There Must Be Bones Under the Paved Street: The Thirty-Second Newsletter (2019).
Dear Friends,
Greetings from the desk of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research.
On 6 August 1945, the United States military dropped a bomb that
contained 64kg of uranium-235 over the city of Hiroshima (Japan). The
bomb took just over 44 seconds to fall from 9,400 metres and detonated
580 metres above the Shima Surgical Clinic. Over 80,000 people died
instantly. This was the first use of the nuclear bomb.
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Satsuo Nakata, Chugoku Shimbun building, 10 August 1945.
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Four days later, Satsuo Nakata
brought the Domei New Agency’s Leica camera to the city. He took
thirty-two photographs of the devastation; each of these pictures –
archived in the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum – is iconic. The force
of the bomb flattened the city, even though less than 2% of the uranium
detonated. Nakata took a picture of the office of the newspaper Chugoku Shimbun
and of the Odamasa kimono store. The store’s metal twisted into a
whirlwind. It is a sign of the power of this weapon. As Toge Sankichi, a
hibakusha (survivor of the atom bomb) and poet, wrote of that
power and its impact, as the fires burnt down from the bomb’s power in a
city of 350,000: ‘the only sound – the wings of flies buzzing around
metal basins’.
This past June, an eighty-nine-year-old hibakusha, Ai Masuda,
returned to Hiroshima. Seventy-four years ago, Ai Masuda (then age 15)
ran through the city in search of her cousin Harue (then age 13).
‘Harue’, she said
as she looked into the Motoyasu River, ‘I am sorry I was unable to find
you’. Ai and Harue were students at the Hiroshima First Municipal
Girls’ School. Six hundred and sixty-six students, including Harue, and
ten teachers died in the blast. ‘Everyone died such a cruel death’, Ai
Masuda recalled. ‘I found myself gazing at scenes from hell’.
Shigemoto Yasuhiko was also 15 on that day. His haiku on Hiroshima stills the heart:
Hiroshima Day –
I believe there must be bones
Under the paved street.
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Global Nuclear Weapons Stockpiles, SIPRI, 2019.
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Last week, the United States withdrew from
the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty that has been in
place since 1987. The INF is part of a series of treaties that – it is
often hoped – will draw the world back from a nuclear war. To remind us
of the perils of our time, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’
Doomsday Clock is stuck at two minutes to midnight. For the atomic
scientists who designed this clock in 1945, in the aftermath of the US
strike on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, ‘midnight’ designated the apocalypse.
Two minutes to midnight is as close to annihilation as possible.
Anything less than that puts us to the point when the bomb begins its
descent to earth (a journey that took less than a minute in 1945). The
Bulletin’s statement from
January says that the twin perils – climate change and nuclear conflict
– put ‘the future of civilisation in extraordinary danger’.
Withdrawal from the INF treaty is only one sign of danger. Another is
that the various nuclear powers – led by the United States – have once
more placed their nuclear weapons at the heart of their military
strategy, and they have begun to spend obscene amounts of money towards
the modernisation of their nuclear weapons force. The US plans to spend
$50 billion per year for the next decade, 23% more than a 2017 estimate.
This annual increase is the same as the total military budget for the
United Kingdom, and it is merely to modernise the US nuclear arsenal.
The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) has recently released
its Yearbook on armaments, disarmament, and international security. The
world’s most powerful nuclear forces are found in the United States,
Russia, the UK, France, China, India, Pakistan, Israel, and North Korea.
The collapse of the INF treaty is a sign of the end of even the
pretence of nuclear disarmament. The Treaty on the Prohibition of
Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) was negotiated in 2017 but has not been
ratified. In this climate, it will likely not be taken forward, despite
the efforts of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, which won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2017 for the TPNW.
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An Iranian cleric walks past a mural on the wall of the former U.S. embassy. Tehran, February 2007. Morteza Nikoubazl/Reuters.
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SIPRI’s Yearbook notes that Iran – which
neither has nuclear weapons nor has indicated aspirations to have
nuclear weapons – ‘continued to implement the 2015 Joint Comprehensive
Plan of Action (JCPOA)’. The JCPOA – also called ‘the Iran nuclear deal’
– was negotiated by Iran, the five permanent members of the UN Security
Council (China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United
States), Germany, and the European Union, and then ratified by the
United Nations. In May, the US government abandoned this deal, which put
restrictions on Iran’s nuclear energy programme. The US withdrawal has
destabilised the region, with the Bulletin of Atomic Scientist saying
that both this unilateral withdrawal by the US from the Iran deal and
the INF are ‘grave steps towards a complete dismantlement of the global
arms control process’.
And yet, the finger of blame for tension in West Asia seems to point towards Iran.
Our Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research dossier
no. 19 (August 2019) offers an Iranian point of view on this conflict.
We spoke to Seyed Mohammad Marandi of the University of Tehran, who
succinctly walked us though the situation inside Iran and the dangerous
hybrid war being prosecuted against Iran. From Tehran, Marandi says that
Iran is not isolated nor is it going to be provoked into a war. Iran
will defend its sovereignty and its rights, but it will do so in a sober
manner. The US unilateral sanctions, he says, are illegal, yet they
have an impact because of the United States’ hegemony over the financial
system and because of the spinelessness of the Europeans. Any European
attempts to save the JCPOA, including the INSTEX mechanism, have been
cautious (as Iran’s Foreign Ministry’s Abbas Mousavi indicated). The United States has been putting pressure on shipping lines
by de-registering ships and by enforcing rigorous customs checks for
ships that have come from Iran. A naval force led by the US in the
Straits of Hormuz is designed to increase tension.
Such provocations, Marandi says, are a sign of US weakness – not
strength. ‘What prevents the United States from attacking Iran is
definitely Iran’s internal strength’, he said, ‘and its regional
capabilities, but obviously Iran’s close relationship with the Russians
and the Chinese significantly strengthen Iran’s hand too’. Of these
‘regional capabilities’, Marandi must have Lebanon’s Hezbollah in mind. A
few weeks ago, Hezbollah’s Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah laid out
his party’s plan if Iran is attacked:
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Hassan Nasrallah on al-Manar, 12 July 2019.
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There is a military angle here. The US has
been bogged down by a war in Afghanistan (Heela Najibullah’s recent article
lays out the political weakness in the country, which will likely allow
the Taliban to return to power). The United States’ illegal war in Iraq
showed the weakness of its power; Iran, with twice Iraq’s population,
will be nearly impossible to subdue. Even militarily, Marandi says, a
$20,000 home-made Iranian missile brought down a $200 million US drone.
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An
Iranian couple rest as they sit in front of the Iranian
surface-to-surface Zelzal missile while visiting of a war exhibition to
mark Iran-Iraq war (1980-88) anniversary at a Revolutionary Guard Corps
military base. Tehran, September 2011. Morteza Nikoubazl.
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Dust thrown into the wind towards Iran by
Donald Trump has muddied any clear thinking. According to the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (1968), of which Iran is a signatory, Iran has
the right to enrich uranium
for the purposes of power generation. The US, for the past two decades,
has insisted that Iran’s attempt to enrich uranium will facilitate a
nuclear weapons programme. To make a nuclear weapon, ‘weapon-grade’
uranium or Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU) is needed. HEU refers to
anything with 20% or more uranium-235 and ‘weapon-grade’ is often
enriched to 90% uranium-235. What Iran has does not qualify to be even
the lowest-grade HEU. Iran is currently at 4.5%, far below any threshold
for a nuclear weapon. The dispute between Iran and the US does not
hinge on nuclear weapons – it hinges on the US refusal to allow Iran the
right to a nuclear energy programme (which includes enrichment).
Frankly, there is a broad discussion to be had about the perils of
nuclear energy. There have already been three dangerous meltdowns at
nuclear power plants: Three Mile Island, USA (1979), Chernobyl, USSR
(1986), and Fukushima Daiichi, Japan (2011). There is also the question
of the toxicity of uranium mining as well as the toxicity of radioactive
waste (including fouled water). But this debate is not one that can be
restricted to Iran; it is a debate that must include the United States
and France, which have the largest number of nuclear power plants. One
in five nuclear reactors on the planet are in the United States; France dominates Niger as a consequence of Orano’s hold on the town of Arlit. We, at Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research, are working on a Briefing
on the world’s uranium corporations. The ‘uranium cartel’ – Rio Tinto,
Cameco, Orano (formerly Areva), and Kazatomprom – are of special
interest to us.
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The Trump administration has
sanctioned
Iran’s Foreign Minister, Javad Zarif – a sophisticated diplomat who was
the architect of the JPCOA. By trying to isolate Zarif, the US has said
that it is not interested in the diplomatic road. This is a very
worrying development and should be roundly condemned. Zarif, for his
part, simply said that the United States is isolating itself.
The pictures in the dossier are taken by the Tehran-based photographer
Morteza Nikoubazl.
In our ears, we have the music of the Iranian poet Abdolqasem Lahouti,
Az hič kasi komak nemiḵᵛāhim
kāfist do dast-e kāregar mā rā
We seek help from no one
Sufficient for us are the workers' hands.
Warmly,
Vijay.
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