2FP Blog

Disarmament

The Ghosts of New START Past, Present, and Future December 22nd, 2010

Celebrate! Today the Senate voted to ratify the New START agreement, which will re-establish mutual, on-the-ground verification of American and Russian nuclear arsenals, and cut the deployed strategic weapons on each side by about 1/3.

This is one step in the right direction for nuclear security in our day—but it is a huge victory for American Christians, who overwhelmingly and vocally supported the treaty. And make no mistake: your work mattered. So, for standing with us and putting up with innumerable New START emails, Facebook updates, and tweets (oh, the tweets!):

Thank you, thank you, thank you.

Now that the votes are cast, we can reflect on what it all means. So, in the spirit of Dickens (cue Marley’s chains) here’s my brief meditations on the ghosts of New START past, present, and future.

The past
The campaign to ratify New START revealed two things—one good, one bad. First, New START proved that the work and witness of the Two Futures Project is both vital and unique. Treaty advocates at the highest levels cited 2FP often as making a critical contribution to the groundswell of support for New START. I am proud of our team and our work: from the on-the-ground voter education efforts in Tennessee and other key states, to our convening an unprecedented pro-ratification press call with Leith Anderson, President of the National Association of Evangelicals, and Bishop Howard Hubbard of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Second, our national public debate about nuclear weapons is profoundly flawed. This conservative treaty, with the unanimous support of the military and the bipartisan security establishment, should have been a slam dunk. But despite this support, a tiny, ideologically driven fringe was able to marshal a substantial campaign against New START by simply and brazenly repeating blatant untruths in public, until they started to sound like facts. And all this over an agreement that still leaves us with thousands of strategic nuclear weapons, doing little to challenge obsolete, Cold War modes of thinking.

The present
New START has exposed the astounding lack of moral seriousness in our public debate about nuclear security. You simply don’t play politics with these weapons if you really apprehend the threat they pose—and from the abundant posturing, pontificating, and political quid pro quos surrounding New START, it became clear that many in government see nuclear security as just one more facet in the endless power game that has consumed Washington politics. Americans of goodwill, regardless of party, should be deeply concerned by this state of affairs.

Fortunately, 2FP closes this year as a mature movement that can help address this malaise. 2011 won’t have any of the big-ticket nuclear policy items of the past year, which gives us the freedom to double down on what we do best: spreading a Christ-centered, biblically grounded moral and cultural mandate to eliminate these weapons of indiscriminate death and destruction. Stay tuned in the new year for our roll-out of several exciting new programs.

The future
Our organization’s name describes the stark choice that we believe we face: a world without nuclear weapons, or a world devastated by them. But from an eternal perspective, of course, there is but one future, authored and anchored by the Triune God, and foretold in scripture’s glorious prophecy of creation restored in a new heavens and a new earth. This recognition does not make us apathetic to the present: the threat of human sinfulness manifesting in nuclear destruction is all too real, but not at all a given. We are stewards of history in our time. But this indispensable focus on the eternal aligns our work and our activism as an expression of fidelity to God Most High.

As we celebrate the birth of Jesus of Nazareth—the Lord, Messiah of Israel, Son of God, Word made Flesh, Prince of Peace, Emmanuel—it is therefore fitting to cast away anxiety about what will come. So attend to the breath that is in your lungs—for none of us is guaranteed another—and sing praise the Lord who died for our sins, and whose resurrection throws open the gates to eternal life for all the faithful of God.

O Holy Night, indeed:

Truly He taught us to love one another,
His law is love and His gospel is peace.
Chains shall he break, for the slave is our brother,
And in his name all oppression shall cease.
Sweet hymns of joy in grateful chorus raise we,
With all our hearts we praise His holy name.
Christ is the Lord! Then ever, ever praise we,
His power and glory ever more proclaim!
His power and glory ever more proclaim!

From all of us at 2FP, wishing you and yours a season filled with grace and peace and love.

Hiroshima Day August 6th, 2010

In the summer of 1945, sixty five years ago today, an American B-29 bomber dropped an atomic weapon named “little boy” on Japan, leveling a city and killing approximately 140,000 Japanese. On this 65th anniversary of Hiroshima, more than a billion Christians will simultaneously remember a culminating event in the life of Jesus Christ, as today also marks the great Feast of the Transfiguration of Christ.

In today’s Huffington Post, I offer a Meditation on Hiroshima and the Transfiguration:

“It must be one of the extraordinary accidents of history that the first atomic bomb was dropped on August 6, which marks the annual Feast of the Transfiguration for Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Orthodox Christians around the world. […] Roughly nineteen centuries [after the Transfiguration event], and sixty-five years ago today, the city of Hiroshima was destroyed with elements that cannot but recall the Transfiguration: a sun-bright white light; a roar from heaven; a cloud; terror; and-most of all-a world that would never be the same…” [link]

To commemorate the 65th anniversary of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Time Magazine has never before seen photographs. The bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki remain the source of deep controversy in America. Yet, as I wrote last year in Christianity Today, even those who would seek to legitimize the bombings within the context of World War II should not use them as barriers to disarmament in our day.

Yours,

Tyler

More Than Moralism: How Values Matter to Nuclear Security July 23rd, 2010

Earlier this week, Tyler was privileged to give the Interfaith Lecture in the Hall of Philosophy at the renowned Chautauqua Institute in New York. The lecture, titled “More Than Moralism: How Values Matter to Nuclear Security,” was part of a series of lectures this week at Chautauqua on the issue of nuclear disarmament — including speakers such as former Senator Sam Nunn, nuclear security expert Joseph Cirincione, and the Rev. Jim Wallis.

Elizabeth Lunblad of The Chautauquan Daily wrote a short piece on the lecture, “Way to End Nuclear Age is Through Moral Activism,” highlighting Tyler’s presentation and the intersection between morality, faith, and nuclear weapons:

Does morality make a difference to the question of nuclear weapons and security? The answer, he said, is a resounding, self-evident “yes.”

“No matter how hard we try, we can’t imagine an amoral security. We can imagine an immoral security, but not an amoral one. This is because security, properly understood, is the means to an end. It’s not an end unto itself,” he said.

Security seeks an end that is unavoidably moral because it is the work of preserving human society from an external threat, and all society has some form of moral architecture that it is internally accountable toward, Wigg-Stevenson said.

If you’d like to read the text of Tyler’s lecture, you can download the PDF here.

Evangelicals and Nuclear Abolition April 13th, 2010

The following was published in the Washington Post’s On Faith blog.

Why conservative Christians should support nuclear abolition

By Rev. Tyler Wigg-Stevenson
founder and director, Two Futures Project

When most people think of abolishing nuclear weapons, they think of long-haired hippies holding “Ban the Bomb” signs. So it’s understandable that some who encounter the Two Futures Project–a movement of Christians for the elimination of nuclear weapons–would initially assume that we are all pacifists, or that our work is typical lefty politics dressed up in Christian costume.

But nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, though our movement is non-partisan and we have drawn support from both the right and the left, the motivation for our work is fundamentally conservative–both politically and theologically.

Politically, we take our policy cues from a group of former Cold Warriors like George Shultz, Sam Nunn, and Henry Kissinger, who argue that the security dynamic of the post-Cold War, post-9/11 era requires a whole new way of thinking about nuclear weapons. These hard-headed statesmen (and the two-thirds of all living former Secretaries of State, Defense, and National Security Advisers who agree with them) argue that our national security hangs in the balance unless we take immediate nuclear threat-reduction steps, while working toward a world without any nuclear weapons.

Theologically, we begin with the church’s ancient and unapologetic confession, Christos Kyrios: that Jesus Christ, revealed in the Holy Scriptures that are the written word of God, is Lord over all creation. We view the Bible as wholly authoritative for any theological claims we make, and consequentially conduct our analysis primarily from a perspective of Just War thinking, a biblically-grounded theological framework that has guided Christian moral discernment regarding the use of force for centuries.

So, if we’re as conservative as I say we are, why have we been vocal in our support of the recent actions taken by the Obama administration–including a Nuclear Posture Review, the New START Treaty with the Russians, and this week’s nuclear security summit?

In sum, we believe that nuclear security should be evaluated on its merits and substance, rather than the party identification of those making the decisions. And because the President’s recent action steps are in accord with the sound recommendations made by the likes of Shultz, Nunn, and Co., we support them–as we would if they were taken by a Republican administration.

Moreover, the Nuclear Posture Review is a document produced by the Defense Department, with the full support of our top security experts, including the Secretary of Defense and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. This doesn’t make the NPR infallible. But ill-informed, ad hominem attacks about “weakening America” don’t just ring false–they border on slanderous allegations against the reputations of men and women who have dedicated their lives to American security.

A lack of public understanding about the post-Cold War nuclear security paradigm has led many to critique the President’s recent actions, especially his assurance that we will not use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear powers that are obeying the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NTP). Why, the flabbergasted questioning goes, would we take options off the table?

Well, we take options off the table all the time, because values matter. If we were attacked with chemical or biological weapons, would we slaughter civilians in an enemy’s capital city in response? I think that the American public would balk at vengeance involving the intentional mass murder of civilians. Do we wage war against other nations’ children, both in the womb and at their parents’ sides? Is that who we are? God help us if this is so.

Moreover, we don’t need the nuclear threat to deter such an attack. Instead, our new Nuclear Posture Review says that we would hold our attacker’s civilian and military leadership personally responsible, and guarantees that our non-nuclear response would be overwhelming–an option readily available to a nation that spends as much on our military as almost every other country on earth combined.

Such critiques also ignore the huge benefits that we have gained through these “negative security assurances.” First, they occur in a relatively hawkish context: the terms of the guarantee left out North Korea and Iran, who are not complying with the NPT, thus giving teeth to the notion that compliance with international bargains matters. Second, our doing so helps build our moral authority in delegitimizing nuclear weapons as tools of statecraft, which in turn strengthens our hand in the fight against global terrorism.

But all of this is policy consideration. So how does faith and biblical theology enter into the picture? Some Christians cite the secular aphorism “peace through strength” as if it was lifted from Holy Writ (it’s not), claiming the concept as virtual paraphrase of Romans 13:1-7. This biblical passage says that human government does not “bear the sword in vain,” and are indeed the servants of God to punish evil.

Equating Romans 13:1-7 with “peace through strength” is careless, sloppy biblical interpretation. I happen to agree that the passage confirms a divine ordination for human government to employ force as a check against the worst impulses of human sin. This is one reason I am not a pacifist (though I am proud and honored to have the support of pacifist brothers and sisters for the Two Futures Project). But maximalist interpretations of the passage–that all government power is just power–have been used to justify tyrannical regimes including the Third Reich and apartheid South Africa. The wicked fruit of this interpretation is proof of its illegitimacy.

There’s nothing wrong with a strong military, and as someone who grew up in Top Gun-era San Diego, you’ll never hear me say otherwise. But if we take seriously the whole witness of Scripture, we must also recognize that the unfettered pursuit of strength–fearing mortal enemies more than God’s judgment–in fact leads to an ungodly arrogance and idolatry. This was the case with King Solomon, who stockpiled horses in contravention of the Deuteronomic instruction, as well as Babylon, the ancient near East superpower, which God describes as “guilty men, whose own might is their god!” (Habakkuk 1:11).

As Christians who believe that true peace and security comes only at the sovereign and eternal hand of God, we cannot simply take a secular utilitarian, value-less approach to security policy. (In fact, the Old Testament prophets testify to the fact that doing so is an indicator of godlessness on the domestic front.)

For most Evangelicals, the Just War tradition provides a normative set of categories for integrating security and values–and Just War teaching flatly prohibits, among other actions, uses of force which 1) are disproportionate to the conflict, 2) do not discriminate between soldiers and non-combatant, and 3) cause more harm than good. Every conceivable use of nuclear weapons in our present context violates at least one–and in most cases all three–of these criteria.

A single nuclear terrorist attack on a major city would kill between 60,000 and 200,000 people, would contaminate 320 square miles for a generation, and cause the shutdown of the global economy, with massive suffering worldwide. One does not need religion to be horrified by such a scenario. But our Christian conscience must be doubly shocked by the affront to the sanctity of human life, stewardship of creation, and care for the poor that such an attack would constitute.

At the Two Futures Project, we seek to bring glory to God by working in his name to prevent such a scenario. And the best, nonpartisan analysis from security experts says that the only policy prescription to ensure this is to pursue urgent nuclear threat-reduction, guided by the vision of a world without nuclear weapons–a verifiable and technical possibility, and the fondest dream of President Ronald Reagan.

Now, there are people of goodwill who disagree with this analysis and policy prescriptions. So, let’s have that vigorous and substantive public argument, holding the newspaper in one hand and the Bible in the other. But criticisms that amount to little more than partisan name-calling, often devoid of any substantive knowledge of nuclear policy, are not just pointless–they’re actually dangerous in an issue that holds hostage the well-being of all people on the planet.

Preventing nuclear disaster isn’t a goal of the political left or right. It’s a matter of right and wrong.

Forging a New Start March 31st, 2010

After a year of negotiations, the U.S. and Russia recently announced they’ve completed a new agreement to reduce the excessive size of our nuclear arsenals in a new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START). The new treaty will be signed April 8 in Prague and its objectives are fairly straightforward: it reduces deployed strategic weapons (i.e., missiles and bombs) from 2,200 to 1,550; it cuts delivery vehicles (bombers, silos, subs) to 800; and it continues the Reagan legacy of “trust but verify” with Moscow.

Strategic nuclear weapons? Missiles? Prague? These aren’t words with a whole lot of relevance in today’s activist crowd—they conjure up icons like Gorbachev, Dr. Strangelove, or maybe Matthew Broderick in War Games. Let’s face it: this is not cutting-edge stuff. Our parents might remember classroom “duck and cover” drills (historical note: plywood desks offer minimal protection against thousands of tons of TNT), the fear of total annihilation, and the threat that one incident or accident could usher in the destruction of every nation. But this was a conflict that had two superpowers pointing thousands of missiles at each other.

What’s really unfortunate is that we may actually have been safer then.

At the height of the Cold War, there were more than 70,000 nuclear weapons in existence, enough to destroy the world many times over. This number has been dramatically reduced by treaties just like the one we’re about to sign. But there are approximately 20,000 nuclear weapons still in existence, 95 percent of which are in the U.S. and Russia.

Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger observed of nuclear weapons that “our age has stolen fire from the gods; can we confine it to peaceful purposes before it consumes us?” In our post-Cold War, post-9/11 world, this “fire” is now harder to contain and capable of quickly spreading. For this reason, the United States and Russia are recognizing that reductions to our own arsenals are necessary if we want to have any moral authority in curbing breakout in countries like Iran.

Yet the quiet acknowledgment coming out of the negotiating rooms is that this treaty is really pretty modest. Because it wouldn’t take the thousands of remaining nuclear weapons to ruin the world for which we are called by God to care. Just one bomb would cause tens of thousands of deaths, massive environmental damage and financial suffering worldwide. (Check out the video on the front page of TwoFuturesProject.org for a visual of what this looks like.)

So the new START isn’t a silver bullet for our nuclear problem—but it’s not insignificant, either. The question now is whether or not the Senate will ratify it. There are some positive signs, like Richard Lugar—a Republican Senator and important voice on foreign policy—saying he looks forward to working “quickly to achieve ratification of the treaty.”

Unfortunately, Congress has recently proven itself to be not only inefficient, but also incapable at times of passing meaningful legislation due to a venomous political climate, and crippling partisan gridlock. Senate rules require 67 votes to ratify a treaty, so ratification of START must be bipartisan. The question is whether a handful of outspoken ideologues in the U.S. Senate can derail the treaty. Inaction would not only damage strategic relations between the United States and Russia, it would be a huge step in the wrong direction toward nuclear insecurity.

A lot of people in our generation are suspicious of anything political, and there aren’t many things more political than ratification of a nuclear treaty in the U.S. Senate. But nuclear weapons are not an issue we can afford to ignore. In fact, inaction is itself a choice; it’s like waking up to find out that your house is on fire, and deciding to go back to bed. We believe God calls us to use our “talents” in the service of His kingdom—and whether we like it or not, having a say in the American political process is one of the most significant gifts for which God will hold us responsible. So let’s make sure that in this, as in all things, we’ll act in a way that will be met with the judgment, “Well done, good and faithful servant.”

This post was published on RELEVANT Magazine’s “Reject Apathy” blog in March of 2010.