It is 2 Minutes to Midnight
clock
Statement
from the President and CEO
The year
just past proved perilous and chaotic, a year in which many of the risks
foreshadowed in our last Clock statement came into full relief. In 2017, we saw
reckless language in the nuclear realm heat up already dangerous situations and
re-learned that minimizing evidence-based assessments regarding climate and
other global challenges does not lead to better public policies.
Although
the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists focuses on nuclear risk,
climate change, and emerging technologies, the nuclear landscape takes center
stage in this year’s Clock statement. Major nuclear actors are on the cusp of a
new arms race, one that will be very expensive and will increase the likelihood
of accidents and misperceptions. Across the globe, nuclear weapons are poised
to become more rather than less usable because of nations’ investments in their
nuclear arsenals. This is a concern that the Bulletin has been
highlighting for some time, but momentum toward this new reality is increasing.
As you
will see in the discussion that follows, the Bulletin’s Science and
Security Board has once again assessed progress—actually, lack thereof—in
managing the technologies that can bring humanity both relief and harm. It is
my hope that the statement focuses world attention on today’s dangerous
trajectory and urges leaders and citizens alike to redouble their efforts in
committing to a path that advances the health and safety of the planet. The
Board has provided recommendations for how we might go about achieving this
end, and it is urgent that we take heed.
I
commend the members of the Science and Security Board for the work they
undertake every day to put us on a safer footing. As always, John Mecklin’s
talented pen has helped pull together wide-ranging contributions and allowed a
large group of engaged experts to speak with one voice. The Bulletin couldn’t
serve its proper role without financial support from the Carnegie Corporation
of New York, the MacArthur Foundation, and the many other foundations, corporations,
and individuals who contribute regularly to the Bulletin’s mission.
We are deeply grateful for this ongoing support.
It is
urgent that, collectively, we put in the work necessary to produce a 2019 Clock
statement that rewinds the Doomsday Clock. Get engaged, get involved, and help
create that future. The time is now.
Rachel
Bronson, PhD
President & CEO
25 January, 2018
Chicago, IL
It is
now two minutes to midnight
Editor’s
note: Founded in 1945 by University of Chicago scientists who had helped
develop the first atomic weapons in the Manhattan Project, the Bulletin of
the Atomic Scientists created the Doomsday Clock two years later, using
the imagery of apocalypse (midnight) and the contemporary idiom of nuclear
explosion (countdown to zero) to convey threats to humanity and the planet. The
decision to move (or to leave in place) the minute hand of the Doomsday Clock
is made every year by the Bulletin’s Science and Security Board in
consultation with its Board of Sponsors, which includes 15 Nobel laureates. The
Clock has become a universally recognized indicator of the world’s
vulnerability to catastrophe from nuclear weapons, climate change, and new
technologies emerging in other domains. A printable PDF of this statement,
complete with the President and CEO’s statement and Science and Security Board
biographies, is available here.
To:
Leaders and citizens of the world
Re: Two
minutes to midnight
Date:
January 25, 2018
In 2017,
world leaders failed to respond effectively to the looming threats of nuclear
war and climate change, making the world security situation more dangerous than
it was a year ago—and as dangerous as it has been since World War II.
The
greatest risks last year arose in the nuclear realm. North Korea’s nuclear
weapons program made remarkable progress in 2017, increasing risks to North
Korea itself, other countries in the region, and the United States. Hyperbolic
rhetoric and provocative actions by both sides have increased the possibility
of nuclear war by accident or miscalculation.
But the
dangers brewing on the Korean Peninsula were not the only nuclear risks evident
in 2017: The United States and Russia remained at odds, continuing military
exercises along the borders of NATO, undermining the Intermediate-Range Nuclear
Forces Treaty (INF), upgrading their nuclear arsenals, and eschewing arms
control negotiations.
In the
Asia-Pacific region, tensions over the South China Sea have increased, with
relations between the United States and China insufficient to re-establish a
stable security situation.
In South
Asia, Pakistan and India have continued to build ever-larger arsenals of
nuclear weapons.
And in
the Middle East, uncertainty about continued US support for the landmark
Iranian nuclear deal adds to a bleak overall picture.
To call the
world nuclear situation dire is to understate the danger—and its immediacy.
On the
climate change front, the danger may seem less immediate, but avoiding
catastrophic temperature increases in the long run requires urgent attention
now. Global carbon dioxide emissions have not yet shown the beginnings of the
sustained decline towards zero that must occur if ever-greater warming is to be
avoided. The nations of the world will have to significantly decrease their
greenhouse gas emissions to keep climate risks manageable, and so far, the
global response has fallen far short of meeting this challenge.
Beyond
the nuclear and climate domains, technological change is disrupting democracies
around the world as states seek and exploit opportunities to use information
technologies as weapons, among them internet-based deception campaigns aimed at
undermining elections and popular confidence in institutions essential to free
thought and global security.
The Bulletin
of the Atomic Scientists Science and Security Board believes the
perilous world security situation just described would, in itself, justify
moving the minute hand of the Doomsday Clock closer to midnight.
But
there has also been a breakdown in the international order that has been
dangerously exacerbated by recent US actions. In 2017, the United States backed
away from its long-standing leadership role in the world, reducing its
commitment to seek common ground and undermining the overall effort toward
solving pressing global governance challenges. Neither allies nor adversaries
have been able to reliably predict US actions—or understand when US
pronouncements are real, and when they are mere rhetoric. International
diplomacy has been reduced to name-calling, giving it a surreal sense of
unreality that makes the world security situation ever more threatening.
Because
of the extraordinary danger of the current moment, the Science and Security
Board today moves the minute hand of the Doomsday Clock 30 seconds closer to
catastrophe. It is now two minutes to midnight—the closest the Clock has ever
been to Doomsday, and as close as it was in 1953, at the height of the Cold
War.
The
Science and Security Board hopes this resetting of the Clock will be
interpreted exactly as it is meant—as an urgent warning of global danger. The
time for world leaders to address looming nuclear danger and the continuing
march of climate change is long past. The time for the citizens of the world to
demand such action is now:
#rewindtheDoomsdayClock.
The
untenable nuclear threat. The risk that nuclear weapons
may be used—intentionally or because of miscalculation—grew last year around
the globe.
North Korea
has long defied UN Security Council resolutions to cease its nuclear and
ballistic missile tests, but the acceleration of its tests in 2017 reflects new
resolve to acquire sophisticated nuclear weapons. North Korea has or soon will
have capabilities to match its verbal threats—specifically, a thermonuclear
warhead and a ballistic missile that can carry it to the US mainland. In
September, North Korea tested what experts assess to be a true two-stage
thermonuclear device, and in November, it tested the Hwasong-15 missile, which
experts believe has a range of over 8,000 kilometers. The United States and its
allies, Japan and South Korea, responded with more frequent and larger military
exercises, while China and Russia proposed a freeze by North Korea of nuclear
and missile tests in exchange for a freeze in US exercises.
The
failure to secure a temporary freeze in 2017 was unsurprising to observers of
the downward spiral of nuclear rhetoric between US President Donald Trump and
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. The failure to rein in North Korea’s nuclear
program will reverberate not just in the Asia-Pacific, as neighboring countries
review their security options, but more widely, as all countries consider the
costs and benefits of the international framework of nonproliferation treaties
and agreements.
Nuclear
risks have been compounded by US-Russia relations that now feature more
conflict than cooperation. Coordination on nuclear risk reduction is all but
dead, and no solution to disputes over the INF Treaty—a landmark agreement to
rid Europe of medium-range nuclear missiles—is readily apparent. Both sides
allege violations, but Russia’s deployment of a new ground-launched cruise
missile, if not addressed, could trigger a collapse of the treaty. Such a
collapse would make what should have been a relatively easy five-year extension
of the New START arms control pact much harder to achieve and could terminate
an arms control process that dates back to the early 1970s.
For the
first time in many years, in fact, no US-Russian nuclear arms control
negotiations are under way. New strategic stability talks begun in April are
potentially useful, but so far they lack the energy and political commitment required
for them to bear fruit. More important, Russia’s invasion and annexation of
Crimea and semi-covert support of separatists in eastern Ukraine have sparked
concerns that Russia will support similar “hybrid” conflicts in new NATO
members that it borders—actions that could provoke a crisis at almost any time.
Additional clash points could emerge if Russia attempts to exploit friction
between the United States and its NATO partners, whether arising from disputes
on burden-sharing, European Union membership, and trade—or relating to policies
on Israel, Iran, and terrorism in the Middle East.
In the
past year, US allies have needed reassurance about American intentions more
than ever. Instead, they have been forced to negotiate a thicket of conflicting
policy statements from a US administration weakened in its cadre of foreign
policy professionals, suffering from turnover in senior leadership, led by an
undisciplined and disruptive president, and unable to develop, coordinate, and
clearly communicate a coherent nuclear policy. This inconsistency constitutes a
major challenge for deterrence, alliance management, and global stability. It
has made the existing nuclear risks greater than necessary and added to their
complexity.
Especially
in the case of the Iran nuclear deal, allies are perplexed. While President
Trump has steadfastly opposed the agreement that his predecessor and US allies
negotiated to keep Iran from developing nuclear weapons, he has never
successfully articulated practical alternatives. His instruction to Congress in
2017 to legislate a different approach resulted in a stalemate. The future of
the Iran deal, at this writing, remains uncertain.
In the
United States, Russia, and elsewhere around the world, plans for nuclear force
modernization and development continue apace. The Trump administration’s
Nuclear Posture Review appears likely to increase the types and roles of
nuclear weapons in US defense plans and lower the threshold to nuclear use. In
South Asia, emphasis on nuclear and missile capabilities grows. Conventional
force imbalances and destabilizing plans for nuclear weapons use early in any
conflict continue to plague the subcontinent.
Reflecting
long decades of frustration with slow progress toward nuclear disarmament,
states signed a Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, commonly known as
the ban treaty, at the United Nations this past September. The
treaty—championed by the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons,
which has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for its work—is a symbolic victory
for those seeking a world without nuclear weapons and a strong expression of
the frustration with global disarmament efforts to date. Predictably, countries
with nuclear weapons boycotted the negotiations, and none has signed the ban
treaty. Their increased reliance on nuclear weapons, threats, and doctrines
that could make the use of those weapons more likely stands in stark contrast
to the expectations of the rest of the world.
An
insufficient response to climate change. Last
year, the US government pursued unwise and ineffectual policies on climate
change, following through on a promise to derail past US climate policies. The
Trump administration, which includes avowed climate denialists in top positions
at the Environmental Protection Agency, the Interior Department, and other key
agencies, has announced its plan to withdraw from the Paris Agreement. In its
rush to dismantle rational climate and energy policy, the administration has
ignored scientific fact and well-founded economic analyses.
These US
government climate decisions transpired against a backdrop of worsening climate
change and high-impact weather- related disasters. This year past, the
Caribbean region and other parts of North America suffered a season of historic
damage from exceedingly powerful hurricanes. Extreme heat waves occurred in
Australia, South America, Asia, Europe, and California, with mounting evidence
that heat-related illness and death are correspondingly increasing. The Arctic
ice cap achieved its smallest-ever winter maximum in 2017, the third year in a
row that this record has been broken. The United States has witnessed
devastating wildfires, likely exacerbated by extreme drought and subsequent
heavy rains that spurred underbrush growth. When the data are assessed, 2017
is almost certain to continue the trend of exceptional global
warmth: All the warmest years in the instrumental record, which extends
back to the 1800s, have—excepting one year in the late 1990s—occurred in the
21st century.
Despite
the sophisticated disinformation campaign run by climate denialists, the
unfolding consequences of an altered climate are a harrowing testament to an
undeniable reality: The science linking climate change to human activity—mainly
the burning of fossil fuels that produce carbon dioxide and other greenhouse
gases—is sound. The world continues to warm as costly impacts mount, and there
is evidence that overall rates of sea level rise are accelerating—regardless of
protestations to the contrary.
Especially
against these trends, it is heartening that the US government’s defection from
the Paris Agreement did not prompt its unravelling or diminish its support
within the United States at large. The “We Are Still In” movement signals a
strong commitment within the United States—by some 1,700 businesses, 250
cities, 200 communities of faith, and nine states, representing more than 40
percent of the US population—to its international climate commitments and to
the validity of scientific facts.
This reaffirmation
is reassuring, and other countries have maintained their steadfast support for
climate action, reconfirmed their commitments to global climate cooperation,
and clearly acknowledged that more needs to be done. French President Emmanuel
Macron’s sober message to global leaders assembled at December’s global climate
summit in Paris was a reality check after the heady climate negotiations his
country hosted two years earlier: “We’re losing the battle. We’re not moving
quickly enough. We all need to act.” And indeed, after plateauing for a few
years, greenhouse gas emissions resumed their stubborn rise in 2017.
As we
have noted before, the true measure of the Paris Agreement is whether nations
actually fulfill their pledges to cut emissions, strengthen those pledges, and
see to it that global greenhouse gas emissions start declining in short order
and head toward zero. As we drift yet farther from this goal, the urgency of
shifting course becomes greater, and the existential threat posed by climate
change looms larger.
Emerging
technologies and global risk. The Science and Security Board
is deeply concerned about the loss of public trust in political institutions,
in the media, in science, and in facts themselves—a loss that the abuse of
information technology has fostered. Attempts to intervene in elections through
sophisticated hacking operations and the spread of disinformation have
threatened democracy, which relies on an informed electorate to reach
reasonable decisions on public policy—including policy relating to nuclear
weapons, climate change, and other global threats. Meanwhile, corporate leaders
in the information domain, including established media outlets and internet
companies such as Facebook and Google, have been slow to adopt protocols to
prevent misuse of their services and protect citizens from manipulation.
The international community should establish new measures that discourage
and penalize all cross-border subversions of democracy.
Last
year, the Science and Security Board warned that “[t]echnological innovation is
occurring at a speed that challenges society’s ability to keep pace. While
limited at the current time, potentially existential threats posed by a host of
emerging technologies need to be monitored, and to the extent possible
anticipated, as the 21st century unfolds.”
If
anything, the velocity of technological change has only increased in the past
year, and so our warning holds for 2018. But beyond monitoring advances in
emerging technology, the board believes that world leaders also need to seek
better collective methods of managing those advances, so the positive aspects
of new technologies are encouraged and malign uses discovered and countered.
The sophisticated hacking of the “Internet of Things,” including computer
systems that control major financial and power infrastructure and have access
to more than 20 billion personal devices; the development of autonomous
weaponry that makes “kill” decisions without human supervision; and the
possible misuse of advances in synthetic biology, including the revolutionary
Crispr gene-editing tool, already pose potential global security risks. Those
risks could expand without strong public institutions and new management
regimes. The increasing pace of technological change requires faster
development of those tools.
How to
turn back the Clock. In 1953, former Manhattan Project scientist
and Bulletin editor Eugene Rabinowitch set the hands of the
Doomsday Clock at two minutes to midnight, writing, “The achievement of a
thermonuclear explosion by the Soviet Union, following on the heels of the
development of ‘thermonuclear devices’ in America, means that the time, dreaded
by scientists since 1945, when each major nation will hold the power
of destroying, at will, the urban civilization of any other nation, is close at
hand.”
The
Science and Security Board now again moves the hands of the Clock to two
minutes before midnight. But the current, extremely dangerous state of world
affairs need not be permanent. The means for managing dangerous technology and
reducing global-scale risk exist; indeed, many of them are well-known and
within society’s reach, if leaders pay reasonable attention to preserving the
long-term prospects of humanity, and if citizens demand that they do so.
This is
a dangerous time, but the danger is of our own making. Humankind has invented
the implements of apocalypse; so can it invent the methods of controlling and
eventually eliminating them. This year, leaders and citizens of the world can
move the Doomsday Clock and the world away from the metaphorical midnight of
global catastrophe by taking these common-sense actions:
• US
President Donald Trump should refrain from provocative rhetoric regarding North
Korea, recognizing the impossibility of predicting North Korean reactions.
• The US
and North Korean governments should open multiple channels of communication. At
a minimum, military-to-military communications can help reduce the likelihood
of inadvertent war on the Korean Peninsula. Keeping diplomatic channels open
for talks without preconditions is another common-sense way to reduce tensions.
As leading security expert Siegfried Hecker of Stanford University
recently wrote: “Such talks should not be seen as a reward or
concession to Pyongyang, nor construed as signaling acceptance of a
nuclear-armed North Korea. They could, however, deliver the message that while
Washington fully intends to defend itself and its allies from any attack with a
devastating retaliatory response, it does not otherwise intend to attack North
Korea or pursue regime change."
•
The world community should pursue, as a short-term goal, the cessation of North
Korea’s nuclear weapon and ballistic missile tests. North Korea is the only
country to violate the norm against nuclear testing in 20 years. Over time, the
United States should seek North Korea’s signature on the Comprehensive Nuclear
Test Ban Treaty—and then, along with China, at long last also ratify the
treaty.
• The
Trump administration should abide by the terms of the Joint Comprehensive Plan
of Action for Iran’s nuclear program unless credible evidence emerges that Iran
is not complying with the agreement or Iran agrees to an alternative approach
that meets US national security needs.
• The
United States and Russia should discuss and adopt measures to prevent peacetime
military incidents along the borders of NATO. Provocative military exercises
and maneuvers hold the potential for crisis escalation. Both militaries must
exercise restraint and professionalism, adhering to all norms developed to
avoid conflict and accidental encounters.
• US and
Russian leaders should return to the negotiating table to resolve differences
over the INF treaty; to seek further reductions in nuclear arms; to discuss a
lowering of the alert status of the nuclear arsenals of both countries; to limit
nuclear modernization programs that threaten to create a new nuclear arms race;
and to ensure that new tactical or low-yield nuclear weapons are not built and
that existing tactical weapons are never used on the battlefield.
• US
citizens should demand, in all legal ways, climate action from their
government. Climate change is a real and serious threat to
humanity. Citizens should insist that their governments acknowledge it and
act accordingly.
•
Governments around the world should redouble their efforts to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions so they go well beyond the initial, inadequate pledges under the
Paris Agreement. The temperature goal under that agreement—to keep warming well
below 2 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels—is consistent with consensus
views on climate science, is eminently achievable, and is
economically
viable, provided that poorer countries are given the support they need to make
the post-carbon transition. But the time window for achieving this goal is
rapidly closing.
• The international
community should establish new protocols to discourage and penalize the misuse
of information technology to undermine public trust in political institutions,
in the media, in science, and in the existence of objective reality itself.
Strong and accountable institutions are necessary to prevent deception
campaigns that are a real threat to effective democracies, reducing their
ability to enact policies to address nuclear weapons, climate change, and other
global dangers.
• The
countries of the world should collaborate on creating institutions specifically
assigned to explore and address potentially malign or catastrophic misuses of
new technologies, particularly as regards autonomous weaponry that makes “kill”
decisions without human supervision and advances in synthetic biology that
could, if misused, pose a global threat.
The
failure of world leaders to address the largest threats to humanity’s future is
lamentable—but that failure can be reversed. It is two minutes to midnight, but
the Doomsday Clock has ticked away from midnight in the past, and during the
next year, the world can again move it further from apocalypse. The warning the
Science and Security Board now sends is clear, the danger obvious
and imminent. The opportunity to reduce the danger is equally clear.
The
world has seen the threat posed by the misuse of information technology and
witnessed the vulnerability of democracies to disinformation. But there is a
flip side to the abuse of social media. Leaders react when citizens insist they
do so, and citizens around the world can use the power of the internet to
improve the long-term prospects of their children and grandchildren. They can
insist on facts, and discount nonsense. They can demand action to reduce the
existential threat of nuclear war and unchecked climate change. They can seize
the opportunity to make a safer and saner world.
They can
#rewindtheDoomsdayClock.
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