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May 12, 2025 Bulletin 357: Ukraine and the urgent need for a peace orientation in nuclear disarmament; pit webinar Tuesday May 20, 6 pm MDT (come one, come all); "What should U.S. pit policy be?" Permalink for this bulletin (please forward!). Bulletins like this one go to our main mailing list. If you missed our most recent emails, they come in three forms and here they are:
Dear friends and colleagues: Apart from press releases, we haven't sent a Bulletin to this list in quite a while. Mea culpa. We've been busy as heck but focused elsewhere. We will hopefully be able to catch you up a little bit in the coming days. 1. Regarding Ukraine and the urgent need for a peace orientation in the nuclear disarmament community, such as it is As noted above, we have continued to post daily or near-daily updates on the war in Ukraine, prospects for peace, and the wider implications of the conflict for relations with the Russian Federation and for nuclear disarmament. We try to keep what we post there short. We generally focus on written material you can scan rather than the excellent podcasts available at the sources we list, so busy people can stay somewhat abreast without a massive investment of time. As we have said from the outset, resolution of this conflict and establishment of long-term modus vivendi with Russia and China are essential first-step predicates for nuclear disarmament, and for much-needed general disarmament. I didn't say "arms control," because the recent historical eras evoked by that phrase -- the Cold War and the triumphalist period which followed aka the "rules-based international order" -- have ended. For the foreseeable future, on the basis of overwhelming evidence, Russia has concluded that the U.S. and now also Europe, are "not agreement capable." China and Russia have both voted with their own investments. At this point, nuclear disarmament will come on only the back of a broader convivencia. It is primarily toward that happy condition, and against rearmament (nuclear and conventional), that we in the nuclear disarmament community should be working. Meanwhile impediments to nuclear disarmament are growing fast, primarily due to the actions of Western countries -- in expanding NATO, provoking the Ukraine War, and now in the fevered cries of EU leaders to invest vast sums to rearm Europe to prevent a "Russian invasion." It would seem that our colleagues in the European disarmament movement have their work cut out for them, as do all of us. Today, we want to especially recommend yesterday's analysis at Moon of Alabama, An Immediate Peace Is The Best One Ukraine Can Ever Get, based in part on a new Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) analysis by Alex Vershinin. Many arms control and even prominent disarmament groups have in the recent past drunk quite a bit of Russophobia Kool-Aid. It's time to put that nauseating drink aside and move on. Excellent resources to help bring us all back to reality, besides our Ukraine page, are too many to list (but you can find some on that page). If you have time, you might start with Scott Horton's monumental 2024 review, Provoked, How Washington Started the New Cold War with Russia and the Catastrophe in Ukraine, Scott Horton, 2024. Jeffrey Sachs is always outstanding. Glenn Diesen (Russophobia: Propaganda in International Politics, 2022; podcasts are cheaper) is superb. As I think we all know, Russophobic machinations in the U.S. MICIMATT (a Ray McGovern coinage for "military-industrial-congressional-intelligence-Media-academic-think-tank complex, with "Media" capitalized) hit overdrive in 2016. It is primarily a bizarre concoction of "threats" created during that period that is driving the U.S. arms race today. There is hardly a single high-level executive branch speech about nuclear weapons to be found in U.S. discourse that does not begin with an invocation of the deadly threats emanating from RussiaRussiaRussia and ChinaChinaChina. It is fully Orwellian, and we can't ignore it. Over a longer time-span, the top-down, foundation-driven attempt to divorce "nuclear disarmament" from "peace" -- which has worked just grand in domestic political practice but of course not at all in diplomatic reality -- has been nearly fatal to the U.S. disarmament movement. We can and must reverse that. 2. May 20 webinar on nuclear warhead core (pit) production, the largest program in NNSA history Next week, on May 20 from 6:00 to 7:30 pm Mountain Time, we will be hosting a webinar on pit production. You are invited! You must register in advance for this meeting at https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/dZ23Gc-bSMWKC0rE8cyfxQ. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. As we noted in our May 8 press release (Nuclear agency begins new environmental analysis of strategies to produce plutonium warhead cores ("pits")...) there is an opportunity for mutual education on this topic that has been set before us all by the plaintiffs in a South Carolina legal case. Just what we needed! More NEPA hearings! The coming hearings will address where and when pits are to be made, what production capacity should be sought, and what environmental impact analysis should be done regarding all aspects of pit production. At this webinar we will be providing succinct suggested talking points on these subjects, while also allowing plenty of time for Q&A and discussion. If you want to attend this webinar but cannot do so at this time, please write. If there is enough demand we will host another, or a followup as needed. NNSA will ignore all our comments but our participation is still important. Yes, preparations for pit production in New Mexico and South Carolina will carry on unimpeded regardless of the immediate outcome of this particular process, but nevertheless it is an educational opportunity that will allow us all to come together to stop pit production at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), the new warhead being designed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) using that warhead, and the Sentinel ICBM for which the LANL-made pits and LLNL-designed warheads are supposedly destined. While the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) will pay no attention to our comments in the NEPA context, it is an opportunity to build common understanding and action. NNSA will eventually stop pit production at LANL, assuming it ever starts, but NNSA will not stop preparations for pit production in South Carolina, no matter what. If you haven't done so already please join us and many others in endorsing the Call for Sanity, Not Nuclear Production. Unfortunately many arms control and so-called "anti-nuclear" organizations -- including the South Carolina plaintiffs -- come down on the side of not opposing accelerated pit production and providing more money and work for these two nuclear weapons labs (LANL and LLNL). They may or may not know that their efforts to drive all pit production to New Mexico are not going to be successful. It's a sad and confusing situation, and not one of our making. Caveat emptor. We will also provide talking points in the next Bulletin, hopefully to come later this week, but meanwhile please see the next item. Of course please see the featured items on our pit page for more. 3. What should U.S. policy be concerning nuclear warhead core (pit) production? Last November we hosted NNSA Administrator Dr. Jill Hruby, the Government Accountability Office's Allison Bawden, and the Heritage Foundation's Robert Peters, in a panel discussion on pit production policy at the National Press Club (YouTube video). We also posted the text from which my spoken remarks to those officials and others present were drawn. With some slight edits to bring matters up to date, those remarks may be helpful in preparation for the coming NEPA hearings and what will follow. Here they are. What should U.S. pit policy be? Prepared remarks for a panel discussion at the National Press Club by Greg Mello, Los Alamos Study Group, 11/13/24 NNSA’s plutonium pit production program is as big, in constant dollars, as the entire Manhattan Project. It is one of the very largest “gigaprojects” underway in the United States. The program is not going all that well and it deserves a lot more attention from Congress and the public. We believe unchangeable realities and fiscal forces majeure will cause NNSA to sooner or later operate only one pit facility in any case, the one at SRS. In the meantime, attempting to build and operate two industrial facilities – as opposed to one industrial facility and one training and demonstration facility – is already having negative national security impacts, and is otherwise harmful. There is no stockpile size that can be maintained via production at LANL alone, not just because of LANL's small production capacity but also because the 50-year-old LANL main production facility cannot reliably be projected to last as long as existing pits, even if production were successfully established. The SRS facilities being built today will be able to handle the entire pit mission. It cannot be stressed enough that federal decisionmakers in Washington cannot make successful policy that runs against the grain of realities on the ground. Congress and the White House cannot re-draw the maps and change topography, geology, and human geography with the stroke of a pen – for example, by signing a Nuclear Stockpile Memorandum or passing a law. Neither can the federal government necessarily gin up the trained, enthusiastic workforce needed for a new arms race on an arbitrary schedule, especially while also trying to rebuild U.S. manufacturing and infrastructure overall. Choices have to be made. Specifically, we believe industrial pit production at LANL will be found impractical, sooner or later. There are legal, practical, environmental, foreign policy, fiscal, and national security arguments in favor of our approach to pit production. Legally, last year a federal judge in South Carolina ruled, correctly in our view, that when Administrator Hruby’s predecessor shifted policy from a single pit production site to two, she violated the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). Under the two-site paradigm, this procedural mistake cannot be corrected without damaging either NEPA on the one hand, or preparations for pit production at SRS on the other. NNSA demanded the former, and got it. LANL’s pit problems include:
From the environmental perspective, the SRS site has fewer natural hazards -- and more important, incurs fewer environmental impacts. SRS does not have LANL’s degree of abiding wildfire risk, has no issues with Native American sacred sites, has no comparable seismic issues, and no geotechnical issues of note. SRS has hurricanes, but SRS has just come through a major hurricane with essentially no damage to its nuclear facilities. The SRS pit facility is 10 times farther from the site boundary than is the case at LANL. Fiscally, having two pit factories instead of one doubles the remaining acquisition cost, using NNSA’s 2024 budget request. In all likelihood, that request understates the costs at both LANL and SRS. Having two sites roughly triples the ultimate operating cost of pit production, which is why NNSA is unlikely to operate both sites for long. Using LANL instead of SRS pits will drastically increase the price of warheads using LANL pits. The cost of producing early-to-need pits at LANL is so great that Congress is avoiding even looking at it. Thank you for your attention and best wishes, Greg Mello, for the Study Group |
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