful world — a world free of the threat that nuclear weapons pose to all of humanity.  Many people, especially in the political world, have scoffed at such a vision and continue to scoff. But David, knowing the true nature of the nuclear threat and having grappled with it over many years, has never lost heart or waivered from his vision of a better world. As David has reminded us on countless occasions, peace is an imperative of the nuclear age.

    Next, David as our leader: The Foundation’s 37-years-and-counting campaign to create a more safe, sane, and secure world has faced daunting odds in the powers-that-be who always resist the changes that we seek. Nevertheless throughout this period the Foundation has been able to keep its lights on, its telephones and computers in operation, and its amazing and dedicated Staff fully engaged with the challenges we face. Let me be clear: none of this would have been remotely possible without David’s steady, clear-eyed leadership and hand on the helm. I shall cite just a few examples among many:

    It has been David who assembled and trained our Staff of all-stars, each of whom treats his or her responsibilities as a calling rather than just a job.

    It has been David who has done the heavy lifting in fund-raising throughout this period.

    It has been David who has kept the Foundation current with developments in the field of nuclear weapons policy.

    It has been David who caused the Foundation to achieve consultative status at the United Nations and to play an active and influential role in nuclear weapons-related conferences at the UN in New York and in Europe.

    It has been David who forged essential alliances with other NGOs and various political, social, and religious leaders around the world, some of whose names you would recognize instantly.

    It has been David who has guided each Staff member in his or her personal growth as a peace activist and as an effective member of our team.

    And it has been David who established our program for interns and has guided our interns not only in their contributions to the work of the Foundation but also in their personal growth as peace activists.

    I could go on about David’s decisive accomplishments as our leader since 1982, but you get my drift. As an organization with an effective voice in the world, we owe our existence this evening to David Krieger.

    Next, David as our teacher: Not all of us were peace activists or anti- nuclear weapons campaigners when we first met David. Some of us needed to be “brought along,” as they say, and in my case, over a period of years. I confess this as one who came from all the educational

    advantages that one would expect should have taught me such things. But under David’s gentle guidance I gradually came to understand not only the gravity of the nuclear threat, but also the moral impossibility of staying on the sidelines while this threat exists. I know that some of you were more developed in this respect than I was upon first meeting David.  Nevertheless I suspect that you have your own stories about how David has influenced your thinking about why and how to create a safer and more secure world. But David as a teacher has gone far beyond our circle at the Foundation. As everyone knows, David’s books, essays, and letters to editors over many years have provided the public with a rich source of education on matters of peace and security in the nuclear age.

    Next, David as our brother and comrade in the campaign for a  better world: Throughout my association with David and the Foundation over more than two decades, I have observed how David places himself among our team rather than over our team, offering hints, praise, suggestions, and encouragement as circumstances would indicate.  Not one to feed his ego in the position of President and CEO even  though he has had plenty of opportunities to do so, David has preferred  to guide by soft-spoken example in the manner of an elder brother   rather than as chief executive. I have always felt and appreciated David’s genuine interest in the people of the Foundation for their own sakes, as if we are all a family.

    Finally, David as our poet in residence: Most of you know that David has a poetic soul. Indeed one wonders where this poetic inclination would have taken him but for his 37 years at the helm of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. Look into his poetry, and you will see what I mean. This is where you will see David’s heart most clearly – the heart of one deeply in touch with humanity’s cri de coeur for a better world – a world free of war, free of mindless cruelty, and free of the threat that nuclear weapons present to all that we hold dear.

    So David, as our visionary, our leader, our teacher, our brother and comrade, and our poet in residence, you have brought us farther in 37 years than we ever had a right to expect. But our journey is not over, and I for one look forward to continuing our work together in the ranks of our comrades in disarmament. May it ever be thus.

  • A Small Republic with Big Principles

    Robert LaneyWhen one is called upon to speak on Sadako Peace Day concerning the necessity of peace in the nuclear age, what can one say that has not been said many times before by speakers more knowledgeable and eloquent than oneself? In this connection I am fortunate that the year 2014 is witnessing a little publicized but unique and potentially historic development in the long campaign for nuclear disarmament. But before we discuss this development, let us consider the meaning of Sadako Peace Day and our purpose in gathering at this lovely spot every year on August 6th.

    Of course you know that August 6, 1945 was the day that the U. S. Army Air Corps dropped an atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. This was the first use of this new and most dreadful form of weaponry in war. Please forgive a few gruesome statistics which I hope will add some context to our gathering today. The atomic bombing of Hiroshima caused approximately 90,000 deaths immediately and an additional 50,000 deaths by the end of the year. You also know that three days later on August 9th, the Army Air Corps dropped an atomic bomb on the city of Nagasaki. This bombing caused approximately 40,000 deaths immediately and an additional 35,000 deaths by the end of the year.

    [Parenthetically you may not realize that during the three day period between these two events, the victorious allies in Europe – the United States, the Soviet Union, Great Britain, and France – agreed to put certain Nazi leaders on trial at Nuremberg for war crimes. Whether the irony of this timing occurred to any of the allies at the time is a question I shall leave to the historians.]

    In any case at the time of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, a little two-year-old girl by the name of Sadako Sasaki was living in the city with her family. Although Sadako was not overtly hurt at the time of the bombing, nine years later in November of 1954 she developed swellings on her neck and behind her ears. By January of 1955 purple spots had formed on her legs. By February Sadako, then age 12, had been diagnosed with leukemia and was hospitalized at the Red Cross Hospital in Hiroshima. During that summer Sadako’s best friend came to visit her. Her friend brought a square piece of gold paper and reminded Sadako of the ancient Japanese legend that promises to anyone who folds a thousand paper cranes that she will be granted a wish. So Sadako began folding cranes. On one of the cranes she wrote the words, “I shall write peace on their wings, and they will fly all over the world.” The story goes that Sadako was able to fold 644 cranes before she passed away in October of that year at the age of 12. Her many friends and schoolmates then took upon themselves to complete the 1,000 cranes and buried them with her.

    Sadako was among many Japanese citizens, especially children, who developed leukemia after the atomic bombings. By the early 1950s it was clear that this unusually high incidence of leukemia had been caused by radiation exposure.

    Today there is a statue of Sadako at the Peace Park in Hiroshima which depicts her holding a golden paper crane. At the foot of the statue is a plaque that reads: “This is our cry. This is our prayer. Peace in the world.” Sadako’s story is famous among the Japanese, who regard her as a symbol of all the children who died from the effects of the atomic bombs. Today people all over Japan celebrate August 6th as their annual peace day. We at the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation believe it only fitting that we follow their example by gathering at this little peace park for our own remembrance of those events and to ponder their meaning for us today.

    Of course many of the survivors of the atomic bombs are still living today. In Japan these survivors are known as “Hibakusha,” which means “explosion-affected people.” Some of these Hibakusha have devoted their lives to raising public awareness of the dangers of nuclear war and of the potential effects of nuclear weapons. [If there are any Hibakusha here today, would you please rise so that we may recognize you and express our appreciation?]

    Now let me explain why I believe the abolition of nuclear weapons is so important. In a nutshell, I believe that a world without nuclear weapons – a world of “Nuclear Zero,” as we say at the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation – would be far more safe and secure for everyone than the world we live in today. It seems to me that this proposition is unassailable because there is no threat that any nation faces from any other nation or group for which the use of nuclear weapons would not make the problem worse – far worse – even for the nation using the weapons. Let me repeat: a world with zero nuclear weapons would be far more safe and secure for everyone than the world we live in today.

    This brings me to my second proposition: nuclear weapons are simply too dangerous to be in the possession of fallible human beings. We all know that military forces, like all human organizations, are prone to accidents, mistakes, misperceptions, and mental and emotional disorders. The recent destruction of the civilian airliner over eastern Ukraine is only one of a long train of tragic examples that we could point to. To mention a comparable tragedy, in 1988 the U.S. Navy destroyed a civilian airliner by mistake over the Persian Gulf, causing a total loss of life similar to that in the Ukraine tragedy. With respect to nuclear weapons, for those who are not convinced that we are living on borrowed time after a series of narrowly averted catastrophes during the nuclear age, the history to read is Command and Control by Eric Schlosser. In our hubris as a society and as a species, we are living with the illusion that human beings have a god-like capacity to maintain and deploy nuclear weapons without serious risk of accidents, mistakes, misperceptions, and mental and emotional disorders.

    Now let me switch gears and tell you about a small but proud nation in the northwestern Pacific known as the Republic of the Marshall Islands. This small island nation consists of 24 coral atolls and is home to approximately 70,000 people. During the 12-year period from 1946 through 1958 the U. S. Government used the Marshall Islands as a testing ground, first for atomic weapons, and later for far more powerful thermonuclear weapons. During this period the Government exploded a total of 67 of these weapons in the Marshall Islands. The horrific environmental and health effects of these tests are still a daily experience for many in these Islands today.

    Fast forward to 1962, when the Cuban missile crisis brought the United States and the Soviet Union so close to nuclear war that they saw the need to bring this potentially catastrophic risk under control. The result was a grand, worldwide treaty, imprecisely known as the “Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,” which came into force in 1970. By this Treaty the great majority of nations of the world promised not to seek or acquire nuclear weapons. Further, those nations and the few nations then in possession of nuclear weapons – the United States, the Soviet Union, Great Britain, France, and China – agreed to negotiate in good faith to terminate the nuclear arms race and to eliminate nuclear weapons from the planet.

    Now, 44 years later, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, a state party to the Treaty, is standing up to the nuclear giants and by its actions is saying to them,

    “Enough is enough. More than forty years ago you, the nuclear giants, promoted and engineered this grand bargain by which the nations without nuclear weapons agreed not to seek or acquire them, and in return you promised to negotiate for nuclear disarmament. Now after more than four decades, the world still waits for these negotiations to begin. Having kept our end of the bargain, we the Republic of the Marshall Islands are taking action against you, the nuclear giants, by initiating lawsuits in the International Court of Justice by which we seek to hold you accountable for your respective failures to negotiate for nuclear disarmament. For jurisdictional purposes we also have initiated a separate lawsuit against the United States in U.S. federal court in San Francisco. Although Israel, India, Pakistan, and North Korea are not parties to this Treaty, we also have initiated lawsuits against them in the International Court of Justice for their failures to negotiate for nuclear disarmament as required by customary international law. The time has come for you to answer in court for your failures to negotiate for disarmament. We seek no financial compensation from these legal proceedings. We seek only that you be required by the courts to perform your end of the bargain, that is, to negotiate in good faith for nuclear disarmament.”

    That is the effective message of the Republic of the Marshall Islands to the nuclear giants. These lawsuits may seem like something out of Don Quixote – a small country challenging the nuclear giants in courts of law over their failures to negotiate for disarmament. Can small countries really do this? We shall see; like the Apollo moon landings, lawsuits like these have never been attempted before. But when the vast majority of countries enter into a grand bargain in which they promise not to acquire nuclear weapons, and in return the relatively few nuclear giants promise to negotiate for nuclear disarmament, and then more than four decades pass without negotiations for disarmament, to what institutions can the non-nuclear countries turn for help other than the courts? Is enforcing bargains, even grand, multi-national treaties, not a role of the courts? If not, then what is the value of this Treaty, or for that matter any treaty, in world affairs? Our Government likes to speak of “the rule of law” as a necessary feature of a free and just society. And yet if nations do not allow courts of law to judge their performance of their mutual legal obligations, then what does that imply for the rule of law among nations? And in the case of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, what would that imply for the long-term survival of our species?

    Of course challenging the nuclear giants in court over their failures to negotiate for disarmament would entail political and economic risks for any country, large or small. No country can afford to challenge the nuclear giants lightly on such a sensitive and emotional issue. Therefore we at the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, with our long-standing commitment to the universal, transparent, irreversible, and verifiable abolition of nuclear weapons from the planet, are especially proud to associate ourselves with this small Republic’s historic and courageous challenge to the continuing possession of nuclear weapons by a very few rogue nations.

    As you surely recognize, there is a sense in which the Marshall Islands represent not only their own citizens by these lawsuits, but in the final analysis all of humankind. When the Republic filed these lawsuits on April 24th, their Minister of Foreign Affairs, Tony de Brum, said, “Our people have suffered the catastrophic and irreparable damage of these weapons, and we vow to fight so that no one else on earth will ever again experience these atrocities.” Although the Republic will receive no thanks from the nuclear giants, the rest of us may wish to convey to the Republic our humble gratitude, our admiration, and our moral support. And we might ponder what the example of this small republic with big principles can teach us about moral courage, leadership, the rule of law, and perhaps even the survival of our species.

    For your information the Foundation seeks to keep you current on the progress of these lawsuits through the Foundation’s website wagingpeace.org. In addition the Foundation has established another website, nuclearzero.org, which is dedicated solely to these lawsuits and invites you to sign a petition by which you may register your support. Of course if you have questions, please ask a member of the Staff, myself, or another member of the Board. Based upon our experience since the Marshall Islands filed these lawsuits on April 24th, you should not rely upon the major U.S. news media to keep you informed. Why this should be, I shall leave for you to determine.

    Many thanks for your kind attention.