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  • Sunflower Newsletter: June 2016

    Issue #227 – June 2016

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    • Perspectives
      • Message to the Wall by David Krieger
      • Obama on Nukes: All Talk, No Action by Setsuko Thurlow
      • Speech in Hiroshima by President Barack Obama
    • Nuclear Disarmament
      • Non-Nuclear Nations Discuss Nuclear Arms Ban
    • Nuclear Proliferation
      • U.S. Missile Shield Stirs Up Tensions
      • China Plans Nuclear Submarines
      • Pakistan Seeks Nuclear Suppliers Group Membership
    • Nuclear Waste
      • Complaints of Vapor Exposure Resurface at Hanford Site
      • Settlement Reached in Rocky Flats Homeowners Lawsuit
    • Nuclear Insanity
      • Would the U.S. Drop the Bomb Again?
    • Nuclear Modernization
      • U.S. Modernization Plans Are “Very, Very, Very Expensive”
      • Universities Seek to Manage Sandia Nuclear Weapons Labs
    • Nuclear Zero Lawsuits
      • Update on the Marshall Islands’ Nuclear Disarmament Lawsuits
    • Resources
      • June’s Featured Blog
      • This Month in Nuclear Threat History
      • Lee Butler’s Memoirs
      • Russian Nuclear Forces
    • Foundation Activities
      • Letters to the Editor in The New York Times and Los Angeles Times
      • Refugees and Peace Literacy
      • Noam Chomsky to Receive NAPF Distinguished Peace Leadership Award
      • Report to the UN Secretary-General
    • Quotes

     

    Perspectives

    Message to the Wall

    Dear Wall,
    Your polished surface deceives.
    You appear serene, yet you are bursting with anguish and lost potential.
    You are a wall of great sadness.
    You remember the young, whose lives were engulfed in the flames of war.
    They wanted to live and love, but the cruel war stopped them.
    They had lives before the lies of their leaders took them to war.

    To read more, click here.

    Obama on Nukes: All Talk, No Action

    As a 13-year-old schoolgirl, I witnessed my hometown flattened by a hurricane-like blast, burned in 7,000-degree Fahrenheit heat and contaminated by the radiation of one atomic bomb.

    Miraculously, I was rescued from the rubble of a building, a little more than a mile from ground zero. Most of my classmates in the same room were burned to death. I can still hear their faint voices, calling their mothers for help, and praying to God.

    As I escaped with two other girls, we watched a procession of ghostly figures: grotesquely wounded people whose clothes were tattered or gone. Parts of their bodies were missing. Some were carrying their eyeballs in their hands. Some had their stomachs burst open, their intestines hanging out.

    To read the full op-ed in the New York Daily News, click here.

    Speech in Hiroshima

    Seventy-one years ago, on a bright, cloudless morning, death fell from the sky and the world was changed. A flash of light and a wall of fire destroyed a city and demonstrated that mankind possessed the means to destroy itself.

    Why do we come to this place, to Hiroshima? We come to ponder a terrible force unleashed in a not so distant past. We come to mourn the dead, including over 100,000 Japanese men, women and children; thousands of Koreans; a dozen Americans held prisoner. Their souls speak to us. They ask us to look inward, to take stock of who we are and what we might become.

    To read the full speech, click here.

    Nuclear Disarmament

    Non-Nuclear Nations Discuss Nuclear Arms Ban

    In May, representatives from more than 60 countries and many civil society organizations met at the United Nations in Geneva to discuss effective legal measures to eliminate all nuclear weapons. Toshiki Fujimori, representative of a Japanese organization of atomic bomb survivors, was one of many speakers at the Open Ended Working Group (OEWG). Fujimori called on member states to conclude a treaty prohibiting nuclear weapons, referring to the weapons as “the devil that could eradicate all life on Earth and destroy the planet.”

    Because all nine nuclear-armed nations refused to join the talks, the states that were present at the OEWG decided they have to move forward towards negotiating a legal ban without the participation of the nuclear nine.  Mexico, Brazil and other countries say they want to start negotiations in the next year on legally banning the weapons, while Japan, Germany and Canada (states under the U.S. nuclear umbrella) favor an approach that aims to promote step-by-step reductions in nuclear arsenals with cooperation from nuclear-armed nations.

    For full coverage of the Open Ended Working Group, visit the Reaching Critical Will website.

    UN Working Group Discusses Nuclear Arms Ban,” NHK World, May 10, 2016.

    Nuclear Proliferation

    U.S. Missile Shield Stirs Up Tensions

    The United States’ European missile defense shield went live on May 12, almost a decade after Washington’s initial proposal to protect NATO states from Iran’s alleged increasing nuclear capacity. Russia is strongly opposed to the missile defense system, asserting that Iran’s missile program poses no threat to NATO states in Europe. Russia calls the U.S. program a violation of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty that directly threatens its national security.

    The U.S. stresses that the missile defense shield’s stated aim is not to advance strategic positioning in the case of a Russia-U.S. war, but rather to protect North America and Europe from “rogue states,” such as Iran and North Korea. Russia claims that the real motive behind the missile shield is to neutralize Moscow’s nuclear arsenal long enough for the U.S. to make a first strike on Russia in the event of war. The U.S. dismisses Russia’s view as “strategic paranoia” and blames Moscow for breaking off talks with NATO in 2013.

    Robin Emmott, “U.S. to Switch on European Missile Shield Despite Russian Alarm,” Reuters, May 11, 2016.

    China Plans Nuclear Submarines

    The Chinese military plans to send submarines armed with nuclear missiles into the South China Sea in response to the U.S. military’s expanding presence in the Pacific region. Specifically, the Chinese military worries about the U.S. THAAD missile defense system in South Korea, as well as the U.S. Prompt Global Strike Program, programmed with a hypersonic glide missile capable of hitting targets anywhere in the world within an hour.

    Until now, China has been cautious with its nuclear strategy, stating that it would never be the first to use nuclear weapons, and storing warheads and missiles separately. While China has been developing nuclear submarine technology for decades, this is the first time it will deploy nuclear missiles at sea.

    Julian Borger, “China to Send Nuclear-Armed Submarines Into Pacific Amid Tensions with U.S.,” The Guardian, May 26, 2016.

    Pakistan Seeks Nuclear Suppliers Group Membership

    Pakistan formally applied for entry into the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), after China blocked India’s entry into the 48-member elite group. Pakistan reported that its decision to seek participation reflects Pakistan’s support for international efforts to prevent the proliferation weapons of mass destruction and their means of delivery.

    Pakistan’s request for entry comes about only weeks after China contested India’s NSG membership for India’s refusal to sign the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Pakistan, which has also refused to sign the NPT, stresses the need for NSG to adopt a non-discriminatory criteria-based approach for NSG membership. Pakistan claims that it will act in accordance with NSG guidelines to transfer nuclear material, equipment and related technology despite not having signed the NPT.

    Pakistan Applies for NSG Membership,” The Times of India, May 20, 2016.

    Nuclear Waste

    Complaints of Vapor Exposure Resurface at Hanford Site

    The Department of Energy (DOE) claims it has been laboring to reduce vapor risks at Hanford site, but Hanford workers suggest otherwise. Over the past month, over 40 workers at the decommissioned nuclear production complex have complained of exposure to noxious chemical vapors. The complaints have emerged amidst the completion of a project at Hanford, focused on emptying a leaking 740,000-gallon underground tank. Some estimates suggest that hundreds of Hanford workers have been affected over time, their symptoms ranging from headaches to cancer.

    In September, a Seattle-based environmental and worker advocacy group, Hanford Challenge, united with Local Union 598 to sue the heavily-contaminated nuclear complex. Despite the legal resurgence of vapor exposure complaints—grievances that date back to the 1990s—DOE continues to dispute all charges.

    The workers list the following demands: the timely fulfillment of recommendations made in a recent tank-farm contractor report, continued medical oversight of both past and present workers, and complete public release of all information relevant to vapor exposure. A non-jury trial seeking improved protection of Hanford workers is scheduled to convene on May 22, 2017.

    John Emshwiller, “New Complaints of Exposures Emerge at Hanford Site,” The Wall Street Journal, May 21, 2016.

    Settlement Reached in Rocky Flats Homeowners Lawsuit

    A $375 million settlement was finally reached in May between Denver-area residents and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). Residents near Rocky Flats claimed that a local nuclear weapons production plant released harmful plutonium, devaluing property and damaging health. The settlement, if approved by a federal judge, will end a 26-year lawsuit between homeowners and Dow Chemical Co. and Rockwell International Corp., two corporations responsible for operating the plant for the DOE.

    The lawsuit was filed in 1990, a year after the plant closed due to concerns of safety and environmental impacts, and took years to go to trial. In 2006, a judge ordered the companies to pay $925 million to homeowners for damages to health and property, but the verdict was overturned. The $375 million settlement will address property values, but not health monitoring for affected residents.

    LeRoy Moore of the Rocky Mountain Peace and Justice Center said, “I’m glad that the people in the affected area being finally compensated for loss, but neither of the corporations, Dow or Rockwell, will pay a cent. DOE will pay the bill, which really means we the taxpayers will pay for the careless and harmful operation of the Rocky Flats plant. The corporations were well-paid for the harm they did.”

    John Aguilar, “$375M Settlement Reached in Homeowner Lawsuit Against Rocky Flats,” Denver Post, May 19, 2016.

    Nuclear Insanity

    Would the U.S. Drop the Bomb Again?

    Studies of public opinion polling in the U.S. show that approximately the same percentage of people today would support using nuclear weapons in a hypothetical conflict with Iran as supported President Truman’s use of nuclear weapons against Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.

    In the hypothetical situation posed in a poll by YouGov, 59% of respondents backed using a nuclear bomb on an Iranian city, even if the expected number of Iranian civilian fatalities was two million. The authors, Scott Sagan and Benjamin Valentino, said, “Today, as in 1945, the U.S. public is unlikely to hold back a president who might consider using nuclear weapons in the crucible of war.”

    Scott Sagan and Benjamin Valentino, “Would the U.S. Drop the Bomb Again?The Wall Street Journal, May 19, 2016.

    Nuclear Modernization

    U.S. Modernization Plans Are “Very, Very, Very Expensive”

    Senator John McCain (R-AZ), Chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee, questioned the continued need for the United States to maintain a nuclear triad given the extraordinary costs of upgrading all of the systems. In a speech at the Brookings Institution, Sen. McCain said, “We’re sort of behind, if you look at some of the estimates as to what it would take to update the triad would it be long range bomber, or missiles, or new submarines, it’s very, very, very expensive. I mean, you look at the cost of this new submarine they want, it’s extremely high. You look at the long-range bomber, we’re looking at tens of billions of dollars, and so we’re going to have to grapple with this. Do we really need the entire triad, given the situation? How do we dispose of this nuclear material in a way that’s not costing us 20 or 30 billion dollars?”

    New Demands on the Military and the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act,” Brookings Institution, May 19, 2016.

    Universities Seek to Manage Sandia Nuclear Weapons Labs

    As the United States embarks on the beginning phases of its planned $1 trillion, 30-year program to upgrade its nuclear weapons, delivery systems and production facilities, Sandia National Laboratories is accepting bids for new management. Sandia has been managed by Lockheed Martin since 1993, but the contract expires in April 2017.

    Multiple entities are bidding for the management contract, including a consortium called Together Sandia, which includes the Texas A&M University System, the University of Texas System, and the University of New Mexico.

    The University of California has managed Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) since their inception in 1943 and 1952, respectively. Over the past decade, the University of California has been part of for-profit private limited liability companies that manage LANL and LLNL.

    Mark Rockwell, “Sandia Labs Management Contract Officially Up for Grabs,” FCW, May 27, 2016.

    Nuclear Zero Lawsuits

    Update on the Marshall Islands’ Nuclear Zero Lawsuits

    Rick Wayman, Director of Programs at the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, recently spoke with Libbe HaLevy, host of the podcast Nuclear Hotseat, about the Marshall Islands’ Nuclear Zero Lawsuits at the International Court of Justice and U.S. Federal Court. He updated listeners on the content of the cases against the United Kingdom, India and Pakistan that are currently before the International Court of Justice, as well as the case against the United States that is pending at the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

    They also discussed President Obama’s recent trip to Hiroshima and the image vs. reality of U.S. nuclear weapons policy, and the Don’t Bank on the Bomb report that details the companies and financial institutions involved in the production of nuclear weapons.

    Libbe HaLevy, “Nuclear Hotseat #258,” Nuclear Hotseat Podcast, May 31, 2016.

     Resources

    June’s Featured Blog

    This month’s featured blog is Defusing the Nuclear Threat by Martin Hellman. Dr. Hellman is Professor Emeritus at Stanford University and a NAPF Associate. The blog addresses numerous current nuclear threats with ideas of how to reduce or eliminate the risk. Recent entries include the first nine chapters of a book written by Martin and Dorothie Hellman entitled “A New Map for Relationships: Creating True Love at Home and Peace on the Planet.”

    To read the blog, click here.

    This Month in Nuclear Threat History

    History chronicles many instances when humans have been threatened by nuclear weapons. In this article, Jeffrey Mason outlines some of the most serious threats that have taken place in the month of June, including the first known nuclear weapons-related accident on June 23, 1942 in Leipzig, Germany.

    To read Mason’s full article, click here.

    For more information on the history of the Nuclear Age, visit NAPF’s Nuclear Files website.

    Lee Butler Publishes Memoirs

    General Lee Butler, a four-star U.S. Air Force General and the commander of U.S. nuclear forces from 1991-94, has published a two-volume memoir entitled “Uncommon Cause: A Life at Odds with Convention.” After leaving the Air Force, Butler became an outspoken advocate for nuclear disarmament.

    Gen. Butler has generously provided an e-book version of his memoirs as a free download for readers of NAPF’s Sunflower Newsletter. Click here to access the memoirs.

    Russian Nuclear Forces

    Hans Kristensen and Robert Norris have published an updated analysis of Russia’s nuclear forces in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. The authors state, “Russia is in the middle of a broad modernization of its strategic and nonstrategic nuclear forces…. The modernization program reflects the government’s conviction that strategic nuclear forces are indispensable for Russia’s security and status as a great power.”

    To read the full report, click here.

    Foundation Activities

    Letters to the Editor in The New York Times and Los Angeles Times

    On May 31, NAPF President David Krieger had a letter to the editor published in The New York Times. Dr. Krieger wrote about the differences in how Americans and Japanese view nuclear weapons. He wrote in part, “The view from above the bomb leads to reliance on nuclear weapons and ultimately to an evolutionary dead-end for our species, while the view from beneath the bomb engages our moral decency and leads to abolishing these devices of mass annihilation and preserving the planet for future generations.”

    On May 13, NAPF Director of Programs Rick Wayman had a letter to the editor published in the Los Angeles Times. He wrote in part, “There exists an international legal obligation to pursue — and bring to a conclusion — negotiations on nuclear disarmament. President Obama should dedicate the final months of his presidency to fulfilling this long-delayed obligation. That would be a legacy worth creating.”

    To read both letters, click here.

    Refugees and Peace Literacy

    When Paul K. Chappell, NAPF Peace Leadership Director, spoke about Peace Literacy in mid-May to over 400 students at the International Youth Conference for the Christian Community in Hamburg, Germany, he also addressed a number of young refugees from the Greater Middle East. Some of them spoke English, had been in Germany for a number of months, and they said they were hopeful for the future. They had survived traumatic experiences and while they were hopeful, they knew their future was not guaranteed.

    Chappell has often talked about the “muscle” of hope, and how realistic hope can survive enormous suffering even when trust has been betrayed. Unlike naïve hope which is the result of helplessness, realistic hope grows from the trust we have in ourselves, others, and our ideals. Participation in creating progress is a higher expression of hope.

    To read more, click here.

    Noam Chomsky to Receive NAPF Distinguished Peace Leadership Award

    Noam Chomsky, one of the greatest minds of our time, will be our Distinguished Peace Leader at this year’s Evening for Peace on Sunday, October 23, in Santa Barbara, California.

    We’re calling the evening NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH because that’s what Chomsky is about– truth. He believes humanity faces two major challenges: the continued threat of nuclear war and the crisis of ecological catastrophe. To hear him on these issues will be more than memorable. Importantly, he offers a way forward to a more hopeful and just world. We are very proud to honor him with our award.

    The annual Evening for Peace includes a festive reception, live entertainment, dinner and an awards ceremony. It is attended by many residents of Santa Barbara, peace activists, those interested in our work, local businesses and philanthropists.

    For more information and tickets, click here.

    Report to the UN Secretary-General

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation submitted a report to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. It will make up a portion of the “Report of the Secretary-General to the 71st Session of the General Assembly on the Implementation of the Recommendations of the 2002 UN Study on Disarmament and Non-Proliferation Education.”

    NAPF’s report outlines its numerous disarmament education activities that have taken place from July 2014 to June 2016. To read the report, click here.

    Quotes

     

    “We must learn the lessons of history, that we may learn to identify and avoid the paths that lead to war.”

    Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum. This quote appears in the book Speaking of Peace: Quotations to Inspire Action, which is available for purchase in the NAPF Peace Store.

     

    “If you sow a mango seed, you get a mango tree. If you sow maize, you get maize. No exception to this simple law has ever occurred or ever will. By the same token, if you sow the seed of contention, violence and hatred, the harvest will be more violence and more hatred. Society can only change by first changing the attitude of people who live in it and the world can only change by changing the attitude of the nations who constitute it.”

    Sir James R. Mancham, KBE, former President of Seychelles.

     

    “I have lost my island, my ocean, my culture. I have lost everything about me. Can Obama come and see me? I am like a coconut floating adrift in the ocean with no set course.”

    Nerje Joseph, a survivor of the March 1, 1954 Castle Bravo nuclear test. That test, at 1,000 times the power of the Hiroshima bomb, was the largest ever exploded by the United States and displaced many people in the Marshall Islands.

     

    “The world has moved on since nuclear subs were first designed and procured — politically, economically and technologically — and it’s time for our politicians to catch up.”

    Kate Hudson, General Secretary of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, commenting on a new report showing that the cost of replacing Trident, Britain’s nuclear weapons system, has risen to 205 billion GBP ($295 billion USD).

    Editorial Team

     

    Lindsay Apperson
    Ricky Frawley
    Alexis Hill
    Erika Ito
    David Krieger
    Carol Warner
    Rick Wayman

     

  • NAPF’s Messages Hit the Mainstream Media

    We’ve had three letters to the editor published in the past six weeks in The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and the Washington Post.


    Matter of Perspective
    The New York Times
    May 31, 2016

    As an American who has visited Hiroshima and Nagasaki on many occasions, I believe there is a fundamental difference in the way Americans and Japanese view the bomb. The American perspective is from above the bomb and its symbol, the mushroom cloud. The Japanese perspective is from beneath the bomb.

    The view from above the bomb leads to reliance on nuclear weapons and ultimately to an evolutionary dead-end for our species, while the view from beneath the bomb engages our moral decency and leads to abolishing these devices of mass annihilation and preserving the planet for future generations.

    David Krieger, Santa Barbara, Calif.

    The writer is the president of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.


    It Isn’t Enough for Obama to Talk About Nuclear Proliferation at Hiroshima
    Los Angeles Times
    May 13, 2016

    Last year, my organization brought Setsuko Thurlow, a survivor of the U.S. atomic bombing of Hiroshima, to Santa Barbara to honor her for her lifetime of advocacy for the abolition of nuclear weapons. Thurlow and so many other survivors have dedicated their lives to abolishing nuclear weapons so nobody will again suffer as they did.

    This is the real lesson of Hiroshima. For the White House to propose a modest speech about the importance of nuclear nonproliferation during the first visit to that city by a sitting president is cowardly and misses the point completely. (“Obama will be first U.S. president to visit Hiroshima — but he’ll make no apologies,” May 10)

    Yes, it is important that no additional nations acquire nuclear weapons. But the story of human suffering that Hiroshima tells makes it clear that the 15,000-plus nuclear weapons in the arsenals of a handful of countries must be abolished with urgency.

    There exists an international legal obligation to pursue — and bring to a conclusion — negotiations on nuclear disarmament. President Obama should dedicate the final months of his presidency to fulfilling this long-delayed obligation. That would be a legacy worth creating.

    Rick Wayman, Santa Barbara

    The writer is director of programs for the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.


    The Meaning of Hiroshima, 70 Years Later
    Washington Post
    April 19, 2016

    Regarding the April 16 editorial “The lessons and legacy of Hiroshima”:

    The leaders of every nation possessing nuclear weapons should be required to visit Hiroshima. This, of course, includes President Obama and whoever is elected as his successor in November. Abstract theories of national security and nuclear deterrence have been stubbornly followed for more than 70 years while willfully turning a blind eye to the very real catastrophic human consequences of nuclear weapons.

    The Post’s call for further reductions in nuclear arsenals is important, but quantitative reductions lose their meaning when the remaining hundreds or thousands of nuclear weapons are made more “usable” and equipped with new military capabilities.

    The United States is in the midst of a $1 trillion, 30-year program to modernize all aspects of its nuclear arsenal: the warheads, delivery systems, production facilities and command-and-control system. The other eight nuclear-armed nations are also engaged in modernization efforts. A visit to Hiroshima would underline the moral and humanitarian imperatives to abolish nuclear weapons. This, taken together with the existing legal obligations to pursue in good faith — and bring to a conclusion — negotiations on nuclear disarmament, makes it clear that continuing with business as usual is unacceptable.

    Rick Wayman, Santa Barbara
    The writer is director of programs for the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.

  • Sunflower Newsletter: May 2016

    Issue #226 – May 2016

    Donate Now!

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    • Perspectives
      • What Is the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation? by David Krieger
      • Opportunity for Progress by Mia Gandenberger
      • Take Three Gifts on Your Journey by David Krieger
    • Nuclear Proliferation
      • North Korea Denies It Offered to Stop Nuclear Tests
      • India Takes to the Seas in the Nuclear Arms Race
      • U.S. Senator Submits “Poison Pill” Amendment in Attempt to Kill Iran Deal
    • Nuclear Disarmament
      • Dutch Parliament Favors a Treaty Banning Nuclear Weapons
      • Cambridge Divests from Nuclear Weapons Producers
    • Nuclear Waste
      • Second Tank May Be Leaking at Hanford
    • Nuclear Modernization
      • Trillion Dollar Trainwreck
      • Sen. Feinstein Takes Aim at Nuclear Cruise Missile Funding
    • Nuclear Zero Lawsuits
      • Another Kind of Nuclear Security Summit
    • Take Action
      • Urge President Obama to Visit Hiroshima
      • Letters to the Wall
      • Vote for Youth
    • Resources
      • May’s Featured Blog
      • This Month in Nuclear Threat History
      • Creating True Love at Home and Peace on the Planet
      • Ghosts of the Cold War
    • Foundation Activities
      • Letter to the Editor of the Washington Post
      • Peace Leadership in Europe
      • What Is Your Legacy Going to Be?
      • Video Contest Winners Announced
      • Rick Wayman Receives Activist of the Year Award
    • Quotes

     

    Perspectives

    What Is the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation?

    A voice of conscience in the Nuclear Age. The Foundation views peace as an imperative of the Nuclear Age, believing that any war fought today has the potential to become a nuclear war of mass annihilation.

    An advocate for peace, international law and a world without nuclear weapons. The Foundation not only educates but is a nonpartisan advocate of achieving peace, strengthening international law, and ending the nuclear weapons threat to humanity.

    A community of committed global citizens. The Foundation is composed of individuals from all walks of life and all parts of the globe who seek to end the nuclear weapons threat to humanity and to build a more just and peaceful world.

    To read more, click here.

    Opportunity for Progress

    Starting on May 2, the open-ended working group (OEWG) to take forward nuclear disarmament negotiations will meet for its second session in Geneva. During the May meetings, it is imperative that states focus their time on discussing elements for a treaty banning nuclear weapons and that they make concrete recommendations to the UN General Assembly in relation to moving forward with negotiations on such a treaty.

    After a fruitful discussion in February, where the prohibition of nuclear weapons provided the key framework for debate and where states and civil society interacted in ways far superior to what we are used to seeing in most multilateral forums on disarmament, it is crucial that the next two weeks are used constructively. The purpose of this body is to “substantively address” and make recommendations to the UN General Assembly about “concrete effective legal measures, legal provisions and norms” to achieve and maintain a nuclear weapon free world. With a significantly greater number of non-governmental organisations and academic institution participating this month, the bar for a fruitful and result-focused debate is raised and states will have to make use of this opportunity for a more focused debate defining elements and processes for the way ahead.

    To read more, click here.

    Take Three Gifts on Your Journey

    Mr. President,

    The word is out.

    You will visit Hiroshima in May.

    In Hiroshima, nuclear weapons become real.

    The possibility of destroying civilization
    becomes tangible.

    Visiting Hiroshima is an opportunity to lead the way back
    from the brink.

    Take three gifts to the world on your journey: your courage,
    your humanity, and a proposal to end the insanity.

    To read more, click here.

    Nuclear Proliferation

    North Korea Denies It Offered to Stop Nuclear Tests

    North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Su Yong has denied that he offered to stop North Korean nuclear tests in exchange for a halt to U.S.-South Korean military exercises held on the Korean Peninsula.

    The United States, South Korea and other countries have expressed concerns that North Korea is preparing for its fifth nuclear test, possibly in advance of its Seventh Party Congress in early May.

    Elizabeth Shim, “North Korea Denies It Proposed End to Nuclear Tests,” United Press International, April 26, 2016.

    India Takes to the Seas in the Nuclear Arms Race

    India’s first nuclear-armed submarine, the INS Arihant, is currently undergoing trials at sea and will likely soon be actively deployed. The 100-member crew has been trained by Russian nuclear submarine specialists. In March 2016, India conducted two test launches of its K-4 submarine launched ballistic missile.

    Deployment of a nuclear-armed submarine by India will give the country the third leg in a nuclear triad of land-based missiles, bomber aircraft, and submarines. This escalation in the nuclear arms race will undoubtedly be seen as a threat by India’s nuclear-armed rivals Pakistan and China.

    Indian Navy Goes Nuclear: Country’s First Nuke Sub Undergoing Sea Tests,” Sputnik News, April 18, 2016.

    Senator Submits “Poison Pill” Amendment in Attempt to Kill Iran Deal

    Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) attempted to introduce a “poison pill” amendment in the Senate’s FY2017 energy spending bill that would prevent the Obama administration from buying heavy water from Iran’s nuclear program. Under the nuclear deal reached last year between Iran and the “P5+1,” Iran is responsible for reducing its stock of heavy water by selling, diluting or disposing of it.

    The legislation required 60 votes to move ahead in the Senate, but it only received 50.

    Richard Cowan and Patricia Zengerle, “Iran Nuclear Deal Fight Threatens Senate Spending Bill,” Reuters, April 27, 2016.

    Nuclear Disarmament

    Dutch Parliament Favors a Treaty Banning Nuclear Weapons

    On April 28, the Dutch Parliament held a debate on a national ban on nuclear weapons. The debate came about through a citizens’ initiative by PAX, ASN Bank and the Dutch Red Cross.

    The result of the debate was that a vast majority of the House wants the Netherlands to start working internationally for a nuclear weapons ban. Bert Koenders, Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs, agreed to adhere to the wishes of the House at the UN’s Open Ended Working Group meeting on nuclear disarmament. This is particularly significant, as the Netherlands is one of five European nations where U.S. nuclear weapons are stationed under the auspices of NATO.

    Krista van Velzen, a campaigner with PAX, said, “Up until now the Government didn’t think the time was right to negotiate a ban on nuclear weapons. Today the Minister stated he would now actively pursue this. From now on the Netherlands will plead for start of these negotiations. This is a big step forward.”

    Selma van Oostwaard, “Dutch Parliament: The Netherlands Needs to Negotiate an International Nuclear Weapons Ban Treaty,” PAX, April 28, 2016.

    Cambridge Divests from Nuclear Weapons Producers

    On March 21, the Cambridge, Massachusetts, City Council voted unanimously to divest the city’s $1 billion pension fund from companies that finance or produce nuclear weapons. This was a collaborative effort, achieved with the cooperation of NGOs, academics and funders. The resolution is based on the information in the report “Don’t Bank on the Bomb,” produced by the Dutch organization PAX.

    Commenting on the importance of this City Council vote, physicist Stephen Hawking said, “If you want to slow the nuclear arms race, then put your money where your mouth is and don’t bank on the bomb!”

    Joseph Gerson, “Cambridge City Council Divests from Nuclear Weapons Production,” Truthout, April 11, 2016.

    Nuclear Waste

    Second Tank May Be Leaking at Hanford

    Officials are trying to determine whether a second massive underground tank is leaking at the Hanford nuclear reservation in Washington state. Hanford has long struggled with leaks in underground tanks containing highly radioactive waste. Twenty-eight double-walled tanks were recently installed in the hope that they would prevent more leaks from occurring. However, officials have already discovered that one double-walled tank has leaked thousands of gallons from its primary tank into the annulus. It now appears that at least one additional double-walled tank is experiencing leaks.

    Hanford, a sprawling site near Richland, WA, was used for years to produce plutonium for U.S. nuclear weapons. There are millions of gallons of highly-radioactive liquid waste stored in underground tanks. The site is near the Columbia River, a source of drinking water for millions of people in the Pacific Northwest.

    While the United States continues to increase its budget for nuclear weapons maintenance, modernization and production, the budget for cleaning up existing environmental disasters at nuclear weapons facilities around the country has stayed flat year after year.

    Nicholas K. Geranios, “2nd Hanford Tank May Be Leaking, Officials Say,” Associated Press, April 26, 2016.

    Nuclear Modernization

    Trillion Dollar Trainwreck

    Despite lofty rhetoric about a world free of nuclear weapons, President Obama has launched what the Alliance for Nuclear Accountability (ANA) calls the “Trillion Dollar Trainwreck.” That is the title of ANA’s new report on Obama’s massive plan to modernize the U.S. nuclear weapons arsenal.

    Marylia Kelley, co-author of the report and Executive Director of Tri-Valley CAREs, said, “The United States is initiating a new nuclear arms race, because the other nuclear-armed states, of course, when they look at our modernization program, are now beginning their own. We need this to be rolled back.”

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s Director of Programs Rick Wayman and intern Alexis Hill also contributed to the “Trillion Dollar Trainwreck” report. Click here to download a copy.

    Amy Goodman, “Obama’s Trillion-Dollar Nuclear-Arms Train Wreck,” Democracy Now, April 15, 2016.

    Sen. Feinstein Takes Aim at Nuclear Cruise Missile Funding

    Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) has said that she will seek to stop funding for a Long Range Standoff (LRSO) cruise missile that “is unaffordable, and may well be unnecessary.” The U.S. currently plans to spend approximately $30 billion on this new cruise missile and nuclear warhead, which critics charge would be indistinguishable from a conventionally-armed cruise missile to an adversary.

    Sen. Feinstein received an award from the Alliance for Nuclear Accountability on April 19 for her outspoken work to stop funding for the LRSO. In accepting the award, she said, “I believe it is unnecessary…But most of all, I’m really concerned that the Defense Department may intend to actually use this particular nuclear cruise missile. In a letter sent two years ago, Under Secretary of Defense Frank Kendall wrote the following: ‘Beyond deterrence, an LRSO-armed bomber force provides the President with uniquely flexible options in an extreme crisis.’ This suggestion — that nuclear weapons should be a flexible option — is alarming. It is a lowering of the threshold, and we must never do this.”

    Aaron Mehta, “Feinstein Takes Aim at Nuclear Cruise Missile Funding,” Defense News, April 14, 2016.

    Nuclear Zero Lawsuits

    Another Kind of Nuclear Security Summit

    In an article for Pressenza, Jacqueline Cabasso, Executive Director of Western States Legal Foundation, summarized the March 2016 hearings at the International Court of Justice in the Marshall Islands’ nuclear disarmament cases against India, Pakistan and the United Kingdom. Ms. Cabasso wrote:

    “The recent Nuclear Security Summit hosted by President Obama in Washington, DC generated a goodly amount of hype, including some well-deserved criticism of its narrow focus on securing civilian highly enriched uranium (HEU) and other modest, voluntary steps aimed at preventing terrorists from acquiring weapons-useable nuclear and radiological materials. The Summit was silent on the huge stocks of HEU and plutonium in military programs and the more than 15,000 existing nuclear weapons possessed by States, including the Summit’s host – the only country that has used nuclear weapons in war.

    “Another kind of nuclear security summit took place last month in The Hague, as the tiny Pacific nation of the Marshall Islands took on three nuclear-armed giants before the highest court in the world. Hubris and hypocrisy on one side, courage and vision on the other were on global display.”

    Jacqueline Cabasso, “Another Kind of Nuclear Security Summit: The Marshall Islands vs. the Nuclear-Armed States,” Pressenza, April 9, 2016.

     Take Action

    Urge President Obama to Visit Hiroshima

    On April 11, 2016, John Kerry became the first sitting U.S. Secretary of State to visit the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum and lay flowers at the memorial cenotaph. Secretary Kerry’s words indicate that he was moved by the experience, calling it “gut wrenching” and “a stark, harsh compelling reminder…of our obligation to end the threat of nuclear weapons.”

    However, the United States continues to rely heavily on nuclear weapons and is planning to spend at least $1 trillion over the next 30 years to “modernize” all aspects of its nuclear arsenal, including the warheads, submarines, missiles, bombers, production facilities and command and control infrastructure.

    Please encourage President Obama to visit Hiroshima when he is in Japan next month for the G7 Summit. Actions speak louder than words. That’s why we are encouraging President Obama not to come to Hiroshima empty-handed.

    Send a message to President Obama today and encourage him to become the first sitting U.S. President to visit Hiroshima, and to make significant substantive contributions to nuclear disarmament while he is there.

    Letters to the Wall

    If you have suffered through the Vietnam war, as a military veteran, a resister, a partner of a veteran, a child or a sibling of a veteran, or just as a caring citizen of the U.S., your voice is needed. On Memorial Day, May 30, Veterans for Peace will deliver letters to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial (The Wall) with heartfelt messages to those young men and women whose names are on The Wall.

    Your note can be one paragraph long or many paragraphs. It can be written to a specific name on The Wall or just as a general cry out against war. Rest assured that your letter will be treated with the respect and caring it deserves — this ceremony is not a political action. It is an act of remembrance and grief.

    You have until May 14 to write your letter and send it either as an email message to rawlings@maine.edu or as a handwritten letter to Doug Rawlings, 13 Soper Road, Chesterville, Maine 04938.

    Vote for Youth

    For the next few weeks, you have an opportunity to support a dedicated group of young people around the world working for the abolition of nuclear weapons. The International Youth Summit for Nuclear Abolition met in Hiroshima in August 2015, bringing 300 youth together to learn more about nuclear weapons issues, meet with hibakusha – survivors of the U.S. atomic bombing – and develop collaborative projects to achieve their common goal of a world free of nuclear weapons.

    This Youth Summit and pledge has been chosen as one of ten semi-finalists out of over 4.5 million submissions in One Billion Acts for Peace, a United Nations-supported peace initiative organized by Peace Jam. Now through May 12, you can vote once a day for the Youth Summit online. The top five projects will receive a Hero Award in June from Rigoberta Menchu Tum, a Nobel Peace laureate from Guatemala.

    Rick Wayman, our Director of Programs, was Co-Chair of the International Youth Summit for Nuclear Abolition, and Josie Parkhouse, a former NAPF summer intern, was a core participant.

    Your vote could make the difference in providing encouragement and visibility to this important emerging network of dedicated young people. Please take a moment to vote today, and every day through May 12.

     Resources

    May’s Featured Blog

    This month’s featured blog is Wildfire >_. Articles are primarily written by Richard Lennane, Chief Inflammatory Officer for Wildfire. He will be very active, both on the blog and on Twitter, during the May session of the Open Ended Working Group in Geneva.

    Recent titles include: “Canada’s Accidental Insight”; “A Grand Unified Treaty”; and “Norway Shows Us the Future.”

    Keep up to date with news from Wildfire >_ at this link, and follow them on Twitter.

    This Month in Nuclear Threat History

    History chronicles many instances when humans have been threatened by nuclear weapons. In this article, Jeffrey Mason outlines some of the most serious threats that have taken place in the month of May, including the May 17, 2014, “Bent Spear” incident, in which Air Force personnel caused $1.8 million in damage to a Minuteman III Intercontinental Ballistic Missile carrying a nuclear warhead.

    To read Mason’s full article, click here.

    For more information on the history of the Nuclear Age, visit NAPF’s Nuclear Files website.

    Creating True Love at Home and Peace on the Planet

    Martin and Dorothie Hellman have written a book entitled A New Map for Relationships: Creating True Love at Home and Peace on the Planet. The approach combines a concern for global issues with improving one’s marriage or other intimate relationship. The authors write of their own experiences implementing this approach. They found that working on both the personal and global dimensions simultaneously accelerated their progress on each of them.

    The full book will likely not be published until June, but the authors have begun releasing chapters of the book in the past few weeks. You can access the first six chapters of the book at this link.

    Ghosts of the Cold War

    The United States has more than 1,500 nuclear warheads deployed on a “triad” of submarines, bombers, and land-based missiles. These doomsday weapons – the ghosts of the Cold War – were built to fight an enemy that no longer exists. Nonetheless, President Obama has approved plans to rebuild and maintain them all, with a price tag of about $1 trillion over the next 30 years.

    One of them is a new nuclear air-launched cruise missile that will cost about $30 billion in taxpayer dollars – yet does nothing to protect us from 21st century threats like terrorism, cyber attacks and global warming.

    A new Ploughshares Fund report calls on President Obama to cancel the new nuclear cruise missile, also known as the Long Range Stand-Off weapon or LRSO. It argues that the new missile is strategically unnecessary, extraordinarily expensive, and undermines US security.

    To read the report, click here.

    Foundation Activities

    Letter to the Editor of the Washington Post

    The lead letter to the editor of the Washington Post on April 19 was written by Rick Wayman, NAPF Director of Programs. In the letter, Wayman called on not only President Obama, but the leaders of all nine nuclear-armed nations to visit Hiroshima. He stressed not only the moral obligations to negotiate for nuclear abolition, but also the existing legal obligation to negotiate, and bring to a conclusion, negotiations on nuclear disarmament.

    To read the letter, click here.

    Peace Leadership in Europe

    Peace Museum Vienna will host NAPF Peace Leadership Director Paul K. Chappell on Thursday, May 19, for a “Peace Talk Evening” at 6:30 PM at the museum, located in the historic city centre. Recent presentations have included Dr. Mary Shuttleworth, president and founder of Youth for Human Rights International.

    At Peace Museum Vienna, Paul Chappell will present his ground-breaking ideas on “Why Peace Is Possible” and “Why Our World Needs Peace Literacy.” Chappell will bring the seven forms of peace literacy to an international audience, to help educate us to solve the root causes of our problems rather than merely dealing with symptoms, and move us closer to ending war and waging peace.

    To read more about this event in Vienna, click here.

    What Is Your Legacy Going to Be?

    What is your legacy going to be? Join us for a special presentation about the importance and the benefits of planning your legacy. Hear from our special guest, attorney Joe Green, on May 24 from 12:30 to 2:00 pm PDT. There are two ways you can participate:

    • We would love to see you in person. Please join us for a delicious lunch at our office in Santa Barbara. This will be a chance to meet some of our staff, Board Members, and ask Joe Green questions. Please RSVP by May 18 (space is limited).
    • If you are located outside of Santa Barbara or you are unable to come in person, we have a call-in option. Simply dial 641-715-3580, then passcode: 939016#. Please kindly RSVP so we can estimate how many people will join by phone.

    To RSVP, please email enicklasson@napf.org or call 805-965-3443.

    Video Contest Winners Announced

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation has announced the winners of its 2016 Swackhamer Disarmament Video Contest. Dozens of contest entries were received featuring videos about why the United States and other nuclear-armed countries should “Humanize, not Modernize.”

    First prize went to Konane Gurfield of San Diego, CA. Second prize went to Elias Reta of Stone Mountain, GA. Third prize went to David Kirk West of Medford, OR. Thanks to all who entered the contest and submitted their ideas about the need to #HumanizeNotModernize.

    Winning videos can be viewed here.

    Rick Wayman Receives Activist of the Year Award

    On April 18, Rick Wayman, Programs Director of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, received the “Activist of the Year” award from the Alliance for Nuclear Accountability (ANA). The award was presented at ANA’s “DC Days” on Capitol Hill, honoring Wayman’s “dynamic leadership in bringing the Marshall Islanders’ Nuclear Zero litigation to world attention, activating the next generation of peace leaders, and guiding ANA as board member and tech guru.”

    Also honored at the event were Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA); Rep. Adam Smith (D-WA); Chuck Montano (whistleblower from Los Alamos National Laboratory); and Kay Cumbow (activist and organizer against nuclear waste in the Great Lakes region).

    Quotes

     

    “War is an invention of the human mind. The human mind can invent peace with justice.”

    Norman Cousins (1915-1990), American author and peace activist. This quote appears in the book Speaking of Peace: Quotations to Inspire Action, which is available for purchase in the NAPF Peace Store.

     

    “Within a single flash of light, Hiroshima became a place of desolation, with heaps of rubble, grotesquely wounded people and blackened corpses everywhere. The G7 Foreign Ministers walk on the ground where people’s bones are still being found. It is on this ground where thousands of people were instantly melted or vaporized. And yet the same governments continue to build their national security around these inhumane weapons and oppose efforts to prohibit them.”

    Setsuko Thurlow, a survivor of the U.S. atomic bombing of Hiroshima and member of the NAPF Advisory Council, commenting on the April 2016 visit to Hiroshima by Foreign Ministers of the G7, including U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.

     

    “One is called to live nonviolently, even if the change one works for seems impossible. It may or may not be possible to turn the US around through nonviolent revolution. But one thing favors such an attempt: the total inability of violence to change anything for the better.”

    Daniel Berrigan, a Catholic priest and peace activist, who passed away on April 30 at the age of 94. He played an instrumental role in inspiring the anti-war and anti-draft movement during the late 1960s as well as the anti-nuclear movement. Click here to read Fr. John Dear’s remembrance of Daniel Berrigan.

     

    “In the name of womanhood and of humanity, I earnestly ask that a general congress of women without limit of nationality may be appointed and held at some place deemed most convenient and at the earliest period consistent with its objects, to promote the alliance of the different nationalities, the amicable settlement of international questions, the great and general interests of peace.”

    Julia Ward Howe, in her Mother’s Day proclamation of 1870.

     

    “Where are those who will shatter the silence? Or do we wait until the first nuclear missile is fired?”

    John Pilger, a journalist and filmmaker, in a recent essay entitled “A World War Has Begun. Break the Silence.”

    Editorial Team

     

    Lindsay Apperson
    David Krieger
    Carol Warner
    Rick Wayman

  • We Stand With the Marshall Islands

    cropped-nuclear_zero_lawsuits.jpgYesterday marked two years since the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) took a courageous stand against the world’s nine nuclear-armed nations. On April 24, 2014, the RMI filed nine groundbreaking lawsuits at the International Court of Justice and another lawsuit, separately, against the United States in U.S. Federal Court.

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation is proud to stand with the Marshall Islands in support of this initiative. NAPF has served as a consultant to the RMI from day one, and will continue to do so as the cases move forward. At this time, we are focused on growing public awareness of the cases through traditional and social media, as well as coordinating a consortium of over 100 non-governmental organizations around the world that have signed on in support of the campaign.

    Last month, the International Court of Justice in The Hague heard two weeks of oral arguments in the RMI’s cases against the United Kingdom, India and Pakistan. These were the first contentious nuclear disarmament cases ever brought before the world’s highest court.

    We were in The Hague to support the legal team and report on the proceedings for the Pressenza international press agency. You can see a summary of our articles here. If you are interested in reviewing the many articles written in the media about the ICJ cases during the month of March, including from Associated Press, Reuters, NPR and BBC, click here.

    The RMI’s case against the United States is currently pending in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

    More information about all of the cases is available at www.nuclearzero.org. While you’re there, if you have not yet signed the petition in support of the Marshall Islands’ action, you can join the 5 million-plus who have already done so.

    Please consider making a financial contribution to allow us to continue providing support for the Marshall Islands’ critical efforts in the courts.

  • NAPF Letter to the Editor of the Washington Post

    Rick Wayman, NAPF’s Director of Programs, had a letter to the editor published in the Washington Post on April 19, 2016. The letter appears below:

    http://bit.ly/wapoletter

    The meaning of Hiroshima, 70 years later

    Regarding the April 16 editorial “The lessons and legacy of Hiroshima”:

    The leaders of every nation possessing nuclear weapons should be required to visit Hiroshima. This, of course, includes President Obama and whoever is elected as his successor in November. Abstract theories of national security and nuclear deterrence have been stubbornly followed for more than 70 years while willfully turning a blind eye to the very real catastrophic human consequences of nuclear weapons.

    The Post’s call for further reductions in nuclear arsenals is important, but quantitative reductions lose their meaning when the remaining hundreds or thousands of nuclear weapons are made more “usable” and equipped with new military capabilities.

    The United States is in the midst of a $1 trillion, 30-year program to modernize all aspects of its nuclear arsenal: the warheads, delivery systems, production facilities and command-and-control system. The other eight nuclear-armed nations are also engaged in modernization efforts. A visit to Hiroshima would underline the moral and humanitarian imperatives to abolish nuclear weapons. This, taken together with the existing legal obligations to pursue in good faith — and bring to a conclusion — negotiations on nuclear disarmament, makes it clear that continuing with business as usual is unacceptable.

    Rick Wayman, Santa Barbara

    The writer is director of programs for
    the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.

  • April 14: Political Responsibility in the Nuclear Age

    Please join us on April 14 as leaders of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation discuss political responsibility in the Nuclear Age, how nuclear weapons affect Santa Barbara and the implications of the U.S. plan to spend $1 trillion modernizing its nuclear arsenal over the next three decades.
    calendar_4.14.2016

    The event will take place at the Faulkner Gallery at the Santa Barbara Public Library, 40 E. Anapamu Street, Santa Barbara, from 7:00-8:30 pm on Thursday, April 14. The event is free and open to the public.

    Richard Falk is a Professor of International Law and Practice Emeritus at Princeton, where he was a member of the faculty for 40 years. He was Special Rapporteur for the UN on Human Rights in the Palestinian territories from 2008-14. He is the author and editor of numerous books, including Legality and Legitimacy in Global Affairs.

    David Krieger is a founder of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, and has served as President of the Foundation since 1982. Among other leadership positions, he is one of 50 Councilors from around the world on the World Future Council. He is the author and editor of numerous books and articles related to achieving peace in the Nuclear Age.

    Robert B. Laney is the Board Chair of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. In his early career Rob served as an officer in the U.S. Navy and as a Judge Advocate in the U.S. Marine Corps. He is a strong and vocal advocate of the rule of law and achieving a world free of nuclear weapons as required by international law.

    Click here for a flyer.

  • #NuclearZero at the ICJ: Our Daily Summaries of the Hearings

    Peace Palace
    Photograph: CIJ-ICJ/UN-ONU, Capital Photos/Frank van Beek – Courtesy of the ICJ. All rights reserved.

    Rick Wayman, NAPF’s Director of Programs, attended all seven days of hearings at the International Court of Justice in The Hague in the Marshall Islands’ nuclear disarmament cases against India, Pakistan and the United Kingdom. Below you will find links to each day’s report, published by the Pressenza International Press Agency. For more information about the Marshall Islands’ lawsuits, visit www.nuclearzero.org.

    Preview: The Marshall Islands at the ICJ — “We are, basically, asking the Court to tell the respondent states to live up to their obligations under international law and to conduct negotiations leading to the required result: nuclear disarmament in all its aspects,” said Phon van den Biesen, Co-Agent for the RMI and attorney at law in Amsterdam, who is leading the International Legal Team.

    Day One: Marshall Islands Shines Against India — It was an historic day at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), as oral arguments in the first-ever contentious cases on nuclear disarmament began at the ICJ. The Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) argued strongly in favor of the ICJ holding jurisdiction in the case that the RMI has brought against India.

    Day Two: Where Is Pakistan? — Pakistan chose not to participate in oral arguments at the case against it at the International Court of Justice. On 8 March, the Marshall Islands presented its case to the Court. Marshall Islands Co-Agent Tony de Brum recounted the only “snowfall” the Marshall Islands had ever experienced — the radioactive fallout after the 1 March 1954 Castle Bravo nuclear test.

    Day Three: What Is the Sound of One Hand Clapping? — In its opening pleadings on 9 March, Sir Daniel Bethlehem told the Court, “The United Kingdom had thought, although naively, as it now appears, that we had a strong record on nuclear disarmament.”

    Day Four: Aspirational Rhetoric vs. Real Actions — India pleaded to the Court on 10 March that it is, in fact, deeply committed to nuclear disarmament because it consistently votes in favor of various disarmament resolutions at the United Nations General Assembly. Its active involvement in the nuclear arms race, though, tells a different story.

    Day Five: Everybody’s Doing It — In the Marshall Islands’ first session of oral arguments in the case against the United Kingdom on 11 March, Phon van den Biesen, Co-Agent of the Marshall Islands, outlined how the UK is not only not engaged in nuclear disarmament negotiations, but “on the contrary it is and continues to be opposed to such negotiations.”

    Day Six (Part One): Contempt of Court — In the Marshall Islands’ final round of oral argument against India on 14 March, Phon van den Biesen told the Court that India’s active participation in the nuclear arms race – including a test-launch of its K-4 submarine-launched ballistic missile on 7 March (the first day of the ICJ hearings) – could be described as “contempt of court.”

    Day Six (Part Two): Appealing to Sentiment — In the United Kingdom’s final round of oral argument on 14 March, Sir David Bethlehem told the Court that the Marshall Islands was simply “appealing to sentiment” by recounting its experience as a test site for 67 U.S. nuclear weapons tests, and that the cases should be dismissed.

    Day Seven: Making a Big Fuss —  In closing arguments at the International Court of Justice, RMI Co-Agent Tony de Brum asked the Court “to adjudge and declare that the Court has jurisdiction over the claims of the Marshall Islands submitted in its Application of 24 April 2014; and to adjudge and declare that the Marshall Islands’ claims are admissible.”

  • Oral Hearings on the Marshall Islands’ Nuclear Disarmament Cases to Begin at the International Court of Justice

    March 2, 2016
    Contact:
    Rick Wayman
    +31.68.6489881
    rwayman@napf.org

    Sandy Jones
    +1 805 965 3443
    sjones@napf.org

    On March 7, 2016, the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the world’s highest court, will begin hearings in The Hague, Netherlands, on the preliminary objections raised by the United Kingdom (UK), India and Pakistan in the nuclear disarmament cases brought by the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI). The purpose of the hearings is for the Court to determine whether any legal obstacles prevent the cases from going forward to consideration on their merits.

    These unprecedented lawsuits were submitted by the RMI to the ICJ on April 24, 2014. They aim to hold the nine nuclear-armed states (U.S., Russia, UK, France, China, Israel, India, Pakistan and North Korea) accountable for violating international law by failing to respect their nuclear disarmament obligations under the 1968 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and customary international law.

    The RMI, a tiny island nation in the Pacific, was used for 12 years, from 1946 to 1958, as a testing ground for nuclear bombs by the United States. Sixty-seven nuclear weapons were tested and the health and environmental effects of those tests still plague the Marshall Islanders to this day. The destructive power of the 1954 “Castle Bravo” nuclear test was 1,000 times greater than the bomb that destroyed the city of Hiroshima, Japan.

    Tony de Brum, former Marshall Islands Foreign Minister and Co-Agent in the cases, said, “I have seen with my very own eyes nuclear devastation and know with conviction that nuclear weapons must never again be visited upon humanity. Nuclear weapons are a senseless threat to survival and there are basic norms that compel those who possess them to pursue and achieve their elimination. This is the subject of legal action by my country at the International Court of Justice.”

    Only the UK, India and Pakistan are appearing before the Court, since only they accept the compulsory jurisdiction of the ICJ. China, the U.S., Russia, France, Israel and North Korea have chosen to ignore the ICJ cases.

    The UK case differs from the cases of India and Pakistan in that the UK is a party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and therefore is bound by Article VI of that treaty which requires states to pursue negotiations “in good faith” to end the nuclear arms race and achieve total nuclear disarmament. The Marshall Islands contends that India and Pakistan are bound by similar obligations under customary international law.

    “From a legal perspective, the issues presented by these cases are ordinary ones, but a positive outcome will, spectacularly, change the world. We are, basically, asking the Court to tell the respondent states to live up to their obligations under international law and to conduct negotiations leading to the required result: nuclear disarmament in all its aspects,” said Phon van den Biesen, attorney at law in Amsterdam, Co-Agent for the RMI who is leading the International Legal Team.

    With these cases the RMI asks the International Court of Justice to follow up on its earlier findings in the Advisory Opinion it delivered in 1996 on the illegality of the threat or use of nuclear weapons. At the time the Court considered that the continued international debate on the legality of these deadly weapons threatens the stability of the international order. It added that “the long-promised complete nuclear disarmament appears to be the most appropriate means” to put an end to that untenable situation. (para. 98, http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/95/7495.pdf)

    World leaders, international non-governmental organizations, world-class experts and Nobel Peace Laureates have offered strong support for the cases, denouncing nuclear weapons as immoral and illegal (http://nuclearzero.org/#lastone).

    Contact information for the International Legal Team:

    Phon van den Biesen, Co-Agent of the RMI
    Attorney at Law at Van den Biesen Kloostra Advocaten, Amsterdam http://vdbkadvocaten.eu/en/phon-van-den-biesen-en/
    +31.65.2061266
    phonvandenbiesen@vdbkadvocaten.eu

    A complete list of the International Legal Team as well as information on the lawsuits can be found at www.nuclearzero.org. The California-based Nuclear Age Peace Foundation is consultant to the Republic of the Marshall Islands.

  • Sunflower Newsletter: March 2016

    Issue #224 – March 2016

    Donate Now!

    Click here or on the image above to make a donation to support the work of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.

    • Perspectives
      • Message to Youth by David Krieger
      • On Balance and Choices by Mia Gandenberger and Ray Acheson
      • Comments on the Manhattan Project National Historical Park by Ralph Hutchison
    • Nuclear Proliferation
      • China Is Upgrading Nuclear Missiles with Multiple Warheads
    • Nuclear Disarmament
      • Open-Ended Working Group Begins in Geneva
    • Nuclear Insanity
      • U.S. Nuclear Workers Discarded Secret Documents in Unclassified Trash
    • Nuclear Testing
      • North Korea Launches Long-Range Rocket
      • U.S. Launches Two Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles
      • French President Recognizes Effects of Nuclear Tests
    • Nuclear Modernization
      • Obama Administration Blames Russia for $1 Trillion U.S. Nuclear Modernization Plan
      • Rep. Blumenauer Speaks Out Against Nuclear Modernization
    • Nuclear Zero Lawsuits
      • Oral Arguments at the International Court of Justice Begin March 7
      • International Peace Bureau Secretary General Comments on Nobel Prize Nomination
    • Resources
      • March’s Featured Blog
      • This Month in Nuclear Threat History
      • Why an Emergency Response to a Nuclear Attack Is Impossible
      • The Future of the U.S. Nuclear Arsenal
      • Declassified: U.S. Nuclear Weapons at Sea
    • Foundation Activities
      • Poetry and Video Contests Now Accepting Entries
      • Peace Literacy Curriculum
      • NAPF Welcomes Elena Nicklasson as Director of Development
      • Robert Scheer Delivers Lecture on War, Peace, Truth and the Media
    • Quotes

     

    Perspectives

    Message to Youth

    You are not required
    to kill on command, to wear
    a uniform, to camouflage yourself,
    to place medals on your chest, to check
    your conscience at the door, to march
    in unison, to bear the burden of the body count.

    You are not required
    to pledge allegiance to the flag, to sing
    patriotic songs, to distort history,
    to believe lies, to support leaders when
    they are wrong, to turn a blind eye
    to violence, or to be cheerleaders for war.

    You are required
    to love, to live with compassion, to be kinder
    than necessary and to seek the truth
    in the time allotted to you.

    To read this poem on the NAPF website, click here.

    On Balance and Choices

    All NPT states parties are legally obligated to participate in activities to eliminate nuclear weapons. They cannot simply choose that a benefit of their possession or reliance on nuclear weapons is that they do not have to act with the same due diligence in accordance with the law as any other state. There is no balance between compliance and non-compliance. If this argument were to be made in another context, it would never be accepted by these states that claim it for themselves when it comes nuclear weapons.

    The nuclear-armed states are not even here. They do not even want to have a conversation with the rest of us about what to do. There is only one choice at this point in time when the nuclear-armed states are refusing to even engage let alone comply with their legal obligation to pursue effective measures for nuclear disarmament. Our only choice is to pursue an effective measure without them—to negotiate a treaty that can impact our own engagement with and relationship to nuclear weapons—financially, politically, socially, legally, morally, and ethically.

    To read more, click here.

    Comments on the Manhattan Project National Historical Park

    The Manhattan Project National Historical Park project presents complicated challenges to the interpreter. On the one hand, it commemorates a truly stunning achievement of human endeavor—scientific and technical, yes, but also engineering and building, social and cultural. It is rooted, at least in part, in a war effort that almost the entire culture embraced as noble. It’s a story of sacrifice and determination mostly by people who had no idea what they were engaged in.

    But like most history that warrants preservation, it is also a story that transcends the time and place in which it took place. The Manhattan Project changed the world; the creation of the world’s first atomic weapon which was then used to create incomprehensible human suffering, and which led to the devotion of many trillions of dollars to an arms race which is still with us today, reverberating in headlines daily as other nations consider or embark on their own quest to do what we have done.

    To read more, click here.

    Nuclear Proliferation

    China Is Upgrading Nuclear Missiles with Multiple Warheads

    On Jan. 22, 2016, Admiral Cecil D. Haney, head of U.S. Strategic Command, confirmed that China is “re-engineering its long-range ballistic missiles to carry multiple nuclear warheads.” According to U.S. intelligence, China has been replacing single-warhead intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) with multiple, independently targetable re-entry vehicles (MIRVs), for the past few months.

    The former Chinese ICBMs had only one single warhead on top of each missile. The new MIRVs are armed with between three and eight warheads, according to intelligence sources, allowing single missiles to hit a multitude of targets at once. This makes the missiles increasingly difficult to knock out with anti-missile technology. According to Rick Fisher, a China military analyst, “This, combined with China’s aggressive development of missile defenses, space warfare capabilities, and possible non-nuclear prompt global strike missiles, will quickly undermine confidence by U.S. allies in the extended U.S. nuclear deterrent.”

    Additionally, a new report by Gregory Kulacki of the Union of Concerned Scientists claims that China’s military wants to put its relatively small nuclear arsenal on hair-trigger alert for the first time. This would be a radical departure from China’s longtime nuclear policy. The U.S. and Russia continue to maintain hundreds of nuclear weapons on hair-trigger alert.

    Franz-Stefan Gady, “Confirmed: China Is Upgrading ICBMs with Multiple Warheads,” The Diplomat, February 15, 2016.

    Nuclear Disarmament

    Open-Ended Working Group Begins in Geneva

    The open-ended working group (OEWG) on taking forward multilateral disarmament negotiations, established by a UN General Assembly resolution in 2015, began in Geneva in February. The mandate of the OEWG is to substantively address concrete effective legal measures, legal provisions and norms that will need to be concluded to attain and maintain a world without nuclear weapons.

    All nine of the world’s nuclear-armed nations (United States, Russia, United Kingdom, France, China, Israel, India, Pakistan and North Korea) refused to participate in the OEWG.

    The second session of the OEWG will take place in Geneva from May 2-13. For a summary of the OEWG and many source documents presented thus far, click here to visit Reaching Critical Will.

    “Open-Ended Working Group Taking Forward Multilateral Nuclear Disarmament Negotiations,” United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs, February 23, 2016.

    Nuclear Insanity

    U.S. Nuclear Workers Discarded Nuclear Secrets in Unclassified Trash

    In June 2014, workers at the Y-12 National Security Complex found documents containing classified U.S. nuclear secrets in dozens of bags meant to be tossed out as typical trash. Upon further investigation by the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), officials determined that Babcock & Wilcox Technical Services Y-12, LLC, the contractor responsible for running the site at the time, had been improperly disposing of nuclear secrets in a way that compromised national security for more than 20 years.

    Almost two years later, the NNSA informed David J. Richardson, president of Babcock & Wilcox Technical Services, Y-12, LLC, that the NNSA would be citing his company for violations including failure to appropriately label classified information, failure to protect and control classified information, and insufficient assessment of its own performance. Despite actions that haphazardly left crucial national defense secrets vulnerable to theft for years, the NNSA decided not to fine the former Y-12 contractor nor impose any substantial civil penalty.

    Patrick Malone, “Workers Threw Out U.S. Nuclear Secrets With Common Rubbish for 20 Years,” The Center for Public Integrity, February 3, 2016.

    Nuclear Testing

    North Korea Launches Long-Range Rocket

    On February 7, North Korea (DPRK) launched a satellite into space, claiming that the launch was for scientific and peaceful purposes. Other nations, including South Korea and the United States, believe that the launch was actually a front for a ballistic missile test.

    U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said, “This is the second time in just over a month that the DPRK has chosen to conduct a major provocation, threatening not only the security of the Korean peninsula, but that of the region and the United States as well.”

    During the 1950s, Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles were used by the United States and the Soviet Union both as delivery vehicles for nuclear warheads and for the development of space programs.

    Ralph Ellis, K.J. Kwon and Tiffany Ap, “U.S., Other Nations Condemn North Korean Launch of Long-Range Rocket,” CNN, February 7, 2016.

    U.S. Launches Two Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles

    The U.S. launched Minuteman III Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles from Vandenberg Air Force Base on February 20 and 25. The missiles flew over 4,200 miles to a target in the Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands.

    Col. Craig Ramsey, commander of the 576th Flight Test Squadron, said, “Perhaps most importantly, this visible message of national security serves to assure our partners and dissuade potential aggressors.” Deputy Defense Secretary Robert Work said, “We and the Russians and the Chinese routinely do test shots to prove that the operational missiles that we have are reliable. And that is a signal…that we are prepared to use nuclear weapons in defense of our country if necessary.”

    NAPF President David Krieger responded, “These comments have the quality of those of a character in Alice in Wonderland; that is, our nuclear-capable missiles have only the best of purposes, despite the fact that they are part of an illegal, immoral and insane weapon system that could result in the total destruction of the U.S. and civilization.”

    Minot Tests Minuteman III with Launch from Vandenberg AFB,” Air Force Global Strike Command Public Affairs, February 22, 2016.

    French President Recognizes Effects of Nuclear Tests

    French President Francois Hollande has acknowledged that the 193 nuclear tests conducted by France in French Polynesia had serious consequences. Mr. Hollande said, “I recognize that the nuclear tests conducted between 1966 and 1996 in French Polynesia had an environmental impact, and caused health consequences.” In a cold change of tone, Hollande then said that without its overseas territories like French Polynesia, “France would not now have nuclear weapons and the power of [nuclear deterrence].”

    President Hollande also announced a review of the application process for compensation of testing victims. Approximately 20 people have received compensation from France, out of over 1,000 applicants, for cancers caused by nuclear testing.

    Hollande Acknowledges ‘Consequences’ of Nuclear Tests on Polynesia Trip,” France 24, February 23, 2016.

    Nuclear Modernization

    Obama Administration Blames Russia for $1 Trillion U.S. Nuclear Modernization Plan

    There has recently been a noticeable change in the public justifications presented by the Obama administration for its plan to modernize the U.S. nuclear arsenal at a cost of $1 trillion over the next 30 years. Previously, the administration insisted that the plan did not represent a return to an arms race or rivalry with Russia. In fact, in 2015, U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said that “the Cold War playbook…is not suitable for the 21st century.”

    However, in recent months, Russia has become the after-the-fact public justification for the massive nuclear modernization plan. In the Obama administration’s Fiscal Year 2017 budget, the administration states, “We are countering Russia’s aggressive policies through investments in a broad range of capabilities…[including] our nuclear arsenal.” In testimony before Congress, Obama administration official Brian McKeon said, “We are investing in the technologies that are most relevant to Russia’s provocations…to both deter nuclear attacks and reassure our allies.”

    Alex Emmons, “Obama’s Russian Rationale for $1 Trillion Nuke Plan Signals New Arms Race,” The Intercept, February 23, 2016.

    Rep. Blumenauer Speaks Out Against Nuclear Modernization

    Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR) delivered a floor speech in the House of Representatives on February 25 criticizing the Obama administration’s plans to spend billions of dollars on modernizing the U.S. nuclear arsenal in fiscal year 2017.

    Blumenauer said, “There are billions of dollars for the controversial modernization of each leg of the nuclear triad—the land-based missiles, submarine-based missiles and bombers—which have not been used in 65 years, have been unable to help us with the military challenges that we face now in the Middle East, and are going to consume huge sums of money in this hopelessly redundant program.”

    Rep. Blumenauer Floor Speech on Excessive Nuclear Modernization Spending,” C-SPAN, February 25, 2016.

    Nuclear Zero Lawsuits

    Oral Arguments at the International Court of Justice Begin March 7

    Oral arguments in the Marshall Islands’ lawsuits against the United Kingdom, India and Pakistan will begin at the International Court of Justice in The Hague on March 7 and conclude on March 16. These hearings will be on preliminary objections raised by the respondent countries. Rick Wayman, NAPF’s Director of Programs, will attend the hearings. Click here to sign up to receive Rick’s daily email update and analysis of what is happening in The Hague.

    International Peace Bureau Secretary General Comments on Nobel Prize Nomination

    Colin Archer, Secretary General of the International Peace Bureau, recently did a radio interview with Australian Broadcasting Corporation about IPB’s nomination of Tony de Brum and the legal team representing the Marshall Islands in the lawsuits against the world’s nine nuclear-armed nations.

    Mr. Archer said, “[The Marshall Islands] could have concentrated on their own situation. But I think they had a bigger vision, and it’s to their credit that they decided to take this case to the International Court of Justice and also to the U.S. Federal District Court. We think it’s the most promising international effort and it does put the spotlight on the legal aspect, because it’s not possible to use these weapons in any legal way.”

    Richard Ewart, “Nobel Peace Prize Nomination for Former Marshall Islands Foreign Minister Tony de Brum,” Australian Broadcasting Corporation, February 7, 2016.

     Resources

    March’s Featured Blog

    This month’s featured blog is Watchblog from Nuclear Watch New Mexico. Blog topics primarily focus around nuclear weapons-related research and production taking place at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. Some articles focus on broader issues of U.S. nuclear weapons modernization and the environmental impact of nuclear weapons production.

    Recent titles include “Los Alamos Lab Would Get $2.1 Billion in Proposed Budget; Officials Discuss Plans for Making Plutonium Pits,” “Watchdogs Call for Renewed Investigation of Corruption at Los Alamos Lab,” and “Nuclear Watch NM Gives Notice of Intent to Sue Over Lack of Cleanup at the Los Alamos Lab.”

    This Month in Nuclear Threat History

    History chronicles many instances when humans have been threatened by nuclear weapons. In this article, Jeffrey Mason outlines some of the most serious threats that have taken place in the month of March, including the March 14, 1961 incident in which a U.S. B-52F-70 BW Stratofortress carrying two Mark-39 hydrogen bombs crashed near Yuba City, California, tearing the nuclear weapons from the plane on impact.

    To read Mason’s full article, click here.

    For more information on the history of the Nuclear Age, visit NAPF’s Nuclear Files website.

    Why an Emergency Response to a Nuclear Attack Is Impossible

    International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW) has published a short presentation in video format about the emergency response to a nuclear attack. The four-minute video describes in simple, stark words and images the overwhelming obstacles that would confront doctors and first responders following a nuclear attack.

    To watch the video, click here.

    Dr. Ira Helfand of IPPNW recently gave a TEDx talk entitled “Can We Prevent Nuclear War?” Click here to watch this nine-minute video.

    The Future of the U.S. Nuclear Arsenal

    The Center for American Progress has launched a new website that highlights the high cost of the Obama administration’s plans to modernize the U.S. nuclear arsenal. The Obama administration’s plan would replace nearly every missile, submarine, aircraft and warhead in the force, driving the cost of modernizing the U.S. nuclear arsenal to $1 trillion over 30 years.

    This website allows visitors to explore the Obama administration’s plan and the alternative plan proposed by the Center for American Progress. It also has tools that allow visitors to create their own plan for modernization.

    Click here to visit the site.

    Declassified: U.S. Nuclear Weapons at Sea

    Hans Kristensen and Robert Norris have published a new report analyzing newly declassified documents from the United States about the number of nuclear weapons it deployed at sea during the Cold War.

    The declassified documents show that the United States during much of the 1970s and the 1980s deployed about a quarter of its entire nuclear weapons stockpile at sea. The all-time high was in 1975 when 6,191 weapons were afloat, but even in 1990, after the fall of the Berlin Wall, there were 5,716 weapons at sea. That’s more nuclear weapons than the size of the entire U.S. nuclear stockpile today.

    To read the full report, click here.

    Foundation Activities

    Poetry and Video Contests Now Accepting Entries

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s annual poetry and video contests are currently accepting entries. The 2016 Swackhamer Disarmament Video Contest invites contestants to submit videos of up to three minutes on nuclear weapons modernization – specifically, why we should “humanize, not modernize.” Entries must be submitted by April 1, 2016.

    The 2016 Barbara Mandigo Kelly Peace Poetry Awards encourage poets to explore and illuminate positive visions of peace and the human spirit. Entries must be postmarked by April 30, 2016.

    More information, including submission instructions, for both contests is available online at www.peacecontests.org.

    Peace Literacy Curriculum

    One month ago NAPF Peace Leadership Director Paul K. Chappell published his essay on “Why Our World Needs Peace Literacy.” His next step is the development of the NAPF Peace Literacy curriculum.

    Paul Chappell will introduce the new NAPF Peace Literacy curriculum at a one day workshop for educators on June 8, 2016, at the International Conference on Conflict Resolution Education (ICCRE) at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio.  His co-presenter will be Dayton International Peace Museum Board Member Katherine Rowell, who is Professor of Sociology at Sinclair Community College, Director of the Center for Teaching and Learning, and received the 2005 Outstanding Community College Professor of the Year award from the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.

    To read more about this exciting new development, click here.

    NAPF Welcomes Elena Nicklasson as New Director of Development

    Elena Nicklasson has joined the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation as the new Director of Development. Ms. Nicklasson comes to the Foundation with a background in International Policy Studies in Non-Proliferation from the Monterey Institute of International Studies in Monterey, CA. She has served as a consultant for the World Bank sponsored projects in Russia, and developed organizational policies for the International Institute for Promoting Innovative Development. Prior to coming to Santa Barbara, Elena was a development consultant at the Global Fund for Women in San Francisco and Development Manager at On Lok Lifeways, also in San Francisco.

    Robert Scheer Delivers Lecture on War, Peace, Truth and the Media

    On February 18, Robert Scheer delivered the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s 15th Annual Frank K. Kelly Lecture on Humanity’s Future. Mr. Scheer is one of the nation’s most outspoken and progressive journalists, Professor of Communications at the University of Southern California, and Editor-In-Chief of truthdig.com.

    Video of the lecture will be available in mid-March. Click here for more information on the Kelly Lecture series and to read about Robert Scheer’s 2016 lecture, including NAPF President David Krieger’s opening remarks.

    Quotes

     

    “The first day we pointed to our countries. The third day, we pointed to our continents. By the fifth day, we were aware of only one Earth.”

    Sultan bin Salman Al-Saud, Saudi Astronaut. This quote is featured in the book Speaking of Peace: Quotations to Inspire Action, available for purchase in the NAPF Peace Store.

     

    “Even the most hawkish among us must acknowledge that modernizing everything nuclear in sight does not really send the kind of international signals that will make America secure. The Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty regime is now foundering, in substantial part because of this policy. The U.S. and other nuclear weapon states have not kept their end of the bargain.”

    Greg Mello, Executive Director of the Los Alamos Study Group, in a February 26 op-ed in the Albuquerque Journal.

     

    “The UK boycott of the Geneva talks [the open-ended working group] begs fundamental questions. Since David Cameron’s government is hell bent on going ahead with Trident replacement and is also refusing to participate in multilateral UN talks on nuclear disarmament, what are we doing to comply with our non-proliferation and disarmament obligations? Why should anyone take Britain seriously when this government is wasting billions on an outdated weapon system that most countries are determined to prohibit?”

    Rebecca Johnson, Executive Director of the Acronym Institute for Disarmament Diplomacy, in a February 26 op-ed in Open Democracy.

    Editorial Team

     

    Lindsay Apperson
    David Krieger
    Carol Warner
    Rick Wayman

  • Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznick to Present 16th Annual Frank K. Kelly Lecture on Humanity’s Future

     

    Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznick

    Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznick presented the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s 16th Annual Frank K. Kelly Lecture on Humanity’s Future. The event, entitled “Untold History, Uncertain Future,” took place on February 23, 2017, at the Lobero Theatre in Santa Barbara, California.

    Oliver Stone is an award-winning, larger-than-life writer and director. Stone served in the U.S. Army Infantry in Vietnam from 1967-68 and earned the Bronze Star for valor. Returning from Vietnam, he completed studies at New York University’s Film School. He has written and directed over 20 feature films, including Platoon, Born on the Fourth of July, JFK, and Nixon.

    According to Stone, “Generations of Americans have been taught that the United States reluctantly dropped atomic bombs at the end of World War II to save the lives of hundreds of thousands of young men poised to die in an invasion of Japan. The story is really more complicated, more interesting, and much more disturbing.”

    Peter Kuznick has long been involved in antiwar and nuclear abolition efforts. He is a prolific author, international speaker, history professor and director of the Nuclear Studies Institute at American University in Washington, DC. A passionate teacher, Professor Kuznick has, since 1995, taken groups of students to Hiroshima and Nagasaki so they might see for themselves the scars of nuclear fallout, both physical and emotional.

    Said Kuznick, “In terms of humanity’s ability to destroy itself, the atomic bombings represented the key watershed event in all of history.”

    Stone and Kuznick are co-authors of the book and documentary series The Untold History of the United States. In addition to an interview-style conversation, they screened a portion of the documentary and answer questions from the audience.

    Click here for photos of the event.

    Video and audio will be available by mid-March.