Biden Says Donât Worry About Nuclear War. Maybe We Should
Qatar Tribune
John Keilman I was in middle school the last time I contemplated dying in a nuclear fireball. It was 1983, and I had just seen âThe Day After,â a TV movie ...
John KeilmanI was in middle school the last time I contemplated dying in a nuclear fireball. It was 1983, and I had just seen âThe Day After,â a TV movie that depicted a fictional but horrifying US-Soviet war.The movie showed plenty of graphic destruction when the warheads struck the Midwest, but what shook me the most was the moment before impact, when a crowd at a football game watches Minuteman missiles soar into the blue afternoon sky.âTheyâre on their way to Russia,â says a character played by John Lithgow. âThey take about 30 minutes to reach their target.âHis companion glances at him.âSo do theirs â right?âThe movie was a Generation X milestone, part of an age when Armageddon was baked into pop culture. Looking back, though, it was a milestone of another kind â a moment when things actually started to change.President Ronald Reagan, the steely defense hawk who months earlier had referred to the Soviet Union as âthe evil empire,â got a sneak peek of the film at Camp David. He reputedly was so moved that he was inspired to slow the arms race.Four years after the broadcast, the US and the Soviet Union signed a treaty to reduce their arsenals. Four years after that, the Soviet Union was no more. Though the weapons didnât disappear â Pakistan and North Korea have since joined the nuclear club, with Iran reportedly in hot pursuit. Personally, I didnât give them a thought.Iâm sure thinking about them now.Vladimir Putinâs gossamer-veiled threats to use some of his 6,000 nukes during Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine has revived the old menace. Deep down, I still donât fear the apocalypse â President Joe Biden, for what itâs worth, recently said Americans shouldnât worry about nuclear war â but if the last two years have taught us anything, itâs that we shouldnât dismiss the worst-case scenario.I wasnât exactly reassured when I sought official advice on what to do if the missiles fly. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, citing the World Health Organization, offers nuggets verging on the absurd: âIf you are near the blast when it occurs: Turn away and close and cover your eyes to prevent damage to your sight.âThe Illinois Emergency Management Agency doesnât include military-grade nuclear strikes among its list of potential disasters, though it has produced recommendations about dealing with improvised nuclear devices and dirty bombs. (Long story short: Go inside, get rid of your clothes, take a shower and wait for official instructions.)A spokesman said the agency no longer keeps an active list of fallout shelters. When WBEZ-FM looked for some in Chicago five years ago, the few they found were beneath South Side firehouses and had been turned into storage areas.Even if you were to survive the blast, you might soon wish you hadnât. In their book âNuclear Choices for the Twenty-First Century,â scientists Richard Wolfson and Ferenc Dalnoki-Veress paint a horrifying picture of the world after nuclear war, with food stores destroyed, social structures shattered, and enough smoke and soot in the air to cause a disastrous temperature plunge.âFallout from an all-out war would expose most of the belligerent nationsâ surviving populations to radiation levels ranging from harmful to fatal,â they write. âAnd the effects of nuclear war would extend well beyond the warring nations, possibly including climate change severe enough to threaten much of the planetâs human population.âThe University of Chicago-based Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has for decades kept a symbolic Doomsday Clock meant to focus public attention on the threat of nuclear war. The closer the big hand gets to midnight, the greater the risk.At the height of the Cold War, just after the Soviet Union detonated its first thermonuclear bomb, the clock was set at 2 minutes to midnight. That was as close as it got until 2020, when the bulletinâs experts, citing climate change and disinformation as additional concerns, moved it to 100 seconds to midnight.The panel reconvened recently to ponder whether the big hand should move again after Putinâs nuclear threats, but in the end decided to leave it alone. Rachel Bronson, the groupâs president and CEO, said Russiaâs moves so far appear to be saber-rattling, though thatâs scary enough.âItâs very worrisome,â she said. âWe know in conflict misperception has often led to unintended consequences, but in terms of the rhetoric, which is terrifying, and some of the movement, we havenât really seen those being aligned, so in part thatâs why we didnât move it.âI told Bronson I thought younger people werenât tuned into the threat because they didnât grow up with visions of annihilation woven into the cultural wallpaper. She had a different take, saying that with climate change, nuclear proliferation and COVID-19, theyâve never been able to take security for granted.At the moment, it doesnât look as if it will get any better. Citing government figures, Bronson said the US will spend more than $1 trillion on its nuclear arsenal over the next 30 years. No matter what happens in Ukraine, we seem fated to keep playing the worldâs most dangerous game of chicken. âI mean, shame on us, weâre committing (younger generations) to that,â she said. âThey just donât know it.â(John Keilman is a general assignment reporter for the Chicago Tribune.)