Who could forget?Ā At the time, in the fall of 2002, there was such aĀ drumbeatĀ of āinformationā from top figures in the Bush administration about the secret Iraqi program to develop weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and so endanger the United States.Ā And who — other than a few suckers — could have doubted that Saddam Hussein was eventually going to get a nuclear weapon? Ā The only question, as our vice president suggested on āMeet the Press,ā was: Would it take one year or five?Ā And he wasnāt alone in his fears, since there was plenty of proof of what was going on.Ā For starters, there were those āspecially designed aluminum tubesā that the Iraqi autocrat had ordered as components for centrifuges to enrich uranium in his thriving nuclear weapons program.Ā Reporters Judith Miller and Michael Gordon hit the front page of theĀ New York TimesĀ with that story on September 8, 2002.
Then there were those āmushroom cloudsā that Condoleezza Rice, our national security advisor, was so publicly worried about — the ones destined to rise over American cities if we didnāt do something to stop Saddam.Ā As she fretted in a CNN interview with Wolf Blitzer on thatĀ same September 8th, ā[W]e don’t want the smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud.āĀ No, indeed, and nor, it turned out, did Congress!
And just in case you werenāt anxious enough about the looming Iraqi threat, there were those unmanned aerial vehicles — Saddamās drones! — that could beĀ armedĀ with chemical or biological WMD from his arsenal and flown over Americaās East Coast cities with unimaginable results.Ā President George W. Bush went on TV to talk about them and congressional votes were changed in favor of war thanks to hair-raisingĀ secret administration briefingsĀ about them on Capitol Hill.
In the end, it turned out that Saddam had no weapons program, no nuclear bomb in the offing, no centrifuges for those aluminum pipes, no biological or chemical weapons caches, and no drone aircraft to deliver his nonexistent weapons of mass destruction (nor any ships capable of putting those nonexistent robotic planes in the vicinity of the U.S. coast).Ā But what if he had?Ā Who wanted to takeĀ thatĀ chance?Ā Not Vice President Dick Cheney, certainly.Ā Inside the Bush administration he propounded something that journalist Ron Suskind laterĀ dubbedĀ the āone percent doctrine.ā Ā Its essence was this: if there was even a 1% chance of an attack on the United States, especially involving weapons of mass destruction, it must be dealt with as if it were a 95%-100% certainty.
Hereās the curious thing: if you look back on America’s apocalyptic fears of destruction during the first 14 years of this century, they largely involved three city-busting weapons that were fantasies of Washingtonās fertile imperial imagination.Ā There was that ābombā of Saddamās, which provided part of the pretext for a much-desired invasion of Iraq.Ā There was the ābombā of the mullahs, the Iranian fundamentalist regime that weāve just loved to hate ever since they repaid us, in 1979, for the CIAāsĀ overthrowĀ of an elected government in 1953 and the installation of the Shah by taking the staff of the U.S. embassy in Tehran hostage.Ā If you believed the news from Washington and Tel Aviv, the Iranians, too, were perilously close to producing a nuclear weapon or at least repeatedly on the verge of the verge of doing so.Ā The production of that āIranian bombā has, for years, been a focus of American policy in the Middle East, the ābrinkā beyond whichĀ warĀ has endlessly loomed.Ā And yet there was and is no Iranian bomb, nor evidence that the Iranians were or are on the verge of producing one.
Finally, of course, there was al-Qaedaās bomb, the ādirty bombā that organization might somehow assemble, transport to the U.S., and set off in an American city, or the āloose nuke,ā maybe from theĀ Pakistani arsenal, with which it might do the same.Ā This is the third fantasy bomb that has riveted American attention in these last years, even though there is less evidence for or likelihood of its imminent existence than of the Iraqi and Iranian ones.
To sum up, the strange thing about end-of-the-world-as-weāve-known-it scenarios from Washington, post-9/11, is this: with a single exception, they involved only non-existent weapons of mass destruction.Ā Ā A fourth weapon — one that existed but played a more modest role in Washingtonās fantasies — was North Koreaās perfectly real bomb, which in these years the North Koreans wereĀ incapableĀ of delivering to American shores.
The “Good News” About Climate Change
In a world in which nuclear weapons remain a crucial coin of the realm when it comes to global power, none of these examples could quite be classified as 0% dangers.Ā Saddam had once had anuclear program, just not in 2002-2003, and also chemical weapons, which he used against Iranian troops in his 1980s war with their country (with theĀ helpĀ ofĀ targeting informationĀ from the U.S. military) and against his ownĀ Kurdish population.Ā The Iranians might (or might not) have been preparing their nuclear program for a possible weapons breakout capability, and al-Qaeda certainly would not have rejected a loose nuke, if one were available (though that organizationās ability to use it would still have been questionable).
In the meantime, the giant arsenals of WMD in existence, the American, Russian, Chinese, Israeli, Pakistani, and Indian ones that might actually have left a crippled or devastated planet behind, remained largely off the American radar screen.Ā In the case of the Indian arsenal, the Bush administration actually lentĀ an indirect handĀ to its expansion.Ā So it was twenty-first-century typical when President Obama, trying to put Russia’s recent actions in the Ukraine in perspective,Ā said, āRussia is a regional power that is threatening some of its immediate neighbors.Ā I continue to be much more concerned when it comes to our security with the prospect of a nuclear weapon going off in Manhattan.ā
Once again, an American president was focused on a bomb that would raise a mushroom cloud over Manhattan.Ā And which bomb, exactly, was that, Mr. President?
Of course, thereĀ wasĀ a weapon of mass destruction that could indeed do staggering damage to or someday simplyĀ drownĀ New York City, Washington D.C.,Ā Miami,Ā and other East coast cities. Ā It had its own efficient delivery systems — no nonexistent drones or Islamic fanatics needed.Ā And unlike the Iraqi, Iranian, or al-Qaeda bombs, it wasĀ guaranteedĀ to be delivered to our shores unless preventative action was taken soon.Ā No one needed to hunt for its secret facilities.Ā It was a weapons system whose production plants sat in full view right here in the United States, as well as in Europe, China, and India, as well as in Russia, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Venezuela, and other energy states.
So hereās a question Iād like any of you living in or visitingĀ WyomingĀ to ask the former vice president, should you run into him in a state thatās notoriously thin on population: How would he feel about acting preventively, if instead of a 1% chance that some country with weapons of mass destruction might use them against us, there was at least aĀ 95%Ā — and likely as not aĀ 100%Ā — chance of them being set off on our soil?Ā Letās be conservative, since the question is being posed to a well-known neoconservative.Ā Ask him whether he would be in favor of pursuing theĀ 95% doctrineĀ the way he was the 1% version.
After all, thanks to aĀ grim reportĀ in 2013 from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, we know that there is now a 95%-100% likelihood that āhuman influence has been the dominant cause of the observed warming [of the planet] since the mid-20th century.ā Ā We know as well that the warming of the planet — thanks to the fossil fuel system we live by and the greenhouse gases it deposits in the atmosphere — is already doing real damage to our world and specifically to the United States, as a recentĀ scientific reportĀ released by the White House made clear.Ā We also know, with grimly reasonable certainty, what kinds of damage those 95%-100% odds are likely to translate intoĀ in the decades, and even centuries, to come if nothing changes radically: a temperature rise by centuryās end that couldĀ exceed 10 degrees Fahrenheit, cascading species extinctions, staggeringly severe droughts across larger parts of the planet (as in the present long-term drought in the American West and Southwest), far more severe rainfall across other areas, more intense storms causing far greater damage, devastating heat waves on a scale no one in human history has ever experienced, masses of refugees, rising global food prices, and among other catastrophes on the human agenda, rising sea levels that will drown coastal areas of the planet.
From two scientific studies just released, for example, comes thenewsĀ that the West Antarctic ice sheet, one of the great ice accumulations on the planet, has now begun a process of melting and collapse that could, centuries from now, raise world sea levels by a nightmarishĀ 10 to 13 feet.Ā That mass of ice is,Ā according toĀ the lead authors of one of the studies, already in āirreversible retreat,ā which means — no matter what acts are taken from now on — a future death sentence for some of the world’s great cities.Ā (And thatās without even the melting of theĀ Greenland ice shield, not to speak of the rest of theĀ ice in Antarctica.)
All of this, of course, will happen mainly because we humans continue to burn fossil fuels at an unprecedented rate and so annuallyĀ deposit carbon dioxide in the atmosphere atĀ recordĀ levels.Ā In other words, weāre talking about weapons of mass destruction of a new kind.Ā While some of their effects are already in play, the planetary destruction that nuclear weapons could cause almost instantaneously, or at least (givenĀ ānuclear winterā scenarios) within months, will, with climate change, take decades, if not centuries, to deliver its full, devastating planetary impact.
When we speak of WMD, we usually think of weapons — nuclear, biological, or chemical — that are delivered in a measurable moment in time.Ā Consider climate change, then, a WMD on a particularly long fuse, already lit and there for any of us to see.Ā Unlike the feared Iranian bomb or the Pakistani arsenal, you donāt need the CIA or the NSA to ferret such “weaponry” out.Ā From oil wells to fracking structures, deep sea drilling rigs to platforms in the Gulf of Mexico, the machinery that produces this kind of WMD and ensures that it is continuously delivered to its planetary targets is in plain sight.Ā Powerful as it may be, destructive as it will be, those who control it have faith that, being so long developing, it can remain in the open without panicking populations or calling any kind of destruction down on them.
The companies and energy states that produce such WMD remain remarkably open about what theyāre doing.Ā Generally speaking, they donāt hesitate to make public, or even boast about, their plans for the wholesale destruction of the planet, though of course they are never described that way.Ā Nonetheless, if an Iraqi autocrat or Iranian mullahs spoke in similar fashion about producing nuclear weapons and how they were to be used, they would be toast.
Take ExxonMobil, one of the most profitable corporations in history.Ā In early April, it released two reports that focused on how the company, as Bill McKibbenĀ has written, āplanned to deal with the fact that [it] and other oil giants have many times more carbon in their collective reserves than scientists say we can safely burn.”Ā He went on:
The company said that government restrictions that would force it to keep its [fossil fuel] reserves in the ground were ‘highly unlikely,’ and that they would not only dig them all up and burn them, but would continue to search for more gas and oil — a search that currently consumes about $100 million of its investorsā money every single day. ‘Based on this analysis, we are confident that none of our hydrocarbon reserves are now or will become “stranded.”‘
In other words, Exxon plans to exploit whatever fossil fuel reserves it possesses to their fullest extent.Ā Government leaders involved in supporting the production of such weapons of mass destruction and their use are often similarly open about it, even while also discussing steps to mitigate their destructive effects. Ā Take the White House, for instance.Ā Here was a statement President Obama proudlyĀ madeĀ in Oklahoma in March 2012 on his energy policy:
Now, under my administration, America is producing more oil today than at any time in the last eight years. That’s important to know. Over the last three years, Iāve directed my administration to open up millions of acres for gas and oil exploration across 23 different states. Weāre opening up more than 75% of our potential oil resources offshore. Weāve quadrupled the number of operating rigs to a record high. Weāve added enough new oil and gas pipeline to encircle the Earth and then some.
Similarly, on May 5th, just before the White House was to reveal that grim report on climate change in America, and with a CongressĀ incapable of passingĀ even the most rudimentary climate legislation aimed at making the country modestly more energy efficient, senior Obama adviser John Podesta appeared in theĀ White House briefing roomĀ toĀ bragĀ about the administrationās āgreenā energy policy. āThe United States,ā he said, āis now the largest producer of natural gas in the world and the largest producer of gas and oil in the world.Ā It’s projected that the United States will continue to be the largest producer of natural gas through 2030.Ā For six straight months now, we’ve produced more oil here at home than we’ve imported from overseas.Ā So that’s all a good-news story.ā
Good news indeed, and from Vladmir Putinās Russia, which just expanded its vast oil and gas holdings by aĀ Maine-sized chunkĀ of the Black Sea off Crimea, to Chinese ācarbon bombs,ā to Saudi ArabianĀ production guarantees, similar āgood-news storiesā are similarly promoted. Ā In essence, the creation of ever more greenhouse gases — of, that is, the engine of our future destruction — remains a āgood newsā story for ruling elites on planet Earth.
Weapons of Planetary Destruction
We know exactly what Dick Cheney — ready to go to war on a 1% possibility that some country might mean us harm — would answer, if asked about acting on the 95% doctrine.Ā Who can doubt that his response would be similar to those of the giant energy companies, which haveĀ fundedĀ so muchĀ climate-change denialismĀ and false science over the years?Ā He would claim that the science simply isnāt ācertainā enough (though āuncertaintyā can, in fact,Ā cut two ways), that before we commit vast sums to taking on the phenomenon, we need to know far more, and that, in any case, climate-change science is driven by a political agenda.
For Cheney & Co., it seemed obvious that acting on a 1% possibility was a sensible way to go in Americaās ādefenseā and itās no less gospel for them that acting on at least a 95% possibility isnāt.Ā For the Republican Party as a whole, climate-change denial is by now nothing less than aĀ litmus testof loyalty, and so even a 101% doctrine wouldnāt do when it comes to fossil fuels and this planet.
No point, of course, in blaming this on fossil fuels or even the carbon dioxide they give off when burned.Ā These are no more weapons of mass destruction than are uranium-235 and plutonium-239.Ā In this case, the weaponry is the production system thatās been set up to find, extract, sell at staggering profits, and burn those fossil fuels, and so create a greenhouse-gas planet.Ā With climate change, there is noĀ āLittle Boyā or āFat ManāĀ equivalent, no simple weapon to focus on.Ā In this sense, fracking is the weapons system, as is deep-sea drilling, as areĀ those pipelines, and the gas stations, and the coal-fueled power plants, and the millions of cars filling global roads, and the accountants of the most profitable corporations in history.
All of it — everything that brings endless fossil fuels to market, makes those fuels eminently burnable, and helps suppress the development of non-fossil fuel alternatives — is the WMD.Ā The CEOs of the planet’s giant energy corporations are the dangerous mullahs, the true fundamentalists, of planet Earth, since they are promoting a faith in fossil fuels which is guaranteed to lead us to some version of End Times.
Perhaps we need a new category of weapons with a new acronym to focus us on the nature of our present 95%-100% circumstances.Ā Call them weapons of planetary destruction (WPD) or weapons of planetary harm (WPH).Ā Only two weapons systems would clearly fit such categories.Ā One would be nuclear weapons which, even in aĀ localized warĀ between Pakistan and India, could create some version of ānuclear winterā in which the planet was cut off from the sun by so much smoke and soot that it would grow colder fast, experience a massive loss of crops, of growing seasons, and of life.Ā In the case of a major exchange of such weapons, we would be talking about āthe sixth extinctionā of planetary history.
Though on a different and harder to grasp time-scale, the burning of fossil fuels could end in a similar fashion — with a series of āirreversibleā disasters that could essentially burn us and much other life off the Earth.Ā This system of destruction on a planetary scale, facilitated by most of the ruling and corporate elites on the planet, is becoming (to bring into play another category not usually used in connection with climate change) the ultimate ācrime against humanityā and, in fact, against most living things.Ā It is becoming a āterracide.ā
Tom Engelhardt is a co-founder of theĀ American Empire ProjectĀ and author ofĀ The United States of FearĀ as well as a history of the Cold War,Ā The End of Victory CultureĀ (from which some of this essay has been adapted). He runs the Nation Institute’sĀ TomDispatch.com, where this article first appeared. His latest book, co-authored with Nick Turse, isĀ Terminator Planet: The First History of Drone Warfare, 2001-2050.
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