There It Goes Again: The Bush Administration's Latest Plan to Build New Nuclear Weapons
There It Goes Again: The Bush Administration's Latest Plan to Build New Nuclear Weapons
The Bush administration's stubborn determination to prevail, whatever the costs, is evident not only in its reckless military venture in
The
Furthermore, when the Bush administration ignored these commitments and pressed Congress hard for funding to build new nuclear weapons -- nuclear "bunker busters" and "mini-nukes" -- Congress dug in and rejected them as totally unnecessary. With some 10,000 nuclear weapons in the
However, from the standpoint of the Bush administration, there are never enough nuclear weapons -- at least in its arsenal.
And so, administration officials are now back with another
The alleged reason for building this newly-designed hydrogen bomb is to maintain the reliability of the
Not surprisingly, the plan for the Reliable Replacement Warhead has drawn sharp criticism. "This is a solution in search of a problem," remarked Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association. "There is an urgent need to reduce these weapons, not expand them." Much the same thing has been said by members of Congress, who stress the provocative nature of the RRW. Despite the fact that the contract for the nuclear weapon is slated to go to the Lawrence Livermore lab in her home state of
Even more worrisome is the fact that the Reliable Replacement Warhead is just the tip of the nuclear iceberg. This nuclear weapon is merely a component of a larger Bush administration plan to rebuild the
Like the Iraq War, this will be a very expensive program. The Bush administration claims that Complex 2030 will cost roughly $150 billion. But the Government Accountability Office considers this estimate far too low and has urged Congress to require that the Department of Energy provide an accurate accounting of the real costs.
Naturally, arms control and disarmament groups are horrified by Complex 2030. Susan Gordon, director of the
How warmly Congress will welcome the Bush administration's plan to upgrade and expand the
In addition, the plan will certainly be seized upon by the government of
Indeed, if the Bush administration were really serious about blocking nuclear proliferation -- rather than enhancing its own nuclear weapons supremacy -- it would scrupulously abide by the provisions of the NPT.
Lawrence S. Wittner is Professor of History at the State University of New York/Albany. His latest book is Toward Nuclear Abolition: A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement, 1971 to the Present (Stanford University Press).


