War and Peace

Is There a Solution in Syria?

Is There a Solution in Syria? Is There a Solution in Syria?

The United States and Russia are working on the Geneva peace conference, but it’s a long shot. Best hope: local ceasefires.

Jan 17, 2014 / Bob Dreyfuss

America’s Secret War in 134 Countries

America’s Secret War in 134 Countries America’s Secret War in 134 Countries

The deployment of US Special Operations forces is a growing form of overseas power projection.

Jan 16, 2014 / Nick Turse

Push for New Sanctions on Iran Stalls Amid Growing Resistance

Push for New Sanctions on Iran Stalls Amid Growing Resistance Push for New Sanctions on Iran Stalls Amid Growing Resistance

Democratic senators warn new economic punishments are "a march towards war."

Jan 15, 2014 / Zoë Carpenter

Blown Away by ‘Grounded’: Drone Warfare Up Close and Personal

Blown Away by ‘Grounded’: Drone Warfare Up Close and Personal Blown Away by ‘Grounded’: Drone Warfare Up Close and Personal

A new play by George Brant brings home the human costs of America’s remote killing machine.

Jan 14, 2014 / Books & the Arts / Bob Dreyfuss

How Ariel Sharon Shaped Israel’s Destiny

How Ariel Sharon Shaped Israel’s Destiny How Ariel Sharon Shaped Israel’s Destiny

In a bloody career that spanned decades, he destroyed entire cities and presided over the killing of countless civilians.

Jan 11, 2014 / Max Blumenthal

The Lesson of Carving Up Sudan

The Lesson of Carving Up Sudan The Lesson of Carving Up Sudan

The multiple civil wars in Sudan and South Sudan show the dangers of creating mini-states.

Jan 8, 2014 / Bob Dreyfuss

Why Does Obama Want to Extend a War He Doesn’t Believe In?

Why Does Obama Want to Extend a War He Doesn’t Believe In? Why Does Obama Want to Extend a War He Doesn’t Believe In?

Obama wants another decade of war in Afghanistan—but a new book says he’s already lost faith in the mission. 

Jan 7, 2014 / Books & the Arts / George Zornick

Why Are US Special Operations Forces Deployed in Over 100 Countries?

Why Are US Special Operations Forces Deployed in Over 100 Countries? Why Are US Special Operations Forces Deployed in Over 100 Countries?

That’s over 60 percent of the nations on the planet.

Jan 7, 2014 / Nick Turse

The US Must Work With Iran to Stabilize Both Iraq and Syria

The US Must Work With Iran to Stabilize Both Iraq and Syria The US Must Work With Iran to Stabilize Both Iraq and Syria

If Washington and Tehran cooperate, they may find themselves on the same side in key regional conflicts.

Jan 6, 2014 / Bob Dreyfuss

Titan II ICBM

Q&A: Eric Schlosser Q&A: Eric Schlosser

With his 2001 mega-bestseller Fast Food Nation, Eric Schlosser inspired a grassroots food movement that changed the way Americans eat. Command and Control, his new book, exposes a shocking history of accidents and errors in the US nuclear arsenal, including the time a B-52 almost nuked North Carolina. I spoke with Schlosser by telephone on October 27. Mark Hertsgaard: You report that at least 1,200 US nuclear weapons were involved in significant accidents between 1950 and 1968. Two of the most extraordinary accidents took place in North Carolina and Arkansas, right? Eric Schlosser: A single safety switch prevented the detonation of a hydrogen bomb in Faro, North Carolina, in 1961. That type of switch was later discovered to have been defective in dozens of cases. Had the weapon detonated, it could have sent lethal radioactive fallout as far north as Washington, DC, and New York City. On September 18, 1980, a couple of workmen were doing routine maintenance at a Titan II missile silo in Damascus, Arkansas. The single warhead on the Titan II had three times the explosive force of all the bombs used during the Second World War combined—including both atomic bombs. As one of the workers prepared to remove a pressure cap near the top of the missile, the socket fell off his wrench handle. The tool fell about seventy feet, bounced off part of the silo, struck the missile and pierced its metal skin. Thousands of gallons of highly flammable, highly explosive rocket fuel began to fill the silo. Had [the warhead] detonated, the state of Arkansas would have been consumed by firestorms. MH: Can books still spark social change? ES: Absolutely. I do not think in any way that the new technology has made the book obsolete. Even an excellent documentary can’t give you as full an experience of a subject as a book can. MH: Has the Internet helped or hurt a book’s ability to affect society? ES: Take that [secret US government] document describing the North Carolina accident. I had that document for three years. During that time, the only people who saw it were me, my fact-checker and the US government censor. Then I gave it to The Guardian, and it was instantly spread all over the world. The Internet is a way to get spied on, but it’s also a way to get vital public information out. MH: The extraordinary value of Command and Control is in showing how fortunate we have been throughout the nuclear era to avoid catastrophes beyond the intentional ones of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It seems we’ve been saved by sheer dumb luck as much as anything. ES: Given the many close calls that we’ve had, there’s no simple explanation for why a nuclear weapon has never detonated accidentally in the United States. A great deal of credit must be given to our weapon designers for their technical expertise, and to the military personnel who risked their lives (and sometimes lost them) trying to prevent nuclear catastrophes. But a hell of a lot of good luck was involved, too. And there’s no guarantee that luck will last. Please support our journalism. Get a digital subscription for just $9.50! MH: What can be done to minimize, if not eliminate, the risks of a nuclear weapons accident? ES: I wrote this book to remind people that the danger didn’t vanish along with the Cold War. I’d like to see a vigorous national debate about our nuclear weapons—how many we should have, why we need them, how they might be used. The same sort of activism now directed at climate change should be focused on nuclear weapons worldwide. Global warming and the detonation of nuclear weapons are the two existential threats that mankind faces today. And neither one is inevitable. MH: What’s next after touring for Command and Control? ES: I’m looking forward to being home for a good long time so I can clean my office. You wouldn’t believe what a mess there is. If the government broke in here to try to find my documents, there’d be no way! Read Next: Robert Jervis on Eric Schlosser’s Command and Control.

Dec 30, 2013 / Mark Hertsgaard

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