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Hiroshima – Nagasaki Day Memorial Service August 9, 2009 Jimmy Spearow, Ph.D. Representing

Update on the Nuclear Arms Race: What you can do to end it and make the US and the world more secure. Hiroshima – Nagasaki Day Memorial Service August 9, 2009 Jimmy Spearow, Ph.D. Representing Sacramento Physicians for Social Responsibility www.sacpsr.org.

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Hiroshima – Nagasaki Day Memorial Service August 9, 2009 Jimmy Spearow, Ph.D. Representing

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  1. Update on the Nuclear Arms Race: What you can do to end it and make the US and the world more secure Hiroshima – Nagasaki Day Memorial Service August 9, 2009 Jimmy Spearow, Ph.D. Representing Sacramento Physicians for Social Responsibility www.sacpsr.org

  2. "Little Boy" 235 Uranium Bomb Yield 13,000 tons (13 Kiloton) TNT Dropped on Hiroshima: 140,000 Civilian Deaths

  3. “Fat Man” 239Plutonium Bomb Yield 20,000 tons (20 Kilotons) TNT

  4. Burn and Radiation Injuries

  5. Medical Effects of Nuclear Weapons • Mortality from Fireball and Thermal Wave • Acute Radiation Exposure • Radioactive Fallout • Immune suppression, Epidemics of Infectious Disease • Blast Wave • Electromagnetic Pulse Damage • Societal Collapse, Economic and Environmental Costs • Nuclear Winter • WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION & TERROR

  6. Medical Effects of Nuclear Weapons • Mortality from Fireball and Thermal Wave • Acute Radiation Exposure • Radioactive Fallout • Immune suppression, Epidemics of Infectious Disease • Blast Wave • Electromagnetic Pulse Damage • Societal Collapse, Economic and Environmental Costs • Nuclear Winter • WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION & TERROR

  7. Lethal Nuclear Weapon Effects • Effects of 12-20 Kiloton ~ 500 Kiloton • Blast • Thermal & Direct 1-2 Mile 5-6 Mile • Radiation Effects Radius Radius • Radioactive Fallout ~ 5-15 Miles ~100 Miles • (Ground burst) • Number of deaths >100,000 Hundreds of from attacking Thousands a major city

  8. A Nuclear War between US and Russia is likely to result in 10-100 Million immediate Deaths on each sidePrevention of Nuclear War needs to have a high Priority

  9. Factors Driving the Nuclear and Conventional Arms Race Nationalism Develop Weapons Military Industrial Complex Insecurity Perceived Military Threats Nation "A" Perceived Military Threats Insecurity Military Industrial Complex Develop Weapons Nationalism Nation "B" Nuclear proliferation increases threats Conflicts over resources or ideologies 14

  10. US/Russian Strategic Nuclear Weapons

  11. US/Russian Strategic Nuclear Weapons

  12. New Way of Thinking: Arms Control and Conflict Resolution can promote Mutual Security and Peace Increased Security Improved Domestic & Foreign Aid & Services Goodwill Desire to help others Arms Treaties and Disarmament Nation "B" Arms Treaties and Disarmament Goodwill Desire to help others Improved Domestic & Foreign Aid & Services Increased Security Nation "A" Conflict Resolution, Cooperation & Mutual Security 19 www.teachpeace.com

  13. Threats of Nuclear War *Major Nuclear Powers US, Russia, China, Great Britain, France Militarization of Space, False Warnings & Fear of Preemptive First Strikes  Increased Risks Nuclear War *Nuclear Proliferation by other Nations India, Pakistan, North Korea, Israel, Iran? & ? Escalation of Conventional War-> Nuclear War *Nuclear Terrorism by Non-State Actors Stolen or Smuggled Nuclear / Radiological Weapon

  14. Arms Control Treaties • Limited Test Ban Treaty • Non-Proliferation Treaty • Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty • Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) • Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty • Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty • Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT I) • Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT II) • Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START I) • Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty II (START II)

  15. Bush- Putin Agreement START I START II START III 6,000 3,500 2,500 In Storage In Storage In Storage 1991 1993 Abandoned 2002

  16. George W. Bush Administration Counterforce Nuclear Weapons Policy • 2001: Bush-Putin circumvented START III • 2001: Opposed Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty • 2001: Withdrew from ABM Treaty • 2002: Nuclear Posture Review--> First Strike Policy • 2002: Pushed to develop “Bunker Buster” Mini-Nukes • 2002: Declared Iraqi WMD a threat to US security • 2003: Invasion & Occupation of Iraq. • 2004: Deployed Missile “Defense” System • 2007: Pushed to upgrade US nuclear bomb manufacturing plants (Complex 2030 & Reliable Replacement Warheads) • 2007: Pushed to deploy Missile Interceptors in Europe • 2008: Abandoned negotiations on successor to START

  17. President George W. Bush Military Policies: 1) Disavowing Arms Control Treaties 2) Threatening Nuclear & Conventional First Strikes 3) US Ballistic Missile Defense & Militarization of Space 4)Using US military to garner and control world resources (Oil) (Economic Imperialism) These policies were very destabilizing, likely to: Create Animosity toward the US; Renew & destabilize the Arms Race; Increase Long-term Chances of Nuclear War;

  18. Opportunities for Nuclear Disarmament *January 2007 - George Schultz, Henry Kissinger, William Perry and Sam Nunn – Called to promote a world Free of Nuclear Weapons. Now is the time to push for nuclear disarmament by treaty negotiations.

  19. Change in Nuclear Weapons Policy • President Barack Obama declared in Prague April 2009 that the United States will "take concrete steps toward a world without nuclear weapons."

  20. President Obama’s Nuclear Arms Control Agenda • President Obama negotiating a successor to Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) with Russian President Medvemed – • Reduce number of US and Russian strategic Nuclear Weapons by ~ one third. • Contention over Ballistic Missile Defenses in Europe • Russian concerns missile interceptors could be used to block Russian retaliation after a US pre-emptive first strike • US Senate opposed to any concessions on BMD • Urge Congress to Support and Ratify this Nuclear Arms Control Treaty.

  21. President Obama Supports Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) • Bans the detonation of any nuclear bombs. • Agreed to by 41 of 44 nuclear states, ratified by 31 • 1999: Without hearings, ratification failed in US Senate 48- 51 • 2001: Bush withdraws from CTBT • 2009: Obama Supports CTBT • Urge Congress to Ratify CTBT

  22. Non-Proliferation Treaty • Seeks to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and weapons technology • In exchange for non-nuclear nations agreeing to not develop Nuclear weapons, Nuclear nations agreed to: 1) Not target non-nuclear nations; 2) Decrease the number of nuclear weapons; and 3) Eventually eliminate nuclear weapons. • President Obama Supports Strengthening Non-Proliferation Treaty and • Taking nuclear weapons off Hair Trigger Launch

  23. Unsolved Problems with Nuclear Power Waste Yucca Flats Nuclear Waste Depository on hold Bush Administration’s “Global Nuclear Energy Partnership” -Reprocesses Nuclear Power waste to purify plutonium and Uranium - Domestically and Globally -Increases stockpiles of weapons-usable plutonium Nuclear Power Plant  Reprocess  Plutonium  Warheads Major Nuclear Proliferation Risk -Reprocessing increases volume of radioactive waste  Increased exposure to radioactivity PSR Urges President Obama and Congress to abandon nuclear waste reprocessing.

  24. Which Nuclear Weapons Policy will we choose? Deterrence Counterforce Mutually Assured Destruction Or Non-Proliferation and Multilateral Nuclear Disarmament

  25. The Future is in our Hands ! PSR Urges you to support President Obama’s Disarmament and Non-Proliferation Treaty Efforts

  26. Other Sources of Information Physicians for Social Responsibility http://www.psr.org Sacramento PSR http://www.sacpsr.org Nuclear Age Peace Foundation http://www.wagingpeace.org/ Teach Peace Foundation http://www.teachpeace.com

  27. Summary • PSR Urges you to contact your congressional representatives and request that they support and ratify President Obama’s nuclear arms control efforts including: • A successor to Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) • Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty • Strengthening Non-Proliferation Treaty • Taking nuclear weapons off Hair Trigger Launch • However, PSR Urges President Obama and Congress to abandon nuclear waste reprocessing.

  28. THE END

  29. Extra Slides for question and answer period

  30. Attack on Nuclear Power Plant anticipated to be the Worst Nuclear Disaster Anticipated Fallout from Bombing a Nuclear Power plant Fetter & Tsipis Scientific American April 1981

  31. Unprecedented Public Health Disaster

  32. Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty • Negotiated with the former Soviet Union during the Cold War. • Forbids testing and deployment of Sea, Space or Mobile ballistic missile defense systems. • ABM Treaty is important: While ABM system may shoot down rogue missiles, it can also be very destabilizing especially if coupled with first strike weapons. • 2001: Bush administration announces US withdrawal from ABM treaty. • ~2004 Russia Develops Topol-M “Crazy Ivan” ICBM • 2007: US plans to deploy ABM in Eastern Europe

  33. Nationalism Develop Weapons Military Industrial Complex Insecurity Perceived Military Threats Nation "A" Perceived Military Threats Insecurity Military Industrial Complex Develop Weapons Nationalism Nation "B" Factors Driving the Nuclear & Conventional Arms Race Conflicts over Resources or Ideologies

  34. President Obama’s Nuclear Arms Control Agenda • President Obama negotiating a successor to Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) with Russian President Medvemed- • Reduce US and Russian strategic Nuclear Weapons by 1/3 • Contention over US Ballistic Missile Defenses in Europe • Russian concerns- missile interceptors could be used to block Russian retaliation after a US pre-emptive first strike • US Senate opposed to any concessions on BMD • President Obama Supports Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty • Ratification narrowly failed in 1999 • President Obama Supports Strengthening Non-Proliferation Treaty • Supports taking nuclear weapons off Hair Trigger Launch • Urge Congress to Support and Ratify President Obama’s Nuclear Arms Control Treaties.

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