Riding pillion behind Bush,
Blair has embroiled
Now, as part of his 'legacy', he wants to
commit us to paying for a brand new Trident missile system. Brown supports this
too, and New Labour ministers flock behind them like sheep. Every one of the
160 nuclear warheads will be capable of wiping out over half-a-million people.
The bill for these weapons of mass
destruction is likely to be around £25 billion for the system. But the total
expenditure will be around £76 billion when running costs over 30 years are
included. Why aren't Blair and Brown proposing to spend this money on improving
health, education, pensions and other vital, life-support services?
The new system, like the current version,
will consist of US-made Trident missiles, based on four British-built
submarines. The nuclear warheads will be manufactured at the Atomic Weapons
Research Establishment (AWRE), Aldermaston. This nuke factory is already being
modernised. The cost is secret, but estimated to be over £4 billion.
Why does
Or
What is
British imperialism's "deterrent"
(under 200 warheads) would be a minor factor compared to the
In 1956,
Another nuclear risk, claims Blair, is that
rogue states could sponsor nuclear terrorists operating from their territory.
Again, Blair himself weakly admits, "it's improbable but no one can say
it's impossible." So we need a £76 billion insurance policy?
The existing Trident system did not deter the
7/7
Imagine a horrific scenario: An unidentified
terrorist group explodes a portable nuclear device in one of our major cities.
It might be a 'dirty bomb', using conventional explosive to scatter highly
toxic radioactive waste material.
Against whom would the government unleash a
nuclear strike? What would nuclear retaliation achieve, apart from revenge? It
would inevitably provoke more terrorist attacks. How many innocent civilians
would the British government be prepared to kill? Even one Trident warhead has
eight times the destructive power of the
Use of a single warhead - and Trident
missiles carry multiple warheads - would trigger a wave of global anger
internationally, with mass protests on every continent. It's a fantasy to
believe that nuclear weapons can deter rogue states or nuclear terrorists.
Instead of fostering stability and security,
the upgrading of nuclear arsenals will give a new twist to the nuclear arms
race, making the world even more unstable and dangerous. It's like taking out
an expensive, comprehensive insurance policy on a car - while filling the boot
with crates of gelignite.
Blair's arguments for an "independent
nuclear deterrent" are false, from beginning to end. Owning a nuclear
arsenal has nothing to do with the security and well-being of
Blair is determined that British imperialism,
now a second- or third-rate power, should continue to 'punch above its weight',
remaining part of the nuclear, great-power club. Surprisingly, perhaps, Blair's
phoney arguments are exposed by the Financial Times, a mouthpiece of big
business. "What exactly...is it for?" asked an editorial (Unanswered
Questions,
"Put simply: do we need Trident as 'the
ultimate insurance' as Mr Blair says? Or are we clinging to the ultimate
vestige of the great power delusions to which this prime minister seems
especially prone?"
One of the Financial Times' columnists,
Philip Stephens, is even more scathing. In an article headlined The High Price
of Nuclear Prestige (
Inconceivable! Yet Blair is determined to
bequeath us a £76 billion bill for an invalid nuclear insurance policy. He said
he wanted a debate about the renewal (and why not the abolition?) of
It's probable that (sometime in March)
Parliament, with Tory support, will also rubber-stamp Blair's plan. The Labour
Party has swung so far to the right that only about 50 Labour MPs are expected
to oppose Trident. If there was to be a real debate, with all sides of the
issue put to the public in mass meetings up and down the country and through
the media, there is little doubt that a big majority would be against this
phenomenally wasteful, dangerous project.
Even if Parliament votes for Trident, the
campaign should be stepped up to reverse such a shameful decision.
The new Trident
system, Blair boasts, will have 'only' 160 warheads, compared with the existing
200. New Labour's white paper, The Future of the
What utter
hypocrisy! Building a new Trident system sends out the opposite signal. As the
nuclear scientist, Joseph Rotblat, says: "If some nations - including the
most powerful militarily - say that they need nuclear weapons for their
security, then such security cannot be denied to other countries which really
feel insecure. Proliferation of nuclear weapons is the logical consequence of
this nuclear policy."
The big five
powers have always tried to maintain an exclusive nuclear club. Under the 1968
Non-Proliferation Treaty (extended indefinitely in 1995), the other 182
signatories agreed to renounce nuclear weapons in return for assistance with
peaceful nuclear energy programmes, subject to international inspection. At the
same time, the big five committed themselves to reducing and eventually
eliminating their own nuclear arsenals.
In reality, the
big five have never had any intention whatsoever of giving up their nukes.
Since the early 1990s they have reduced their stockpiles of nuclear warheads,
while modernising their arsenals and developing new 'tactical', battlefield
weapons.
Currently, about
40 countries have nuclear weapons or the capacity to rapidly produce them.
Worldwide, there are around 27,600 nuclear warheads - more than enough to
destroy the planet and pollute surrounding space.
The policy of
the imperialist powers towards proliferation is completely hypocritical. The
Yet since the
early 1960s, the West has secretly helped the state of
The North Korean
regime of Kim Jong Il is an obnoxious, Stalinist-type dictatorship. But it has
developed nuclear weapons mainly as a defence against US-imposed isolation and
the threat of 'regime change'. However, this month, agreement was reached
between
The Iranian
regime claims it is interested only in peaceful nuclear energy, but it is not
unlikely that it aims to produce nuclear weapons.
Iranians have
not forgotten, moreover, that the Western powers supported Saddam Hussein
during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war - when Saddam used chemical weapons against
Iranian forces.
The nuclear
arming of
This is the
result of
The nuclear arms race took off after the
second world war (1939-45). The war closed with the
During the "Cold War", from 1945 to
1989, capitalist leaders put forward a simple case for nuclear weapons - as a
deterrent against aggression by the totalitarian "Communist" bloc.
Two rival blocs competed for global economic,
strategic and political influence: the Western capitalist bloc, dominated by
Both sides poured enormous resources into
more and more sophisticated and destructive nuclear weaponry. 'Mutual Assured
Destruction' (MAD), the capacity of one side to retaliate to a 'first strike'
by the other, ruled out nuclear war as a rational choice. Launching a nuclear
strike would be the equivalent of suicide for the regime concerned - not to
mention the annihilation of humanity.
The two super-powers, the
The nuclear arsenals of the big five did not
prevent a whole series of 'small' wars, like the Korean and Vietnam wars and a
series of civil wars (e.g. Angola, Zaire, Nicaragua) in which rival powers
intervened by backing warring protagonists.
During the "Cold War", hot,
conventional wars claimed the lives of between 20 and 30 million people. The
Cold War ended with the collapse of the Stalinist states after the fall of the
However, the end of the bi-polar world and
the break-up of the former Western and "Communist" blocs has produced
intensified rivalry between the major powers and rival regional powers. More
and more regional powers have acquired nuclear weapons or are now striving to
produce them.
Through their militaristic policies, the
major powers have provoked further proliferation. Above all, Bush's policies of
pre-emptive war and regime change have persuaded threatened regimes to develop
nuclear "deterrence".
The superpowers may regard nuclear weapons as
an absolute last resort. But what about unstable regimes like
Socialists are opposed to all nuclear
weapons. But the total failure of the United Nations and numerous international
arms control treaties to stop the spread of nuclear weapons shows that nuclear
disarmament is a utopian dream under capitalism.
There is an organic competitive drive by
national capitalist states for their own spheres of influence, markets and
resources. Regimes based on capitalist and landlord exploiters strive for power
and prestige. This makes arms accumulation and wars inevitable.
For as long as they exist, nuclear weapons
will pose a dire threat to humankind. But the elimination of nuclear weapons
requires a world-wide change in the social system: Democratic economic planning
instead of the anarchy of the market. Socialist democracy instead of the
predatory rule of capitalists and landlords.
Only the democratic control of society by the
working class can provide the basis for real international cooperation and
global planning. A new Trident system for
In depth analysis of this and other issues can be found in
Socialism Today. The monthly magazine of the CWI in