Tag: Nuclear Age Peace Foundation

  • Nuclear Zero: The Necessary Number

    This article is the introduction to the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s Annual Report.

    David KriegerIn 1945 the first nuclear weapon was tested and, within weeks, the next two nuclear weapons were used by the United States on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

    By 1986 there were over 70,000 nuclear weapons in the world, nearly all in the arsenals of the US and USSR.

    Today there are just over 17,000 nuclear weapons in the world,

    which means that, since the mid-1980s, the world has shed some 50,000 nuclear weapons. That’s progress, but it’s far from sufficient.

    There are still some 2,000 nuclear weapons on hair-trigger alert in the US and Russian arsenals. These weapons are accidents waiting to happen.

    Atmospheric scientists tell us that, in a regional nuclear war between India and Pakistan in which 50 nuclear weapons from each side were exploded on the other side’s cities, enough soot would be put into the stratosphere to block warming sunlight, shorten growing seasons, and cause crop failures leading to a billion deaths by starvation globally. Nuclear famine is only part of the havoc that a “small” nuclear war would cause.

    Zero is the only safe number of nuclear weapons on the planet. It is what the human future requires of us. For the sake of the seven billion inhabitants of our planet, for everyone who matters to each of us, for everything that matters to each of us, we must strive for and achieve Nuclear Zero.

    Another necessary number is One, because each one of us has the power to make a difference with our voice, our actions and our support. When a dedicated portion of the seven billion Ones on the planet are joined together and motivated, they can achieve any great and necessary goal, including Nuclear Zero.

    At the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, we are committed to providing Peace Leadership that emphasizes the Power of One in achieving Nuclear Zero.

  • Que es la Nuclear Age Peace Foundation?

    Click here for the English version.


    Una voz de la conciencia en la era nuclear. La Fundación siempre ha considerado a la paz como un imperativo de la era nuclear, en la creencia de que cualquier guerra en la era nuclear tiene el potencial para convertirse en un conflicto de aniquilación masiva.


    Un defensor de la paz, el derecho internacional y un mundo sin armas nucleares. La Fundación no sólo educa sino que es un defensor no partidista para lograr la paz, fortaleciendo el derecho internacional, y poner fin a la amenaza que representan las armas nucleares para la humanidad.


    Una fuerza de impugnación de la dependencia de las armas nucleares. La Fundación desafía la excusa de los países que justifican la dependencia de las armas nucleares como disuasión (ver nuestro DVD “El mito de la disuasión nuclear”).


    Una fuente de inspiración para los jóvenes de que un mundo mejor es posible. La Fundación se comunica con los jóvenes a través de concursos, pasantías y cursos de capacitación de liderazgo de paz, tratando de elevar su nivel de conciencia y compromiso en las cuestiones de la paz, el desarme nuclear y la seguridad mundial.


    Un líder en la formación de liderazgo para la paz. La Fundación es pionera en entrenamientos de liderazgo para la paz entre jóvenes y adultos en todo el país. El programa está dirigido por Paul Chappell, un graduado de West Point y autor de dos libros para poner fin a la guerra.


    Un catalizador para involucrar a las artes con la paz. La Fundación promueve la paz en las artes a través de su Concurso Anual de Poesía Barbara Mandigo Kelly y el Concurso Anual de Video Premio Swackhamer por el Desarme.


    Un foro para reexaminar las prioridades nacionales y mundiales. La Fundación organiza diálogos y conferencias, incluyendo su Conferencia Anual Frank K. Kelly sobre el futuro de la humanidad, tratando temas clave que enfrenta el planeta.


    Un almacén de datos y fuente de análisis sobre las principales cuestiones nucleares. La Fundación ha creado la NuclearFiles.org como una fuente de información precisa acerca de la Era Nuclear. También mantiene extensos archivos de artículos en su sitio web WagingPeace.org.


    Una organización que busca que las naciones actúen en nombre de la humanidad. La Fundación participa en importantes reuniones internacionales, tales como la Conferencia de No Proliferación y Revisión del Tratado, y trata de influir en las posiciones nacionales para lograr políticas más seguras y sanas, incluido el apoyo a una Convención Sobre Armas Nucleares para la gradual eliminación verificable, irreversible y transparente de las armas nucleares.


    Una comunidad de ciudadanos comprometidos. La Fundación está compuesta por personas de todas las clases sociales y muchas partes del mundo que pretenden acabar con la amenaza que las armas nucleares representan para la humanidad y construir un mundo más justo y pacífico.

  • Frank Kelly: An Advocate of Joy

    These remarks were delivered at Frank Kelly’s memorial service in Santa Barbara, California on July 16, 2010.

    We are here today to remember a good and decent man, who lived a long life with many notable achievements.  It is not so much what he accomplished, though, as how he lived that makes his life a powerful lesson and one worth celebrating.

    Frank was a very dear friend, the kind of friend that one is graced to have.  I first met Frank when Carolee and I came to Santa Barbara and I worked at the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions.  We shared the experience of being a part of that remarkable organization headed by Robert Hutchins.  That was 38 years ago.  

    Ten years later, in 1982, Frank and I would work together to found the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.  Over the 28 years that the Foundation has existed, we were very close, conferring on our work on nearly a daily basis.  For many years before Barbara’s death, Frank and Barbara and Carolee and I shared our birthdays together.

    Frank was a unique individual who lived a unique life.  Here are some of the characteristics that impressed me about Frank:

    He was always generous with his smiles and his praise.

    He always managed to find and encourage the best in each person he knew.

    He believed that all of us are, in his special language, “glorious beings.”

    He recognized that each of us is a miracle and should be celebrated as such.

    He was optimistic that a better world was possible and could be achieved.  

    He believed that each of us deserves a seat at humanity’s table.

    He felt the world needed far more women as leaders at all levels of society, and he was as insistent as he was persistent in urging leadership roles for women.

    He was a loyal and devoted husband, father, father-in-law, grandfather and friend.  He was proud of his children and grandchildren and delighted by his new great-grandson.

    He was a sparkling storyteller and had a rich storehouse of memories to draw upon, ranging from his childhood memories of his father coming home from World War I, to his days at the Kansas City Star, to speechwriting for President Truman, to his work as the assistant to the Senate Majority Leader, and his close relationship to Robert Hutchins and many other luminaries of the 20th century.

    He loved music of all sorts, and had a special fondness for Louis Armstrong’s rendition of “It’s a Wonderful World.”  He also loved the special concerts that his son Stephen performed for him and was Stephen’s greatest fan.

    Frank had a deep spirituality – a spirituality rooted in our connections with each other, with the Earth, and with the infinite.  

    Most of all, Frank was an advocate of joy, and he loved these lines by William Blake, “He who kisses joy as it flies lives in eternity’s sunrise.”  William Blake might well have envisioned Frank as he wrote those lines.

    Frank will live on in the hearts of those who admired and loved him and in the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s annual Frank K. Kelly Lecture on Humanity’s Future.

    I hesitate to say farewell to Frank, as I believe his spirit will remain with us in our efforts to create a more peaceful and decent future for humanity.  If we can build some joy into our efforts, I think we can be assured that Frank will be smiling down on us.

  • Reflections on Frank Kelly

    The following comments were made by NAPF Board members and staff in reaction to the news of Frank Kelly’s death on June 11, 2010.

    * * *

    I have sad news.  The world lost a great and indomitable soul when Frank Kelly passed away earlier this morning, just one day shy of his 96th birthday.  I had stopped in to visit him and he was resting quietly.  He was very peaceful as he passed on.  I know he had high hopes of reuniting with his beloved Barbara.

    Frank lived a long and good life, one which deserves to be celebrated, as he celebrated life itself.  He never wavered from his belief that what we were doing at the Foundation was critical for humanity’s future, and he always believed that by our efforts we would create a more secure and decent future for humanity.

    David Krieger

    * * *

    How terribly sad for us all.  We have lost a friend and a major source of inspiration.  Yet for Frank, there is now peace.

    I had looked forward to attending his birthday party tomorrow.  Instead, I’ll spend that hour thinking about how he affected me over the past 25 years.  When I think of the term, “smile,” I honestly can’t come up with a better visual than Frank’s face.  Nor can I think of a better exemplar of dedication to task.  He was single-minded without being dogmatic.  And who will ever forget his gentle reminders about what Harry Truman would have said about war and nuclear weapons.  

    Sometimes, I caught myself thinking — hey, this is not on the agenda; this is not a part of the present discussion.  But then, I’d come full circle.  Frank had noticed that, though focused on the issues of the day, we might have lost sight of the larger picture…so he was going to remind us why we were gathered around that table; he was present to help us focus on the more important issues — how to move the planet closer to a system based on peaceful conflict management and how to eliminate nuclear weapons from humanity’s collection of “helpful” gadgets.

    Frank was one of a kind.  There will be no replacing him, but perhaps he can still serve as that gentle reminder, especially when we experience a difficult moment at a Board meeting, stressing about an insignificant “this” or an absurd “that”….perhaps his spirit will, once again, remind us about why we are there.  His was the clarion call to purpose.  

    I will truly miss him though I know he will be at every meeting, smiling…and gently reminding us to stay on task.

    Peter Haslund

    * * *

    Peter, your comments are beautifully and accurately stated. You were the one at the last board meeting that affirmed Frank for reminding us of our higher purpose.  It was a perfect and familiar meeting with Frank always at the end of the table in his wheel chair.  Sometimes we thought he was sleeping or nodding off…but he never missed a beat. He was always present.  And, as you said, he never missed a chance to admonish us about the more important goal.  I mentioned to someone today, there were no idle words from Frank Kelly.  He always made meaningful statements.

    You are right.  There will never be anyone like him.  We were all so blessed to work with him for all these years.

    Anna Grotenhuis

    * * *

    This is truly very sad news.  I had just written a card to Frank late last night.  His life has made this world a better place for so many reasons.

    Frank Kelly’s life is one to celebrate in the best way we can at the foundation.  He was a founder and cared so deeply for our cause.  I still remember his admonitions at the most recent board meeting.

    We have lost our hero.

    Anna Grotenhuis

    * * *

    Frank was such a lovely man.  He thought and felt deeply about the wellbeing of all humanity.  At the same time, he was warm and funny and optimistic in his outlook.  I will miss his smiles and hugs, but I am glad he is at peace.  My heart goes out to his family.

    Lessie Nixon Schontzler

    * * *

    For too many people, joy is a rare –or at best occasional — feeling.

    For Frank, joy was a way of living.

    He always had a twinkle in his eye, an idea in his head and a song in his heart.

    Both fiercely dedicated and embracingly kind, he lived in his own circle of grace — blessing those around him even as he appreciated the blessings they brought to him.

    I miss him, but what an extraordinarily good and joyful life he led.

    To a true wager of peace and appreciator of humankind!

    All love and honor to you, Frank.

    Steven Crandell

    * * *

    I too share the sense of loss following Frank Kelly’s death.  He was a radiant spirit, blessed with a sunlit disposition, generous of spirit, and profoundly dedicated to a peaceful and feminized and denuclearized future for humanity.  We will miss his presence, but I feel that his legacy will serve us well as guidance and source of inspiration.

    Richard Falk

    * * *

    In addition to his moral leadership and vision for a more just, peaceful, and (as Richard puts it) feminized world, the quality which most endears Frank to me was his talent for making his partner in conversation, whoever that may be, feel especially intelligent, perceptive, and full of insight.  Suffice to say that a visit with Frank did no harm to one’s self-esteem.

    Rob Laney

    * * *

    Perhaps because I am here in France where the reminders of World War II are so present and the honor and glory of military victories and wars are celebrated so often with marches and holidays that I feel especially close to the days of Harry Truman and Frank Kelly and appreciate even more than I would have at home, how extraordinary a man Frank was for his time.

    I feel very privileged to have known him on the Foundation Board–look at the guidance his beliefs have given us!  I also really appreciate the gusto he has shown over these last few years.  I am especially happy that we could celebrate his 95th birthday last year in such grand style and that he enjoyed it so much–that is a wonderful memory to have.

    Laurie Harris

    * * *

    Although I am a new board member and did not have the pleasure of meeting Frank Kelly, I have had the opportunity to get to know how wonderful he was through your kind words.

    Yolanda Nunn Gorman

    * * *

    We were so looking forward to the party tomorrow.  We loved Frank so much.  He was my idol in the organization.  A truly great human being.  We will miss him very much.

    Jill Dexter

    * * *

    I am so sad to hear of the news about Frank. He was so lucid, so full of emotion and seemed so pleased to have visitors last month. I will always be grateful to have spent some of the afternoon with him during our visit to Santa Barbara. He sent us with several books including his most recent.

    It is so rare to find someone remaining true to shameless idealism to the very end! He left a wonderful legacy in NAPF, and I feel so fortunate to have been influenced by his vision. The best compliment to his exemplary life is to continue working for a more just and peaceful world ourselves.

    Leah Wells

    * * *

    Roxanne and I remember him well. He was always so kind and welcoming and keen to share stories. I am certain he will be missed by very many people. And what a tremendous legacy.

    Marc Kielburger

  • Training Session 1: Public Speaking

    What makes someone an effective communicator and public speaker? Why are most people afraid of public speaking? What bad habits prevent us from being heard, and how can we speak in a way that best serves our message? What steps can we take, in our everyday lives, to become better public speakers? Public speaking is crucial to leadership, and we will explore all of these questions in this training session.

    Why is public speaking important to you? Take turns sharing your thoughts with the group.

    THE IMPORTANCE OF SPEAKING WELL

    Public speaking is not just about speaking in front of large groups of people. It is about effective and clear communication. If you can speak well, this will serve you not only when talking to an audience, but in everyday life. Solving problems with a boss, coworker, employee, friend, or family member requires communication. Although communication is essential on a daily basis, most people are never taught the important speaking skills that can help us say what needs to be said.

    Human beings influence the people around them often through the spoken word. When we can communicate more effectively and clearly, this improves our ability to influence others. Since peace leaders influence through reason instead of blind obedience, use persuasion instead of threats, and strive to increase people’s awareness and understanding instead of deceiving them, communication is vital.  

    For better or worse, we live in a society that judges our intelligence based on how well we speak. When promoting the change our world needs, being a good public speaker increases the credibility of our message. When we communicate poorly, people will not take our message as seriously.

    I have never met a writer who doesn’t want to write well, a musician who doesn’t want to perform well, or an athlete who doesn’t want to play well. Solving problems in our community, nation, and world requires us to communicate, and we are best prepared to solve these and other problems when we speak well. The next sections will discuss several small steps we can take that will make a big difference in how we speak.

    What makes someone a good public speaker? Write down three attributes that effective public speakers have, and take turns sharing this with the group.

    FEAR OF PUBLIC SPEAKING

    Why do studies show that more people fear public speaking than dying? To understand why so many people are afraid of public speaking, we must understand the effects of pressure.

    If I drew a three by three foot square on the ground, and I told you to stand in that square and jump so that your knees touch your chest, you would probably be able to do it. But if you were standing on a three by three foot platform suspended ten stories off of the ground, it would be much more difficult. Although the task itself has not changed, the risk of falling adds an enormous amount of pressure, making it much more difficult to perform.  

    Speaking is something we do every day. But when we must speak in front of others, especially those we don’t know, the added pressure fills many people with dread. For many people, public speaking is more frightening than the risk of falling to one’s death. Studies have shown that more people fear public speaking than dying. At first this might not make sense, but Gavin de Becker, who is widely regarded as the nation’s leading expert on fear, says that public speaking is so frightening because there is actually a risk of death involved. He is not referring to physical death, but the death of our identity. When we speak in front of people, there is a chance that we might be humiliated. Being humiliated, which would threaten to destroy our sense of identity, terrifies most people.

    How can we reduce our fear of humiliation, which is the underlying reason that causes people to be afraid of public speaking? First, we must have the right attitude. We must reject the myth that we can please everyone, because no matter what we say, someone out there won’t like it. Many of the people who are most admired today, such as Susan B. Anthony, Gandhi, and Martin Luther King Jr., were despised by many while they were alive. If they could not please everyone, then how can we? No matter how well we represent the ideals our world needs most, some people have personal shortcomings that prevent them from listening and understanding.

    I have realized that someone out there hates my favorite book, movie, and song. I even had a roommate at West Point who disliked chocolate. If chocolate cannot please everyone, then how can I? When we speak in front of people, we must remove the unrealistic expectation that we can please everyone and that all people will love what we say. We must also speak from the courage of our convictions, because if we do not believe that our message is important, how can we convince others to think so?

    If we let our sense of identity and ego get wrapped up in our message, then the fear of our ego being damaged through humiliation is overwhelming. But if we focus on the cause we are trying to promote, instead of worrying about ourselves, we won’t put our ego in a position to be attacked. For example, if you are speaking in support of the environment or oppressed people, you can speak from your compassion, conscience, and the confidence that what you are saying needs to be said. When your focus shifts from your cause to worrying about yourself and what others might think about you, your anxiety will increase. With good preparation, there is no point in worrying about what others might think about us, because when we are prepared we should feel confident that we will do the best we can.

    Even the best public speakers were at one time afraid of speaking in front of others. Before Gandhi became a great orator, he had a horrible fear of public speaking. Talking about our fears with others helps to heal them. Are you afraid of public speaking, and, if so, what scares you about speaking in front of others? Discuss this with the group.  

    REPETITION

    To reduce our fear of public speaking, we can desensitize ourselves to this fear through repetition. During the beginning of the chemistry, physics, and math classes at West Point, every cadet must go to the board, write down how they did one of the homework problems, and brief it to the class. In other courses, part of every student’s grade is based on class participation, and everyone is expected to speak at least once during class. When teachers asked me to read out loud, I thought “I haven’t been asked to read out loud since elementary school. Am I in third grade again?”

    Reading out loud improves our public speaking skills by helping us learn how to use our voice and desensitizing us to the fear of speaking in front of others. If we cannot read another person’s words without being nervous, how can we speak our own words with confidence? One of the best ways to learn how to use the inflection and rhythm of our voice is to read stories to children.

    Public speaking is so central to leadership that West Point strives to desensitize its cadets to the fear of public speaking. By the time a cadet graduates from West Point, he or she has spoken in front of others thousands of times. In many college classes, it is possible to go through the entire semester without saying anything, but this does not help people develop their public speaking skills, which are also crucial life skills.

    To apply these lessons to your life, pursue every opportunity you can to speak in front of others. It might be challenging at first, but it is good practice and necessary to improve.

    Most schools in America ignore the importance of public speaking and verbal communication by not giving students the opportunity to develop these skills. Do you have much public speaking experience? What opportunities for public speaking can you pursue? To gain more public speaking experience, for example, students can make an effort to speak more often in the classroom.

    TRAIN LIKE YOU FIGHT

    In addition to repetition, cadets at West Point are also given constructive criticism to help them become better speakers. Many people say uh, like, and you know every five seconds, but leaders lose credibility when they talk like that. Could you imagine a military commander saying, “We are going to… like… make sure we complete the objective and… you know… uh… accomplish this mission.” Could you imagine Martin Luther King Jr. speaking like that?

    These are bad habits that anyone can correct, but most people are never given feedback or constructive criticism to help them. There is nothing wrong with saying uh once in awhile, but many people say it to the point where it becomes distracting. Many people say uh, like, or you know every sentence, and sometimes multiple times per sentence.

    The army has a motto train like you fight. This means that we must practice as we want to perform, because our bad habits become worse when we are under pressure. If we constantly say uh, like, or you know when talking to our friends, then it will be very difficult to not say these distracting phrases when speaking in front of a group. When people are nervous and afraid, they usually say uh a lot more than they would normally.

    During our daily conversations, we can do two things. We can either reinforce or remove our bad habits. If we want to become better public speakers, we must train like we fight and practice as we want to perform. If you don’t want to say uh, like, or you know when speaking in front of a group, conversing with your boss, or talking to your employees, make an effort to not say these distracting phrases when talking to your friends. It will take time and work, but it will make you a more effective public speaker and communicator.

    One reason people say these distracting phrases so often is because they are uncomfortable with silence. Effective public speakers are comfortable with pausing for a few seconds to think, and do not feel a need to fill the silence with gibberish. Looking down and taking a few seconds to collect your thoughts is more helpful than saying “uh, uh, uh, uh.” Through practice and developing a comfort with silence, you will speak in a clearer and more effective way, which will increase the credibility of the work you are trying to do.

    Developing these communication skills will not make our speech more rigid and less sincere. It will actually do the opposite. Being comfortable with pausing and not feeling the need to say uh, like, and you know every five seconds makes our speech less nervous and more relaxed. When we are comfortable with pausing, we can also take a few seconds to think about what we are going to say rather than rushing into the next sentence. This will make you a more effective communicator when speaking not only to a group, but to the people in your everyday life.

    What are some of the distracting phrases that you say, which fill nervous silence but don’t actually communicate anything? What distracting phrases do you notice a lot of other people saying? Do you know anyone who fills nervous silence with curse words? Instead of saying uh, like, and you know, have you ever met anyone who curses every five seconds?

    PUBLIC SPEAKING FOR PEACE LEADERSHIP

    It could take months of conscious effort to reduce your use of uh, like, and you know. It could also take years to become an effective public speaker. But improving our communication skills is a gradual process that is worth the effort, because these are also crucial life skills. The better we can communicate, the less we have to yell.

    In this training session, we have discussed fundamentals of public speaking that are vital for all forms of leadership, especially peace leadership. In addition, it is important to be prepared and know your subject. Knowing your subject increases confidence and reduces fear and nervousness.

    Public speaking for peace leadership requires not only strong communication skills and knowledge of a subject, but also compassion, conscience, confidence, and calm.

    After losing his calm during a turbulent debate, Martin Luther King Jr. said, “That Monday I went home with a heavy heart, remembering that on two or three occasions I had allowed myself to become angry and indignant. I had spoken hastily and resentfully. Yet I knew that this was no way to solve a problem . . . You must not become bitter. No matter how emotional your opponents are, you must be calm.”

    If your personality is bitter and does not represent peace well, then nothing you say, no matter how you say it, will truly be peaceful. When discussing the concept of right speech, Gautama Buddha said that the intentions behind our words are vital to speaking well. Right speech means not using words to deceive and do harm, not using words with malicious intent, and never slandering others. Right speech involves speaking gently, warmly, and with compassion. It also involves exposing the truth. When someone commits injustice, Gautama Buddha, Gandhi, and Martin Luther King Jr. would encourage us to not resort to slander or name calling. Instead, they would urge us to expose the truth and condemn the unjust action. That is a more effective way for a peace leader to make a difference.

    When I speak to a group of people, the ideas I express are like seeds being planted. Some people will embrace my ideas while I am speaking and the seed will sprout immediately. In others, the seed I have planted may lie dormant and sprout years later, perhaps when another experience serves as a catalyst to change their understanding. And in some, the seed will never sprout. As peace leaders, we must plant as many seeds as we can, and nurture the seeds that do sprout.

    Our actions as peace leaders, like pebbles creating ripples in a pond, can also affect people in ways we could never have imagined. David Krieger, the President of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, spoke to a high school graduation in 2000. Ten years later, a woman who graduated that day came up and talked to him. A third-year medical student, she said that she heard him speak during a very difficult time in her life, and that his words inspired and helped her immensely. When you speak for the change our world needs, you are creating a ripple and planting a seed. You never know what effect the ripple may have, and you never know what the seed might become.

    Have you received any training or have much experience in public speaking? If so, is there any public speaking advice that you would like to share with the group? Take turns sharing advice with the group.

             – written by Paul K. Chappell

    Here are a few tips for public speaking. As you receive public speaking advice from the group, write them down and add to this list.

    1.    Be well prepared – Know your subject, organize your material, and practice.

    2.    Be aware of your body – Know what your body is doing. This will allow you to use your gestures and body language well, and protect you from using your hands to the point that it becomes distracting.

    3.    If you don’t know anyone in the audience, introduce yourself to a few people before your talk as they are entering the room – This will give you a friend in the audience.

    4.    Maintain eye contact – It is always best to not read your speech, but if you have to read your speech, look up often and make eye contact with the audience.

    5.    Be yourself – By building your confidence and being less nervous, you will be more relaxed and able to be yourself. Just as many kinds of food are delicious and nutritious, many styles of public speaking are engaging and effective. Don’t try to be someone you are not. Find a style of public speaking that complements your personality. When you are relaxed and able to be yourself, you will do your best work as a public speaker.

  • 2009 Evening for Peace President’s Message

    2009 Evening for Peace President’s Message

    Twenty years ago, almost to the day, the Berlin Wall fell. Before this happened, virtually no one thought it would be possible or that the Cold War would come to an end. And yet these seemingly impossible dreams occurred, and they did so not by magic but because there were largely unobserved efforts at work to bring about change. Marking this anniversary should remind us that change does happen and should give us added strength and incentive to carry on our work of seeking a world free of nuclear weapons.

    At the Foundation we educate and advocate for peace. We seek to overcome obstacles of ignorance, apathy and hostility. We seek a world free of domination and double standards. First and foremost, we seek a world free of the omnicidal threat posed by nuclear weapons.

    Our annual Evening for Peace is meant to accomplish three goals: to shine a light on peace leadership and world citizenship; to honor our deeply deserving awardees; and to inspire new peace leaders. We thank you all for being an important part of this Evening for Peace.

    I want to give you a brief report on the State of the Foundation as we approach our 28th year.

    Our membership has expanded to over 31,000 individuals and organizations.

    Our Action Alert Network now has over 26,000 participants, who send messages on key issues to members of Congress and the Administration.

    Our Sunflower e-Newsletter reaches people all over the world, keeping them abreast of important developments related to nuclear weapons and nuclear disarmament.

    The Foundation’s latest DVD has been viewed more than 3,500 times online, and is now being shown in classrooms and on Public Access television stations across the country.

    Earlier this year, we transmitted to the White House more than 200,000 signatures on our Appeal for US Leadership for a Nuclear Weapons Free World.

    The Foundation’s websites, WagingPeace.org and NuclearFiles.org, have more than 750,000 unique visitors each year.

    The Foundation has had more than 300 articles in the press so far this year.

    The Foundation’s Swackhamer video contest this year drew more than 120 entries on the need for nuclear disarmament. These have been viewed online by more than 10,000 people.

    Our Kelly Peace Poetry Awards had more than 2,000 poems this year. The winning poems for this year and previous years may be viewed at the Foundation’s WagingPeace.org website.

    In the past two years we’ve edited and published two important anthologies on the need to abolish nuclear weapons: At the Nuclear Precipice: Catastrophe or Transformation? and The Challenge of Abolishing Nuclear Weapons.

    We also produce various other publications throughout the year, including our Annual Report, our annual Kelly Lecture, and briefing booklets and articles.

    This year we formed a new chapter of the Foundation in Silicon Valley, and we are excited about the enthusiasm they are bringing to their work.

    Fellows of the Foundation, Daniel Ellsberg and Martin Hellman, are engaged in important research and writing projects.

    We have a new Peace Leadership Program. Its director is Paul Chappell, a West Point graduate who is dedicated to building peace. Paul is doing an outstanding job in reaching out to people all over the country and encouraging them to engage in waging peace.

    The rest of our staff is quite extraordinary as well. I’d like to take this opportunity to acknowledge their dedicated work day in and day out.

    Vicki Stevenson is our ever cheerful receptionist and my assistant. She makes everyone feel at home at the Foundation and is also a superb editor.

    Sharon Rossol is our talented and tireless office manager, who assures that our office runs smoothly.

    Rick Wayman is our Director of Programs. He oversees our programs, supervises our interns, works on chapter development, updates our websites, and much, much more.

    Steven Crandell is our Director of Development and Public Affairs. He is the person responsible for raising funds for the Foundation, and for our outreach to the media.

    In addition to having a superb staff, the Foundation also has many enthusiastic interns, volunteers and supporters, and a dedicated Board of Directors. I bow to you all, and thank you deeply. Without you the Foundation could not have existed and grown as it has over the past 27 years.

    In 2009, the Foundation has had a dramatically different environment in which to do our work. While we remain judiciously nonpartisan, we now have a US president who shares our vision. That is a major step forward. In Prague this year he said, “I state clearly and with conviction America’s commitment to seek the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons.” He also said that he wasn’t naïve and that this goal might not be reached in his lifetime. Nonetheless, our goals, if not our timeframe, are aligned. We will continue to urge the president to push forward toward a world free of nuclear weapons with a sense of urgency. This goal can be achieved over the next decade.

    So that is where we stand. I’d like make just a few remarks about our theme this evening of Women for Peace.

    First, it seems more natural for women, as child bearers, to protect and nurture life than to destroy it. We need their leadership in the areas of peace and nonviolence, and men need to do better at learning such perspectives.

    Second, what woman would not prefer for her children and all children to have the opportunity to be fed, sheltered, educated and provided with health care, rather than sacrificed on the altar of war? The world is still spending nearly $1.5 trillion annually on military might, funds that could be far better used in meeting basic human needs.

    Third, women have long been leaders in asserting themselves for a better and more peaceful world. In 1889, Bertha von Suttner wrote a book, Lay Down Your Arms. It was Suttner who convinced Alfred Nobel to establish the Nobel Peace Prizes, and who became the first female recipient of the prize in 1905. It was Eleanor Roosevelt who led the United Nations in creating the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, a document that is foundational for a peaceful future.

    Fourth, a number of our sister organizations working for a peaceful world are women’s groups that have made a substantial contribution to building peace. A great example is Another Mother for Peace, which had the ironic and iconic tagline, “War is not healthy for children and other living things.”

    Finally, in the past, the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation has honored some truly outstanding women, including Nobel Peace Laureates Mairead Corrigan Maguire and Jody Williams. We have also honored Mary Travers, Hafsat Abiola, Queen Noor of Jordan, Bianca Jagger, Anne Erlich, Helen Caldicott, and Elisabeth Mann Borgese.

    We draw encouragement from the roles played by women in seeking to build a more decent world. Our 2009 honorees, Judith Mayotte and Riane Eisler, have made quiet but large and important contributions to building a better world. To all the young people who are with us for our Evening for Peace, please learn and take inspiration from these two extraordinary women, and know that your lives can make a true difference in our world.

    David Krieger is President of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (www.wagingpeace.org) and a Councilor on the World Future Council.

  • A Message for the New Year

    A Message for the New Year

    Dear Friend of the Foundation,

    For 25 years the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation has worked daily for a better world. As we enter a New Year, our work to abolish nuclear weapons, strengthen international law and empower a new generation of peace leaders has never been more critical. To succeed, we need your involvement and your support.

    I encourage you to have a look at our new DVD, “Nuclear Weapons and the Human Future.” You can request a free copy from the Foundation and show it to your friends. We think it is an important tool to raise the profile of the nuclear threat to humanity – a threat that is still very much with us.

    We also have a great Speakers Bureau at the Foundation. Let us know if you’d like one of our staff or associates to come out and talk with your group about current nuclear dangers and what can be done about them.

    Al Gore has referred to global warming as an “inconvenient truth.” Unfortunately, that is not the only inconvenient truth the world is facing. The dangers of nuclear weapons stand toe-to-toe with global warming in their threat to humanity. Nuclear weapons, in fact, are an even more urgent threat. They could destroy civilization in the virtual blink of an eye.

    As we witness the continuing turmoil in nuclear-armed Pakistan, the urgency of the threat should be clear. No one should feel comfortable with nuclear weapons in the hands of any state or leader, but least of all a state in disarray such as Pakistan.

    US plans to do a “nuclear deal” with India, supplying India with nuclear materials and technology, will only exacerbate the dangers in South Asia, as Pakistan attempts to keep pace with India. The US must be dissuaded from this dangerous project, which could speed up the dismantling of the nuclear non-proliferation regime.

    We badly need US leadership for a nuclear weapons-free world. That is becoming more than obvious. Early in 2007, George Shultz, Henry Kissinger, William Perry and Sam Nunn, four former high US officials, called for such leadership from the US. Some of the current presidential candidates are also calling for this leadership. Without US leadership, progress toward nuclear disarmament won’t be made.

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation has prepared an Appeal, “US Leadership for a Nuclear Weapons-Free World.” It is aimed at the next President of the United States. Won’t you add your voice and help spread the Appeal? It will soon be available for signing on our www.wagingpeace.org website.

    We also need your financial support to help us reach more and more people with our messages. The bottom line is that the US will change and lead the world away from the nuclear precipice when enough of its citizens demand this course. At the Foundation, we know what we need to do, but we need your help to reach as wide an audience as possible.

    Each of our efforts to eliminate nuclear weapons is a gift to humanity and to the future. As we enter the New Year, I urge you to add to your New Year’s resolutions a pledge to work with the Foundation in 2008 for the end of the nuclear weapons threat to humanity. This can only be accomplished by ending the nuclear weapons era, and this will require our joint efforts. Together we can and will change the world.

    Wishing you a very happy New Year,

    In Peace,

    David Krieger President Nuclear Age Peace Foundation

    David Krieger is the President of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (www.wagingpeace.org). He is a leader in the global effort to abolish nuclear weapons.

  • Seeking Peace in the Nuclear Age

    Seeking Peace in the Nuclear Age

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation was founded in 1982 by a small group of citizens who believed that peace is an imperative of the Nuclear Age – that our powerful technologies, particularly nuclear weapons, have brought us to the stage in human development when we must put an end to war before war puts an end to us. We created the Foundation in the belief that citizens can make a difference by influencing other citizens and government officials.

    The Foundation began with only a handful of individuals and now reaches millions of people annually through our programs, publications and websites. We operate internationally and are on the Roster in consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council. The Foundation has been named a United Nations Peace Messenger organization, and among our advisors are many Nobel Peace Laureates from throughout the world.

    The work of the Foundation is based upon a commitment to achieve a more secure and decent future for humanity. We have three principal goals: to abolish nuclear weapons; to strengthen international law and institutions; and to inspire and empower a new generation of peace leaders. We seek these goals by means of education and advocacy.

    Abolishing nuclear weapons may seem like an impossible goal, but it is critical to pursue because these weapons can destroy cities, civilizations and even the human species. The stated purpose of nuclear weapons has always been deterrence, to prevent others from using nuclear weapons by threatening to retaliate with massive force. But now that the Cold War has ended there are no nuclear weapons states that remain enemies, excepting possibly India and Pakistan , and even they are attempting to work out their differences.

    Nuclear weapons are not needed to deter friends, and they cannot deter terrorists who cannot be located. Thus, our most practical and safest course of action is the phased and verifiable elimination of all nuclear weapons. To succeed in this endeavor, the US must take the lead, for without the US it will not happen. The Foundation works with other organizations around the world on these issues. We helped form a network of over 2000 organizations working for a nuclear weapons-free future. We have also initiated a national campaign to chart a new course for US nuclear policy. The campaign is called Turn the Tide and it allows citizens to learn about US nuclear policies and to play a role in changing them.

    Each year the Foundation hosts a symposium on international law that looks at strengthening some aspect of the global legal structure. One of our symposiums focused on creating a United Nations Emergency Peace Service – a small UN rapid deployment force that could be used to stop genocides and crimes against humanity from occurring by moving rapidly to prevent them. Another symposium focused on the importance of supporting an International Criminal Court that will hold all individuals, including national leaders, accountable for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.

    The Foundation is also active in reaching out to young people. We are working to create a new generation of peace leaders. Michael Coffey , our Director of Youth Programs, travels around the country speaking to and working with youth on high school and college campuses. In 2005, the Foundation will host a conference of 50-60 young nuclear activists from around the country to learn from each other and from a team of experienced activists about being more effective in creating a nuclear weapons-free future. We are very excited about the potential of this youth conference to have a multiplier effect in reaching a broad audience of young people and influencing them to play a role in shaping their future.

    We do much more at the Foundation, which you can find out about at our principal web site, www.wagingpeace.org. You can also visit our other web sites,www.nuclearfiles.org and www.ucnuclearfree.org.

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation is an organization that works daily to build a peaceful and nuclear weapons free world. It is a persistent voice for peace in our troubled world. We invite you to add your voice and help support our efforts to abolish nuclear weapons, strengthen international law and reach out to young people. Help us create a world we can be proud to pass on to our children and grandchildren.

    David Krieger is president of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. This is an edited version of remarks made at the kick-off event for the Foundation’s 20th Anniversary Campaign.