State's Gottemoeller on Freeing World of Nuclear Weapons
U.S. Department of State
Remarks by Rose Gottemoeller
Acting Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security
Joseph Rotblat Memorial Lecture, Hay Festival
Hay-on-Wye, Wales, United Kingdom
June 10, 2012
New Partnerships for Combating the Threat of Weapons of Mass
Destruction
"Above all, remember your humanity." Sir Joseph Rotblat recalled these
words from the 1955 Manifesto of Bertrand Russell and Albert Einstein when he
accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in 1995, on behalf of the International Pugwash
Movement. For Jo, they reflected very well the frame of mind we must have when
we confront the problem of nuclear weapons.
I was honored to know Joseph Rotblat, and these words have stuck with me.
When we talk about creating the conditions for a world without nuclear weapons,
we are not talking about some remote utopia, we are talking about preventing the
use of the most powerful weapon ever conceived by man. We are talking about
protecting humanity.
The idea of a world free of nuclear weapons is nothing new. It was upon us
almost as soon as scientists realized the feasibility of nuclear weapons. Sir
Joseph was one of this community. As a leader of the Pugwash Movement, he was
instrumental in making nuclear elimination a legitimate topic for policymakers
around the world. When he was pushing for reductions at the height on the Cold
War, Jo saw an opening for conversation - not one in English and Russian across
the negotiating table, but one in the universal languages of math and science, a
conversation among scientists. This open forum for scientific dialogue, which
became the Pugwash Movement, led to some of the first arms control and
nonproliferation treaties.
Through his work, Sir Joseph played a big role in making the goal of "zero"
an acceptable goal of security policy. Two years after his death, four venerable
Cold Warriors - former Secretaries of State George Shultz and Henry Kissinger,
former Secretary of Defense William Perry and former Senator Sam Nunn -
published an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal calling for a world without
nuclear weapons. The group, often called "the Four Horsemen" saw it as "a bold
initiative consistent with America's moral heritage." Two years later, President
Obama spoke to thousands of people in Prague, stating that the United States
would seek the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons. That
speech was the foundation for what we in Washington call the Prague
Agenda.
Even with the massive shift in accepting nuclear elimination as a policy
worth pursuing, Sir Joseph warned us, "the Cold War is over, but Cold War
thinking survives." When it comes to the next steps in nuclear reductions, this
is undoubtedly true. In order to dismantle this dangerous legacy, we have to
change the way we think about these weapons. And we have to be ready to
challenge our notions of how they might be eliminated.
We are entering unknown terrain. As we steadily reduce nuclear weapons
toward zero, the more cheating matters. Consider, if you will: if a country can
stash away just a few nuclear weapons while others continue to eliminate them,
that country can spring a significant and dangerous surprise on the world
community. To counter this possibility, we will need innovative approaches.
Finally to achieve zero, we will need a truly global effort involving thousands
and thousands of people. I am guessing you are asking yourself, "How on Earth
can an ordinary person such as I help with a problem like this?"
Joseph Rotblat considered this challenge decades ago. He developed the
concept called "societal verification," which he defined as the involvement of
whole communities in monitoring compliance with treaties, in contrast to using
the highly specialized teams of experts such as we use to verify the New START
Treaty. Sir Joseph argued that technological verification of the New START kind
was sufficient for reducing arsenals to lower numbers. However, the prospect of
a state clandestinely acquiring only a few nuclear weapons in a disarmed world
requires greater confidence and verification. Sir Joseph believed societal
verification would bring us this increased confidence. Such a societal regime,
he said, would be essential in achieving the goal of zero.
Today, we have the information revolution to lend to this task, and Sir
Joseph's concept is closer to reality. Our enviornment today is a smaller,
increasingly-networked world where the average citizen connects to others in
cyberspace hundreds of times each day. We exchange and share ideas on a wide
variety of topics. Citizens are armed with more information tools than ever
before. Why should we not put this vast problem solving entity to good
use?
Think about this: Any event, anywhere on the planet, has the potential now
to be broadcast globally in mere seconds. The implications for arms control
monitoring and verification are compelling. It is harder to hide things
nowadays. When it is harder to hide things, it is easier to be caught. The
neighborhood gaze is a powerful tool.
The Possibilities
Open source information technologies can improve arms control verification
in at least two ways: either as a way of generating new information, or as
analysis of information that already is out there.
Let me give you some examples, to give you an idea what I'm talking
about.
In 2009, in recognition of the 40th anniversary of the Internet, the U.S.
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) held a competition where 10
red weather balloons were moored at visible fixed locations around the
continental United States. The first team to identify the location of all 10
balloons won a sizable cash prize - $40,000. Over 4,300 teams composed of an
estimated 2 million people from 25 countries took part in the challenge. A team
from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology won the challenge, identifying
all of the balloon locations in an astonishing time of 8 hours and 52 minutes.
Of course, to win in such a short time or complete the challenge at all, the MIT
team did not "find" the balloons themselves. They tapped into social networks
using a unique incentive structure that not only incentivized people to identify
a balloon location, but also incentivized people to recruit others to the team.
Their win showed the enormous potential of social networking, and also demonstrated how incentives can motivate large populations
to work toward a common goal.
Social networking is already being incorporated into local safety systems.
RAVEN911 - the Regional Asset Verification & Emergency Network - is a
multilayer mapping tool that supports emergency first response in Cincinnati,
Ohio. RAVEN911 uses live data feeds and intelligence gathered through Twitter to
provide details that cannot be given on an everyday geographic map, such as the
location of downed electric power lines and flooded roads. Authorities are
cooperating with communities in Southwestern Ohio, Southeastern Indiana and
Northern Kentucky to develop and implement this emergency management system, in
order to help fire departments assess the risks and potential dangers before
arriving on the scene of an accident. This open source system gives emergency
responders a common operating picture, to better execute time critical
activities, such as choosing evacuation routes out of flooded areas.
In addition to collecting useful data, the ability to identify patterns and
trends in social networks could aid the arms control verification process. In
the most basic sense, social media can draw attention to both routine and
abnormal events. We may be able to mine Twitter data to understand where strange
effluents are flowing, to recognize if a country has an illegal chemical weapons
program; or to recognize unexpected patterns of industrial activity at a missile
production plant. In this way, we may be able to ensure better compliance with
existing arms control treaties and regimes such as the Chemical Weapons
Convention.
The synergy is stunning: private citizens may contribute to monitoring for
illicit weapons of mass destruction wherever they are found.
Now, how could approaches such as this work specifically in the arms
control context? I've been thinking about the notion of verification
challenges.
Let's just imagine that a country, to establish its bona fides in a deep
nuclear reduction environment, may wish to open itself to a verification
challenge, recruiting its citizens and their i-Phones to help prove that it is
not stashing extra missiles in the woods, for example, or a fissile material
production reactor in the desert. Of course, some form of international
supervision would likely be required, to ensure the legitimacy of the challenge
and its procedures. And we would have to consider whether such a challenge could
cope with especially covert environments, such as caves or deep underground
facilities.
(Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State.)
No comments:
Post a Comment