By Robert Wiblin and Keiran Harris · Published September 24th, 2018
Contents
- Introduction
- Key
points
- Articles, books and blog posts
discussed in the show
- Transcript
- Learn more about relevant
career options
- Related
episodes
The 80,000 Hours Podcast
with Robert Wiblin
#43 - Daniel Ellsberg on the
creation of nuclear doomsday machines, the institutional insanity that
maintains them, and a practical plan for
dismantling them. #43
- Daniel Ellsberg on the creation of nuclear doomsday machines, the
institutional insanity that maintains them, and a practical plan for
dismantling them.
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We are on the Titanic, going
at full speed on a moonless night into iceberg waters. Have we hit the iceberg
yet, and made it inevitable that we will go down? We don’t know. …. there’s no
way to prove it. It is definitely not a waste for some of us to keep trying to
explore to see if there’s a way out.
Daniel Ellsberg
In Stanley Kubrick’s iconic
film Dr. Strangelove, the American president is informed that the
Soviet Union has created a secret deterrence system which will automatically
wipe out humanity upon detection of a single nuclear explosion in Russia. With
US bombs heading towards the USSR and unable to be recalled, Dr Strangelove
points out that “the whole point of this Doomsday Machine is lost if you keep
it a secret – why didn’t you tell the world, eh?” The Soviet ambassador replies
that it was to be announced at the Party Congress the following Monday: “The
Premier loves surprises”.
Daniel Ellsberg – leaker of
the Pentagon Papers which helped end the Vietnam War and Nixon presidency –
claims in his new book The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of
a Nuclear War Planner that Dr.
Strangelove might as well be a documentary. After attending the film
in Washington DC in 1964, he and a military colleague wondered how so many
details of the nuclear systems they were constructing had managed to leak to
the filmmakers.
The USSR did in fact develop
a doomsday machine, Dead Hand, which probably remains active today.
If the system can’t contact
military leaders, it checks for signs of a nuclear strike. Should its computers
determine that an attack occurred, it would automatically launch all remaining
Soviet weapons at targets across the northern hemisphere.
As in the film, the Soviet
Union long kept Dead Hand completely secret, eliminating any
strategic benefit, and rendering it a pointless menace to humanity.
You might think the United
States would have a more sensible nuclear launch policy. You’d be wrong.
As Ellsberg explains based
on first-hand experience as a nuclear war planner in the early stages of the
Cold War, the notion that only the president is able to authorize the use of US
nuclear weapons is a carefully cultivated myth.
The authority to launch
nuclear weapons is delegated alarmingly far down the chain of command –
significantly raising the chance that a lone wolf or communication breakdown
could trigger a nuclear catastrophe.
The whole justification for
this is to defend against a ‘decapitating attack’, where a first strike on
Washington disables the ability of the US hierarchy to retaliate. In a moment
of crisis, the Russians might view this as their best hope of survival.
Ostensibly, this delegation
removes Russia’s temptation to attempt a decapitating attack – the US can
retaliate even if its leadership is destroyed. This strategy only works,
though, if you tell the enemy you’ve done it.
Instead, since the 50s this
delegation has been one of the United States most closely guarded secrets,
eliminating its strategic benefit, and rendering it another pointless menace to
humanity.
Even setting aside the
above, the size of the Russian and American nuclear arsenals today makes them
doomsday machines of necessity. According to Ellsberg, if these arsenals are
ever launched, whether accidentally or deliberately, they would wipe out almost
all human life, and all large animals.
Strategically, the setup is
stupid. Ethically, it is monstrous.
If the US or Russia sent its
nuclear arsenal to destroy the other, would it even make sense to retaliate?
Ellsberg argues that it doesn’t matter one way or another. The nuclear winter
generated by the original attack would be enough to starve to death most people
in the aggressor country within a year anyway. Retaliation would just slightly
speed up their demise.
So – how was such a system
built? Why does it remain to this day? And how might we shrink our nuclear
arsenals to the point they don’t risk the destruction of civilization?
Daniel explores these
questions eloquently and urgently in his book (that everyone should read), and this conversation is a gripping introduction. We
cover:
- Why full disarmament today would be a mistake
- What are our greatest current risks from nuclear
weapons?
- What has changed most since Daniel was working in
and around the government in the 50s and 60s?
- How well are secrets kept in the government?
- How much deception is involved within the
military?
- The capacity of groups to commit evil
- How Hitler was more cautious than America about
nuclear weapons
- What was the risk of the first atomic bomb test?
- The effect of Trump on nuclear security
- What practical changes should we make? What would
Daniel do if he were elected president?
- Do we have a reliable estimate of the magnitude
of a ‘nuclear winter’?
- What would be the optimal number of nuclear
weapons for the US and its allies to hold?
- What should we make of China’s nuclear stance?
What are the chances of war with China?
- Would it ever be right to respond to a nuclear
first strike?
- Should we help Russia get better attack detection
methods to make them less anxious?
- How much power do lobbyists really have?
- Has game theory had any influence over nuclear
strategy?
- Why Gorbachev allowed Russia’s covert biological
warfare program to continue
- Is it easier to help solve the problem from
within the government or at outside orgs?
- What gives Daniel hope for the future?
Get this episode by
subscribing to our podcast on the world’s most pressing problems and how to
solve them: type 80,000 Hours into your podcasting app. Or read the transcript
below.
The 80,000 Hours podcast is
produced by Keiran Harris.
Key points
Our policy has actually been
the threat of an insane action, an action that essentially we now know for the
last 35 years has involved killing nearly everyone on earth by the smoke from
the burning cities that are planned to be hit in our war plan. And that smoke,
we now know on the nuclear winter calculations, would be lofted into the
stratosphere, would spread around the world globally. I’m talking now about a
war between the U.S. and Russia, where thousands of weapons would be involved.
And a few hundred of those weapons on cities which are targeted would be enough
to cause smoke that would reduce the sunlight reaching the earth’s surface by
about 70%, killing all the harvests worldwide and for a period as a long as a
decade.
But that wouldn’t be
necessary, killing all the harvests for about a year or even less would exhaust
our food supplies, which globally are about 60 days, and nearly everyone would
starve to death except for a small fraction, perhaps 1% a little more or less,
of humans would survive, in Australia or New Zealand, southern hemisphere is
somewhat less affected, eating fish and mollusks. And that could be a sizable
number of people. One percent is 70 million people, but 99% gone and virtually
all the larger animals other than humans. They’re not as adaptable as we are,
and they can’t move thousands of miles and wear clothes, light fires, have
houses. They would go extinct altogether, as they did when an asteroid hit the
earth 67 or 65 million years ago and created a very similar effect, blotting
out the sunlight by the dust that was sent up.
Even the word evil seems
just overwhelmed by what we’re talking about, which is the destruction of most
large life and most humans on earth, something that was simply not possible a
hundred years ago …
…we’re in a situation then
where such a war can actually occur. It has been prepared for, more extensively
probably than any other human project in history. Go back to the original
Hiroshima and Nagasaki that involved a combination of the two most elaborate,
highly developed, scientific applications the world had ever seen. A B-29
bomber was incredibly complex, highly advanced flying machine, and of course
the atomic weapon which represented the product of years of work of the richest
nation concentrating on the subject with the best scientific minds in the world
working on it.
So here you had the two most
highly developed scientific objects, the B-29 and the atomic bomb, connected.
Well, that fission bomb is now the trigger for a thermonuclear weapon, an H bomb
or a fusion weapon. …
So here we have something,
then, that nothing in history … not the pyramids, not anything else, … in terms
of science and GDP and everything else, this will have been enormously
well-prepared for. Reflectively, rationally, scientifically, economically, and
yet the result will have been the destruction of civilization altogether. …
No president of either
country has ever intended or determined or decided to wipe out life on earth.
But they have all been willing to threaten it, and to prepare for it. And the
threats actually do create the risk of this happening because to make them
credible and effective, not effective altruism, but effective intimidation –
they prepared for it. They made it possible and feasible.
Brezhnev was sure that when
Nixon signed the convention against biological warfare, that he would continue
a covert program on a large scale, and so they had to have one too. Now, what’s
the use of doing that if you don’t use it deterrently, if you don’t make it
public? How can it be a deterrent? It can’t, but then how could they say,
“We’re assuming you’re breaking this, so we’re breaking it too?”
You couldn’t prove that
Nixon was doing it, and, amazingly enough, Nixon wasn’t doing it, as far as we
can tell. They did preserve some smallpox at CIA, and some anthrax, and this
and that, but only a refrigerator-full, sort of. The Russians maintained
hundreds of thousands of gallons and pounds of anthrax and botulinus and
improved forms, against vaccines.
Now, that’s as close to insanity
and evil as you can get to. As one disarmer said when he looked at the huge vat
that remained for anthrax, he said, “I’m looking at pure evil.” Well, fair,
enough, it would seem so. Who continued that? It was done under Brezhnev, kept
very secret, as far as we know, was not revealed, it is Strangelovian, and kept
secret, not for a deterrent, continued under Gorbachev.
How could Gorbachev possibly
continue this insane, evil program? He told Larry Brilliant, who had been
instrumental in eliminating smallpox from the world, when Brilliant asked him …
and I have a memoir by Brilliant on this. He talked to Gorbachev, and he said,
“How could you have done this? We were eliminating smallpox. You were providing
huge amounts of smallpox here.”
Gorbachev got very
disturbed, anxious, uneasy, anguished, and said he knew, he was most ashamed of
that of anything he’d ever been involved in. He said, “The military came to me,
and said, ‘If you don’t continue this, you cannot stay in office. We will
overthrow you.'” And he looked at all the things he was doing, reducing nuclear
weapons, Glasnost, opening up the society and all that, and rather than give
all that up, he continued this insane program, which is very human, very
normal.
When you look at human
character, it’s hard to be confident humans will survive. To me, it’s crazy to
be confident, I have to say. To think that it’s highly likely we will survive
nuclear weapons, climate change, artificial intelligence, genetic engineering,
biological warfare… to be confident like that is to be either totally ignorant
of the nature of humanity – which most people are – or to be crazy.
So, thinking it’s likely
we’ll survive? I can’t believe that. I think it’s unlikely, very unlikely.
But not impossible. My age
and experience doesn’t permit me to be confident that there’s no way out here.
Because humans are adaptable, and things do change, and the changes I’ve
mentioned are possible.
We are on the Titanic, going
at full speed on a moonless night into iceberg waters. Have we hit the iceberg
yet, and made it inevitable that we will all go down together? We don’t know.
It may turn out that, a while ago, we went past the no-return point. But we
don’t know that, there’s no way to prove it.
As I say in The Doomsday
Machine: “I act as if we have a chance to find our way out of this. I don’t
know what that path is yet, but that doesn’t tell me there is no way.”
So, I urge others, I
encourage them.
And if they give up hope, or
even devote themselves entirely to pleasure, like a life on the Titanic
drinking champagne after hitting the iceberg… I can’t say that’s crazy. But I
don’t join in that.
And should someone stop
trying to save the world as a whole, and instead just works to ease the
suffering of other people – I think that’s very reasonable, very good.
I just think that it’s
definitely not wasted for some of us to keep trying to explore and see if
there’s a way out of the precarious situation in which humanity finds itself.
EXPAND KEY POINTS
Articles, books and blog
posts discussed in the show
Daniel’s
books:
- The Doomsday Machine:
Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner
- Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam
and the Pentagon Papers
- Papers on the War
- Risk, Ambiguity and
Decision
Everything else discussed in
the show:
- Climatic consequences of
regional nuclear conflicts by Alan Robock, Brian Toon et. al. 2007.
- Local nuclear war, global
suffering by Robock and Toon, Scientific American, 2010.
- FLI podcast on Nuclear Winter with Robock and Toon
- Command and Control: Nuclear
Weapons, the Damascus Accident, and the Illusion of Safety by Eric Schlosser
- Sleepwalking to Armageddon: The
Threat of Nuclear Annihilation edited by Helen Caldicott
- The Wizards of Armageddon by Fred Kaplan
- One Minute to Midnight:
Kennedy, Khrushchev, and Castro on the Brink of Nuclear War by Michael Dobbs, read by Bob Walter
- Buying for Armageddon: Society,
Economy, and the State since the Cuban Missile Crisis by John L. Boies
- The Soviet Biological Weapons
Program: A History by Milton Leitenberg
- Lockheed Stock and Two Smoking
Barrels by Richard Cummings
- Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
- International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons
Transcript
Robert Wiblin: Hi listeners, this is the 80,000 Hours Podcast,
where each week we have an unusually in-depth conversation about the world’s
most pressing problems and how you can use your career to solve them. I’m Rob
Wiblin, Director of Research at 80,000 Hours.
I was recently going through
our podcast analytics to see where people are listening to the show. A lot of
it is about what you expect – about 45% of listeners are in the USA and there’s
large numbers from the UK, Canada and Australia.
But I was interested to see
how popular we are in Germany, Sweden and the Netherlands, which make up the
next three. Hallo leute, hej allihopa and hallo iedereen!
Here’s also a shoutout to
our lone listener in each of East Timor, Cuba and the Faroe Islands. I hope
you’re finding the show useful, wherever in the world you find yourself.
At the end of the episode
I’ll read a short blog post we recently published about US government policy
careers for people with a scientific background. Let me know whether you’d like
me to regularly read relevant articles at the end of the show by emailing
podcast at 80000hours dot org. I’m not sure where we want to go with that but I
thought it was worth a try.
And if you know a community
that should know about the information in this episode please share it with
them. That could include subreddits, facebook groups or mailing lists.
In today’s episode I speak
with Daniel Ellsberg, who will be known to many listeners.
Daniel studied economics at
Harvard before becoming a commissioned officer in the U.S. Marine Corps.
He then went to work at the
RAND Corporation – a non-profit think tank working for the US government –
concentrating on nuclear strategy and the command and control of nuclear
weapons. In the early 60s he finished a PhD in economics at Harvard focused on
decision-making under uncertainty and ambiguity, in which he discussed a
problem now known as the Ellsberg Paradox.
From 1964 he worked at the
Pentagon under Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, advising on American
strategy in the Vietnam War and spent two years doing researching in South
Vietnam itself.
He became progressively
disaffected with the war, and after failing to find a way to affect the war
inside the government, in 1971 he leaked thousands of pages of analysis of the
US’ grim prospects in Vietnam to dozens of newspapers. Those documents
subsequently became known as the Pentagon Papers and were an enormous scandal
with a public tiring of the war.
They exposed the
government’s poor decision-making and widespread lying to the public, and ended
up being one of the most consequential leaks in US history.
Ellsberg was charged for
revealing classified information and faced life in prison. In an attempt to
discredit and blackmail him government agents broke into his psychiatrist’s
office in order to steal his medical records, and his phone was tapped without
a warrant. Ultimately he was freed on a mistrial due to this and other criminal
behaviour on the part of prosecutors.
The ability to link this
criminal activity directly to Nixon, along with the evidence from the break in
at the Watergate Hotel, would end the Nixon presidency soon after.
He wrote his memoirs about
Vietnam – Secrets – in 2002 and last year published The Doomsday Machine:
Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner which is the main topic of our discussion
today.
Transition music.
Robert Wiblin: So, thanks for coming on the podcast Daniel.
Daniel Ellsberg: Thank you. Good to be here.
Robert Wiblin: So while my intro was mostly about the Pentagon
papers, today I want to focus mostly on the topic of your latest book, The
Doomsday Machine : The Threat of Nuclear Apocalypse and How to Prevent It, as I
think that that’s been less covered in previous interviews that you’ve done.
First, though, what are you
working on these days, and why do you think it’s important?
Daniel Ellsberg: Well, the paperback edition of The Doomsday
Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner is coming out by Bloomsbury a
year after the hardback so it’ll be coming out in early December, December 5th,
this year. And so I’m really preparing for that in part by planning to put
things on the web that I thought were left out of the book that I’d like people
to know, and also involved in archiving my files all together. I’m working with
someone who is digitalizing in principle all my files, so you know for one
person that’s very hard to do that. It’s sort of like shoveling the sea. But I
am working on that and trying to keep up with current events and how the
revelations in The Doomsday Machine apply to current events. So I continue to
be hopeful to try to prevent nuclear war.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah. Has there been much interest in the book
from policy makers?
Daniel Ellsberg: Yeah. Actually, the publishers have been happily
surprised. 17 publishers turned down the book before Bloomsbury took it on the
grounds that they couldn’t’ sell it for commercial reasons. They said they
respected me, but this was not a subject they could sell. Actually, although
the first printing was only 19 thousand, they have now sold in about six months
somewhat more than 40 thousand, which unfortunately doesn’t make it a
bestseller yet. Not viral or anything. I wish it were. But it’s respectable for
a book of that nature. It’s … respectable was not what I was aiming at in the
sense that I really would like to change discussion and climate on this. It’s
gotten very good reviews, actually, virtually all of them. Two rather lukewarm reviews,
all the others very warm. I couldn’t ask, actually, for better reviews. I’ve
been talking … doing quite a bit of speaking and interviewing in connection
with it. So the book does do what one hopes, is to give you a platform for
speaking about a subject that’s very important to me.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah. Have you heard from anyone in the military
or intelligence services?
Daniel Ellsberg: No. I didn’t expect to hear directly.
Robert Wiblin: They don’t take your calls.
Daniel Ellsberg: I’d love it if they were reading it. I would
love nothing better to have it read. In fact, to show what I can aim at here, I
have … was speaking just yesterday, it so happens, to a Marine general, I won’t
identify who, is anxious to read it and I’m going to send that to him today.
But the thought occurred to me that he’s in a position to send it to General
Green, General Dunford is chairman of the Joint Chiefs, to General James
Mattis, which is the Secretary of Defense, and to General Kelly who is the
Chief of Staff, all of whom were junior officers under this very general. So if
he orders them to read it-
Robert Wiblin: It’ll have a shot.
Daniel Ellsberg: … it’s actually conceivable. I already had some
hope from the fact that Marines are in such prominent positions because Marines
have had no real connection with nuclear weapons for a long time. Going way
back into the early fifties, they had a ten-inch Howitzer shell, which actually
they sent ten-inch Howitzer’s into Lebanon in the landing in 1958, and there
was a question whether the shells had accompanied them or not, that never
resolved. But the Marines were disposed of their nuclear weapons half a century
ago, and as a result I think these people, although they’ve been to war
colleges of course and have very broad responsibilities now, I suspect they are
not as devoted to even the threat of nuclear weapons as the Air Force and Navy
and even the Army used to be. The Army, too, has lost its nuclear weapons, like
the Marines. But that’s encouraging to me. I think now … there’s never been a
time when Marines were in such prominent policy positions. It’s sort of the
fifth leg on the military. So, I think there actually is some promise there.
I’m hoping.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah. So, what do you think are the few most
important points in the book that you’d really want people to remember?
Daniel Ellsberg: Well, that our policy has actually been the
threat of an insane action, an action that essentially we now know for the last
35 years has involved killing nearly everyone on earth by the smoke from the
burning cities that are planned to be hit in our war plan. And that smoke, we
now know on the nuclear winter calculations, would be lofted into the
stratosphere, would spread around the world globally. I’m talking now about a
war between the U.S. and Russia, where thousands of weapons would be involved.
And a few hundred of those weapons on cities which are targeted would be enough
to cause smoke that would reduce the sunlight reaching the earth’s surface by
about 70%, killing all the harvests worldwide and for a period as a long as a
decade.
But that wouldn’t be
necessary, killing all the harvests for about a year or even less would exhaust
our food supplies, which globally are about 60 days, and nearly everyone would
starve to death except for a small fraction, perhaps 1% a little more or less,
of humans would survive, in Australia or New Zealand, southern hemisphere is
somewhat less affected, eating fish and mollusks. And that could be a sizable
number of people. One percent is 70 million people, but 99% gone and virtually
all the larger animals other than humans. They’re not as adaptable as we are,
and they can’t move thousands of miles and wear clothes, light fires, have
houses. They would go extinct altogether, as they did when an asteroid hit the
earth 67 or 65 million years ago and created a very similar effect, blotting
out the sunlight by the dust that was sent up.
So the war plans of both
U.S. and Russia have contemplated as sending not just hundreds but thousands of
warheads at each other and hitting hundreds of cities. And something between
100 and 200 cities hit that way, by thermonuclear weapons, would cause this
nuclear winter. The likelihood of a limited nuclear war between the U.S. and
Russia is not quite zero, but it’s very small. Any armed conflict between U.S.
and Russia, which has never occurred yet, would bear a high likelihood or a
real risk of erupting and escalating into use or nuclear weapons by one or the
other. Once that happened, the change of keeping it limited is very low. Each
would worry that the other was about to escalate. And another major point in
the book is that our planning on both sides has been aimed, delusionally for
this entire period, at limiting damage to one’s own side by counterforce, by
hitting the forces of the other side in addition to its cities and its urban
industrial centers. In fact, most of the targets on both sides are of military
targets, many of them near cities or in the cities actually.
But for over half a century,
the idea that that would in effect protect the attacking side from close to
annihilation or certainly the destruction of its society has been delusional.
The likelihood is that the society would be entirely destroyed and I come back
to the point that the threat of initiating such a war has been aimed at
deterring the other side from various actions, aggressive actions of various
kinds, and yet it is the threat of an insane action and to call it immoral is
scarcely conveyed by any word at our disposal. Immoral … that can leak from
anything.
Robert Wiblin: It’s like stealing a pack of gum.
Daniel Ellsberg: Even the word evil seems just overwhelmed by
what we’re talking about, which is the destruction of most large life and most
humans on earth, something that was simply not possible a hundred years ago, or
for that matter, eighty years ago. So we don’t have concepts to deal with it,
ethical, legal, practical. We’ve been living with it and making the kinds of
threats that have been used for millennia to intimidate and influence policies
of other countries, but on a scale that was never before possible or
contemplated.
So I’d say we’re in a
situation then where such a war can actually occur. It has been prepared for,
most extensively probably than any other human project in history. Go back to
the original Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the first acts … the first nuclear war.
That involved a combination of the two most elaborate, highly developed,
scientific applications the world had ever seen. A B-29 bomber was incredibly
complex, highly advanced flying machine, and of course the atomic weapon which
had dropped, the fission weapon which they dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
represented the product of years of work of the richest nation concentrating on
the subject with the best scientific minds in the world working on it, or some
of the best. There were a few comparable ones in Germany, but they didn’t focus
on that problem. They didn’t think it was feasible in time.
So here you had the two most
highly developed scientific objects, the B-29 and the atomic bomb, connected.
Well, that fission bomb is now the trigger for a thermonuclear weapon, an H
bomb or a fusion weapon. Hydrogen weapon known as an H bomb uses a
Nagasaki-type fission bomb as its trigger, its detonator, its percussion cap in
effect. And the initial explosion of a weaponized kind of H bomb in 1954 had an
explosive yield a thousand times that of the Nagasaki weapon. A thousand times.
And that in turn was a thousand, or two thousand, or four thousand times the
largest bombs of World War II, which ranged from blockbusters from five to
twenty ton. The Nagasaki weapon had a yield of twenty thousand tons of TNT
equivalent. So that was a thousand times, and then the weapon in 1954, the
Castle Bravo test was 15 megatons, another thousand, a factor of a thousand.
So here we have something, then,
that nothing in history … not the pyramids, not anything else, the Great Wall
of China reflected perhaps more manpower somehow over time. But in terms of
science and part of the GNP and everything else, this will have been enormously
well-prepared for. Reflectively, rationally, scientifically, economically, and
yet the result will have been the destruction of civilization altogether. It’s
as if one were to hypothesize, somehow, a self-destructive impulse in
civilization or in rationality or in humans. It would be very hard to disprove
that. Let’s just say you can think of other hypotheses, and one does. I have.
How you get there without having intended it altogether. No president of either
country has ever intended or determined or decided to wipe out life on earth.
But they have all been willing to threaten it, and to prepare for it. And the
threats actually do create the risk of this happening because to make them
credible and effective, not effective altruism but effective intimidation, they
prepared for it. They made it possible, feasible mostly. Sometimes they make
threats that are totally hollow and they can’t carry out.
A very important example of
that was Khrushchev, the Soviet premiere in the late fifties, when he was
threatening Britain and London and Paris with weapons that he didn’t have. He
didn’t’ have the intermediate range missile weapons at that time. But within a
few years, he did have them. And having … since his threats didn’t work, by the
way, he decided he needed … his military decided they needed them to be more
realistic, more credible, and that meant making them feasible. And of course,
making them feasible opened the possibility that deliberately or not, they
would be carried out by someone or other, if not the Prime Minister or Premiere
or General Secretary, by someone else who had access to those weapons. It was
true on the U.S. side, this is another revelation in the book, that in order to
make it impossible to paralyze our response, our retaliation, by a single
weapon on Washington on our command post, a few weapons on command post, the
authority to initiate or to use the weapons, the U.S. weapons, had been
delegated by President Eisenhower to a number of high-level commanders who had
in turn delegated it for the same reason to their lower commanders.
If the lower ones were out
of communication, which happened every day in those days for technical reasons,
that was before we had the system of satellites, and Washington was out of
communication with our headquarters in Oahu part of everyday. That’s not true
now. It does depend on satellites, by the way, which both sides are working on
anti-satellite weapons to clear the air, the space, of those connecting nodes
so that really very early in a war, the weapons may well, or could even say
probably, will be out of contact with central headquarters. And it will depend,
then, on human responses and decisions what to do. And in an environment in
which nuclear weapons are going off and war is on. So the idea of controlling
that and limiting that to a small exchange is very low and it doesn’t take much
to destroy this society.
So there’s a few of the
things. Let’s see, the delegation, the reliance on incredibly evil actions
which can in fact be triggered and have come close to being triggered a number
of times in the past, in order to have certain political effects, and this is
something not in the book, as much as it should be if at all. And that is in
order for corporations to sell weapons to the government and to our allies,
that may actually be a main purpose. In our political economy, the military
budget involves profits, jobs, political donations, careers for retired
officers. In and out, actually, people from the corporations and the
governments. A great many short-run material benefits, in other words, from
producing this doomsday machine. And that is true in Russia as well. Even
before … even under Communism, their desire to match what the U.S. had led them
to build a doomsday machine in the mid-sixties, perhaps 10 years after we did.
And now, they have the same profit motives our corporations do. They have their
equivalent to Boeing and Lockheed and Raytheon. And as Gorbachev said someone
recently, “You have your profit motives and we do to.”
So, that alone is enough,
actually, to ensure that these weapons get made. And when they’re made and
deployed and used in “diplomacy”, that is threats, intimidation, the chance of
their actually exploding is not zero as it should be. So we’ve been maintaining
with the rational of deterrence and preventing war, which may have worked in a
number of cases, actually prevented wars that might have occurred otherwise.
But at the same time, maintaining the risk of the destruction of civilization
and we’ve been consciously, deliberately, rationally maintaining that risk now
for well over half a century.
Robert Wiblin: We’ll return to the political economy issue in a
minute when we’re thinking about what can be done, but I’m curious to know,
what do you think is the greatest risk we face? In terms of which countries do
you think might end up shooting at one another, and do you think it would be
deliberate or a mistake?
Daniel Ellsberg: I think the greatest individual risk is a false
alarm of the kind we’ve had repeatedly in the past. Recently in a limited form in
Hawaii, this very year, where someone put out an alert to the residents of
Hawaii that an attack was on the way. Now, the residents of Hawaii were not in
a position to respond or to do anything, really, effective. They sat in
bathtubs, they went under manhole covers, none of which would have done much
good. But similar false warnings have reached the highest levels. Very few
actually up to the President, although in 1995 President Yeltsin of Russia,
after the Cold War, was told that an attack was on the way and was
contemplating responding to it with his so-called briefcase, with his computer,
could have led to a full-scale response. But in most cases, the fact that it’s
a false alarm, which took 38 minutes to discover in Hawaii by the way, is
discovered by the elaborate national networks sooner than that, within a matter
of minutes, often just before it was time to tell the President that it was up
to him to respond.
And here’s the real danger.
Not only do our warning systems on both sides bring out these false alarms,
having, by the way, not just casually but having gone through several filtering
systems that are designed to eliminate false alarms and to explain them
otherwise and so forth, nevertheless a number of very serious false alarms have
occurred. The biggest problem is that both Russia and the U.S. have large
numbers of forces, ICBMs, Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles, that cannot
survive an enemy attack on the U.S. or on Russian. They are fixed targets,
vulnerable to the accurate large-yield weapons on the other side, and if you
wait for that alarm to be confirmed by actual explosions, the weapons
themselves will mostly be destroyed.
So each side has a very
strong incentive and plan and readiness to launch its weapons before they are
destroyed. That may be while the others are in the air, or space, or if there’s
an indication that there will be an escalation shortly. The impulse to use them
or lose them is very strong. Now, a realistic point of view that there is no
advantage in using them over losing them because in both sides, there’s enough
submarine missiles that cannot be targeted, that each can destroy the other
even it’s lost all of its ICBMs, and its bombers for that matter. It so happens
that the Russian subs are much more vulnerable than ours because for geographic
reasons and various reasons, we’re able to track them from their ports or from
certain entry points into the Atlantic or the Pacific in a way that they can’t
track ours. And we have a hundred killer submarines that are dedicated to
getting a number of their submarines. The Russians really don’t have a
comparable capability. That doesn’t mean we have a high chance of getting all
of them, and a single submarine, let alone two or three, would have the
capability to destroy our society and bring about nuclear winter, by the way.
So if the word came to the
President, as it almost did in 1979 in particular where our National Security
Assistant Zbigniew Brzezinski had his arm reaching out to inform the President
via red phone at three in the morning that an attack was on the way, the
President would be told, “We launch our weapons or we lose them.” He would
almost surely not be told, “And Mr. President, it doesn’t make any difference
what you do.” That’s the reality. But as far as we know, no president has been
fully briefed on the notion of nuclear winter. Gorbachev does give indication
that he was well-informed on that subject. And Reagan, by the way, referred to
it. He was not one for being briefed very much in detail on anything, any more
than Trump, but he seems to have been aware of it.
As far as we know, the
latest results from the last decade have not been briefed. People like Alan
Robuck and Brian Toon have tried to … have asked to brief the high levels on
this, have never been taken up on it. And are not really aware that it doesn’t
make any difference what he does. On the contrary, the weapons have been sold
both by Boeing and Lockheed and by the Air Force and the Navy, on the grounds
that they can destroy Russian ICBMs, which seems like a worthwhile thing to do
in a war. Whatever happens, isn’t it better to have eliminated their ICBMs?
Seems plausible. The answer is no, it won’t make any difference. It simply
won’t make any difference.
Say, well, why not then get
rid of our ICBMs? What are they good for? Well, they’re not good for saving
lives in the U.S. in any circumstance whatever. They’re not good for any
political purposes, but they’re very good to make for profits, jobs, and to
reassure our allies that we’re working hard on this problem and we remain their
protector in what amounts to a protection racket. We have built up the threat
from the Russians ever since about 1947, and since then, in the interest as
presenting ourselves as their only protector against an overwhelming threat.
And very much like the Mafia’s protection rackets in Chicago or elsewhere, give
us this money, let us control your business or you’ll regret it. And there the
threat is in principle … I mean in practice, or we’ll blow you up ourselves,
but the implication is or our rivals will hurt you and we’ll protect your from
that if you give us your tribute. That’s basically our relation with NATO, ever
since.
So there are interests in
maintaining and building this doomsday machine. They are domestic, political,
and the reliance interests in doing it. What there are not are any ability to
influence our events and our benefit or save lives in any circumstance
whatsoever if they were actually launched. So, I repeat what I said earlier. No
President has actually wanted to launch those weapons, but they have all wanted
to be able to threaten them. Or in some cases, I think, in their own minds,
they were reluctant about that. They wanted to keep their jobs, which depended
upon their not being charged with weakness or appeasement or with withdrawing
from this competition, and have the donations of Boeing and Grumman and the
others go to their rivals. So we act as if they believe that it was worth being
able to make those threats. And in fact, probably, in various circumstances,
the threats have had some effect that can be regarded as useful, have had a
deterrent effect. I can be specific in a moment about that. But at best, that
has been at the cost of maintaining the possibility of destroying most life on
earth.
Robert Wiblin: What do you think has most changed about the
situation since you working on nuclear security issues for Rand and the
Pentagon in the fifties and sixties?
Daniel Ellsberg: Well, I and my colleagues were all suffering
from a delusion given to us by Air Force intelligence, which in turn, was very
biased in their estimates by a desire to face a very strong enemy which had
took the Air Force to hold off and increase the Air Force budget that forces
promotions at bases, everything else. So Air Force intelligence was telling us
that they were moving towards … the Russians were moving toward hundreds and
ultimately thousands of ICBMs, against which we had no real defense, and never
had have and never will have. There never will be an anti-ballistic missile system
that actually protects us from a large scale attack by Russian ICBMs,
accompanied by decoys and other evasive measures.
So given that circumstance,
they said only deterrents can do it, and they also posited and I believe this
that … how old was I? 27, and my colleagues believed that we faced an enemy
that was essentially Hitler with nuclear weapons, a Nazi-like regime in Russia
armed now with nuclear weapons. And that was plausible to a degree, because
Stalin was in fact as ruthless as Hitler and probably killed more communists
than Hitler did in Stalin’s purges and in famines in the Ukraine and elsewhere.
So he was totally ruthless, brutal, murderous, and also was in occupation of
East Europe. The realistic thought that that occupation, which was very costly
to the Russians, was primarily defensive against resurgent Germany was never in
our discussion. I don’t remember every hearing such a thought, that it was
anything but a precursor to their taking over all of Europe as Hitler had tried
to do. They’re in East Europe, they want West Europe beyond Germany, and only
we can keep them from having it. So it seemed very dire circumstances.
In retrospect, I think that
was always a delusion, that Stalin always was aware that that would be
effectively a suicidal … in the nuclear era, a suicidal attempt by him and had
no practical inclination to do it and was concerned about a German resurgence
in fact, as he said, though we tend to dismiss that as just propaganda, very
foolishly. Here you have a situation where Russia has been devastated twice in
a century by Germany, and the idea that they were sincere in saying that they
worried about that happening again in Germany, not right away but in … Stalin,
and later Khrushchev, used to say fifteen years or twenty years, long ago.
Simply, we didn’t take into account at all. So their buildup, their weapons
seemed to us purely offensive and aggressive. And moreover, they were ahead of
us in ICBM technology. They fired their … launched their first ICBM in 1957,
in, I think it was August or September. We weren’t able to do it. We couldn’t
get one off the ground until months later, and of course they put up Sputnik
which showed that they had the accuracy to hit our cities at least.
So in those circumstances,
there was a third factor. Very strangely, in retrospect somehow, but my
colleagues like my very admired, respected mentor Albert Wohlstetter had ran,
my mentor, took the attitude that the Russians could not be deterred from
attacking and gaining world domination by any damage less than they had
suffered in World War II, which was at least twenty million dead. Now it’s
usually put something like 27 million. And the idea was they saw themselves,
Wohlstetter said, as having gotten through that very well. Here they were, ten
years later, doing very well in the world. So they knew they could stand that.
World domination would be worth that, he thought. So we had to assure that
under any circumstances, we could kill more than 27 million people. And again,
that went along with his Nazi … his implication that they were Nazi-like,
genocide prone country.
Again, in retrospect, that
was totally unrealistic in terms of Russian attitudes. When I first went to
Russia in the mid-eighties just before Glasnost, or just in the early stages of
Glasnost, I became aware that the Russians I met simply vibrated with horror at
what they had gone, being as they said, fought over twice in World War II.
First with the Germans moving east across their country, and then in a fighting
withdrawal, moving west again, both times, in effect devastating them. And the
idea that they were prepared to do that again, couldn’t have been further from
the truth. After all, in our country, we never had anything comparable to that,
except the Civil War which was limited geographically, to a limited band of the
country, unlike theirs, and far beyond our … past our memory in the North. The
South, to this day, clearly retains the idea that they lost a noble cause, to
preserve their way of life, namely slavery. It’s something for blacks, very
comparable to the totalitarian regimes.
So we had this idea then,
that it was very hard to achieve deterrence and that you had to think in terms
of massacre as a possibility because nothing else would deter them. That had no
particular relation to reality. But what we believed … or what I believed. At
the highest levels of the Air Force, it’s now clear, they did understand from
our reconnaissance programs, various ones before the U-2 high flying plane and
then later planes like the SR-71, but in particular satellites, had revealed to
the highest levels of command that the Russians had almost no ICBMs at all. But
that was not passed on to us at Rand, and actually the commander of SAC,
Strategic Air Command, when I visited them in Omaha in August of 1961, was
estimating that the Russians had a thousand ICBMs. We had 40. But they had
four. We learned that a month later.
So we had 40 to their 4,
plus we had many intermediate range missiles within range of them, both Polaris
and land-based, and several thousand planes in range of Russia, whereas they
had something like 192 which were not at all planned for attacks on the U.S.
They didn’t have the air refueling capability. We imagined they did, as we did.
So they had essentially nothing against the U.S. Even so, we knew that they
could destroy Europe, their neighbors, with intermediate range missiles, or
short range, and planes and bomber which we couldn’t destroy in a first strike
because they were mobile, there were too many of them, too many bases and we
couldn’t find them.
So had we attacked, the U.S.
in ’60 or ’61, say over the Berlin crisis, the U.S. might not have suffered a
single casualty, which might be the case if we attacked North Korea now, for
example. Would that we mean we’d win the war? Well, from one point of view,
yes. We’d have devastated them, suffered perhaps no casualties, or if they had
some submarines at sea that we didn’t find, we might have lost a city or
several cities even, which would be more casualties than we’d suffered since
the Civil War, but compared to them that would be victory. Unless you counted
what they did to our allies, who would have been annihilated.
So our threats of NATO
always involved the total devastation of our allies, of NATO, and absolutely
inescapably … it’s not clear to me to this day how conscious the NATO allies
were of this, or why they allowed it. Well, again, you can say it’s the
difference between actually having it happen and threatening. They could hope
that our threats would keep it from happening, and that in effect, it did work,
or at least there was no war. It might have been necessary. I would say not,
but it could have been. But were they really thinking of the possibility we
would not succeed and that they would be totally annihilated?
Now, there are those
anti-nuclear people of whom I’m one who believe that there’s no effective point
to it all where deterrents worked. I don’t agree to that. I would say that West
Berlin remained capitalist and remained aligned to the West inside East Europe
250 miles I think it was within East Germany surrounded by Soviet division. I
would say that that remained on our side only because of the threat of blowing
the world up. There was no other way of keeping Russians from simply walking in
and taking it over. And they wanted it. They didn’t want that example of
capitalist freedom against their East German oppression. They didn’t want that
as a route for people escaping from East Germany. They would have liked to have
it all that time, but they couldn’t. Not because they were certain we would
blow the world up at great cost, but because we might. And that was not
foolish. We might. That was our plan. We had no other real plan. And we might
not have carried it out. The President might have decided to let Berlin go or
he might not, and that was enough to keep the Russians out.
So, there you have an effect
of some benefit to West Berliners for example, but at the cost of preparing to
blow the world up and the possibility that that would happen.
Robert Wiblin: So, for the benefit of the audience I’ve been
interested in going through some of the lessons that I took away from the book,
which I think are likely to be particularly interesting to them and maybe you
can comment. One of them is that secrets seemed to be really kept so there
might be a lot that we don’t know. That it was possible to keep information
confidential at least about nuclear stuff most of the time.
Daniel Ellsberg: Yes. Very much so. The very fact that our NATO
commitment involved a continuous first use threat. A threat of initiating
nuclear war was not in the awareness of most Americans from beginning to end of
the Cold War. They really, a majority actually of Americans, said in poll that
they did not think it was protecting West Europe from an invasion would justify
initiating nuclear war, but they were not aware that that was the very basis of
our commitment and always has been and still is to this day. Now, West Germany
or Germany now is not in any tangible danger from Russia at this point of
invasion.
One could say, however, that
Poland and the Baltic states can’t say that as definitively as West Germany,
and yet we remain committed in the case let’s say of even a covert invasion of
Lithuania to initiate nuclear war if necessary. It might not be necessary, in
fact, it shouldn’t be. Our non-nuclear capability against Russia, any kind of
Russian aggression is enormous. We spend 12 with U.S. included, 12 times the
defense budget of Russia and without the U.S., Europe alone and NATO spends
four times as much as Russia all together, so the idea that Russia could take
even its neighboring countries against a determined European defense is not
sound. Yes, they could muster a larger ground force against the Baltics, let’s
say than NATO could, but in terms of air power, our ability to isolate that
battlefield with air power and destroy them to any desired degree with
non-nuclear force is very overwhelming.
Nevertheless, Poland and the
Baltics prefer to have that additional threat of blowing the world up if it
happens. It’s understandable that they want that. You could also say at this
point it isn’t understandable, you know? Is it really necessary. Is it really
moral to rely on a threat of exterminating the Northern Hemisphere or all of
it. Well, we have for half a century, so it’s not less moral than their other
members of NATO, but it’s not necessary and I think we should not be
threatening under any circumstances whatever to initiate nuclear war under any
circumstances, whatever the desires of our any allies might be for that threat or
for that assurance. Our alliances should not and need not from any real point
of view be based on such a threat and a preparation, but that’s where we are,
so we’ll come to this later no doubt. But if you were to ask what I think
should be changed in the world, one of the very things of the top of that list
would be to forego the threat of insanity of initiating nuclear war.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah, we’ll get to that. The next section is on
what policies we think should change and what could be done to make this
better. But another lesson that I took away from the book is the extraordinary
extent to which the military misleads I think their civilian control and indeed
like other parts of the military. For example, they would withhold information
from the President. For example, the number of weapons they had in the late
40s, how likely they were to be used, like how they were being delegated. They
also LeMay and I think others schemed to be able to use nuclear weapons even
without Kennedy’s approval, because they worried that Kennedy wouldn’t be
willing to use them. So, they’re not necessarily, at least at that time, were
not as well controlled by civilians as perhaps was thought. And also it seemed
like they would mislead other parts of the service. Like the Air Force would
mislead the Army and the Navy in order to increase its funding. There’s a lot
of territorialism, and they would often just promote projects that really
didn’t have much of a defense function simply in order to boost their budgets
and payroll.
Daniel Ellsberg: That’s true of all the services by the way, I
would say. In this area the Air Force had the main responsibility for nuclear
war, so very interested in making it seem realistic that a nuclear war might
occur and hiding the fact that it wasn’t to this day so far as anyone knows,
the Defense Department and the services have not conducted realistic studies of
what would happen in terms of nuclear winter. In terms of the smoke that would
kill harvests from air attacks. It’s not something they want to know. And if
they did, their instinct to keep that result secret would be extremely great
and their ability to keep it secret has been shown to be very great. For
example, the Pentagon papers, which I revealed in 1971 show that over a matter
of 30 years really of the services all together the Defense Department and the
White House did manage to conceal from the public the threats they were making
in Vietnam or their own estimates of what the effects would be of carrying out
those threats and how unlikely it was that those threats would bring victory or
would end the war. And when it came to a determination to escalate the war in
64 and 65, they kept very secret for many years their plans to do that.
Just as 30 years later or so
George W. Bush administration kept entirely secret from the public their plans
to invade Iraq for over a year. And right now the public knows very little
about the degree of our involvement for example in Yemen. Our air support in
terms of refueling and loading and target information to the Saudis in carrying
out massacres in Yemen. Major war crimes that are happening every day are not
in the consciousness of the American people at all. The fact that this power
had been delegated and remains delegated in certain circumstances if
communications are eliminated for example on our nuclear weapons. That’s not in
American awareness. That’s been kept very secret.
And in terms of lying to the
President, people in the system who have been in it and have studied it ever
since like Bruce Blair, who was a Minuteman Launch Control Officer, have shown
that the belief in the Air Force in particular, that its weapons must be
launched in the event of warning, launched on warning, rather than be
destroyed, is so strong that if a President ordered otherwise at a time when
the Air Force was convinced that there was an attack on the way, it’s very
questionable whether the President would be obeyed. They certainly don’t bring
that to his attention or her attention if we ever have a female. What is a fact
is that the President has no physical capability to prevent those weapons from
being launched. He or she does not possess a code which is necessary to
launching those weapons.
The so-called codes that are
in the President’s football, the briefcase, the computer, that accompanies him
at all time are simply to authenticate, to identify that person as an ability
to give the order, but if his or her desire was to stop or not to respond, that
intention would not limit the people who control the weapons from launching the
weapons. There are locks on them which prevent the lowest levels of operation
from launching the weapons on their own initiative without a code of some kind.
But how high does that combination reside? Certainly not in Washington where it
could be destroyed by a single bomb. It’s more widely distributed than that.
Very possibly very widely distributed and so it’s quite likely really that if a
President decided ‘I don’t care, they are about to attack us, but I’m not going
to join them in this, and simply bring nuclear winter that much sooner.’ It’s
very unlikely that he would be obeyed – or let’s just say it’s not certain.
It’s enough to say that. And the fact that that is the case is something that
is not brought to the attention of the President.
Robert Wiblin: Another overarching lesson that I took away was
just how people in collective groups are just capable of insane brutality and
they’re making extraordinary decisions. Maybe doing terrible things without
even necessarily making a decision. So for example, when the hydrogen bombs
were invented, it was just kind of assumed that all of the bombs would be
upgraded to be hydrogen bombs, which would increase the effective deaths by ten
or a hundred fold, well ultimately I guess by a thousand fold once we knew
about nuclear winter. And there was never kind of a conscious decision that is
necessarily from a military point of view to kill a hundred times as many
people as was the previous plan, but that just kind of happened because the
technology became available. Similarly just progressively over time during
World War II and after we became inured to the idea of destroying cities. This
was actually the idea of just bombing cities and killing lots of civilians was
previously forbidden and even the Nazis kind of typically refused to bomb
cities en masse and they apologized –
Daniel Ellsberg: When you say the Nazis, Hitler didn’t want to
start to set an exchange against cities and he ordered that it had to be on his
authority only and so forth, but that doesn’t, you know. It gets away. In fact,
very early in the war there were a number of cases where bombing occurred that
was neither known to the higher command or intended by them. For example, the
bombing of Britain actually started when … British cities I mean to say, when
some German bombers bombed London, suburbs of London by accident thinking they
were over a different area. Not realizing they were hitting London. Hilter
having forbidden them to bomb London unless it evoked retaliation. So, the
British took that as a deliberate bombing of London and immediately
reciprocated with some long distance raids against Berlin and Hitler said day
after day if you keep doing this you’re gonna get it back basically. Churchill
did keep doing it in part because as a Commander, he preferred that they use
their force against London than against factories or against airfields
elsewhere. And it did evoke them. Eventually it ended in the Blitz against
London at a time when the British … when attacks on the airfields might have
been far more effective, but it wasn’t. But anyway there’s a number of examples
like that. And these accidental attacks, various kinds, have escalated in the
past and could do so again it the future.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah. Another example where Hitler comes in is
that when we detonated the first bomb during the testing in 1944 or 45 –
Daniel Ellsberg: 45.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah. They weren’t actually certain that this
wouldn’t ignite the atmosphere and lead to the destruction of all life.
Daniel Ellsberg: That’s right. It’s something we go into in some
length in the book, because I find it so emblematic of the situation we’re in
today. The fact is that the scientists who exploded that bomb, the first
so-called Trinity Test in July of 1945 knew they were gambling. They thought it
was unlikely, but possible that that would ignite the atmosphere and the
nitrogen in the atmosphere and the hydrogen in the water and destroy all life
on earth. All life. Even microscopic. In a fraction of a second. And indeed the
most distinguished experimental physicist of them all, Enrico Fermi, while
knowing that their calculations indicated that that was extremely unlikely,
also knew that those calculations aren’t that reliable.
Robert Wiblin: It assumed that their model was correct. That
they hadn’t missed anything out.
Daniel Ellsberg: Yeah. That assumed that the model is correct,
but he understood that as an experimental physicist that there was a good
possibility that they had overlooked some major interaction, some effect of some
kind. And he thought the probability of that was ten percent. Now, that’s not
small at all, and yet he went ahead with it. In fact, the very first bomb that
I described earlier there was a test explosion in 1952 of a hydrogen device,
but it was not a droppable bomb. It involved liquid tritium and a very huge
apparatus, many tons, stories high. It wasn’t a real bomb.
But the first droppable bomb
with dry lithium deuteride in 1954 was three times the yield that they had
calculated as its largest possibility. Now, the zone of danger from which
shipping was to be excluded near the atoll, was based on this worst case they
thought estimate of I think something like five megatons, five million tons of
TNT equivalent. In fact, it was 15 million tons and that resulted in fallout
not only on many islanders in the Marshall Islands, but on the crew of the
Lucky Dragon Five, Maru fishing boat of Japan, which came back into Tokyo with
one sailor dead from radiation the others all injured by it and a boatload of
tuna that had been iradiated, which went into the market, and when they
realized that had to cut off the sales of all the available tuna at that point.
And that in a way evoked the modern anti-nuclear movement and the anti-testing
movement all together.
This was in 1954, but how
did that happen? Well, the initial reaction of American officials was, well, it
must have been inside the danger zone that had been forbidden, but it wasn’t.
It was a hundred miles away. And how did that happen? Well, there was in fact an
interaction that they had not foreseen. The fuel for the hydrogen reaction, the
fusion reaction, lithium deuteride, involved a compound of lithium 6 and
lithium 7 and one of those, I think it was, I forget, but lithium 7 was
believed not to contribute to the explosive yield. It was just there because it
was too hard to separate. And in fact, under the conditions, on the fission
explosion of the trigger, it did interact. It did provide neutrons and it
tripled the yield of the explosion.
Now, that was exactly the
kind of effect that Fermi had feared just nine years earlier when the Trinity
Test went off. That’s something that they had thought was impossible. Might not
be impossible and might occur. And yet, it went ahead. He didn’t say, “There’s
a ten percent chance here of blowing …” he did offer odds actually of the
chance that the state of New Mexico would be incinerated. And different odds,
presumably somewhat lower that all life on earth would be burned. And we don’t
have a record of who, if anybody, took him up on that or exactly what the odds
were that he offered. But we do have this quote that he said that day that he
thought there was a ten percent chance.
Did Truman know that there
was ten percent chance? As close to certain as we can be, not. There’s no
evidence that anyone at the high levels in Washington was told that there was a
real chance, however small. And that was not small of course, ten percent. But
even if it was three in a million or two in a million, as some thought,
nevertheless, a chance. Remember and a point in the war when victory was
assured. The Germans had already surrendered. The Japanese were known at the
high level to be negotiating for surrender, terms of surrender and were certain
of being defeated at that point by blockade or otherwise with or without an
invasion. So, the reason for taking even a one in a million chance of this
happening was not justifiable I would have to say. Certainly was problematic to
say the least.
The idea of taking a ten
percent chance is hair raising and granted, as far as we know, no one else
thought the chance was that high, but this was the best experimental physicist
in the world, Enrico Fermi, who thought that. And at the other extreme,
[inaudible 00:49:26] who got a Nobel Prize for this kind of process later,
thought there was no chance. There was no chance. But he was alone in thinking
that. Almost nobody else believed that with his confidence. So, this is the
chance that was taken.
What I’m saying is our
leaders and our scientists had been taking gambles like that ever since without
telling us and it was 30 years before, well, let’s see, 40 years, 1945 to 1983,
almost 40 years, before people realized that the smoke which had been ignored
as a factor, a miscalculation, would have this effect. Sort of like ignoring
lithium 6, you know, or something for the whole period. But that was 35 years
ago and we’ve lived ever since with the knowledge that to say the least, there
is a possibility that our war plans would destroy life on earth. But does that
keep people from preparing it, or threatening it? No. It doesn’t.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah. Just mentioned Hitler there ’cause
apparently this concern about igniting the atmosphere was one reason that
Hitler didn’t want to pursue an atomic bomb, which curiously didn’t stop us
though.
Daniel Ellsberg: When Speer told him about it Speer says Hitler
was not delighted with the idea that his might be the cause of destroying life
on earth. He didn’t like that idea. And he went on to say someday he said, the
scientist will in his egotism and their pride and everything else, be setting
the possibility of setting the earth on fire. He said someday. He said it won’t
be in my lifetime, he said. Well, it wasn’t exactly in his lifetime. He died
the first week of May 1945, but two months later they were making that experiment.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah, another example of just the crazy things
that people can do in groups is that the joint chiefs of staff during the Cuban
Missile Crisis apparently were just extremely keen to go to war in Cuba even
knowing that there was a decent chance that this could escalate to all out
nuclear war. And similarly Castro from what I’ve read was absolutely willing to
go to an all out nuclear war and he was asked in some later interview like what
do you think would have happened in that case, and he said, “Well, everyone
would have died in Cuba.”
Daniel Ellsberg: Yes, but socialism would prevail.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah, he was so ideological and I guess to some
extent so were the joint chiefs of staff. They’re willing to see their
societies totally destroyed for this.
Daniel Ellsberg: No, the joint chiefs I think were not afraid is
for reasons I’ve told earlier that the U.S. would be destroyed. They weren’t
worried about that and if worse came to worse, they knew that Europe would be
destroyed, but as Lindsey Graham said, Senator Lindsey Graham about a war with
North Korea, he said there would be terrible causalities but they would all be
over there.
Robert Wiblin: They don’t get vote.
Daniel Ellsberg: They would not be Americans. Now, that is not reliable,
because all it takes to kill Americans for Kim Jong-un is a boat with a nuclear
device in it. We know he has material for up to 60 such devices. We don’t know
how many he’s made into warheads, but he doesn’t need a warhead that can get
through the atmosphere without being destroyed after a missile ride. All he
needs is a device like the Trinity, ones that we know he’s tested on a boat. He
doesn’t need an ICBM. He need to send a boat over with such device. It doesn’t
even need to have a crew it can be artificial intelligence. Simple drone into a
harbor like San Francisco or Los Angeles or for that matter a container that
could be sent anywhere in the country. A container with a device in it that
could be triggered by a drone or remote device. So, he could be wrong, you
know? Nobody’s perfect. Sorry about that. It wasn’t all over there.
But what he’s saying is he’s
falsely assuring us that it would all be over there, and that would be
acceptable to protect us from the risk or the treat of being destroyed
ourselves, our cities by an ICBM, it would be worth sacrificing South Korea or
Japan, large parts of Japan. Well, that sounds insane, and it is. But of a very
ordinary kind of insanity. It’s basically what we have contemplated with Europe
for the entire lifetime of NATO.
Robert Wiblin: So, in the book you discuss nuclear winter a lot
and you’re very confident that if hundreds of thermonuclear devices were
detonated that our world would be very likely –
Daniel Ellsberg: Cities.
Robert Wiblin: Cities, yeah, would be very likely to suffer a
nuclear winter. I’ve spoken to some smart people who are somewhat skeptical
about that or at least think that it’s an open question how likely a nuclear
winter is and whether basically the particulates would get high enough in the
atmosphere to stay up there for a long time and block out the sun. Do you have
any view on kind of the current state of science –
Daniel Ellsberg: First, I don’t have a personal view. I’m not a
scientist. I was an economist.
Robert Wiblin: Same.
Daniel Ellsberg: Not really a scientist. So, I have to pick who
on rely on here. You just made me aware that there is one peer reviewed study
that raises questions about the likelihood that a small war between India and
Pakistan using only fission devices would have the effect that Alan Robock and
Brian Toon and others have reported in peer reviewed articles by the way, would
result from a war between India and Pakistan involving only a hundred fission
devices, 50 on each side. Now, they’re not limited to 15 kilotons, which they
had assumed. They have boosting devices now, which would be at least 50
kilotons, which would make a difference. But they still don’t have
thermonuclear devices that we know of even though Kim Jong-un has claimed that
he tests an H-bomb. It takes more than one provisional test in any case to have
a reliable H-bomb.
Now, if the calculations
that Toon and Robock made in 2007 of such a result that it would not cause
nuclear winter or a global diminution of sunlight by 70% but diminution by
about 7%, which would not kill everybody on earth by starvation, but would
shorten harvests and kill enough harvests as to starve the least nourished two
billion people on this planet. Between one and two billion people. Or about a
third of the earth’s population, not all of it. And this new article by Los
Alamos questions that the effect would be that great or that prolonged, and it
remains to be seen how challenging this result is since it’s based on a
classified computer model, which they so far have been unwilling to share. So
that the chance of replicating that by people who aren’t paid by the government
to design nuclear weapons and sell them is negligible at this point. You can’t
replicate it. You can’t check it, but he wants to do that and of course, of
course, that’s the way science proceeds whether that would have much effect on
… there are other questions about whether that’s on the basis of their
calculations. Were they looking at the right kinds of targets all together,
they were applicable to the India Pakistan War, and so forth.
So, that remains to be seen.
There has been no other peer reviewed article actually questioning their
results. This is the first from Los Alamos, the design laboratory. And it still
doesn’t address the question of the larger war between the U.S. and Russia with
thermonuclear weapons causing nuclear winter. I am told by the way, by somebody
I do trust very much, a scientist who works for the government that there is
very little uncertainty about what would happen if as much smoke as Robock and
Toon and Turco and others imagine, does get into the stratosphere. That will
cause nuclear winter. But that there is still some uncertainty as to just how
much will get up there. That’s the question raised by this new study by the way.
And that needs more research no question. I mean you can’t have too much in a
way. The fact is the Defense Department, which alone has the classified data on
the actual targets, the actual yield, the height of yield, all the things that
affect the amount of firestorm. All of that is classified.
And there are outfits like
the National Academy of Sciences that have done classified studies on such
matters and could have access to all that. I would say I have no higher aim
than to encourage Congress to appropriate the money for such studies. Very
small amount of money by the way, and no one has done that. The don’t want to
know on that what the effect will be, ’cause it cannot improve the sales of
ICBMs or drones or new testing or whatever. It’s something they don’t want to
know. They have no need to know, and they don’t want to know it. The rest of us
in the world, every country in the world, has a stake in that information,
because they are all threatened by this occurrence. But they can’t do the
studies themselves without knowing the plans and the targets. They could only
do analogous studies or hypothetical studies of the kind that have been done
already with very ominous results.
So, that’s something that I
would like to see happen. It won’t happen under a Republican Congress, it seems
clear. And it’s never happened under a Democratic Congress, but Democratic
Congress coming out of 2018 this year elections, seems to be necessary though,
far from sufficient in learning what we need to learn about this. And then it
would take pressure on that Democratic Congress. Really they’d have to be more
concerned Democrats than we’ve ever seen before to confront these very powerful
corporations. They get donations from them. The people on the armed services
committee and others and they would have to confront, they aren’t in any rush
to confront Exxon on climate or Brown and Williamson on tobacco. That’s the way
the system works.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah, at some point I really need to speak to
one of these researchers to help me get to the bottom of this question of
nuclear winter.
Daniel Ellsberg: On this paper.
Robert Wiblin: Maybe Robock potentially I could talk to. I
could get up to date on what’s the state of the research there. There’s one
good thing about Trump. I think it’s that it has made people more worried about
our nuclear security.
Daniel Ellsberg: Yes.
Robert Wiblin: And I guess you could imagine that Democrats in
Congress might be interested in studying this.
Daniel Ellsberg: His policies up to now with the exception of the
fact that he’s very critical of NATO, that’s new. But his nuclear policies are
really very much in line with ones we’ve had all along. There’s no big turning
point there. And the idea of spending 1.7 trillion dollars in modernizing the
Doomsday Machine we got under Obama. Not because he wanted it, but because it
was the only way he could get Senator Kyl and others to vote for New Start.
Negotiations was to promise this big build up. I would question whether that
was a good deal to make at all. Of course, he could’ve gone back on it or
Hillary could have, but she has shown no indication and she wanted to deny the
military industrial complex anything it wanted. As a woman she is under
question about her strength and her militarism. And she’s shown every
indication, her political career has been based for years now on being known as
the person who would support the military in any of their requests for
intervention or for force build up.
So, if anything Trump was a
better prospect for changing this, but he hasn’t shown any indication of doing
it. It would have to be done with Russia to a large extent. His friendship with
Putin, whatever the basis of it is, would be promising in that respect. That
together they could go down. He even spoke about that a few times during the
campaign and even since. But Putin hasn’t shown any indication of a desire to
go down. And he has the same incentives that an American President does. He has
his corporations that are supporting him, his oligarchical friends, and to call
Russia an oligarchy is well-founded and not more so than the U.S. I would say.
Robert Wiblin: Just before we move on from the book, what do
you think are the other best sources that people who want to pursue a career in
nuclear security should read. I guess Eric Schlosser’s “Command and Control”
often comes up as a good read. Is there anything else that you’d recommend?
Daniel Ellsberg: Well, by the way Schlosser’s book is so good
that when I read it I thought, “Gee. Well, now I don’t have to write mine.” You
know, it’s all out there. And then when I reread it some more, I said, “No, I
have a number, a few points to make that he doesn’t.” He did get some things
that almost nobody else had. The delegation issue for example is in there. I
alone was the person talking about that for decades. And he has a number of,
he’s much more on the accident problem and the false alarm problem than I have.
In my book I just referred to his to a large extent and to Bruce Blair and
Scott Sagan and a few others. So, that’s an excellent book to read.
Helen Caldicott, a former
head of the Physicians for Social Responsibility here, the American part of the
group that got the Nobel Prize in the 90s for nuclear war, the International
Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, Helen Caldicott edited in
Australia a book called “Sleepwalking to Armageddon”, which is very, very good
last year on where we are right now. More up to date than mine is. In fact, it
came out just after mine had been printed or I would have referred to it more.
Those are two good ones. But
I would put my book as one definitely worth reading in that trio. So, on the
question there are of course many others going back in history. Fred Kaplan’s
the “Wizards of Armageddon” is very good. On the Cuban Missile Crisis, I think
it’s called “One Minute to Midnight” or something a very good one on the Cuban
Missile Crisis.
Robert Wiblin: So let’s move on and talk about what specific
policies you think will be useful.
And perhaps like practical
and feasible for the U.S. government and other governments to potentially
implement.
Daniel Ellsberg: Yeah.
Robert Wiblin: So I guess if you were elected President
tomorrow, what would be your ideal approach for the U.S.?
Daniel Ellsberg: Remember if I … If we were to imagine my being
elected or anyone like me at a younger age, we’d have to assume a change in our
political economy, you know a significant case. It wouldn’t be other things
being equal, other things being equal I wouldn’t be President. But … And a lot
would’ve had to change from my point of view for the better.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah.
Daniel Ellsberg: That’d be a big change. But if we look at things
that are imaginable politically, without massive changes in our political
economy, changes in the distribution of income and the power of corporations
and so forth, but are still imaginable, let me take things that really do
involve enormous risks let’s say to most of the corporations in this country.
And the rich people. Other than those who profit immediately from the arms
race.
In other words, it’s almost
hard to explain how things that profit only Boeing and Lockheed and Drummond,
who are powerful but hardly majority of our corporate wealth and profits, how
do they manage to get away with policies that threaten everybody?
Robert Wiblin: And even just that require a huge tax bill that
other rich people would oppose, right? In general you’d think that other
corporations-
Daniel Ellsberg: Yeah.
Robert Wiblin: … or rich people, they don’t wanna pay the taxes
that fund all of this enormous infrastructure at the cost of a trillion
dollars.
Daniel Ellsberg: Right. Well that effects … You know is it
unimaginable that really billionaires should decide that for the benefit of
society, you know, that there should be more progressive taxation? The answer
is that Warren Buffet, among others, has said right along he should be taxed
more and the others should be taxed more. So it’s not unimaginable, it’s just
that they have not succeeded in winning on this. But it doesn’t seem
unimaginable that they would.
What then would I go for
things that do seem to involve disproportionate danger and risk,
disproportionate to any benefits to the society as a whole. And in particular
to the most powerful people in society. All right let me just start at the top
of the list.
I said earlier, launch on
warning is an absolutely unconscionable basis for our defense policies. There’s
no way you can make it called necessary. We should eliminate the ICBMs. And
there has been actually major proposals for that by influential people in the
Defense Department for many decades. They just always lose in the end. Without
it ever having become a matter of public discussion until we learn later. Even
I, stay very much in touch with this sort of thing, have been frequently
surprised to discover how seriously such good proposals were taken some decades
earlier. We learn much later, specifically the President.
President Barack Obama
favored getting rid of the ICBMs and also a very closely related question of
rejecting first use of nuclear weapons under any circumstances. People get this
wrong so often. Let me spell this out a little bit. First use, the phrase first
use refers to any initiation nuclear weapons, including tactical weapon, short
ranged, relatively low yield weapons. As in short ranged artillery or missiles
in a limited war of some kind. But any kind of first use.
First strike refers to
initiating or launching long range strategic weapons, essentially against the
homeland of our major opponent, the Russians or vice versa, before enemy or
enemies warheads have arrived on our soil. It might be after they have been
launched, but before they’ve arrived. Or escalating from a limited conflict to
an attack against the homeland of the other super power.
And so there’s two basic
ways that a first strike could occur. One is what I just said, an escalation of
a limited non-nuclear or nuclear, limited nuclear war. For example a war
between the U.S. and North Korea that we decided had to be escalated to an
attack on China as well or against Russia, or your first strike. Having perhaps
already taken first use of limited tactical weapons by the U.S. or by North
Korea, but escalating that to a homeland strike against Russia or perhaps China
would be a first strike.
The other way would be in
anticipation of an imminent or ongoing strike by the opponent, preemptive.
Getting it off as some said, striking second first. Getting our weapons off the
ground before they’re attacked by the other side. Imminently about to be
attacked.
Now when I say launch on
warning, that refers to this latter preemption where there has been some
indication, either strategic, perhaps a covert agent or a set of events, a
limited war that we think will probably escalate. Or by a warning from our
radar or our electronic warning on satellites or infrared warning, that enemy
warheads are on the way. Such as has happened a number of times. And launching
our weapons before that warning has been confirmed by actual explosions. And remember
even or two explosions might not really confirm that a larger attack was under
way. It might have been a terrorist or a third party of some kind. Or a rogue,
or a non authorized action.
So until you’ve really had a
rather large number of weapons, a dozen, half a dozen, 20, hundreds, whatever,
that indicate a concerted full scale attack, any launch before that is a launch
on warning. That should never occur. In the past it was, even until now, it’s
been imagined because it’s a good way to sell vehicles that launching them
first gives us a chance of limiting damage to ourselves. But since by launching
we cannot attack their submarines. If anything we attack their submarines by
anti-attack submarines that are in the water already and then go after them.
It’s not a real launch on
warning. It’s our planes, which can be recalled. Or our missiles getting off a
launchpad before they’re attacked, that is launch on warning. That should be
eliminated. It should’ve been eliminated 50 years ago or more. Along with that
the weapons that must be launched before they’re attacked, our ICBMs should be
eliminated. They do nothing for us other than make us look big and crazy. And
that’s not without its effect, looking big and crazy makes the other people
cautious up the point that it makes them decide they have to strike first. But
it can have a beneficial effect.
But not in a way that can’t
be achieved otherwise or that is necessary. And it is a way that involves a
continuous risk of blowing up the world. Which is shorthand for actually …
Nothing we do will blow up the world, literally, or even kill all life. After
all, most biomass in the Earth is microscopic and much, or most of that, will
survive even a nuclear winter or nuclear war. But larger animals will all go.
Except us. And we’ll mostly go. Nearly all.
So that is not justifiable.
So get rid of the launch on warning. Get rid of the weapons that are for launch
on warning, ICBMs. And now a third step I would take which is unilaterally we
would improve the world’s security, and our own, if we did either of those
things, and/or, also, divested ourselves of that large part of our submarine
force which threatens their land based missiles. If I can spend just a moment
on the asymmetry here.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah.
Daniel Ellsberg: The Russians rely on their ICBMs in a way we
don’t. Because they don’t rely on their submarines as we do. Their submarines
have more of tendency to bump into each other or to fall to the bottom of the
ocean. They’ve had a number of serious accidents. But more importantly than
that, their subject to an American anti-submarine warfare which will not get
all of their submarines, but which will get a number of them. They’re not
willing to rely entirely on their submarines and so they do rely on their ICBMs.
It’s hard for me to imagine they’re getting rid of all of their ICBMs in that
circumstance. Just as it’s hard for me to imagine North Korea, Kim Jong-Un,
getting rid of all of his nuclear weapons. I don’t expect that to happen. He
depends on that for his deterrents and his survival and Russia feels they
depend on having some ICBMs.
We don’t require those
ICBMs. We don’t benefit from them in anyway, other than the one I described,
which is not by the way just imaginary, conjectural. To look crazy enough to
buy these useless things does make us look crazy to launch.
Robert Wiblin: To use them.
Daniel Ellsberg: And that can be a deterrent.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah.
Daniel Ellsberg: But at this I say at the risk of destruction of
everything. So we should get rid of those. No first use policy on our part,
even unilaterally, all the better for Russia. All of these things are even
better, much better, if Russia imitates them, which is not guaranteed. But they
are good for us even if they don’t imitate them and certainly our ability to
press them in various ways. And shame them. Or educate them or whatever, to get
rid of their first use policy and their launch on warning, depends necessarily
on our getting rid of it. Although it’s not guaranteed by it.
So those would be three
major things I would do. I would thus reduce the number of our warheads first
by the ICBMs, but also sub launched missiles, warheads. Not to zero, however.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah. So in light of that, should we want a ban
on all nuclear weapons, or should we just be looking to reduce the number?
Daniel Ellsberg: Now we get to an important issue. 122 nations
have signed now, although I forget how many, but maybe 20 more, have actually
ratified a treaty to ban nuclear weapons. And to make illegal any possession of
any nuclear weapons. The Pope speaking, not legally but morally, has said now,
in contrast to his predecessors, that any possession of nuclear weapons is
morally condemnable. Now similar to the ban idea. Unfortunately, and
predictably, all of those 122 nations are nations that do no possess nuclear
weapons. And they are not allied to nations that protect them with the threat
of nuclear weapons. So not one member of NATO has signed such a treaty. Nor has
any member of the nine nuclear weapon states. Actually one member of NATO did
take part in the negotiations, only one. [crosstalk 01:24:40]
Robert Wiblin: Netherlands, is that who it was? Yeah.
Daniel Ellsberg: Yeah, the Netherlands. But they were … They took
part because they were ordered to do so by their Parliament. They wouldn’t have
done it on their executive branch. But they were ordered by the executive
branch to vote against it. So, I don’t foresee that approach by itself
expanding very much. In part, because like the Pope, it is legally or morally
condemning the position of any nuclear weapons and most of the people in the
nuclear weapons states and their allies don’t agree with that as a moral norm
or as a prudent action.
Nor do I, actually at this
point. Given that other countries, including opponents, have nuclear weapons.
It’s hard for me to say … I can’t see that is is morally condemnatory, for
example, for China to have any nuclear weapons since it’s had serious adversary
relations with both the U.S. and Russia, the Soviet Union in the past.
Robert Wiblin: And India for that matter, yeah.
Daniel Ellsberg: And India. You could say likewise for India. Or
that it’s morally condemnatory to have some nuclear weapons rather than leaving
a major adversary with a monopoly. It’s not only that most people will not
agree, I will be among those who will not agree, that it’s morally obligatory
for us to unilaterally divest ourselves of all nuclear weapons while Russia retains
some, leaving them with a monopoly. It’s not only … It’s not that I would
expect Russia to attack with those weapons necessarily, or very quickly, but it
is very plausible that it would encourage them to take aggressive actions of
various kinds. Old actions, reckless actions that they wouldn’t take otherwise,
that might very well lead to conflict. And if not to immediate nuclear war by
one side or the other, to a build up.
So it seems to me that
whereas I do think that a world without nuclear weapons would be a very much
safer place. And that is a desirable aim and should even be a practical aim, if
not in our lifetime, in our children’s or our grandchildren’s lifetime. But by
the same token in the nuclear era in which we live, I would say that war, major
way, should be abolished, in effect should not be an instrument of policy.
Should not be tolerated or legitimated and prepared for. But that implies a
considerable change in our world order, in our system of resolving conflicts.
And rather than say well in
other words that’s like changing the gravitational constant, or some currently
unthinkable thing, that should be thinkable. We should be aiming at that. And
they go together. I find it hard to believe that there will be sufficient trust
and verification and enforcement for countries who now rely on nuclear weapons
entirely to rid themselves of them, so long as they do face a real risk of
attack. Or of invasion. Or occupation.
You mentioned Castro
earlier. Castro is the one major leader, you know a very small island, he’s
been faced with imminent invasion by a nuclear power. Let me take that back,
Saddam was faced with that of course and did experience it. So has Afghanistan
by Russia. So what’s the difference? They did not, those countries did not have
recourse to nuclear weapons themselves. But Castro had nuclear weapons on his
territory. Which, by the way, did not have locks on them and which his people
could’ve taken control of. Rather than say to Khrushchev, which would certainly
look rational, “Do not use those nuclear weapons or we will be annihilated,” he
could’ve said that. And he could’ve backed it up with non-nuclear force, taking
over the weapons himself, but he wouldn’t have had to with Khrushchev. I think
Khrushchev would’ve agreed to that, almost certainly.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah, Khrushchev seems quite sane from the
historical records.
Daniel Ellsberg: Yeah. Yeah. Now was it insane then for … What
Khrushchev did do as the youngest leader around at that point, what he did do
was say, “I assume you’ll use them. That’s fine. And, therefore, if it’s going
to be a nuclear war, which it is, because we’re gonna use them, you should go
first.” And he said that under the mistaken impression that Russia had a couple
of hundred ICBMs when in fact it had about 10. Some say 40. But socialists
would not have prevailed. The Northern … Eurasia would have been annihilated.
And actually some American cities would’ve gone, starting with Oahu because
Khrushchev had ordered a nuclear … sub with nuclear missiles offshore Hawaii in
case a war erupted.
Now to what effect … What
good would it have done in the world for Hawaii to be annihilated while Russia
was being annihilated? Nothing. No good. But that was his plan, secretly. He
ordered that secretly. And not for deterrents. He didn’t tell us that that
would happen. He just did it. Nor did he tell us that he had nuclear warheads
ashore.
Now this is to me
inexplicable rationally. I can’t imagine what that was except as a simple
bureaucratic trend in Russia to keep secrets. Even when you would be safer if
you exposed that secret. The secret being that he had nuclear warheads in Cuba.
When I look at that warhead, I believe, and I’ve never seen anyone else say
this or raise it, and I didn’t get into it in my book for space reasons, the
what if or the, you know, the hypotheticals that might’ve occurred. I wanted to
but my son said, “Dad, this is not a book about Cuba. You don’t have space for
this.” But I would’ve liked to say Khrushchev could’ve won that crisis at any
point up until Saturday, October 27th, when he gave in by simply revealing he
had nuclear weapons there, which he did.
In fact, if he didn’t he
still could’ve said he did. But he did have them. And he could’ve shown them to
our surveillance, not all of them, just one or two. Opened them up for
inspection, send your U2 over, send a low level over, take a real good
photograph. Send a ground observer over, let him look at this thing. See. We
have nuclear weapons ashore, which was true. Which would mean to Kennedy an invasion
was out of the question.
Now, when the Joint Chiefs
contemplated the possibility that there were nuclear weapons ashore right at
the end, their proposal was let’s put nuclear weapons with our troops. That was
refused. That was insane. What the hell were nuclear weapons on their troops
gonna do if our invasion fleet was about to be destroyed by their nuclear
weapons? You know. Having them even on the ship wasn’t going to do anything for
you. The ship was going to be vaporized if they had them. It does make the
Joint Chiefs look insane and in important ways they were, but as I say, in a
way that is institutionally endorsed. Normal insanity. Organizational insanity.
I don’t have even that, as I say for Khrushchev except that they just were
generally very secretive and didn’t notice that this was an occasion they
should not be secretive.
To Castro, for him to say
given that we’re about to be occupied, better that we all be annihilated and
they’d go down with us. See. And that capitalism go down. Now he’s the only one
really tested like that. Where he had an opportunity not to see nuclear war
occur or to let it occur. And he let it occur rather than be occupied. Well
that could be seen as saying well being occupied, let’s say by the Nazi’s, or
in this case by the Americans, we don’t wanna be occupied.
Something very odd that I’ve
never seen commented on was his armed forces were entirely organized for
guerrilla warfare. They had some to power by guerrilla warfare only a few years
earlier. They were now enormously greater than that. They had militia, they had
the whole country organized. Much more than Vietnam did for example, for
guerrilla warfare. So why was being annihilated preferable to-
Robert Wiblin: Being occupied probably temporarily.
Daniel Ellsberg: … guerrilla warfare? You know? They weren’t
quite as well situated for it as Vietnam in a number of ways. They were an
island, they could be surrounded. But on the other hand they had a 600 mile
mountain chain, the Sierra Maestra. We would’ve had a hell of a time occupying
Cuba as would have been recognized a few years later, after Vietnam. But this
was ’62. So it wasn’t as clear to us what a threat guerrilla warfare was to us.
But Castro should’ve known that. That’s how he won.
And amazingly enough, rather
than be occupied, he made the choice that they should use the nuclear weapons
at the cost of their annihilation. Well, this is I think you can’t single him
out as a single psychotic leader. I think that was a test of what humans in
power do, how crazy they can be when it comes to questions of war and peace.
And life and death. You know there’s no way to make real sense out of almost
any of the decision making that led to World War I. You could give their
reasons, they had reasons in every case, each country, for actions that led to
the destruction of their empire. But they weren’t good reasons. It was
terrible.
And what I reveal in the
Pentagon Papers was not just poor decision making, it was crazy decision
making. But it was normal for humans. I forget how we got off this entirely,
but …
Robert Wiblin: Well I was just thinking about, yeah, what is
the most practical and useful thing that the U.S. could do to make the world
safer? And [crosstalk 01:34:18]
Daniel Ellsberg: Yeah, to make it safer. So I have a number of
things. Move against, there should be no armed conflict between the U.S. and
Russia. That should be inconceivable now as it is not. We’re preparing for it.
We’re deploying for it. We’re getting ready. It’s preparing to blow up the
world in the sense in which I’ve described it for annihilating most large
animals on the Earth. And that is scarcely necessary. It would be hard to
imagine is was necessary even if you were confronting Hitler. That is reckless
and ruthless. Not only ruthless, but recklessly expansionist. And we haven’t
seen that. We haven’t seen a Hitler in great power, including atop the U.S. I
think the reason there has not been a war in the 70 years since 1945, a result
which was in fact hard to imagine for people in 1945, was that the phenomenon
that was a reality then. Hitler, not with nuclear weapons, but up until that
point might have nuclear weapons, but in ’45 the expansionism of Hitler was
easy to project onto the Russians, or the Russians on to us.
They expected a first
strike. Actually, no president was Hitler and no leader of Russia was Hitler.
Not in terms of ruthlessness, but in terms of wild gambling expansionism. We
haven’t seen that. If we had, we would not be here. In other words, if what people
reasonably worried about in 1945 had occurred, had let’s say an Idi Amin or
what should we say? Saddam I think was very aggressive. But had he been on top
of the U.S. or Russia, we wouldn’t be here. The world would’ve blown up.
So it’s important that that
not occur, and that there be other ways of confronting reckless leaders
somehow, other than threatening to blow the world up. For example, we should
not be reproducing Cold War, which we are at this point, where you don’t
negotiate with Russia. When Trump speaks of negotiating with Russia some
support that his followers, and many do not, and the Democrats … The latter are
in my opinion not just wrong but crazy in this traditional widespread
craziness. To say that we should not be collaborating with Russia, not
cooperating because of Crimea let’s say. And to analogize Crimea to Hitler’s
invasion of Poland, that’s a totally mistaken, misleading analogy for a lot of
reasons. And a very dangerous one.
And I’m saying the idea that
that shows that we can no more negotiate and cooperate with Putin than we could
with Hitler in 1939, could not be more dangerous. So in the short run I would
want to change that. Here’s an amazing irony. If you look at Trump – Donald
Trump’s policy views – I would regard them as not just mistaken but as
despicable in nearly every instance except one, which is that he wants to
cooperate with Russia and not get into a war with Russia. Not over Syria, or
Ukraine, or anywhere else. In my opinion whatever his motives – and I doubt
that they’re very creditable, I think they probably have to do with being under
subject to blackmail by Putin – they make him reasonable on this point.
Whatever his motives, he’s
right on that point. That is the point I think that most motivates the
opposition to him from the Democrats. What they regard as his most vulnerable
point, is the one point I would say where his policy is right and realistic.
And that is his not preparing for war with Russia. Because you’re preparing for
a world omnicide basically when you do that, and not moving in a different
direction. So why in the world are they attacking him on that point? Well
partly because they think he’s politically vulnerable, and the Democrats can
get back in power that way, and they might be right about that.
But by pressing that point
they are making omnicide more likely. And why by they way are they going for
the Cold War, that happened before Trump. That was under-
Robert Wiblin: Well both Bush and Obama.
Daniel Ellsberg: Obama, and was definitely backed by Hillary in
terms of the arms buildup, why? Because only Russia provides a target system
that can rationalize advanced weapons to get through their defenses. We need a
long range standoff weapons, so our planes can get through an air defense
system which only one country in the world has like Russia. Others have similar
weapons but not in the same network. Our planes have problems getting into only
one country in the world, Russia. So for that we need a long range standoff
weapons for Boeing and Lockheed or whoever makes them. You can’t rationalized
new Trident submarines against ISIS, or against Assad, you just can’t. Only
Russia allows that incentive.
And likewise ICBMs, and so
forth. So in other words to keep these assembly lines going, and to keep rotten
Connecticut working on attack submarines for example, you have to have somebody
with submarines to attack, and that’s Russian. So in order for these you might
say military Keynesian motives and for profit motives basically we are
reproducing the Doomsday Machine. And encouraging the same kinds of factions in
Russia to reproduce their Dooms Day machine. And this is a human tendency of
people in power, to maintain their power, and their wealth and everything else,
which I don’t know how to change. I have to hope, and I do hope that we find a
way to do it, but I don’t yet know what that is.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah, so your preferred policy is that we get
rid of land based ICBMs completely.
Daniel Ellsberg: And most of our SLBMs.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah, okay so we go down to what?
Daniel Ellsberg: Bombers are little less dangerous because they
can be recalled.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah okay, so we’d end up with what, a hundred?
Something like what the UK has?
Daniel Ellsberg: I’ll get to that right away.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah.
Daniel Ellsberg: The reason I want to get rid of the SLBMs which
nobody else talks about is I prefer the Russians not think that their ICBMs are
in danger of being destroyed entirely, which our SLBMs can do. And we’ve just
put on super fuses on our SLBMs to make them capable of destroying hardened
ICBMs. And that does nothing for us at all, except that it does give the
Russians an incentive to interpret alarms from their radar of the kind that
occurred in 1983, they got a false warning from their satellite system. Their
ICBMs were in danger. Was that possible? Yes, we had enough weapons to do that.
We should make it clear that we did not threaten to launch a warning, and we do
not threaten counter-force against Russia, because it’s hopeless, it’s
infeasible. It is as infeasible as a highly effective anti-ballistic missile
system.
Now that, the scientists are
all lined up on saying that’s impossible, it’s infeasible. The truth is that
our counter force efforts against Russian are just as unfeasible. They have too
many and they have submarines, and you can’t get them. Unlike the ABM which may
be fooled by decoys, and maybe not hit any warheads, the Anti-Ballistic
Missile, our ICBMs can find and destroy their ICBMs. Not all of them probably
but a lot of them, and not the mobile ones altogether. But they really can hit
it. They could make by the way hundreds of decoys over there, that was
discussed in connection with our MX system. We could build lots of holes and
they wouldn’t know which hole it’s in, but it’s expensive and we didn’t do
that, and they haven’t done it either.
So you say, “Okay, we really
can destroy the ICBMs. Isn’t that worth doing?” And the answer no is not being
made by any politicians, because what does it pay them to do that. No one gives
them a campaign contribution for saying that Boeing is just wasting money. No
you don’t say that about Boeing, because Boeing would then come back and say
your bridge to nowhere is not needed, or your infrastructure project here is
not needed. So Congressmen don’t oppose each other’s district profits,
Robert Wiblin: So what do you think of China’s current stance?
It sounds like you’d like us to get close to where China is?
Daniel Ellsberg: [crosstalk 01:42:49] No, I’m saying I think
China has a pursued a relatively sane even totally sane nuclear policy all
along. At first we thought they only built a dozen or so ICBMs because they
couldn’t afford more, that was plausible. But only for the first 10 years or so
after ’64. Since the last 30 to 40 years it’s obvious they could build many
more, they could have as many as we do but they don’t, they don’t feel a need
for parity which they don’t have, which they don’t need, correctly. Their
policy has been no first use, and open explicit encouragement of a ban. It’s
now a questioned for reasons I don’t know entirely. Well I could see our Anti
Ballistic Missiles might have some effect in reducing damage from a first
strike against the small Chinese force, not against Russia, but against the
Chinese.
So they have reason to think
we might not be as deterred as we used to be against China. We seem to be
preparing for a war against China. So they are now considering although so far
haven’t adopted launch on warning for the first time, that will make the whole
world less safe if they do that, and I hope they don’t. But they’re also
considering building more survivable weapons, it means more weapons, more
submarine weapons, more survival, more mobile weapons. With some bases that we
don’t look as deferrable as we should, because we’re still threatening and
we’re still preparing. So unfortunately they are building up. I presume that’s
reason they did not sign on to the ban. Otherwise, I don’t why they wouldn’t,
it’s totally compatible with their policy.
Their policy … It’s not
compatible, I take it back a little. They have a minimum deterrent, so it’s not
compatible with a full ban, immediate ban.
Robert Wiblin: I think they’ve said that in principle they
would like a world nuclear weapons.
Daniel Ellsberg: In principle they want a world without nuclear
weapon. Well …
Robert Wiblin: In principle, I guess, so would we it’s just
more of a fantasy.
Daniel Ellsberg: [crosstalk 01:44:48] Well okay. Now of course a
number of our presidents have said that. Obama got a Nobel Prize for it. Trump
doesn’t say it but Reagan said it and Carter said it, but they each had a huge
military buildup, so they said it. Now China has said it and has not had a huge
military buildup. So they’re a lot more plausible that. No first use we favor
elimination and a minimum deterrent. No pretense of damage limiting
counterforce first strike capability. They do not pretend to believe in that or
to be trying to get it unlike the US and Russia. So what I would like to see is
China to press as a world leader on this. And I’ve asked whether that seems
possible or not, unfortunately China experts tell me that China has such a
strong tradition in the last century of saying we don’t intervene in another
country, we don’t tell them what to do, we don’t intervene, non-intervention
the sovereignty.
That it is against their
whole-
Robert Wiblin: Philosophy.
Daniel Ellsberg: … inclination and vision to be telling other
countries do as we do. I wish they did actually on that point, and I don’t know
enough to say it’s impossible. But people who do know China more say that’s
extremely unlikely.
Robert Wiblin: They’re probably right with that.
Daniel Ellsberg: Unfortunately, but I don’t hesitate to say as an
American we should look at China, and we should pursue a policy like China’s.
And that means endorse and even negotiate toward elimination of nuclear weapons
in the longer one verification policy than everything else. But in the meantime
while other countries have nuclear weapons, we should maintain a small
capability to respond. A survivable capability to respond in a limited way,
which is not by the way to say we should necessarily use that capability. In
fact, I can only think of one circumstance I won’t go into, it’s just too
complicated, where it might make sense to launch a nuclear weapon or more.
But in general except for a
very small possibility, there’s almost no circumstance in which it would make
sense for in my terms to respond to a nuclear attack with a nuclear weapon by
the US. Any circumstance in which it would be necessary, desirable, optimal,
anything but second use is as crazy as first use for the US.
Robert Wiblin: Is that because of course it can’t protect you
because the missiles are already coming, and I guess two me it just makes us
off because you just get a worse nuclear winter.
Daniel Ellsberg: [crosstalk 01:47:20] what good is it gonna be
of? If you send them over there what targets could be hit that would be of any
benefit? Whereas if you send them in targets near cities, or in the cities
you’re just adding to the smoke. In the end the result will be the same a year
later. But it will come a little faster, mass starvation will come a little
faster if we burn cities in addition to our cities that are being burnt. But
nevertheless a capability to do that should be taken very seriously by any adversary,
because the likelihood that we will use that capability in revenge even if it
doesn’t do any good for us is very high, because we’re human.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah, it’s interesting. Okay so that’s your kind
of medium or moderate disarmament policy.
Daniel Ellsberg: [crosstalk 01:48:06] how many weapons as they
get down to, I would say by the way a handful of propositions here in my
opinion these are normative statements. No country has the justification or
good reason to have a doomsday machine first of all, which Russia and the US
do, and the other countries are on the verge of it. All the countries except
North Korea could cause starvation up to a third of the earth’s population,
that’s eight countries can do that, none of them should have that capability.
What is that capability? Well it’s something between 100 and 200 weapons, and
eight of the countries… Let’s put this way, seven of the countries have at
least 100. Israel probably has more, but is only estimated to have 80 or
something, I think it probably has more than that because of the no news
revelations many years ago.
North Korea doesn’t at this
point. So it follows from that, no nuclear weapons state is justified in having
as many weapons as it now has, not one of them can justify. India can’t justify
having 100 nuclear weapons, no. To what effect. Or now we have Israel with it’s
80 and so forth. You can’t justify more than 100, let’s say. That isn’t to say
you can justify a hundred, but you can’t justify more than that right? Fourth,
no country can justify having as many weapons as the smallest nuclear state
other than North Korea. And you can’t have as many weapons as Israel, certainly
not as many as Pakistan or India or England or France or in that zone, as a
first step toward ultimate elimination. But also toward a relatively stable
situation.
I would say for the US and
Russia to come down to the level of the other nuclear states, something between
80 and 120. Not striving for superiority which is meaningless except in
conveying craziness, which has a diplomatic benefit under some circumstances,
but one that comes at too high a cost, too a high a risk. So it means coming
down to 100. Now what should they be? They should not be vulnerable weapons if
possible. I am very unhappy that the Russians depend on ICBMs to the extent
that they do, but at least if they could get down to 100 warheads, they would
not be pretending to a disarming capability. They would not be encouraging the
other to go, us to go launch on warning. Likewise, if we got down to 100
sub-launched weapons, and really how large?
Actually we can’t really
justify having thermonuclear weapons, hundred kiloton weapons. The Trident 2,
has two capabilities for a warhead. One is 475 kilotons. You don’t have a
reason for that or a need for that under any circumstances including
deterrence. What I’m saying is to deter a country rational enough to be
deterred at all, does not require an ability to annihilate them or to destroy
the world. But if you were to say, a capability of hitting 10 to 20 of their
cities that’s very deterrent, and to not have that in the face of their
capability, does not make the world safer necessarily. It might but I wouldn’t
rely on and I wouldn’t try to convince people that it was the case.
In other words to be a
little bit more technical about it, we’re talking about having very low yield
sub-launched weapons because Russia has some. Actually you can burn cities with
the fission weapons the Truman had in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. They cause fire
storms. That’s the trigger of our weapons, so you could disarm all of the
thermonuclear, the secondaries, what are called secondaries that lithium
deuteride, H-bomb, fusion fuel and so forth.
Disarm it, take it out or
make it incapable. You don’t need boosted weapons, you don’t need 50 kilotons
weapons which they all go for. That involves injections of tritium into the
core do without that. As Herbert York put it, what does it take … Who was the
first director of Livermore Laboratory, and then director of research and
engineering and then in the Defense Department, and then a major arms control
negotiator. He asked at Livermore the question, how many weapons does it take
to deter an enemy that is capable of being deterred from a nuclear attack? And
he said one or 10, or if you really stretch, a hundred. He got to that by
saying 100 weapons give you the capability of one individual to destroy as many
people as died in World War 2, 60 million in a day or two. It shouldn’t have
more than that.
So he said the number you
need for this purpose then is between one to 10 to 100, and closer to one than
100. That gets you down by the way to the area of North Korea pretty much. Now
North Korea does not have adequate deterrence right now unfortunately, they’re
facing a lot of threats, but that’s because they’re going for a bigger
capability. They would be pretty safe I think if they gave up their ICBM and
H-bomb test right now. The threat against Korea and Japan, which does not
require that should be enough to keep even Trump … Even you know Trump …
Trump’s excuse for hitting them anyway is that they’re trying to get a
capability against the US. Let me make one point here, historic point that has
been made to my knowledge only by Noam Chomsky in the past.
And he bases it on McGeorge
Bundy’s comment in his book about nuclear war as follows. Bundy said, having
addressed this question in 1952 when the first test was approaching, said it’s
notable in reflection that there was no discussion of avoiding H-bombs
altogether on the grounds that they would make ICBMs feasible. Now it was the
H-bomb that did make the ICBM look feasible to us immediately. And the reason
for that was that it was known that the early ICBMs would have a very large
error probably, very inaccurate. Half of them would not land within perhaps
seven to 10 miles of a city, which means even an A-bomb would not have much
effect, even on a city landing seven or 10 miles away, but an H-bomb would. And
so a small H-bomb you could put on a missile could destroy a city at least even
if the missile was very inaccurate, which they knew the early missiles would
be.
As soon as they developed a
feasible H-bomb warhead, the Teller–Ulam device in early ’51, 1951. A guy at
Rand actually … What his name Bruno Augenstein immediately said this makes an
ICBM effective. Now why should that have been avoided, because only ICBMs
threatened American society. When I was born in 1931 and until much later no
American city was susceptible of being destroyed by an enemy.
Robert Wiblin: Ever.
Daniel Ellsberg: It hadn’t happened since 1812 when the British
invaded from Canada and burned the White House. In the Civil War we burnt
Atlanta and so forth but that was our own people at short range on the ground.
American cities … I lived in Detroit the arsenal of democracy, we had air raid
drills but they were just for show, like duck and cover in the ’50s, there was
no danger of Detroit being destroyed. With long range bombers you could destroy
a city with an A-bomb, but not more than a couple, we could have air defenses.
You could keep A-bombs from getting through to us in large numbers, ICBMs you
couldn’t. So ICBM would make American society … in large numbers would make an
American society vulnerable to destruction, as it has been ever since the mid
’60s which is when there was, the Russians had a lot of ICBMs, so why not aim
then at no ICBM. Why didn’t we aim at having no ICBMs and along with that no
H-bomb warhead that could give you the ICBM okay?
The answer seems to have
been that we were worried about all our bombers getting through their defenses,
and so we wanted an ICBM that would get through their defenses. We already had
thousands of planes that would get through but we’d lose a lot of them, so
what? What possible purpose could it serve to have several thousand warheads
there instead of a handful, or a couple dozen if we’re talking about
deterrence? But our plans were based on getting through their differences, for
that we wanted an ICBM, for that we allowed the Russians to get an ICBM. We
could have prevented that very easily by a test ban, our radars were absolutely
capable of verifying whether missile tests were taking place and how large they
were. They were also capable of verifying H-bomb tests at that point because
they’re so large. So if you wanted to stop those you just have a test ban, and
there was some consideration of that, but it wasn’t pressed, and it wasn’t
exposed to the public.
Fermi, Enrico Fermi that I
was discussing earlier and Isidor Rabi said in 1949 we should not be the first
to test this stuff, and we should try to achieve a test ban. But no we wanted
it even at the cost of their getting it, and that meant we wanted an improved
capability to destroy them when we already had 10 times over the capability to
destroy them at the cost of our moving from being invulnerable to being
vulnerable, and that was the choice that was made. And it was just a lot better
for Boeing and Lockheed and Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics to go that
way than not to have them, then they wouldn’t be selling the weapons. And by
the way what I’ve learned just recently by books like … A guys named Kofsky
wrote a book called Harry Truman And The War Scare of 1947.
Reveals that at the end of
the war, Ford and GM who had made most of our bombers went back to making cars
very profitably. But Boeing and Lockheed didn’t make products for the
commercial market, only for commercial air except there wasn’t a big enough
market to keep them from bankruptcy. They had suddenly lost their vast orders
for military planes in mid 1945. The only way they could avoid bankruptcy was
to sell a lot of planes to the government, military planes. But against who?
Not Germany we were occupying Germany, not Japan we were occupying Japan. Who
was our enemy that you needed a lot of planes against. Well Russia had been our
ally during the war, but Russia had enough targets to justify, so they had to
be an enemy and they had to be the enemy, and we went off from there.
I would say that having read
that book and a few others I could say, I now see since my book was written
nine months ago, that the Cold War was a marketing campaign for selling war
planes to the government and to our allies. It was a marketing campaign for
annual subsidies to the aerospace industry, and the electronics industry. And
also the basis for a protection racket for Europe, that kept us as a major
European power. Strictly speaking we’re not a European power. But we are in
effect because we provide their protection against Russia the super enemy with
nuclear weapons, and for that purpose it’s better for the Russians to have
ICBM, and missiles, and H-bombs, as an enemy we can prepare against. It’s the
preparations that are profitable. All wars have been very profitable for the
arms manufacturers, nuclear war will not be, but preparation for it is very
profitable, and therefore we have to be prepared.
Robert Wiblin: I’m curious to know what other policies might
help other than disarmament. So one suggestion that I’ve had is that we should
help the Russians get better detection equipment, so they can detect attacks
earlier.
Daniel Ellsberg: That’s a terrible, a really terrible idea.
Robert Wiblin: Oh okay.
Daniel Ellsberg: It’s true that the world is less safe than it
used to be because Russian air warning has gone down, they’ve lost the satellites,
their equipment is eroded and so forth, they’re more prone to false alarm than
they used to be. So are we less safe now than we were before? Yes in that
sense. And we would be more safe if we improved their system. We’d be back up
to where we were before which nearly blew the world up in 1983 and 1995 and
others. They should not have a launch on warning system, nor should we. We
probably can’t get them to give up their ICBMs, but we can give up the threat
to their ICBMs. Our SLBMs, our submarine launched missiles are not under
threat.
China by the way doesn’t
threaten the counter force of either Russia or the US. Do they have adequate
deterrence? Yes. Would they have better deterrence if they had a thousand
warheads instead of 300? No. There is such a thing as having too many warheads
which we do and the Russians do [crosstalk 02:01:36] the Chinese do not. They
can’t really justify 300 either by the way, that’s more than they can really
justify. Probably most of those are tactical weapons against Russia. But what
will that do for them? A tactical war against Russia will preserve Beijing? No,
I don’t think so, or in a war with India for that matter. So they have more
than they need or should have too, but a lot less than in our case. So China
has been wiser on this point and is worth imitating right now.
Robert Wiblin: So Russia has dead hand, this literal doomsday
machine where if it detects a nuclear explosion in Russia, or at least if it
did during the cold war, it would send out rockets that would launch all Soviet
nuclear weapons at various targets across the Northern Hemisphere.
Daniel Ellsberg: Yeah, that’s crazy for them.
Robert Wiblin: Why is that crazy?
Daniel Ellsberg: Except in this respect. I don’t criticize their
assuring that decapitation is easy or possible even. Decapitation will not
protect us even against Kim Jong Un, but not against Russia. Of course they
will have arranged for their weapons to reply, but that doesn’t mean we don’t
plan for it. We plan for it. It’s crazy. It has always seemed … I go back to
when I was working on the war plans in ’61, that was over half a century ago.
It seemed to me crazy to leave the Russians which what we then believe were large
numbers of ICBMs which came to be true a few years later, it wasn’t true then.
To leave them decentralized without a Moscow to tell them to stop, or
surrender, or end the war, just let them fire away. That looked to me crazy,
but it’s what we planned. It was something you could do, it might work. Yeah I
can’t prove it wouldn’t work. There’s what is it? One chance in a million that
it might and so forth.
And we’ve known that they
had arrangements to launch anyway, so what’s the one in a million?
Robert Wiblin: Well the funny thing is that, it seems like
Russia’s Dead Hand system if we were more rational could make things more-
Daniel Ellsberg: We have it, we have it.
Robert Wiblin: Oh we have a same [crosstalk 02:03:30].
Daniel Ellsberg: Well it’s effectively the same. [crosstalk
02:03:30].
Robert Wiblin: So if Russia’s like literal doomsday machine
seems like it would make the world more safe if we were more rational, because
it would mean that we would never have any reason to attack them, because it
would be absolutely guaranteed that..
Daniel Ellsberg: Well we don’t. But we can pretend we do. We can
pretend we do and that is not without benefit. I have to keep saying it sells
weapons, but there is another benefit. By pretending that we believe we might
decapitate them, we make ourselves look crazy enough to launch a war if they
provoke us. It also makes us crazy enough to launch a war when we don’t provoke
us by a false warning, but we live with that.
Robert Wiblin: I’m curious to know, why is it that Russia kept
Dead Hand secret? It’s like a paradox, that you create this machine you want
everyone to know about, but you never tell them.
Daniel Ellsberg: The same as us. Our delegation of authority was
one of our closest-held secrets, and effectively held secrets for decades, and
to a large extent to this day. I put it out in my book, and people are startled
by it, but, actually it was in Schlosser’s book, and there have been quite a
few revelations in the national security archive, going back to the 1990s. So,
that’s 20 years ago, so it’s been available to some extent. Why was it ever
secret? The whole point of delegation is to prevent your being paralyzed by a
decapitating attack-[crosstalk 02:17:23]
But, to not be paralyzed, to
respond to the attack by attacking, only hastens nuclear winter. It doesn’t do
anything for you. The only advantage to delegation is to deter decapitating
attack, but you can only do that if you assure the Russians that we have
delegated. On the other hand, if we keep that a huge secret and deny it all the
time, and keep saying only the President can control this, the Russians
unfortunately could conclude, maybe they’re telling the truth. Maybe only the
President can do it, and thus be led to a decapitating attack. So, it was
exactly the same in Russia as here. It’s crazy for Khrushchev to keep that a
secret, and it was crazy in exactly the same way for us to keep it a secret.
Why, in either case? Because
what is being kept secret looks dangerous. Now, granted, if you want a
deterrent effect, you pretty much have to delegate. But that does raise the
question, is this the best way we should be assuring our safety altogether, as
opposed to cooperation, coordination, collective security, what Gorbachev was
calling for, when he was in power? Collective security, let’s don’t increase
our own security by reducing their security. The new way of thinking that
Gorbachev, which is still called for … that he proposed, was, “We’re in this
together, and you don’t increase your security by, in the traditional
time-honored way, of decreasing their security, in a nuclear age.”
Increase our security
together, by, for example, making nuclear winter impossible, which could be
done, without eliminating nuclear weapons. You could still have deterrence, but
if no country had more than, let’s say, 10 or 20 weapons, like North Korea, you
couldn’t get nuclear winter. That would be good.
Now, if they were all
vulnerable weapons, by encouraging preemption, encouraging, that could make the
world even less safe than it is now. But if you had submarine-based weapons,
for each nuclear weapons state, let’s say, a small number, with no pretense of
targeting or disarming your opponent, we’ll need the capability to retaliate in
kind, well, if you retained that, you would have eliminated nuclear winter and
probably nuclear war. There would be no advantage to it. And then we couldn’t
pretend to be protecting Europe. And they would be more on their own,
economically.
Robert Wiblin: So are the other any other policies that you
think would be good other than disarmament?
Daniel Ellsberg: Oh yeah and no I’m saying is not just as
disarmament, much more important than that is to make very clear we do not
threaten an armed conflict with Russians, there shouldn’t be any prospect of
that. We should protect our allies by means other certainly than nuclear,
initiating nuclear war. We should protect allies by means other than
threatening to blow up a most life on earth. And the danger of a non-nuclear
conflict between US and Russia, is such that let’s say they did invade a Baltic
country, which is not impossible. First do we need a nuclear weapon against
that? Even in military terms no. Our air power against their reinforcements in
the Baltics. But we can’t match them probably man for man in Latvia or
somewhere, but in terms of ability to cut off their forces by air power, we
have a very great ability do that.
But second, in terms of
their relations to the rest of the world, they’re not Albania or North Korea.
Well North Korea is not at all cut off let’s say from China. But they’re not
autonomous, and the effects the political effects of that should be enough to
dissuade them from doing that. If they did do it, they should face economic
other military … What they would get is an enormous arms buildup for good or
bad, I would say bad, but that’s what they would get if they did that. We
should be aiming at what Trump talks about. For his bad reasons I assume are
causing him to differ with the insanity of the cold warriors in the Democratic
Party and the Republican Party both, they’re for preparedness. A great profit
on both parties, even Bernie Sanders, and Elizabeth Warren and as far as I know
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez don’t think at all about lowering the arms race they
haven’t talked about it, because that’s like gratuitously going against the
tobacco industry or Exxon on climate. Why stack the odds against you that way
in our society.
Well, the idea of showing
the dangers of a Cold War, and assess the urgency of collaboration on climate.
Right now we have a collaboration on pumping CO2 into the atmosphere. Putin
wants to use his Arctic oil reserves that’s why he liked Tillerson who was
trying to make a huge deal for Exxon in burning oil and condemning us all to a
climate holocaust, and that should change, there should be collaboration
against climate change. Again China by the way has mixed, obviously a mixed
policy of this. On the one hand they are leading the world I believe in
renewable energy, and on the other hand they’re leading the world in coal fired
plants.
Yes there are ways like your
improving their air defense system. The world would be safer if we gave them
several of our Trident submarines, but that isn’t going to happen. And you know
that they’re more dependable-
Robert Wiblin: I don’t think I trust [crosstalk 02:07:23].
Daniel Ellsberg: … and they could … If we could give them Trident
submarines and they would get rid of their ICBMs, the world would be a lot
safer. But that a, isn’t going to happen for a lot of reasons. And B, there are
better things to do than that.
Robert Wiblin: You talk mostly about the risk of war with
Russia. I would think that in the 21st century there’s kind of a greater risk
of war with China over Taiwan or some other thing. Do you have a view on that?
Daniel Ellsberg: By the way why should we get into a war with
China over Taiwan? Taiwan has the capability to mount perfectly good
non-nuclear defense against China, I would think they did, why not?
They’re richer than China on
the whole, are they not, man for man? And there should not be a prospect of war
with China. And look, how impossible is this? Look at the European Union. Most
of the countries in that were at war with each other, not just once, but twice,
in the last century. And now?
Robert Wiblin: It’s unthinkable.
Daniel Ellsberg: Pretty low. But, you say unthinkable? Well, I
think that’s a little fast to say, but-
Robert Wiblin: Probably not France and Britain.
Daniel Ellsberg: Montenegro.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah.
Daniel Ellsberg: Turkey and Greece for example. Is that
unthinkable?
Robert Wiblin: Western Europe at least.
Daniel Ellsberg: Yeah. So, we did manage to get beyond that, and
without having even as much world government as they should have, as we see
from the Greek case, and from the European currency case. They should have more
of a federal government than they do, and the European Parliament should have
greater powers than it does. But even so, they have enough to make that very
unlikely, since 1991. There has been no reason that Russia should not be in
that same relation with the reciprocal policy. I would say it was extremely
unwise on the part of the GHW Bush, Clinton, George W Bush, to move instead
toward neglecting Europe, Russia, humiliating it and not allowing it into
things.
Secretary Defense William
Perry, deputy under Carter, Secretary of Defense under Clinton, was strongly in
favor of an alliance relation with Russia. Partners for Peace program, it was
called. Strongly against the expansion of NATO, which, by the way, I think the
best, first approximation reason for that expansion was selling arms to East
Europe, to, quote, “bring them up to NATO standards,” at great profit to our
arms-makers.
Why is Europe right now
being … and this is not his finest hour now, we’re outside the realm of Trump’s
sanity … is calling on them to increase their NATO expenditure to 3% or even 4%
of their GNP. Why? Without doing that, they are, without the US, four times the
budget of Russia already. Why should they increase that? For one reason. He
just gave it last week, “We have very good arms for sale by …” And he named the
firms. Boeing, Lockheed and Raytheon, or Northrop Grumman, I think he said.
And what could be more
blatant than that? They should buy our arms, for our balance of payments, and
our jobs, and our profits. That’s why they should expand. They have no other
reason. Germany isn’t going to do it, as far as we know. There’s no reason in
the world for them to do it. He’s calling on them, absolutely idiotic proposal,
simply for our national benefit, profit.
Robert Wiblin: It sounds like a lot of your model of this is
based around this idea that there’s corporate lobbying in favor of these
policies, to make money. How confident are you that that is the explanation?
Because I imagine that some listeners might be skeptical-
Daniel Ellsberg: No, it’s relatively new for me, frankly.
Robert Wiblin: Okay, yeah.
Daniel Ellsberg: And there’s been not nearly as much research on
that as there should have been. I would like to know more about it. I just sent
to Amazon for a book, it’s on the way, called Buying for Armageddon, that I’ve
been told is good on this subject. I mentioned the one by [Kovski 02:11:24].
There is a very good article, Playboy.com, by a guy named, I think [Conroy 02:11:29],
but the title is memorable, Lockheed Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. And it’s a
play on the British action movie, Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, but it’s
an extremely detailed, well-researched article on the role of Lockheed in
putting its own officers into the government to promote these sales.
By the way, the current
Deputy, John Bolton, as of the last month, is a former Boeing vice-president
for strategic systems. So the ICBMs are said to be in no great danger of
reduction by Defense One, an online defense journal that I see.
Robert Wiblin: If you spoke to the Generals, they would not say
that they’re doing it to-
Daniel Ellsberg: No, no, and they go out to highly-paid jobs in
defense industry, and to be commentators on MSNBC and Fox and others, when they
go out. It’s a very deeply ingrained situation, our military industrial
complex. So I would say a major need is for investigation of the influence of
lobbies on this arms race, as on climate, which we’re beginning to learn, about
Exxon and the climate problem. And there hasn’t been nearly as much research.
Granted, they are as
secretive, if not more so, than the Defense Department, without the benefit of
an Espionage Act, or an Official Secrets Act. They can’t threaten prosecution
for revealing their company secrets. They can only threaten a civil suit for
violation of non-disclosure agreements. But that is more than enough to keep
their secrets very, very well. And so we don’t know nearly as much about the
inner decision-making by any of the firms I’ve mentioned, or DuPont, or the
other arms manufacturers, as we do about the Pentagon, and we don’t know nearly
enough about that. So, the field for investigation of that by journalists and
academics is very important.
Also, in theory, and to some
extent in practice, if you go to work for [Kleinboroughs 02:13:34], you can
work against the effects of these lobbyists, rather than base your job on
conforming to them. There has been effective legislative reform of tobacco by
investigations by various people, and by whistleblowers, by the way, from
inside the industry. Merrell Williams and Jeffrey Wigand, I mentioned earlier,
did just what I did, brought thousands of pages out for the help of Congress.
And that has reduced the deaths from secondhand smoke in this country. It
hasn’t reduced their profits generally, because they’ve increased their profits
selling to Third-World people, and to the rest of the world. So I think their
profits, if anything, are up, which is despicable.
Robert Wiblin: I think actually the number of cigarettes sold
is at an all-time high.
Daniel Ellsberg: And, by the way, that was true before the Cold
War ended, by the socialist countries of Communist China and Russia. I think
China’s had a monopoly of cigarette sales. I don’t know where they are now.
Robert Wiblin: It’s a government monopoly still.
Daniel Ellsberg: Maybe you happen to know, but I don’t. What has
happened to cigarette consumption in this country?
Robert Wiblin: It has gone down, in the US.
Daniel Ellsberg: Now, I understand it’s particularly gone down
for young people.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah, I’m not sure. We could look that up.
Daniel Ellsberg: I’d like to know that, and what has happened to
profits for sales in this country. But I can believe they’ve gone down, but
they have… increased abroad, which is despicable. As Lindsey Graham put it, the
lives are over there. Selling cancer to people in the rest of the world is more
acceptable than … once we learned that it’s over here. So, opposing lobbies,
investigating them, revealing, being a whistleblower, going … making the
secrecy system less sacred and legitimate and impenetrable, having a public
interest defense for whistleblowers, I would … I’ll bet there could be
legislative action that would restrict the effect of non-disclosure agreements,
when it’s a question of criminal behavior or concealing results. That, of
course, we find something new on that almost every day, something comes up,
from asbestos to the airbags. Well, every week, there’s some new relation-
Robert Wiblin: Yes, some misconduct.
Daniel Ellsberg: … to people who have been behaving criminally.
Oh, yeah, Purdue Pharmaceutical. An article in Time last week pointing out that
a deal was made, where the Purdue funds … over who knew, admitted that they
knew they were selling to non-prescription people. They know they were
enormously contributing to the opioid epidemic, which is now the killer of
young people. They knew that, and not one criminal prosecution. And now there
are several civil suits against people, but that’s not enough to … These civil
suits are just cost to business. There should be criminal prosecutions for this
mass murder they are complicit in.
Robert Wiblin: In terms of what listeners can do concretely
with their career, to try to make a difference here-
Daniel Ellsberg: Well, I don’t have much of an answer there,
except to say they can do otherwise, and often better, outside the government,
the executive branch.
20, 30 years ago I would
have said that to know what the situation is by what might be done by it, one
almost had to be on the inside however problematic that is, and to have
clearance and to have access to it. I can now say that’s definitely not the only
way to do it. I would say on the whole not the best. The chance of being
compromised or co-opted in one’s intellectual attitudes and values on the
inside is very great. It’s not that people can’t see and even recommend what
would be very bitter policies from the inside, but the chance of having those
implemented is negligible.
It’ll simply be overridden
by the interests that go in the other direction. That’s been the experience.
Now you can almost say the same from the outside because that hasn’t been very
effective either. But there are some effects that would not have been achieved
from the inside. The Test Ban Treaty and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty,
which we still haven’t ratified, would never have been signed or come about
without enormous pressure by scientists and others. By whole international
movement in that case. Many, many people, millions, many millions on the
outside.
Likewise we would have
wasted perhaps a trillion dollars on ballistic missile defense without
tremendous outside pressure, a lot of scientific … The whole field of ecology
has grown up in the last few decades and led to several conferences on the
violations on humanitarian law that would come about through any nuclear war.
And more specifically not just on law, but on human survival. That has come
almost entirely from the outside.
Here we have one peer
reviewed article coming out from Los Alamos recently on nuclear winter,
questioning it, fine, but they could do this study with their left hand any
time. They could’ve done it any month, any time this year. This is the first
one we’ve ever seen. And certainly not gonna be the last. So I mean the study
on the subject. So it just doesn’t get done from the inside.
Now it’s true you do learn a
lot on the inside that you’re not gonna get otherwise. I’ve asked myself
whether it could make sense for someone to go in to the cleared area, to the
community, get a clearance, do this stuff in order to learn and leak. And it’s
hard to say that that would be wrong, but it’s a kind of deliberate spying in
effect which I would find uncomfortable, even when I rationally look at it and
say, “Well this is for the good of humanity.” But it does involve lying from
the very beginning as to what your intentions are. And I don’t … can’t advise
someone to do that. I can’t say that I would’ve ever been willing to do that,
even though many lives would’ve been at stake.
On the other hand, I do … I
would encourage anybody who goes in to the get the clearance to, in their mind,
when they’ve signed nondisclosure agreements, which is what the security
so-called oath is, it doesn’t involve an oath in nearly any case. So help me
God I swear that I will not reveal and so forth, it’s a nondisclosure agreement
as in corporations or unions. I understand that I can be fired and even
prosecuted for revealing this information. Now I signed that many times,
without being aware that no one ever had been prosecuted, before me. I was the
first. So in a way it was true. I could’ve been prosecuted, I was prosecuted.
But I was the first.
And the reason for that was
that our First Amendment had always been understood to preclude a British type
Official Secrets Act, which would criminalize any revelation of classified
information, whatever the circumstances. We still don’t have an Official
Secrets Act for that reason. Although it’s often been proposed in Congress or
by the Executive, but Congress has never passed it because of our First
Amendment which Britain doesn’t have. But they have been using the Espionage
Act as if it were an Official Secrets Act. And it was intended against spying,
that is working for a foreign government, in particular an enemy during wartime
to give them information that is properly protected from them. And that was
used often before me for against spies. I was the first to be tried under that
for a non-espionage action for informing the American public.
And it’s written in a way
that does not take into account your possible good motives or patriotic motives
or any kind of motives, for giving this information to the public. After all,
if you’re giving it to a foreign government, especially in terms of warfare,
it’s hard to cut in the ice with a jury by telling them what your motives were,
it’s hard to make that look acceptable, unpatriotic. Now if you’re giving it to
the American public, you should be able to argue why you think you needed to
have it and what the effects were and whether there was any harm or that there
was any benefit. But currently, you can’t do that.
So something that should
change is for Congress to pass what has been proposed, a Public Interest
Defense, which would allow you to argue your motives before a jury. But that
doesn’t exist now. So one would have to say now to make these revelations,
whatever you thought was in the public interest would be a jeopardy of being
convicted under the Espionage Act, should you ever do that? And I would say,
yes, there are circumstances under which I think I was right to do it and
others have been right to do it. Snowden I believe was right to do it. Chelsea
Manning was right to do it. And even though conviction was certain for them.
And, under the existing law,
with what intention should someone ever take that agreement not to reveal
secrets? And I would say it should be with the private understanding of what
should be explicit so long as keeping the secret does not unjustly condemn
others to death. Or does not conceal criminality or unconstitutional behavior.
In other words, secrecy should not protect unconstitutional or criminal
behavior, enormously reckless, dangerous behavior. But it does. All the time.
Now that’s the reality of it. But I think a person should be well aware that
they should not feel bound by that. That an agreement to keep secrets should
apply absolutely only under the circumstances when that does not involve
protection of criminal behavior. Watergate for example.
But this applies all the
time. I mean things like that are going on all time. Should the people in the
tobacco industry have felt bound by their disclosure agreements? Well they were
open to suit when they did violate and tell the public that, Congress, that in
fact contrary to the sworn statements of the tobacco executives in Congress,
those executives new that their product was carcinogenic and addictive and they
were selling it to minors. But one person, two people I think have actually,
one named Merrell Williams and the other Jeffery Wigand, did in fact violate
their non-disclosure agreements and reveal this fact. And may have saved just
countless lives as a result.
So it’s not on the
government that’s involved here. Same thing, there’s the tobacco, same thing
applies right now to climate. Clear now that Exxon has been lying for decades
about what they knew as to the effects of the carbon dioxide they were
releasing. And what have we been saying in this whole talk is that the effects
on human survival have been knowable, whether they investigate them or not, for
decades now, been deliberately kept from investigation by the government, and …
It’s so funny what we’re discussing just today, even a study which purports to
contradict the dangers here is based on classified data that can’t be examined
by other scientists, including the scientists they’re criticizing, who as Alan
Roebuck said to me today, “That’s not science. That’s not what we call the
scientific method.”
So in other words, it is
possible for people to save countless lives and preserve our Constitution, or
help to preserve it, attempt to preserve it. Avoid wars. They have more power
to that than most of them ever imagined if they’re willing to risk their
careers and even their freedom and they’re associations and their way of life,
by telling the truth. That the power of truth telling is very great. And not
only by putting out the information, but by serving as an example to others
that this is a patriotic and worthwhile, admirable even, thing to do at
whatever risk. Not likely though, because the risk is great, personal risk. And
there’s also the risk that you will be wrong, that will you have actually
endangered people by doing this, yes, that’s a reality. But people who are in
this position with this information generally are in as good a position to
judge that reality as anyone else. Not always. And they could be wrong. And I
could’ve been wrong.
But it’s very hard to find
an example where people took that risk to their personal lives and had the
effect of actually worsening dangers. In fact, no example comes to my mind
right away and instead of this right away. That isn’t to say it couldn’t
happen. But despite charges that Ed Snowden or Chelsea Manning had blood on
their hands by their revelations, the government in years and years now of
opportunity, has not given a single instance in which an individual was harmed
by what they did, physically harmed. Having claimed … Whereas of course the
secret keeping has resulted in wars that have killed hundreds of thousands of
people. So that experience should be kept in mind.
Robert Wiblin: I know that many listeners are interested in
pursuing careers in Congress or in the military or the intelligence services,
so what would you say to them about your skepticism?
Daniel Ellsberg: What I said there was, if Congress could get
back, and you could help it get back the powers it had as co-equal branch of
government, which it has given up to a large extent, that would be for the
good. The founders had it right, I think, and we’ve pretty much rejected that.
But that model is there, that was their way of thinking, they was new in the
world, and it was a good idea. We get back to a role for Congress, to an
investigative role, which they’ve largely given up, to work for Congress in
that respect, very good.
If you go in the executive
branch, to be prepared to give it up, if called for, to be prepared to
sacrifice yourself as a civilian, as people routinely do in the military
services. That would be a change for the better, and to spread that word, to
improve the chances for whistleblowing.
Inform yourself as to what
the history of those institutions is, what the traditions of them really are.
When Winston Churchill, as First Lord of the Admiralty, was saying that
something he proposed was against the traditions of the service, he said, “Ha.
Traditions of the Navy … rum, sodomy and the lash.” Yes, quite true, and
empire.
So, I would say, spending a
career as an anti-imperialist is better spent than working for the empire. But
if you do go work for the empire, discover what the history is and become aware
of what you’re involved in, that should not be happening. And then consider
telling the truth about it, even at the cost of your own freedom, and your
life, in the pursuit of saving many lives and preserving our Constitution.
We haven’t even talked about
movements here, but that’s another huge subject. I’ve spent the last 40 years
of my life trying to build a movement against nuclear weapons’ use. Use, and
you risk … like the one against the Vietnam War, and with some success in the
80s, but not since. So, all that can be done. I continue to participate in
civil disobedience there, to keep the idea alive, for when again it might be
powerful.
Robert Wiblin: Are there any individuals or projects or
organizations outside of government, working on nuclear safety, that you’re
particularly enthusiastic about?
Daniel Ellsberg: Well, on safety, I imagine there are, but I’m
not sure what to identify. On the dangers of nuclear weapons, very much so.
Peace Action, the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. Peace Action used to be SANE,
nuclear freeze campaign, which still exists. The Natural Resources Defense
Foundation used to be very good on this, but they’ve moved away from it. Most
people have given up nuclear research. I give a whole list in the end of my
book, you’d have to look at it. I tried to remember. It’s 11 or 12
organizations that are on this.
There is a fairly big
movement for this ban movement, the ICAN, that is very good for a lot of people
in the world. I don’t see that becoming powerful in the nuclear weapons states.
It hasn’t shown it, and in part because the idea of a ban is not even
normatively compelling against maintaining some survivable minimal deterrent in
those countries. But that’s not what any of the nuclear states actually have.
So, without saying that it’s
illegal for them to have any nuclear weapons right now, it’s much easier, I
would say, to make a compelling case that they should not have the number and
types that they do have right now, and that that should change, even
unilaterally, as soon as possible. And that’ll be hard to achieve, but I think
less impossible than convincing people that we should unilaterally disarm
ourselves of all nuclear weapons and leave Russia with the monopoly.
Robert Wiblin: Yeah, I agree with that. How important is game
theory? How important historically was game theory?
Daniel Ellsberg: Very simply, not at all. I’m not aware of its
having had any influence on anything. If we’re talking about classical game
theory, stemming out of von Neumann and Morgenstern and the work after that,
including very intelligent, very brilliant work by a lot of other, mainly mathematicians,
which as far as I know, has not had any effect on any defense capability, and
never did have. The people I worked with that ran in the economics department,
social sciences, even engineering, had no background in game theory of any
kind.
I was the only one, in
effect, and I was a critic of game theory, in my earlier publications. My
honors thesis, actually, I wrote perhaps, as far as I know, the first critical
account of zero-sum two-person game theory, so I was mainly a critic, but I knew
the literature. And I was very influenced by Tom Schelling’s kind of work,
which was not in that tradition at all. It was bargaining theory, very
ingenious, very innovative, he got a Nobel Prize in the end. I wouldn’t say
that his theorizing had any effect. He himself was a consultant and had some
influence on … I could say a number of individuals, my boss, John McNaughton,
and a few others, Henry Kissinger, even. But, as a personal … It wasn’t his
theorizing that had the effect.
The idea that game theory had
an influence is a mistake, on the whole, or that it should have had, I would
say. It wasn’t suited for it. Tom Schelling’s kind of theorizing was relevant
to what you could call two-person or n-person non-zero sum games, that notion.
His theories of bargaining and threats were relevant, and in some cases could
potentially have been very good on arms control, for example. But there they
weren’t applied. Where they were applied, to some extent, was not very
favorable. And, for example, in his later years, at the time he got the Nobel
Prize, he was very optimistic about low risks of nuclear war. I think he was
mistaken in that.
Robert Wiblin: I guess one last question is, it can be easy, I
think, to be a bit demoralized, because this problem doesn’t seem easy to
solve. The institutions that create this risk are somewhat resistant to reform.
Look, what is it that gives you hope that it’s worth working on, I guess? What
can help motivate people to-[crosstalk 02:28:42]
Daniel Ellsberg: A friend of mine said just the other day, “Hope
is not a feeling, it’s a way of acting.”
Robert Wiblin: Yeah.
Daniel Ellsberg: I know that what looks impossible is something
that should never be confident of, because good things that looked impossible,
like the ending of the Berlin Wall, or the ending of the first Cold War, looked
impossible, not just unlikely, in that period of time. And they did happen,
thanks to Gorbachev and anti-nuclear movements, various things. And the idea
that Mandela would come to power in north Africa without a violent revolution
didn’t look unlikely, it looked impossible. And it did happen.
So, to say that we can’t get
out of this, there is no good basis for that. We don’t know the future that
well. I can say, as in those cases, I can’t see the way in which it will
happen, but that’s what anyone would have said about the downing of the Berlin
Wall. How was that going to come about? It’s not going to come about. But it
did.
And, so to say that the
stakes are very high for continuing to try to explore and to try to challenge
the obstacles that we can see in the way of that happening, like the role of …
and this is new for me, the role not just of the Air Force, but of the
corporations and the budget process. How do you affect that? I don’t know, but
I wouldn’t say it was impossible. It was done, as you say, in the case of the
tobacco companies, domestically, and everything is at stake.
So, we’re talking now about
properly-called existential crises now, and dangers that simply did not exist
before. You could say, by the way, I’m just … Off the top of my head, a kind of
epidemic that would destroy, was probably possible in some sense, but bringing
it about, the genetic engineering that we’re working on right now, that was not
possible then.
Robert Wiblin: Should we have been equally concerned about
bioweapons during the cold war, as we were about nuclear weapons? Is there a
good chance they could have also led to human extinction? And worried are you
today about bioweapons compared to nuclear weapons?
Daniel Ellsberg: We now know, only recently, big book on this by
Milton Leitenberg and others, on the Soviet biological warfare program and
chemical warfare program. Brezhnev was sure that when Nixon signed the
convention against biological warfare, that he would continue a covert program
on a large scale, and so they had to have one too. Now, what’s the use of doing
that if you don’t use it deterrently, if you don’t make it public? How can it
be a deterrent? It can’t, but then how could they say, “We’re assuming you’re
breaking this, so we’re breaking it too?”
You couldn’t prove that
Nixon was doing it, and, amazingly enough, Nixon wasn’t doing it, as far as we
can tell. They did preserve some smallpox at CIA, and some anthrax, and this
and that, but only a refrigerator-full, sort of. The Russians maintained that.
Are you aware, of hundreds of thousands of gallons and pounds of anthrax and
botulinus and improved forms, against vaccines.
Robert Wiblin: I didn’t know that.
Daniel Ellsberg: Now, that’s as close to insanity and evil as you
can get to. As one disarmer said when he looked at the huge vat that remained
for anthrax, he said, “I’m looking at pure evil.” Well, fair, enough, it would
seem so. Who continued that? It was done under Brezhnev, kept very secret, as far
as we know, was not revealed, it is strangelovian, and kept secret, not for a
deterrent, continued under Gorbachev.
How could Gorbachev possibly
continue this insane, evil program? He told Larry Brilliant, who had been
instrumental in eliminating smallpox from the world, when Brilliant asked him …
and I have a memoir by Brilliant on this. He talked to Gorbachev, and he said,
“How could you have done this? We were eliminating smallpox. You were providing
huge amounts of smallpox here.”
Gorbachev got very disturbed,
anxious, uneasy, anguished, and said he knew, he was most ashamed of that of
anything he’d ever been involved in. He said, “The military came to me, and
said, ‘If you don’t continue this, you cannot stay in office. We will overthrow
you.'” And he looked at all the things he was doing, reducing nuclear weapons,
Glasnost, opening up the society and all that, and rather than give all that
up, he continued this insane program, which is very human, very normal.
That’s not to excuse him. It
was horrible, it was culpable, and yet, that was the choice he made, like
Castro and the others. It’s what most Americans would have done, and kept it
secret, okay? So, when you look at that kind of behavior by Gorbachev, I think
the person most influential for good that I can think of, in the last century,
my hero, so far. But nobody’s perfect, and not just imperfect, this was
horribly imperfect, okay? But in a very natural way for humans to do in power.
When you look at that human
characteristic, it’s hard to be confident humans will survive. To me, it’s
crazy to be confident, I have to say. To think that it’s highly likely we will
survive nuclear weapons, a climate change, artificial intelligence, genetic
engineering, biological warfare, to be confident like that is to be either
totally ignorant, which is true of most people in that respect, to be unaware
and ignorant. To be ignorant of the nature of humanity, which most people are,
or to be crazy.
Or to be hired by … to be
corrupt, and hired by people who make this stuff, and so decide. It’s like
working for a tobacco company. Probably a lot of them manage to believe that
it’s not carcinogenic. It’s hard to believe, isn’t it? But it’s not hard for me
to believe that there are tobacco executives who think this is all a witch-hunt.
They’ve convinced themselves. You can believe anything that your job depends
on.
But, how about thinking it’s
likely we’ll survive? I can’t believe that. I think it’s unlikely, very
unlikely, but not impossible, and I don’t believe it’s impossible. I don’t have
confidence, impossible. I don’t think that my age and experience doesn’t permit
me to be confident, that there’s no way out here. Because humans are adaptable,
and things do change, and the ones I mentioned are possible. We are on the Titanic,
going at full speed on a moonless night into iceberg waters. Have we hit the
iceberg yet, and made it inevitable that this will go down? We don’t know. It
may turn out that, a while ago, we went past the no-return point. But we don’t
know that, there’s no way to prove it.
As I say in the book, “I
propose, I do act as if we had a chance to find our way out of this. And I
don’t know what it is yet, but that doesn’t tell me there is no way.” So, I
urge others, I encourage them. And if they give up, or devote themselves
entirely to pleasure, let’s say, and a life like being on the Titanic and
drinking the champagne, after they’ve hit the iceberg, I can’t say that’s
crazy, or even culpable, but I don’t join that. And, if they stop trying to
save the world and just try to ease the pain of some other people, or help
people in some way, I think that’s very reasonable, very good, and I just think
that it is definitely not wasted, for some of us to keep trying to explore to
see if there’s a way out of this.
Robert Wiblin: My guest today has been Daniel Ellsberg. Thanks
for coming on the podcast, Daniel.
Daniel Ellsberg: Thank you for the opportunity.
Rob Wiblin: I hope you enjoyed that episode! If you know a
community that could benefit from finding out about this episode, please share
it with them. That could include subreddits, facebook groups or email lists.
As I said at the top of the
show I’ll now read a blog post we released recently, which seems relevant to
nuclear security careers, for at least some listeners. If it doesn’t sound
relevant to you feel, don’t feel any need to listen.
I’m undecided whether this
should be a regular feature of the program, or how much we should make audio
versions of articles on the 80,000 Hours website in general. If you’d like to
share your thoughts on this, email us at podcast at 80000hours dot org.
The 80,000 Hours Podcast is
produced by Keiran Harris. Thanks for joining, talk to you in a week or two.
Music again
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