How we learned to love the Bomb
As
a child it was hard for me to believe that there were people in this world
who took pleasure in the killing of six million Jews, and people in the world
who thought that killing hundreds of thousands of Japanese civilians
with atomic
bombs was justifiable and people who thought that the murder of
Mahatma Gandhi was fine. I now have the same feeling of disbelief at the moral
bankruptcy
and intellectual idiocy of a nation grown mindlessly euphoric about
the acquisition of weapons of mass destruction.
The argument that America did the same and therefore has no moral right to
complain is no doubt a valid one. America was not only the first to make the
Bomb it is the only country to have used it. Not only did America build up
its own arsenal, it forced the Soviet Union and then China to divert vitally
needed resources towards building up their arsenals at the cost of building
up their economies.
But the question of America's moral right is a red herring. Today it is not
America that will suffer the consequences of a nuclear war or arms race in
this region. The cold war is over. Nations that had pointed nuclear weapons
at each other find themselves without good reason for further posturing. Today
the greater danger of nuclear war comes from countries like India, Pakistan,
Israel and Iran and from the possible use of nuclear weapons by international
terrorists who can quite conceivably lay their hands on a technology that has
begun to proliferate and has become portable.
Every child knows that in a nuclear war there can be no winners. Deterrence
is cited as a reason for deployment but history has repeatedly shown the opposite
to be true. Why is it so difficult to put ourselves in Pakistani shoes? What
would our response have been in 1974 if a nation that had defeated us in a
war three years ago, suddenly exploded an atom bomb? We would have been forced
by hook or crook, to reply in kind. So Pakistan acquired it's A Bomb. Now we
have upped the ante with a Hydrogen bomb. How long will it take for Pakistan
to get theirs? Pakistan and China are bound to reply to Indian tests, overtly
or covertly, and a huge escalation of a regional nuclear arms race is inevitable.
Such an escalation is not only disastrous because it can push nations into
a catastrophic war but because even if peace is tenuously maintained while
scientists keep playing with the atom and generals keep itching to test their
new toys, no country can claim today to have full and fool proof nuclear safety
standards. Three Mile Island in the US and Chernobyl in Russia are grim reminders
of the fact that even the most scientifically advanced powers have failed to
maintain nuclear safety standards and placed their populations at considerable
risk. Our own record at the Bhabha Atomic Energy plant is abysmal though this
has been a well guarded secret and workers who were radiated by atomic leaks
went on to die from cancer without getting into the news. No doubt they would
have been cheered by the announcement that “the country is willing to
pay any price for its security.”
In the West there has always been a strong and vocal anti-nuclear movement.
Peace protesters in the US forced a nuclear plant in California to shut down.
In the UK over a hundred thousand people linked arms at Greenham Common to
surround the Cruise missile base. Greenpeace activists in New Zealand forcibly
entered the testing zone at Mururoa to offer their lives even as the French
were insisting on testing its nuclear device. Eleven years ago one Greenpeace
activist died at Mururoa. For ten years thereafter the French were shamed into
stopping their tests. Last year, amidst international protests, they resumed.
For the time being in India (and I suspect, in Pakistan) there is only a cacophony
of "patriotic" fervour that equates the Bomb with national pride.
People dance in the streets as if it is Diwali in the astounding belief that
their world has become more secure. Newspapers roar "Bravo India" and "The
Buddha smiles". Young men sign messages of congratulations in blood. It
would not be so disturbing if all this were being orchestrated by those who
took pride in the killing of Mahatma Gandhi and those who distributed sweets
when the Babri Mosque was demolished. But when every political party including
some "Left" parties and some “Gandhians” join in to demonstrate
their "patriotism" and when press, politician and populace unite
as one and the common man takes leave of common sense, there is little choice
but to take refuge in the wisdom of children.
Anand Patwardhan
May 1998
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