WITH AMERICAN NUKES BACK IN BRITAIN, FREEDOM’S EDITORIAL AT THE HEIGHT OF THE
COLD WAR COULD AS WELL HAVE BEEN WRITTEN TODAY
~ punkacademic ~
In its 4 October 1981 issue, Freedom laid out an unequivocal case against
nuclear weapons under the bold heading, THINKING THE UNTHINKABLE. 1981 was the
height of the Cold War, with Reagan in office and sabre-rattling at its peak. A
month earlier, protests had begun at the Greenham Common RAF base against the
siting of US cruise missiles there.
These protests, famously feminist and often referred to in the media as ‘the
Greenham Women’, featured spectacular acts of direct action as the years went
on, including tens of thousands of women encircling the base, the perimeter
fence torn down, and protestors dancing on missile bunkers. The Peace Camp there
became an iconic symbol of resistance to patriarchy.
The piece reproduced here is that cover editorial, which preceded an issue of
Freedom accompanied by a supplement focused on the threat of nuclear weapons.
The cover editorial included a map of US bases in the UK, including familiar
names such as Greenham Common and Lakenheath. Commenting on the prospect of the
neutron bomb Freedom considered it a tell on the true nature of government that
states would seek to develop a weapon that would annihilate people but preserve
property.
The 1980s were an era when nuclear weapons were ubiquitous in popular culture.
The decade kicked off with Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark’s haunting Enola
Gay reaching number 8 in the UK charts. In 1983-84, films such as The Day After
in the US and Threads in the UK brought the horror of nuclear war home to TV
audiences (both films were TV movies, which heightened their impact). And again
in ’84, the first glimpses of a post-apocalyptic Los Angeles where humanity
battled for survival against a malevolent artificial intelligence which had
triggered a nuclear holocaust to exterminate them were seen in James Cameron’s
The Terminator.
The iconography of nuclear war is hardly as prevalent now, but maybe it should
be. To go in reverse, news broke this week that the major AI research company
Anthropic have built a mechanism into their Claude chatbot aimed at preventing
it from building a nuclear weapon. At the same time, news also broke that major
AIs such as ChatGPT and Grok are developing a resistance to being turned off.
For those who remember, Skynet didn’t actually build the nukes in Terminator,
but it did come to control them. And it reacted very badly to those who tried to
turn it off.
Closer to home, Greenham Common may be no more thanks in no small part to the
efforts of thousands of feminists, but Lakenheath is very much alive and kicking
and, as of this summer, once again home to US nuclear weapons. Worse still,
planning permission (how twee!) has gone in with the local council for
modifications to the site to house new munitions facilities. It’s also come out
that the council has no evacuation plan in case of a nuclear accident. Alas.
Nuclear weapons are both a moral obscenity and, as the editorial alludes to, the
ultimate representation of what government is. The ability for the government of
some to simply delete the population of others at the stroke of a key is the
ultimate rebuttal of any ‘contractarian’ justification for it. Hobbes claimed
government was justified by the provision of security; tell that to those it
disintegrates.
THINKING THE UNTHINKABLE
THE development of nuclear weapons has always brought with it its own brand of
specious justification. The first Atomic Bombs, as dropped on Japan, were
justified because they ‘saved lives by bringing the war to a speedy conclusion’.
The Hydrogen Bomb. as developed by both America and Russia, was defended by the
ghastly logic that they maintained a ‘balance of terror’ since both sides were
afraid to use them. The appalling destruction, uncontrollable fall-out and
long-term poisoning by radiation of land and spelled too much danger for the
world’s rulers, who would be destroyed along with the rest of us.
The latest development has brought with it a new justification – it can be
controlled! The Neutron Bomb, dubbed by the Soviets as the ‘Capitalist Bomb’ —
which doesn’t mean they won’t develop one themselves — was originally said to
‘kill people but leave property untouched’ and to have a very short life of
radioactive contamination. Conquered territory could be occupied by the victors
in a battle in a relatively short time.
Because of this, it is now being justified because it would be limited in its
use to ‘the theatre of war’ itself, and not used as a terror weapon against
civilian populations.
Messrs Reagan and Haig are now speaking openly of the possibility of waging war
in Europe (that’s America’s ‘Theatre’) with neutron bombs to overcome the
Soviet’s alleged superiority over NATO in numbers of conventional weapons.
What does this mean‘? It means quite simply that war between NATO and the Warsaw
Pact countries can now be contemplated, safe in the understanding that it can be
contained within battlefield Europe.
What bloody nonsense! Can anybody believe for a moment that if the commanders of
either side saw themselves losing such a conflict (and one side must lose!) that
they would not call up their intercontinental missiles to strike at the
heartland of the enemy‘?
Both sides now have enough megatons to destroy the world ‘several times over’
—and we know enough of the ruthlessness of the world’s rulers to know that they
would not hesitate to use them once the chips were down.
Neutron bombs, therefore, precisely because they sound more ‘controllable’, are
even more dangerous than their predecessors, because nuclear war is now becoming
thinkable in tactical terms by the lunatics who rule the world – instead of
being unthinkable.
It is time we all linked cause and effect. Governments are bringing us to the
brink of annihilation — it is time we began to think of government itself as
unthinkable!
The post Radical Reprint: Against Armageddon appeared first on Freedom News.
Tag - anti-nuclear
BETWEEN LABOUR’S BAREFACED MILITARISM AND A DOMESTICATED PEACE MOVEMENT, IT
FALLS TO ANARCHISTS TO STEP UP RESISTANCE TO WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION
~ Ned Skinn’ ~
The patriotic flag-waving and bunting to commemorate the 80th anniversary of
D-Day has for now kept our attention away from another upcoming anniversary—that
of the dropping of atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
in August 1945. The images of destruction and human suffering that followed
showed a horrific reality, reflected in ‘what it could be like’ films like
Threads. Humanity took a deep breath in and decided no-one wanted that again. It
was the fear of ‘mutually assured destruction’ that has, arguably, kept the
nuclear peace since then.
But now, for the first time in almost 20 years, it has just been announced that
American nuclear weapons are to be based on British soil. The British Prime
Minister tells us that we must prepare for war. There is talk of conscription
and a ‘Dad’s Army’-style volunteer defence corps. The right-wing press tries to
sell us the lie that we could survive a nuclear exchange. Businesses are being
offered courses on remaining operational during war. Even ‘enemies within’ like
Palestine Action are being created and police powers increased to quell
potential civil unrest.
Against all this, the anarchist movement in this country has a long history of
involvement in anti-militarism and resisting nuclear weapons, much of which may
have been forgotten. It may be useful to reflect on that past.
Shortly after Britain started testing its own nuclear weapons, in 1952, came the
first generation of anti-nuclear protestors with the formation of the Campaign
for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) and the more radical Committee of 100. They had
massive support from the public and it wasn’t long before the Labour Party
realised the potential to gain votes from that support. Public concern,
particularly after the global tension created by the Cuban missile crisis of
1962, meant that many believed Labour when they promised, “Vote for us and we’ll
ban the bomb!”.
As anti-militarists, anarchists had been involved in earlier movements against
war, and warned that the Labour Party could not be trusted. Sure enough, in
1964, the ‘ban-the-bomb’ Labour Party returned to government and wasted no time
deciding to further develop Britain’s nuclear arsenal. Those lies and that
betrayal should have been a lesson to remember forever.
Unfortunately, like many movements with radical beginnings, the CND and other
peace movement organisations had come to be led by middle-class liberals,
Christian pacifists, and entryist state-socialists. Since then, generations of
people wanting to ‘do something’ have been drawn into the same dead end of
writing to politicians, going on marches, and being encouraged to “vote Labour
without illusions” again and again. This attitude carried on into the 1980s’
intensification of the Cold War. Despite mass demonstrations and the camp at
Greenham Common, the mainstream leadership of the peace movement continued to
channel it all into innocuous protest and and electoral politics.
The 1980s also saw a resurgence of the anarchist movement. Interest in what was
later to become the Class War Federation started after their presence at CND
demos. The anarcho-punk scene and anarchists’ involvement in the animal rights
and environmental movements boosted interest in our ideas. Direct action, in all
its forms, became popular. Tory attacks on the working class provoked major
strikes like the miners, printers and ambulance staff, encouraging
class-struggle anarchist politics and leading to the creation of specifically
working-class organisations like Anarchist Communist Federation.
So, what next? We can only wait and see what effect that recent events have on
the wider population, particularly the working-class. I believe things might
have to get worse before they get better. With the increasing authoritarianism
and militarism of our society and intensified attempts to suppress dissent, the
Labour government is showing its true colours. How much will the population take
before they rouse from their sleep and do something?
We must remain anti-militarist and point out the clear fact that the Labour
Party is not the solution but the cause. This will put the left in a quandary,
so while we may be small in numbers we must speak and act with integrity. We
need to take care but we also need to stand up, shout and get organised. It is
anarchism that could provide the kindling that ignites the fire of change. We
just need to light that match.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Top image: Anti-nuclear blockade at Faslane, 15 April 2013. Ric Lander on Flickr
CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
The post Nuclear weapons on British soil appeared first on Freedom News.
RANGE OF DECENTRALISED RESPONSES ACROSS FRANCE AND GERMANY MARK TWENTIETH
ANNIVERSARY OF ACTIVIST KILLED BY A TRAIN CARRYING RADIOACTIVE WASTE
~ Rob Latchford ~
Numerous decentralised actions have been carried out on railway tracks and
nuclear industry sites in France and Germany to mark the 20th anniversary of
Sébastien Briat’s death.
Briat was a 21-year-old French anti-nuclear activist who was struck and killed
by a train carrying nuclear waste when preparing to chain himself to the tracks
near Avricourt on 7 November 2004. The train was carrying 12 containers of waste
from German nuclear power plants, which had been reprocessed in France, and was
heading to Germany for storage, based on an agreement between the countries.
On the night of 1 November, slogans were spray-painted around the Bugey nuclear
site, due for expansion, including “Nuclear neither here nor elsewhere”,
“Nuclear kills, pollutes, colonises” and “two more reactors = Bugey Sacrificed”.
Vigil in Lüneburg. Photo: Cecile Hoernchen
Sébastien’s relatives and friends gathered with 120 other anti-nuclear
protesters for a vigil at Bar le Duc station on 7 November. The street sign was
modified to symbolically rename the square “Place Sébastien Briat”, candles and
flowers were placed and speeches and musical performances were heard.
Meanwhile, at Lüneburg station in Germany, 15 people gathered with candles, mock
barrels of nuclear waste and banners, for a vigil to honour Sébastien’s memory
and raise awareness of the upcoming transport of nuclear waste to Phillipsburg.
Simultaneously, 45 people gathered at Hitzacker station, the last section of the
route at the time of his death, where a commemorative stone and a plaque were
erected several years ago. Protesters focused their opposition on the nuclear
storage centre planned in nearby Bure.
On the night of 10 November, two vans were set on fire near Bremen, on the site
of the arms company KAEFER which also supplies components for the nuclear
industry. A letter claiming responsibility for the action stated: “all
militaries in the world rely on gigantic quantities of uranium, oil and gas and
control over these resources is the trigger for many military conflicts… Because
the war machine that is killing in other places in the world is being set in
motion in the industrial areas of this city… we should identify and attack the
weak points in these supply chains”.
The post Anti-nuke actions in memory of Sébastien Briat appeared first on
Freedom News.