U.S. can't ignore nuclear threat
By Ted Turner
I'm worried that we're about to make the
same mistake we made a decade ago.
In August of 1991, when a coup by Soviet
hard-liners fell apart, then-president Mikhail Gorbachev gave
credit to live global television for keeping world attention
on the action, and Time magazine wrote: "Momentous
things happened precisely because they were being seen as they
happened."
But if good things can happen because a
lot of people are watching, bad things can happen when few
people are watching. After the Soviet Union collapsed, the
media moved off the story of the nuclear threat — and we moved
into the new world order without undoing the danger of the old
world order.
In the wake of Sept. 11, people are
realizing that the nuclear threat didn't end with the Cold
War. Soviet weapons, materials and know-how are still there,
more dangerous than ever. Russia's economic troubles weakened
controls on them, and global terrorists are trying harder to
get them.
When President Bush and Russian President
Vladimir Putin meet in Moscow next week, they will sign a
treaty to reduce the number of nuclear weapons on each side.
They need to reduce a lot more than that. Some of the
poisonous byproducts of the two powers' arms race are piled
high in poorly guarded facilities across 11 time zones. They
offer mad fools the power to kill millions.
At a Bush-Putin news conference two
months after the terrorist attacks, Bush declared: "Our
highest priority is to keep terrorists from acquiring weapons
of mass destruction." He also has told his national security
staff to give nuclear terrorism top priority.
Where's the money?
But it's hard to see this priority in the
budget and policies of the administration. Not a dollar of the
$38 billion the administration requested in new spending for
homeland defense will address loose weapons, materials and
know-how in Russia. The total spending on these programs —
even after Sept. 11 — has remained flat at about a billion
dollars a year, even though, at this rate, we will still not
have secured all loose nuclear materials in Russia for years
to come.
But what worries me most is not the lack
of new spending, but the lack of new thinking. Where are the
new ideas for preventing nuclear terrorism?
We can't just keep doing what we've been
doing, and we can't just copy old plans; we've got to
innovate. If we are hit with one of these weapons because we
slept through this wake-up call from hell, it will be the most
shameful failure of national defense in the history of the
United States.
Waning public interest
Unfortunately, public pressure for action
is weak, partly because media attention on nuclear terrorism
has begun to fade. And it's fading not because the threat has
been addressed or reduced, but because the media cover what
changes, and threats don't change much day to day. They just
keep on ticking.
The media need to stay on this story
because it's harder to get government action when there's not
much media coverage. If something's not in the media, it's not
in the public mind. If it's not in the public mind, there's
little political pressure to act. If public attention moves
off this nuclear threat before the government has moved to
reduce it, we will be making the same mistake we made after
1991.
Leadership, however, means being out in
front even if no one's pushing from behind. Bush and Putin
need to think bigger and do more. They need to reduce the
chance that terrorists can steal nuclear weapons or materials
or hire away weapons scientists. They need to work together as
partners in fighting terror and encourage others to join. They
need to launch a worldwide plan to identify weapons, materials
and know-how and secure all of it, everywhere, now — if we are
to avoid Armageddon.
CNN founder Ted Turner last year
established the Nuclear Threat Initiative, dedicated to
reducing the threats from nuclear, biological and chemical
weapons. He has pledged to provide $250 million to fund its
activities. |