Before Trump, Americans hadn't worried this much about nuclear weapons since the Cold War
Evan Halper
Gov. Jerry Brown, who has seen much to worry about in his five
decades in public office, said recently that he had a particularly
heavy concern: the nation’s obliviousness to how close it is to nuclear
catastrophe.
“There is virtually no conversation about this, and
it is damned dangerous,” Brown said to journalists and politicians in
Philadelphia last month, after steering the conversation to the threat
of nuclear warheads exploding. “We really ought to wake up.”
Soon, the public did wake up. Donald Trump saw to it.
Trump
has suggested America use nuclear weapons to bomb Islamic State. He has
proposed that Japan and maybe even Saudi Arabia build their own
arsenals. And he may have weakened the deterrent effect of nuclear bombs
in Europe by suggesting a Trump administration would not come to the
aid of NATO members who owe the alliance money.
But the public most took notice, perhaps, when MSNBC
host Joe Scarborough told an anecdote about Trump asking a foreign
policy expert three times during a briefing why the U.S. doesn’t use its
nuclear weapons. Trump’s campaign denies any such query took place.
Not since Ronald Reagan’s reelection at the
tail end of the Cold War have nuclear weapons played so big in a
presidential race. Historians have to reach back even further,
to decades before Reagan, to find a nominee who has talked about nuclear
war as loosely as Trump does.
Until Trump came along, voters had
largely shifted their worries elsewhere, away from the sobering reality
that nuclear warheads can pulverize entire cities in an instant, that
they are so powerful that merely possessing them is a deterrent to war,
and that presidents can order, on their own, that a nuclear weapon be
launched.
“It’s been shock therapy for the American public,” said
Joseph Cirincione, president of the Ploughshares Fund, which promotes
nuclear disarmament. “Up until last month, most Americans did not even
know a president could launch a nuclear war on their own authority.”
Regardless,
Trump has plunged into an issue presidential candidates gently
sidestepped for years. U.S. policy for when and how nuclear arms should
be deployed has been one of the rare points of bipartisan foreign policy
agreement. Yet it doesn’t fit neatly into Trump’s unique ideology,
which is driven by challenging existing orthodoxy on everything.
This
is one corner of policy, though, where his vow to shake things up is
not so much energizing voters as unnerving them. On the questions of
national security and temperament, voter confidence in Trump lags far
behind that of rival Hillary Clinton.
One
of Clinton’s most effective lines on the stump now is asking
whether someone who can be so easily baited by a tweet should have his
finger on the nuclear button.
Amid an outpouring of alarm from
national security experts — including dozens who served at the highest
levels of Republican administrations — even many die-hard Trump
supporters admit they are rattled by the idea.
During a recent
focus group of women in Arizona and Ohio, the nuclear issue gave pause
to voters otherwise committed to Trump. A staunchly conservative woman
from Phoenix said she was hopeful that a President Trump would not be
empowered to “just hit the button” at will. “I’d really like to think
that there are more controls,” she said.
The problem, as Americans are fast learning, is that there really are not that many controls.
“You
get into some dangerous hypotheticals of what it would look like if
Donald Trump gave an order” disputed by the military, said John Noonan, a
GOP security advisor.
He would know. Noonan is a former Air Force
launch officer, a job in which he held the codes for launching
intercontinental nuclear missiles.
“The question is whether the
nuclear infrastructure is robust enough to survive instability at top. I
think it is. But this also places unnecessary stress on the military.
“The best thing American people can do is just make sure Donald Trump is never elected president.”
Noonan says Trump has unnecessarily panicked the public, triggering worries that have been latent for decades.
“For
my parents and grandparents, there was always a very real threat that
at any moment a crisis in a remote region of the world could escalate
into a massive nuke attack in the United States,” he said. “I grew up
not worrying about that. Trump has reintroduced that specter onto the
national scene.”
Other scholars of the nuclear triad say the jolt
Trump has given the electorate could ultimately prove useful — even if
many of them, like Noonan, want Trump nowhere near the nuclear arsenal.
“His
comments have forced us to reckon with the fact that our current
nuclear posture remains unnecessarily risky,” said Kingston Reif,
director for Disarmament and Threat Reduction Policy at the Arms Control
Assn., a Washington think tank.
Nuclear weapons have emerged as a
focal point in the presidential race as President Obama contemplates
adding new safeguards into the rules governing their use. Options the
president is mulling include banning America from striking first with a
nuclear weapon, which current policy allows under certain extreme
circumstances.
“There are a lot of question about what our nuclear
policy should be, what we should spend the money on, what the
president’s power should be with regard to use of the weapons,” said
James Acton, co-director of the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie
Endowment. “The fact that these things are not being discussed is a
point of weakness.”
“If Trump’s comments spark a sensible public
conversation, that may be a silver lining,” he said. “But it is clearly
not the optimal way to spark this discussion.”
Brown is looking
for a bigger conversation. He recently wrote a sobering review in the
New York Review of Books of “My Journey at the Nuclear Brink” by former
U.S. Defense Secretary William Perry, who has convinced Brown the world
is closer to a nuclear catastrophe than even during the Cold War.
In
a phone interview, Brown vividly lays out a scenario Perry warns about
in which terrorists could smuggle a crude nuclear device into the center
of Washington and use it to wipe out the president, key Cabinet
members, most of Congress and tens of thousands of people — setting off
mass panic and descending the nation into chaos.
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