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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, April 1, 2019
Trump does not like Russia
President Donald Trump has been exonerated of collusion with Russia. As I
wrote a while back I expected this conclusion from the investigation
carried out by Robert Mueller.
The
big clue lay in Trump’s anti-Russian posture. Trump has continued the
expansion of NATO which Russia, more than understandably, sees as a
provocative, unfriendly and dangerous move. Then there is the
unwillingness to step forward to negotiate an end to the Ukrainian
situation. The US, under the presidency of Barack Obama, refused to
countenance President Vladimir Putin’s suggestion that UN peace-keeping
troops be deployed in southern and eastern Ukraine, and Trump has
continued that policy. Then there’s the seeming refusal to extend the
treaty (New START ) that dramatically lowers the number of
intercontinental nuclear missiles on each side. Trump has also thrown
money at the Defence Department while cutting social budgets, vowing to
beef up America’s nuclear forces. Recently he unilaterally ended one of
the great achievements that came towards the end of the Cold War, the
treaty abolishing intermediate-range nuclear forces in Europe.
Collusion with Russia? It hardly seemed likely given this record and now it has been proved to be a red herring.
Collusion with Russia? It hardly seemed likely given this record and now it has been proved to be a red herring.
What I have long feared is not collusion but the effect that Trump’s
confrontational policies will have on the peace of the world. When the
Cold War ended in 1991 we had a big pan-European peace within reach and
we blew it away. Analysts of the stature of Zbigniew Brzezinski, George
Kennan and Henry Kissinger criticized the way the expansion of Nato was
done and how there was a lost opportunity of binding Russia into Western
Europe. Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush launched that
hostile policy but Obama continued it.
Twenty-six games were played. In only two was the result the use of nuclear weapons. But it wasn’t ethical reservations or worries about triggering more proliferation that gave the players pause, it was an “apprehension about domestic, global, allied or peer reputational costs”. They didn’t want to become a pariah by being the first to advocate use since 1945. They were prepared to suffer conventional war defeats rather than use nuclear weapons.
Nuclear war is always a possibility as long as the weapons and the
hostility that is now prevalent, exist. Apart from an accidental launch
or the action of rogue officers (as have nearly happened in the past
according to Pentagon sources) there’s always the chance that mistaken
policies will drive the US, Russia and China to military
confrontation.
A sane finger (or fingers) on the nuclear button becomes a necessity if
the world isn’t to be partly devastated. I can cross my heart and say
that Presidents John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Jimmy Carter, Ronald
Reagan, George H.W. Bush and Barack Obama would never have initiated a
nuclear attack. But I’m not so sure about Richard Nixon and George W.
Bush. As for Donald Trump I put him in the second camp. I wouldn’t trust
him.
Crises can pop up seemingly out of nowhere and a steady hand in the Oval
Office is absolutely necessary. Trump doesn’t like Russia, albeit he
has had so far a civilized personal relationship with Putin. But, given
his attitude, that could turn sour at any moment.
The worst of it is that a majority- albeit a small one- of Americans
might support him. A number of surveys carried out have shown that over
the years Americans have become more tolerant of the use of nuclear
weapons if they felt the homeland was truly threatened, even by a
non-nuclear attack.
At the time of the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki President
Truman rejected advice to authorize a third, saying he didn’t want to
take the lives of “all those kids”.
Yet we know he considered using them if the Soviet advance into Japan
from the north continued. And at the time of the Korean War General
Douglas MacArthur, the chief commander, recommended they be used in
significant numbers to stop the Chinese advance into the north. As
recently as 1965 during the Vietnam War the Pacific Theatre Commander
asked Washington for permission to use tactical nuclear weapons.
Fortunately, we know today that the so-called “elite” policy makers wouldn’t accept the use of nuclear weapons.
This is the conclusion of an exhaustive study made of a “war game”
involving both very senior policy makers (the “elite”), past and
present, and their juniors. It’s written up by Reid Pauly in the current
issue of Harvard’s International Security. The simulation, organized
under the auspices of the Pentagon, pitted the home side against an
unnamed foreign power during wartime.
Twenty-six games were played. In only two was the result the use of
nuclear weapons. But it wasn’t ethical reservations or worries about
triggering more proliferation that gave the players pause, it was an
“apprehension about domestic, global, allied or peer reputational
costs”. They didn’t want to become a pariah by being the first to
advocate use since 1945. They were prepared to suffer conventional war
defeats rather than use nuclear weapons.
So what about the “button”? In reality the president’s command to use
them has to pass through various Pentagon layers before launch officers
get their orders. I doubt, given the deep reservations of the “elites”,
that it would be obeyed.