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Global disarmament starts at home;
it's time to disarm America! Talking Points - Nuclear Disarmament/Redefining Security Working Group, United for Peace and Justice, August 20031) WMD FOUND IN U.S. AFTER FRUITLESS SEARCH IN IRAQ. At STRATCOM, the U.S. military's nuclear command and control center at Offutt Air Force Base near Omaha, Nebraska, top-level Pentagon officials will meet the week of August 4th to discuss a proposal for the production of modified and new nuclear weapons. A contest has been launched between the Lawrence Livermore (CA) and Los Alamos (NM) National Laboratories to design a 'Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator,' a nuclear bomb designed to withstand a high-speed collision with the ground and bore through 20 - 30 feet of rock or concrete before exploding. This 'high-yield' weapon, at least 75 kilotons and perhaps much larger (the Hiroshima bomb was about 15 kilotons), is intended to destroy deeply buried and hardened targets. Its use would result in a huge, deadly, radioactive mushroom cloud. Research is ongoing on both 'low-yield' nuclear warheads and on targeting techniques to make nuclear weapons more usable, particularly against deeply buried targets and chemical and biological weapons facilities. The U.S. opposes the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty which would block possible U.S. proof testing of new or modified nuclear weapons. (Some new or modified weapons could be, and have been, deployed without such tests.) Los Alamos recently manufactured the first nuclear weapons pit (plutonium
trigger) in 14 years that meets specifications for the U.S. stockpile.
Plans are Upgrades to the nuclear weapons laboratories' biowarfare research facilities
will allow the conduct of aerosol studies, including tests on live rodents,
2) AS IT DEMANDS THAT NORTH KOREA 'VERIFIABLY AND IRREVERSIBLY DISMANTLE' ITS NUCLEAR PROGRAM, THE U.S. IS REFUSING TO APPLY THE SAME PRINCIPLES TO U.S./RUSSIAN REDUCTIONS. The U.S. demands that North Korea and Iran refrain from acquiring nuclear weapons and submit to IAEA inspections in accordance with the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT). But Article VI of the NPT also requires the U.S. and other existing nuclear powers to eliminate their arsenals through good-faith negotiations. The U.S. is now blatantly rejecting NPT commitments it made in 2000 to apply the principles of irreversibility and verification to reduction of its arsenal. Unlike prior agreements, the 2002 Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT) with Russia does not require the verified destruction of a single delivery system or warhead. In addition to SORT-permitted deployed strategic (long range) warheads, 1700-2200 in 2012, the U.S. plans to retain hundreds of tactical (short range) weapons and many thousands of warheads in reserve, including large numbers - perhaps 2000 a decade from now - in a 'responsive force' capable of redeployment within weeks or months. Today and into the future, the U.S. remains ready at all times to strike
Russia and other countries, within minutes of an order to do so, with
about 2000
missile-based warheads. 3) WHILE ITSELF PREPARING TO USE NUCLEAR WEAPONS THE U.S. WARNS NORTH KOREA AND IRAN AGAINST ACQUIRING NUCLEAR ARSENALS AND WAGED A WAR ALLEGEDLY TO PREVENT IRAQI ACQUISITION OF WMD. The December 2002 Strategy to Combat Weapons of Mass Destruction declares that the United States 'reserves the right to respond with overwhelming force - including through resort to all of our options - to the use of WMD against the United States, our forces abroad, and friends and allies."All of our options" includes both 'conventional and nuclear response' capabilities, employed in appropriate cases through preemptive measures.' The January 2002 Nuclear Posture Review plans for first use of nuclear weapons in response to non-nuclear attacks or threats involving biological or chemical weapons or "surprising military developments," and targets countries including Iran, North Korea, Syria, and Libya. Early this year a 'Theater Nuclear Planning Document' was drawn up for Iraq. 4) Global disarmament starts at home - it's time to disarm America. The U.S. demands disarmament from other nations while expanding its reliance on the ultimate weapons of terror and increasing the risk of their use in the 'War on Terrorism'. We reject this hypocritical, dangerous and unsustainable policy and has made nuclear disarmament one of its priorities, calling for sweeping measures to eliminate nuclear arms in the U.S. as well as worldwide. Citizens are opposing U.S. reliance on nuclear arms in events at the nuclear weapons laboratories, STRATCOM, and elsewhere, while also commemorating the 53rd anniversary of the U.S. atomic attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. |
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