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Consequences of War and Militarism. Martin Donohoe. Outline. The history and epidemiology of war Nuclear weapons Chemical weapons Biological weapons. Outline. Economic and environmental consequences of militarism and war Health consequences of militarism and war Contemporary conflicts
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Consequences of War and Militarism Martin Donohoe
Outline • The history and epidemiology of war • Nuclear weapons • Chemical weapons • Biological weapons
Outline • Economic and environmental consequences of militarism and war • Health consequences of militarism and war • Contemporary conflicts • Afghanistan, Iraq, “War on terror” • Solutions
History of War • Violent conflict ubiquitous in the animal kingdom: • Interspecies conflict – food, territory • Intraspecies conflict – food, territory, mates (usually not directly fatal) • Violence among non-human primates • Gorilla infanticide • Chimpanzee killing bands
History of war • 10,000 yrs ago – agriculture • Stable populations, division of labor, warrior class • 3500 yrs ago – bronze weapons and armor • 2200 yrs ago – iron • 1900 yrs ago – widespread use of horses
History of war • Ninth Century China - bombs developed • Thirteenth Century China – rockets • Forgotten until the 19th Century • 1783 – Balloon • Montgolfier brothers • Prussian general JCG Heyne – used for bombing
History of War • 1903 – Wright brothers/Kitty Hawk – airplane • 20th Century – nuclear submarines, predator drones, weaponization of space
History of War • Belief that each new invention would eliminate warfare • Instead, increased casualties, killing at a distance
Epidemiology of Warfare • Deaths in war: • 17th Century = 19/million population • 18th Century = 19/million population • 19th Century = 11/million population • 20th Century = 183/million population • Increasing casualties to civilians • 85-90% in 20th Century (vs. 10% late 19th Century)
Legacies of Colonial Exploitation • Christopher Columbus’ log entry upon meeting the Arawaks of the Bahamas: “They…brought us…many…things…They willingly traded everything they owned…They do not bear arms…They would make fine servants…With fifty men we could subjugate them all and make them do whatever we want.”
Legacies of Colonial Exploitation • Winston Churchill (speaking in favor of RAF’s “experimental” bombing of Iraqis in 1920s, which killed 9,000 people with 97 tons of bombs): “I am strongly in favor of using poisoned gas against uncivilized tribes to spread a lively terror…against recalcitrant Arabs as an experiment”
Legacies of Colonial Exploitation • Cecil Rhodes (Rhodesia, Rhodes Scholarship, DeBeers Mining Company): “We must find new lands from which we can easily obtain raw materials and at the same time exploit the cheap slave labour that is available from the natives of the colonies. The colonies would also provide a dumping ground for the surplus goods produced in our factories.”
Contemporary Wars • 250 wars in the 20th Century • Incidence of war rising since 1950 • Most conflicts within poor states • 27 separate civil wars currently underway • 19 involve U.S.-supplied weapons
Contemporary Wars • 72 million lives lost in 20th Century wars, another 52 million through genocides • WW II: first war with more battle deaths than deaths from other causes, such as accidents, disease, and infections
Vietnam War • US dropped the equivalent of one 500 lb. bomb on every person in Vietnam • Vietnam War: 1.5 to 3 million Vietnamese casualties; 58,000 American • More US soldiers died of suicide after Vietnam than died in combat during the war. • Gulf War I: U.S. planted one land mine for every Iraqi citizen
Contemporary Wars • Gulf War I: US planted one land mine for every Iraqi citizen • 310,000 direct war-related deaths in 2000 (0.5% of worldwide mortality); indirect deaths much larger
Wars Promoted Through Militarism • Military buildups • Exceptionalism • Imperialism • Glorification of war • Unrealistic expectations
Consequences of War Deaths, injuries, psychological sequelae Collapse of health care system affecting those with acute and chronic illnesses Famine
Consequences of War • Environmental degradation • Refugees, migrants, internally-displaced persons • Increasing poverty and debt • All lead to recurrent cycles of violence
Atomic Weapons - History • Hiroshima, August 6, 1945 • “The day that humanity started taking its final exam” – Buckminster Fuller • 15 kiloton bomb, 140,000 deaths • Nagasaki, August 9, 1945 • 22 kiloton bomb, 70,000 casualties
Atomic Weapons – Other Victims • Hundreds of thousands of hibakusha – atomic bomb survivors • 1054 U.S. nuclear tests since 1940s, 331 in atmosphere
Atomic Weapons – Other Victims 80,000 cancers (15,000 fatal) in US citizens as a result of fallout from atmospheric testing NCI/CDC Thousands of illnesses and deaths, higher CA risk in 600,000 former employees - DOE
Atomic Weapons Today Approximately 23,360 nuclear weapons at 11 sites in 14 countries (1/2 active or operationally-deployed) Down from over 71,000 at height of Cold War 5,200 active U.S. warheads today (more than ½ on hair-trigger alert); 8,000 in Russia Several thousand megatons (100,000 Hiroshimas)
Atomic Weapons Today • Vastly redundant arsenal • 150-200 weapons adequate to destroy all major urban centers in Russia
Atomic Weapons Today Accidental intermediate-sized launch of weapons from a single Russian submarine would immediately kill 6.8 million Americans in 8 cities
Nuclear Weapons – Oops! • Pentagon: 32 nuclear weapons accidents since 1950 • GAO: 233 • Since 1950, 10 nuclear weapons lost and never recovered • All laying on seabed, potentially leaking radioactivity
Effects of a Nuclear Explosion • Immediate: • Vaporized by thermal radiation • Crushed by blast wave • Burned and suffocated by firestorm
Effects of a Nuclear Explosion • Intermediate: • Suffering, painful deaths • Health care personnel/resources overwhelmed • Famine • Refugees • Devastated transportation infrastructure
Effects of a Nuclear Explosion • Late effects: • Cancer • Psychological trauma (PTSD, anxiety, depression) • nuclear winter (mass starvation due to disruption of agricultural, transportation, industrial and health care systems)
Effects of a 20 megaton nuclear explosion • Ground zero - 2 miles: • Within 1/100 second fireball hotter than sun; everything vaporized • 2 - 4 miles: • 25 psi pressures; 650 mph winds • Buildings ripped apart and leveled
Effects of a 20 megaton nuclear explosion • 4 - 10 miles: • 7 – 10 psi; 200 mph winds • Sheet metal melts; concrete buildings heavily damaged (all others leveled) • 16 miles: • 100 mph winds, firestorm, T = 1400° C • 100% mortality
Effects of a 20 megaton nuclear explosion • 21 miles: • 2 psi; 100 mph winds • Shattered glass, flying debri • 29 miles: • 3° burns over all exposed skin • 40 miles: • Retinal burns blind all who witness explosion
Effects of a 20 megaton nuclear explosion over Boston (1998 study) • Death toll: • 1,000,000 within minutes • 1,800,000 survivors: • 1,100,000 fatally injured • 500,000 with major injuries • 200,000 without injuries
Types of Injuries • Burns • Blindings • Deafenings • PTX • Fxs • Shrapnel wounds
Radiation Sickness • Very high dose: cerebral edema, N/V/D, speech and gait difficulties, convulsions, coma, death within 1-2 days • Medium doses: N/V/D → resolves → recurrent hematemesis, bloody D → majority die • Low doses: BM failure, infections, bleeding, sores, ± death
Effects on health professionals • 70% killed or fatally wounded • 15% injured • < 1000 survive
Effects on health care system • Most major hospitals destroyed • EMS system debilitated • No X-ray machines, electricity, water, antibiotics or other meds, blood/plasma, bandages • 2000 burn unit beds in US (100 per major city) – essentially destroyed
Effects on Health Care System • 1500 patients/doctor • 10 min/pt • 4 hours sleep/noc • 2 weeks to see all injured
Ultimate Outcomes • Boston (pop. 2.8 million in 1998) • > 2.5 million dead after one month • More than 6x as many Americans as died in WW II
Health hazards of the Nuclear Cycle • Ecosystem degradation: e.g., Bikini Island • Uranium mining: 5-fold increase in lung cancer • Depleted uranium: • increased stillbirths, birth defects, childhood leukemias, other cancers in Southern Iraq • Possible increase in lung CA in U.S. soldiers (data sparse)
Nuclear Waste Disposal • On-site storage: • 118 commercial reactors • 10 weapons plants • 37 research reactors
Nuclear Waste Disposal • Skull Valley, Goshute Indian Reservation, Utah • Private fuel storage consortium • Temporary storage of 44,000 tons of high-level nuclear waste • Bribes to tribes; environmental injustice • Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, New Mexico • Defense Dept. waste
Nuclear Waste Disposal – Yucca Mountain • On DOE land claimed by Western Shoshone Nation under the Ruby Valley Treaty of 1863 • 100 miles from Las Vegas • Near aquifer and earthquake fault
Nuclear Waste Disposal – Yucca Mountain • Est. 100,000 shipments of 70,000 – 120,000 tons of waste over 25 yrs • Coming within ½ mile of 50 million Americans • Est. 200-350 accidents • Nuclear roulette • After $9 billion spent, will not occur – other options being considered
Nuclear Power Plants 104 plants in US Aging, equipment failures (8 from 3/00-4/01 → shutdowns) Nuclear power industry receives billions in taxpayer subsidies 435 plants worldwide (generate 16% of planet’s electricity) 60 plants in Russia ? Condition, safety
Nuclear Power • Supply of uranium for fission to run out by 2050 • Alternate sources: • MOX (mixed oxide) fuel (reprocessed spent fuel – plutonium and uranium) • Breeder reactors – make more fuel (plutonium) than they consume • Fission – currently impractical