This Sunday is Hiroshima Day, the 61st anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and, three days later, Nagasaki. While the conventional wisdom is that the mass murder of 150,000 Japanese civilians (and U.S. prisoners of war) was absolutely necessary to end the Pacific sphere of World War II by minimizing U.S. troop casualties and forcing a quick, unconditional Japanese surrender, a thorough review of historical documents and secondary analyses will tell you a very different story.

“The Hiroshima Myth” explains that the nuclear holocaust in Hiroshima was more for flipping off the Russians (who had entered the war three days earlier) and securing America’s new role as a superpower. It’s time for us to stop heralding the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki as a necessary evil and recognize them for what they really are: abominable, unprosecuted war crimes.

But that was sixty years ago. Not much we can do about those 150,000 murders now, but we can take a moment to think about the United States’ nuclear strategy. This Common Dreams article, documenting two people’s protest at a nuclear missile silo in North Dakota, is illuminating.

A friendly cab driver in Bismarck told me “If North Dakota seceded from the Union, we would be the world’s third most-powerful nuclear state.”

Not counting those screwed on top of intercontinential ballistic missiles stored in underground concrete silos, North Dakota has more than 1,700 nuclear warheads. The Peace Garden State alone has the capacity to send any country of any size (from Burkino Faso to China) back to the Stone Age, with a considerable amount of radiation and fallout to accompany them on their time travel journey.

In an age where conflicts are increasingly fought among supranational groups rather than nation-states (both the U.S. and Israel are fighting wars against organizations, not nations), is having an overwhelming nuclear arsenal the wisest decision for America? If Al-Qaeda set off a dirty bomb in downtown Seattle, where would we send our nuclear weapons? Southeastern Afghanistan? Beirut? Tehran?

It strikes me as folly that we’ve got this enormous stockpile–and have been the only nation so far to use it–and because of that stockpile alone, we believe we can dictate to other nations whether they are allowed to possess nuclear weapons or not.

We’re not fools. Iran wants to process uranium in order to run their nuclear power plants (Iran is/was an oil-rich country; their willingness to convert to nuclear energy should tell us something about the coming age of depleted oil), but they’re definitely going to consider making nuclear warheads while they’re at it. Who wouldn’t? The U.S. has dealt with India and Pakistan on a much more eye-to-eye level since they became self-declared nuclear powers. A nuclearized Iran changes the rules of the game and forces the U.S. to either sit down at the bargaining table or blow Iran to smithereens–neither are very good solutions.

Shouldn’t the U.S. walk the walk and drastically reduce their stockpiles before they can run around telling other countries whether they can have nuclear weapons or not? The issue of nuclear weapons is far too serious for Bush’s cowboy diplomacy. Allow North Dakota to live up to its nickname, The Peace Garden State, and maybe our international reputation could improve. Sue for peace, and it may just happen.

Then again, Japan tried to, and they got nuked instead.


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