
Atsushi Tomura/Getty Images
May 27 2016, 7:40 p.m.
While President Obama called for a
“moral awakening” in Hiroshima and restated his ambition for a nuclear-weapon
free future, back in Washington, Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., criticized him for
moving forward with a costly plan to renovate the U.S. nuclear arsenal.
“The U.S. cannot preach nuclear
temperance from a bar stool,” Markey wrote in a Boston Globe opinion piece.
Obama’s Hiroshima speech was
reminiscent of the one he gave in Prague, only three months into his
presidency, when he announced that he would “seek the peace and security of a
world without nuclear weapons.”
In 2010, he negotiated a treaty that limited the U.S. and Russia to 1,550
deployed, strategic nuclear weapons each.
But that was as far as he would go.
Obama is set to maintain the U.S. arsenal of 1,528 deployed warheads — almost half of which
are on 30-minute alert — despite a 2013 White House assessment that he could safely reduce
the U.S. arsenal by a third.
Obama is also pushing for a $1
trillion effort to replace the U.S.’s entire stock of long-range strike bombers,
cruise missiles, nuclear submarines, and land-based missiles – which experts
have said is sure to cause an arms race.
Markey attacked the modernization
program on the Senate floor on Thursday. “The United States must take
the lead,” Markey said, “instead of wasting billions of dollars on dangerous
new nuclear weapons that do nothing to keep our nation safe.”
Markey also promoted a measure he
introduced to delay the procurement of the new nuclear cruise missile, which he
called a destabilizing and “dangerous new weapon.”
Erica Fein, nuclear policy expert
with Women’s Action for New Directions, said it was courageous for Markey
to “call out [his] party leader, something only a handful of other
Democrats have been willing to do on this topic.”
Last month, Republicans on the House
Armed Services committee lined up to kill a measure that would require the
Congressional Budget Office to simply estimate the modernization’s cost over three
decades.
But last week, Sen. John McCain,
R-Ariz., broke ranks with his own party, calling the new generation of
submarines “very, very, very expensive,” and questioning “do we even need the
entire Triad given this situation,” at an event at the Brookings Institution.
Top Photo: President Barack Obama gives a
speech during his visit to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park.
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