US Survey Reveals Public Support for Nuclear Strikes
By Dana E. Abizaid
Nuclear weapon
test Romeo on Bikini atoll, March 27, 1954. People who support the use of
nuclear weapons do not understand the bloody reality of bombing campaigns.
(Photo: US Department of Energy)
June 07, 2016 "Information Clearing House" -
"Truth Out" In
the wake of President Obama’s visit to Hiroshima last week, renewed debates
over the use of atomic weapons against Japan in August 1945 have highlighted a
disturbing trend: a rise in public support for US attacks on civilians across
the globe. Never having withstood a prolonged bombing campaign on their soil,
many people in the United States are quick to support and justify the use of
bombs -- including nuclear ones -- on others.
Academics Scott Sagan and Benjamin Valentino conducted
research on the US public's attitude regarding nuclear bombing and recently
publishing a summary of their findings in a Wall Street Journal story titled
"Would the US
Drop the Bomb Again?" From a survey of a "representative sample
of 620 Americans" administered by YouGov last July, Sagan and Valentino
revealed results that were "unsettling about the instincts of the US
public." Specifically, the pair reported that, "When provoked, [US
citizens] don't seem to consider the use of nuclear weapons a taboo, and our
commitment to the immunity of civilians from deliberate attack in wartime, even
with vast casualties, is shallow."
Admittedly, the sample of 620 citizens can hardly be
expected to reflect the sentiments of 320 million Americans. Nevertheless, the
pair’s findings should not surprise anybody who has paid attention to US
foreign policy since 1945. In his 2002 book, Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace,
Gore Vidal points out that, according to the Federation of American Scientists,
there have been 200 aggressive US military engagements since the end of WWII.
This was tallied before the debacle in Iraq and the "liberation" of
Libya; the drone wars in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia;
President Obama's plan to "degrade and
ultimately destroy ISIL"; not to mention the unconstitutional
drone strikes on US citizens abroad.
The Sagan and Valentino survey sets forth a fictional
scenario mirroring Pearl Harbor: an Iranian attack on a US aircraft carrier in
the Persian Gulf that killed 2,403 US sailors. Faced with this scenario, would
the US public support the dropping of a nuclear weapon on an Iranian city
killing 100,000 civilians?
Sagan and Valentino found that the results were
"startling." In this case, 59 percent of respondents backed
"using a nuclear bomb on an Iranian city."
The backdrop for their WSJ piece was Obama's visit to
Hiroshima. While most US media focused on whether or not Obama would apologize
for the dropping of bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945, few
considered the dangerous precedent the US set that summer. Instead, a chorus of
justification echoed in the nation's press. This persistent practice of
self-deception is epitomized by columnist Ramesh Ponnuru, who
recently wrote, "We do not deliberately target civilians for killing
whenever we think the consequences would be beneficial." Irresponsible
statements like this ignore the bombing of civilians in Vietnam, Panama, Iraq and Afghanistan and
represent the sad triumph of Orwellian indoctrination
over education.
To counter the public's perennial support for bombing,
Sagan and Valentino tried to offer respondents a diplomatic solution to the
fictional Iranian crisis. Simulating the Truman administration's dilemma
between demanding unconditional surrender or allowing Hirohito Shōwa to
maintain his imperial throne in Japan, the researchers "ran a second
version of the survey that offered respondents the option of ending the war by
allowing Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to stay on as a
spiritual figurehead with no political authority." Still, 40 percent of
respondents favored dropping the bomb and killing 100,000 civilians.
Many
historians challenge the contention that the atomic bombs were
necessary to end the Pacific War and save lives. Not surprisingly, most
Japanese believe they were unjustified. Perhaps US citizens would agree with
the Japanese if they had also experienced the terror of air power. Speaking
with people who have survived bombing raids is vastly different than reading
headlines about collateral damage. The popular 1980s speed metal bandAnthrax put
it this way: "You pushed a button / That is all you did / It is much
harder to kill a man, if you've seen pictures of his kids."
Whatever public relations goodwill the Obama trip was
designed to inspire, the facts speak for themselves. The president has worked
to limit nuclear proliferation in Iran but not in the
US. His administration has recklessly provoked Russia in
Ukraine and pushed the US closer to nuclear war than
any time since the tense days of the Reagan
administration's revamping of nuclear diplomacy.
The reliance on drone strikes distances the US public
further from the reality of air power. Since the enemies we engage do not
possess an air force, and our drone pilots operate thousands of miles from the
battlefield, it is likely that attitudes toward civilian bombing and nuclear
destruction will not change.
There are few US citizens who have experienced what
British prisoner of war Victor Gregg did in Dresden in 1945. In a BBC interview he
stated:
Nothing prepared me for seeing women and children
alight flying through the air. Nothing prepared me for that … after Dresden I
was a nutcase. It took me 40 years to get over it.
Gregg didn't talk about it for decades. "You
can't talk about it because nobody who hasn't experienced it, their mind can't,
they can't grasp it," he said.
Sagan and Valentino's study concludes that, "the
US public is unlikely to hold back a president who might consider using nuclear
weapons in the crucible of war." These are the civilian and political
minds that can't grasp the terror that Gregg describes.
The question is, if they could, would they still
support the use of nuclear weapons?
Dana E. Abizaid is a history teacher at the Istanbul
International Community School and director of studies for the Open Society
Foundations New Scholars Program.
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