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- From: pierce@lanai.cs.ucla.edu (Brad Pierce)
- Subject: A plutonium economy vs. a free democracy
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.020820.1559@cs.ucla.edu>
- Sender: usenet@cs.ucla.edu (Mr Usenet)
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- Organization: UCLA, Computer Science Department
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 92 02:08:20 GMT
- Lines: 269
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- ------------ FORWARDED POSTING ------------------------------------
- from "The Russian Threat, Its Myths and Realities" (c) 1983,
-
- Gateway Books, London, by Jim Garrison and Pyrae Shivpuri, pp 231-236.
-
- The growing erosion of civil liberties in Western Europe and the
- United States is closely linked with the nuclear energy-nuclear
- weapons complex, which mandates a psyche all its own. This complex
- creates the necessity for secrecy on the one hand and greater
- protection of investment on the other. Not only are there high
- financial and environmental risks but also potential ramifications
- beyond national boundaries. Because of the `plutonium culture'
- generated by the nuclear complex, the age old dilemma of striking a
- balance between state authority and the rights of the individual is
- being forced to opt for increasing state control, and diminishing
- individual freedom. The plutonium culture allows for no other
- choice.
- Each operating nuclear reactor produces between 400 to 600 pounds
- of plutonium waste each year. Less than one millionth of a gram, if
- ingested, can cause cancer and/or genetic mutation. Twenty pounds,
- if properly fashioned, can be made into a nuclear bomb. Because of
- this, *the different aspects of the plutonium economy must be as
- tightly guarded as nuclear weapons themselves*. Nuclear weapons are
- kept at military facilities generally away from population centres
- and specifically under guard in a military system predicated upon
- discipline, hierarchy and authoritarian leadership. Similar
- protection for the `atoms for peace' programme will have a
- devastating impact upon the democratic freedoms and civil liberties
- of the citizens.
- The potential problem with the plutonium economy and its relation
- to human freedom has been succinctly expressed by a statement made by
- Dr. Bernard Feld, Chairperson of the Atomic and High Energy Physics
- Department of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology:
-
- Let me tell you about a nightmare I have. The Mayor of
- Boston sends for me for an urgent consultation. He has
- received a note from a terrorist group telling him that they
- have planted a nuclear bomb somewhere in central Boston. The
- Mayor has confirmed that 20 pounds of plutonium is missing
- from Government stocks. He shows me the crude diagram and a
- set of the terrorists outrageous demands. I know--as one of
- those who participated in the assembly of the first atomic
- bomb--that the device would work. Not efficiently, but
- nevertheless with devastating effect. What should I do?
- Surrender to blackmail or risk destroying my home town?[9]
-
- The dangers are real, so real that government planners in every
- country with nuclear programmes have undertaken steps to be prepared
- for Dr. Feld's scenario. In 1975, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
- (NRC) commissioned a specific study of the problem. One of the
- participants, Professor John Barton, Professor of Jurisprudence at
- Stanford University Law School, prepared a paper entitled
- `Intensified Nuclear Safeguards and Civil Liberties.' The document
- began by stating that:
-
- Increased public concern with nuclear terrorism, coupled with
- the possibility of greatly increased use of plutonium in
- civilian power reactors, are leading the US Nuclear
- Regulatory Commission (NRC) to consider various forms of
- intensified safeguards against theft or loss of nuclear
- materials and against *sabotage*. The intensified safeguards
- could include expansion of personnel clearance programs, a
- nationwide guard force, *greater surveillance of dissenting
- political groups,* area searches in the event of a loss of
- materials, and creation of *new barriers of secrecy* around
- parts of the nuclear program.[10]
-
- It is important to be clear what the above statement implies. The
- governments supporting nuclear power are attempting to protect the
- plutonium economy from two perceived enemies: first, those who would
- use the nuclear materials to terrorise the country through some type
- of nuclear sabotage; and second, those who seek to stop nuclear
- power, meaning anti-nuclear `dissenting political groups'. This
- requires a nationwide guard force to be created specifically to deal
- with any terrorism and the erection of new barriers of secrecy around
- the nuclear programmes to keep public knowledge and participation at
- a minimum. Both sets of enemies would be subject to greater
- surveillance through electronic listening devices such as phone taps.
- In Britain, for instance, it is accepted as a matter of course
- that anyone working for the Atomic Energy Authority be `positively
- vetted' before being appointed. The Official Secrets Act, moreover,
- allows the government and the atomic industry to keep the nuclear
- installations cloaked in secrecy and the employees forbidden to
- communicate anything about their work. In 1976, Britain also became
- the first country to establish by law a nationwide guard force of
- constables under the direct control of the atomic authorities in
- order to guard nuclear facilities and specifically the plutonium
- stores. This guard force has privileges in relation to carrying
- weapons not granted to any other British police unit. Indeed, so
- sensitive are these privileges that under the Official Secrets Act,
- information about them has not been made available to the public.
- This force is mandated not only to guard against possible terrorism
- but to keep tabs on `dissenting political groups.'
- Jonathan Rosenhead, of the London School of Economics, points out
- that this type of political control is very easily overlooked by the
- general populace because it is specifically designed and intended to
- be used as inconspicuously as possible. In America, political
- scientists refer to this technique as the "politics of the iron fist
- in the velvet glove." "What the ruling groups prefer", he says,
-
- is to produce a situation in which no one dares oppose their
- plans. Their favourite methods are therefore to exploit
- people's dependence on consumer goods and on their jobs and
- exercising prevention controls by means of intensive
- surveillance. In the event of open conflict breaking out in
- spite of that, they would hope at least to contain it by
- `limited operations.'[11]
-
- What needs to be remembered in assessing this state of affairs is
- that plutonium, if it is to be used, must be protected by police
- state methods. We just cannot have something that can be used for
- nuclear bombs and can damage and mutate human life with the
- lethalness of millions of cancer doses per pound floating about in a
- free society. *A plutonium economy and a free democracy are a
- contradiction in terms.* This is a fact that has been recognised by
- leading legal experts and politicians alike. Writing in the "Harvard
- Law Review," Russell Ayres states flatly that `plutonium provides the
- first rational justification for widespread intelligence gathering
- against the civilian population.'[12] The reason for this is that
- the threat of nuclear terrorism justifies such encroachments on civil
- liberties for `national security' reasons. It is inevitable,
- therefore, says Ayres, that "plutonium use would create pressures for
- infiltration into civic, political, environmental and professional
- groups to a far greater extent than previously encountered and with a
- greater impact on speech and associated rights". Sir Brian Flowers,
- in Britain, has come to similar conclusions. At the end of his
- environmental impact statement for the plutonium economy in the
- United Kingdom, known as the Flowers Report, he made it quite clear
- that Britain could not have both plutonium and civil liberties.
- Rather, he said, to adopt the plutonium economy would make
- `inevitable' the erosion of the freedoms that British people had
- fought for over the centuries and have come to assume and accept as
- inalienable rights.
- What is happening to Western Europe and the US should not be seen
- as an abnormal occurrence; rather, it should be viewed as the
- *logical progression* of what the adoption of the plutonium economy
- in any country implies. There are certain psychological implications
- inherent in the use and development of nuclear weapons. There are
- direct physical results on both workers and public alike from the
- nuclear fuel cycle. So, too, the plutonium economy makes inevitable
- the erosion of human rights.
- Observers in the Netherlands and West Germany refer to the decline
- of the "Rechtsstadt" (meaning a state guided by laws which are both
- just and accepted) and the rise of the "Machtstadt," where state
- authority is based on power equations. In the US, it is sometimes
- referred to as a `national security state'. We prefer the term
- "totalitarian democracy" to characterise the governments of the US
- and Western Europe. It denotes a governmental system of
- parliamentary democracy within which the official bureaucracy, the
- police, and the legal authorities are vested with almost total power
- over the individual.
- It has been apparent for some time that the drive in the West for
- all-out growth, dictated by the need for capital accumulation and
- profits, has been creating problems that existing institutions, be
- they national or international, are simply not equipped to handle.
- These include:
-
- * the alienation through and ruthlessness of the
- multinational corporations;
-
- * the frustrations of an economy where automation and
- machinery are replacing human skills and ingenuity;
-
- * the gnawing fears and anxieties aroused by the `diseases
- of affluence,' notably cancer, heart disease and stress;
-
- * and the looming threat of environmental destruction, be
- it at the local or planetary level, from chemical
- pollution, or the plutonium economy.
-
- As long as the boom lasted, and Western affluence was sustained
- these pressures could be ignored. But that `boom-balloon' has burst.
- The energy crisis is deepening. The economic reality of increased
- unemployment and inflation is becoming more and more depressing. The
- pressures of burgeoning populations, as also the youth demanding
- employment and a piece of the good life, are becoming unbearable.
- In order to survive this `crisis of capitalism', the dominant
- forces in industry and government are forcing through a ruthless
- restructuring and re-grouping of the economic system. In Western
- Europe this is reflected in the wholesale writing-off of vast sectors
- of traditional industry such as steel and textiles and the resultant
- social decline of whole areas. The trend is to form blocs such as
- the EEC but this in turn places increased strain on the member states
- and does little more than paper over the fundamental problems with
- another layer of bureaucracy. Under this weight, the welfare state
- that grew up in the decades after World War II is being dismantled,
- to squeeze just a bit more money to spend, as often as not, on more
- weapon systems. In the process, yet another safety net is removed
- for the individual who is the victim of the capitalist system. If it
- is any consolation, Marxism hasn't come up with any answers either.
- Those in power know they have no way to solve the problems or meet
- the demands of their youth, of the millions of unemployed, of the
- anti-nuclear movement, of the populations in economically depressed
- areas, of the victims of industrial disasters, or of any other
- discontented groups. The only valid answers are ones which involve
- fundamental changes in our thinking and in our system itself, and
- these are ones which those in power are not in a position to offer.
- So they placate their constituencies with promises which they know
- they cannot fulfil.
- This only adds to the frustration of those who can no longer wait.
- The next stage after fruitless protest cannot fail to be a challenge
- to that part of the system of which the individual has become the
- victim. If this challenge is met with either refusal or with
- repression, the frustration of those in protest can lead to violent
- action. Protest by violence against the system which cannot meet
- their demands when peacefully presented is labelled by those in power
- as `terrorism.'
- Foreseeing this scenario, the reaction of the dominant groups is
- to proclaim the necessity to prepare in time to deal effectively with
- those who are discontented. When there are violations that cannot be
- put right, then freedom to criticise and, in the end, democracy
- itself become hostage to `effective governance.' It is an axiom of
- history that when the people begin to question the right of their
- leaders to govern, the leaders question the right of the people to
- question.
- The irony of this situation within the conflict of East-West
- relations is that although the starting point of their analyses are
- different, the conclusions drawn by the Soviet leaders and the
- governing groups in the West are the same: both regard effective
- governance as being hindered by a genuine democratic government. The
- result in the East has been the `dictatorship of the proletariat';
- in the West, `totalitarian democracy.'
- While it is true that the system of repression in the West is not
- as extensive or as brutal as in the East, except in isolated cases,
- what is necessary to remember is that the *mentality* of the
- oppressor, whether in the Kremlin or in 10 Downing Street or in the
- White House, is the same. What is different are the *mechanisms*
- which oppress the people below. In both cases what is achieved is
- the setting up of a *standard of behaviour* which, because there are
- no alternatives allowed, becomes the *pattern of behaviour.* This
- creates a dangerous person-into-machine social norm. In the Soviet
- Union this has been done with a ruthlessness that needed only the
- unity and discipline of the Party; in the West mass control has been
- achieved by subtle manipulation that needs either public ignorance or
- public apathy to be effective. Social control is justified,
- particularly as far as the plutonium economy is concerned, by the
- over-riding necessity to avoid the catastrophe which might occur
- either through carelessness, disobedience, or `terrorism.' This
- cultivated attitude enables the Western technocrats to represent
- themselves to the public as the guardians of the society in the
- emergency situation they themselves inspired and engineered.
- The tragedy of the Russian people is the suffering of individuals
- endowed with a passion for personal freedom so profound as to verge
- on the anarchic, and yet who have been forced to live under a
- despotism resolutely intent upon the suppression of that freedom.
- The tragedy unfolding in the West is of a people who achieved
- liberty at great cost, but who now, faced with the despotism inherent
- in the plutonium economy, are abnegating it. They are rendering
- themselves subservient to those few who wish to build a national
- security state supplied with nuclear energy and armed with nuclear
- weapons. Our leaders are depriving us of the very liberties they
- have been entrusted to defend. Moreover, they are manipulating the
- `Russian threat' to justify such actions, all the while claiming that
- they are protecting democracy. Never before have so few asked so
- many for so much for the sake of so little.
-
- [9] In Robert Jungk, "The Nuclear State," trans. Eric Mosbacher,
- London, 1979, pp. 118, 19.
-
- [10] "Intensified Nuclear Safeguards and Civil Liberties," Nuclear Reg.
- Comm. Cont. No. AT(49-24)-0190, Washington, DC, 31 Oct. 1975, p. 1.
-
- [11] In Jungk, "Nuclear State, op. cit., p. 132.
-
- [12] In Ibid., p. 142
-
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