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Columns
Norman Solomon

News media’s love-hate for nuclear weapons
August 6, 2006

Since the Soviet Union collapsed a decade and a half ago, nuclear weaponry has been mostly relegated to back pages and mental back burners in the United States. A big media uproar about nuclear weapons is apt to happen only when the man in the Oval Office has chosen to make an issue of them.

Sometimes a “nuclear threat” has been imaginary. During the lead-up to the invasion of Iraq, the Bush administration went into rhetorical overdrive -- fabricating evidence and warning that an ostensible smoking gun could turn into a mushroom cloud. The White House publicly obsessed about an Iraqi nuclear-weapons program that didn’t exist.

In sharp contrast, North Korea really seems to have a nuclear warhead or two. And because the Pyongyang regime is apparently nuclear-armed, Bush isn’t likely to order an attack on that country, as he did against Iraq and as he has been not-too-subtly threatening to do against Iran.

By all credible accounts, Tehran is at least several years -- and probably more like a full decade -- away from acquiring a nuclear bomb. But America’s top officials and leading pundits have been sounding urgent alarms.

Judging from the frequent denunciations of some countries for alleged plans to build a nuclear arsenal, you might think that the U.S. media are down on nuclear weapons. Not so.

Red-white-and-blue nuclear weaponry has been depicted by U.S. news media as a reassuring guarantor of national security -- or at worst an unfortunate necessity -- since the nuclear age went public 61 years ago with the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.

That first atomic bombing of Japan came three days before an initial presidential lie about U.S. nuclear weapons policies. The lie was huge, but very few journalists in the United States have ever done so much as murmur a complaint about it.

On Aug. 9, 1945, President Harry Truman told the public this whopper: “The world will note that the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, a military base. That was because we wished in this first attack to avoid, in so far as possible, the killing of civilians.”

Actually, the U.S. government went out of its way to select Japanese cities of sufficient size to showcase the extent of the A-bomb’s deadly power -- in Hiroshima on Aug. 6 and in Nagasaki on Aug. 9. As a result of those two bombings, hundreds of thousands of civilians died, immediately or eventually. If Truman’s conscience had been clear, it’s doubtful he would have felt compelled to engage in such a basic distortion at the dawn of the nuclear era.

The scientific know-how of the Manhattan Project that developed the atomic bomb was headquartered at the secret Los Alamos laboratory in northern New Mexico beginning in the spring of 1943. Today, that one laboratory has a $2 billion annual budget, with most of the money devoted to the lab’s key role in helping to maintain the “reliability and safety” of the U.S. government’s nuclear arsenal -- which currently includes about 10,000 thermonuclear weapons. But you’d have to search far and wide to find mainstream American news coverage that raises fundamental questions about that arsenal as any kind of “nuclear threat.”

Meanwhile, experts say that the Israeli government now has about 200 nuclear weapons. Israel’s military actions in recent weeks underscore its willingness to use high-tech weaponry for reckless offensives that kill many civilians.

But in U.S. news media, the implicit message is that American nuclear bombs are A-OK, and the fact that Washington’s ally Israel maintains a large nuclear arsenal is supposed to be no cause for major concern.

Until the moment when events prove otherwise, the policy of deploying an array of nuclear weapons with the rationale of “deterrence” can convince the faithful that the nuclear priesthood in Washington is worthy of our trust.

But, going deeper than nationalistic blind faith, some important questions should be considered. Last week, the Latin American writer Eduardo Galeano asked two of them: “Who calibrates the universal dangerometer? Was Iran the country that dropped atomic bombs on Nagasaki and Hiroshima?”

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The paperback edition of Norman Solomon’s latest book, “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death,” was published this summer. For information, go to: www.warmadeeasy.com.


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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008

Norman Solomon

"Announcing the P.U.-litzer Prizes for 2006"
  December 27, 2006

"Is the USA the center of the world?"
  December 21, 2006

"Powell, Baker, Hamilton -- thanks for nothing"
  December 18, 2006

"Media sham for Iraq war -- it’s happening again"
  December 6, 2006

"The new media offensive for the Iraq war"
  November 16, 2006

"Saddam’s unindicted co-conspirator: Donald Rumsfeld"
  November 6, 2006

"Channeling Thomas Friedman"
  October 23, 2006

"The pundit path for death in Iraq"
  October 12, 2006

"Welcome to the nuclear club"
  October 10, 2006

"Spinning the troop levels in Iraq"
  September 5, 2006

"The mythical end to the politics of fear"
  August 24, 2006

"News media’s love-hate for nuclear weapons"
  August 6, 2006

"Applauding while Lebanon burns"
  July 26, 2006

"Why pretend that Hillary Clinton is progressive?"
  June 13, 2006

"The urbanity of evil"
  June 6, 2006

"Media Memorial Day"
  May 29, 2006

"When "diplomacy" means war"
  April 19, 2006

"The lobby and the bulldozer: Mearsheimer, Walt and Corrie"
  April 14, 2006

"When war crimes are impossible"
  April 7, 2006

"Blaming the media for bad war news"
  March 27, 2006

"Domestic lying: The question that journalists don’t ask Bush"
  March 19, 2006

"War-loving pundits"
  March 17, 2006

"Digital hype: a dazzling smokescreen?"
  March 8, 2006

"Mahatma Bush"
  March 1, 2006

"The unreal death of journalism"
  February 24, 2006

"The Iran crisis -- “Diplomacy” as a launch pad for missiles"
  February 19, 2006

"Cheney’s dodge: Taking responsibility"
  February 16, 2006

"Smothering the King legacy with kind words"
  February 2, 2006

"The crime of giving the orders"
  January 19, 2006

"Ted Koppel: “natural fit” at NPR news and longtime booster of Henry Kissinger"
  January 18, 2006

"Axis of fanatics -- Netanyahu and Ahmadinejad"
  January 7, 2006

"Media new year’s resolutions for 2006"
  January 4, 2006




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