December
13, 2012
December 13, North Korea’s
state-run news agency issued a two-sentence statement via radio, joining
critics in Iran and Japanese hibakusha and anti-nuclear activists who have
condemned the U.S.’s December 5th subcritical nuclear experiment named
‘Pollux.’
The critical part of the North
Korean statement, as translated by a BBC news monitoring service, reads:
‘Despite strong objection and denunciation from the world community, the United States is continuously and frantically clinging onto carrying out nuclear tests for developing new nuclear weapons.’
There are elements of truth and mistruth in North Korea’s
statement. Let’s start with the mistruths. Contrary to misleading statements
made in blogs and by some in the international media, the recent subcritical
experiment was not a nuclear test. Nor did it lead to any leaked radiation.
These tests occur in a fortified containment in an underground tunnel that
prevents the possibility of an accidental release (although one similar test,
decades ago, did cause a fire).
The U.S. Department of Energy argues that because it can’t
conduct a real nuclear test to ensure that aging components and weapons-grade plutonium
inside U.S. nuclear warheads are still reliable, it therefore has to resort to
subcritical tests and other so-called ‘stockpile stewardship’ experiments.
As long as these laboratory tests on plutonium (and warhead
weapons parts) don’t induce a runaway chain reaction, the U.S. is allowed by
the CTBT to do these things. A runaway chain reaction, by the way, is the
modern definition of a nuclear explosion, but modern doesn’t mean good.
In fact, the current definition of ‘nuclear explosion’ is a
very bad one. Why? Well, no one opposing nuclear weapons has ever said they
oppose them on the grounds that they’re designed to induce a domino effect on
the fissioning of plutonium.
People complain about nukes because of the size of the
energy release these weapons of mass (or worldwide) destruction are designed to
discharge ~ as heat, blast and radiation. It would make more sense to ban all
man-made nuclear energy releases.
Critics of the U.S. program allege that the hundreds and
hundreds of stockpile stewardship experiments conducted since the U.S. signed
the CTBT and the fact that most of them are duplicate experiments of precursor
ones suggest that the program is not, or not any longer, credible. The thought
is that the program is either a big boondoggle or the Department of Energy is
secretly designing new nuclear weapons.
But you don’t have to agree with the critics. Take it from
the horse’s mouth. Have you heard of the declassified document known as the DOE
“Green Book?” Obtained in 1997 through the Freedom of Information Act, the
Green Book indicated that the DOE’s stockpile stewardship program ~ of which
subcritical tests are a part ~ is not really about stewardship at all, but
about new nuclear options.
The Green Book states “In the meantime, future national
policies are supported for deterrence by retaining the ability to develop new
nuclear options for emergent threats.” The DOE would argue that it isn’t
currently designing and testing next-generation nuclear weapons via
simulations, however the lack of transparency of its stockpile stewardship
program (the last time the U.S. allowed international inspectors access to an
underground subcritical test was in the late 1990s) speaks louder than its
words.
And sometimes the curious omission of words creates the most
suspicion. Take for example the omission by the DOE about its December 5th test
‘Pollux.’ A May 2012 report titled ‘Supplement to Department of Energy
Activities Relating to the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, Fiscal Year
2011 Site-Specific Activities’ described Pollux as a
‘scaled subcritical experiment with special nuclear material. The experimental campaign is a first-of-a-kind demonstration…’
Yet neither that report nor any subsequent one (and not even
the DOE’s Pollux press release) elaborated on these ‘scaled subcritical
experiments.’ The government never gave us a definition of them. Why not?
Has the Department of Energy been keeping something from the
public?
So, what really are ‘scaled subcritical experiments?’
Hans Kristensen of the Federation of American Scientists
wrote in his September 2011 article titled ‘Hydrodynamic Tests: Not to Scale’
that scaled experiments are ‘experiments in an implosion geometry that is
essentially identical to an actual warhead design, but reduced in size.’
These are scaled down versions of the real thing. Kristensen
mentioned in his article that Pollux may be the first of several ‘scaled’ tests
that would be roughly half scale models too…of a nuclear warhead! So, Pollux
was a subcritical nuclear test on plutonium-239 weapons grade fuel INSIDE a
half-scale model of a nuclear bomb!
The U.S. has carried out a first-ever subcritical nuclear
test in a shrunken nuclear fission bomb!?
And if the Department of Energy doesn’t really have a need
for its stockpile stewardship tests, then what was the purpose of this
provocative experiment? Was it a boondoggle?
Or is the U.S. simply, as North Korea suggests, ‘frantically
clinging onto carrying out nuclear tests?’
I’d hate to agree with North Korea, but it sure looks like
the folks in the Energy Department are simply not able to control their lust
for conducting a nuclear test. In my opinion, they never have been able to
control that lust.
That lust is the reason why the U.S. won’t ratify the CTBT
and why the U.S. is one of only two or three countries left which still has a
nuclear test site that it hasn’t yet shut down.
That lust was also the reason why it and its predecessor ~
the Atomic Energy Commission ~ lied to the American people about the fallout
from nuclear weapons testing. They said the radioactive debris falling on
Americans’ homes was safe (‘There is no danger’) because they simply didn’t
want citizens to force a halt to their precious weapons development program.
It all makes perfect sense when you accept this truth. Think
about it. Why else are they blowing up shrunken nuclear bombs at a nuclear test
site?
Andrew Kishner
is founder of NuclearCrimes.org,
which provides analysis into contemporary environmental radiation dangers and
also the history and public health consequences of nuclear weapons work during
the 20th century by several ‘nuclear club’ nations.
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