Sacking the Quarterback to Take Possession of the Nuclear Football
“In
a democratic country without hereditary power, royal crowns or bejeweled
thrones, the nuclear football is... the only physical manifestation of our
nation’s head of state.”
There has been a sudden uptick in
media chatter and Washington insider talk about the White House staff, and
various other high officials, now speaking openly about their belief that
President Trump is mentally incompetent and “unravelling” at an alarming pace.
Are the rats about to jump ship? Will they sack the ball carrier, forcing a
fumble to take the nuclear football with them? All is uncertain in America
these days except for the certainty that the story will be told with football
metaphors.
In the first place, there should
have been mechanisms within the Republican Party and within the constitution to
block such an ignorant and incompetent person from rising so high, but the
urgent question for Washington elites now is what to do about the president’s
access to the nuclear codes. There has even been speculation about the
possibility of actually “tackling” the president to the ground if he ever
“lunges” toward the button.
The blame for this sorry situation
lies with all previous administrations. No previous president ever, as far as
we know, made efforts to insert checks and balances in the command and control
structure. Did any of them ever, at the very least, tell their staff to
challenge them or tie them to the proverbial mast if he ever reached for the
button? In the Soviet Union, the
president, minister of defense and chief of the general staff had to consent to
a nuclear launch, but Americans have never made any serious effort to fix the
flaws in their own system, in spite of previous crises with it.
During the darkest days of the Nixon
presidency, and even the brighter ones, the question about access to the launch
codes was a recurring problem that troubled senior officials. In 1969, just
after North Korea shot down an American EC-21, George Carver, a CIA specialist,
is reported to have said that Nixon became “incensed” when he found out... The president
got on the phone with the Joint Chiefs of Staff and ordered plans for a
tactical nuclear strike and recommendations for targets.... Henry Kissinger,
National Security Advisor for Nixon at the time, also got on the phone to the
Joint Chiefs and got them to agree to stand down on that order until Nixon woke
up sober the next morning... Kissinger is reported to have told aides on
multiple occasions that if the President had his way, there would have been a new
nuclear war every week.[1]
The problem continued until the last
days of Nixon’s time in office, as described by Politico in an article from August 2017:
Even though Nixon had more than two hours left in his
tenure, the most critical tool of the modern presidency had already been taken
away from him. He never noticed it, but the nuclear “football” didn’t travel
with him as he boarded the helicopter, and later, Air Force One for his flight
back to California... In a democratic country without hereditary power, royal
crowns or bejeweled thrones, the nuclear football is in some ways the only
physical manifestation of our nation’s head of state... Yet, on that August
day, it had been quietly removed from Nixon’s hands—remaining behind at the
White House with the incoming commander-in-chief, Gerald Ford.... Defense
Secretary James Schlesinger recalled years later that in the final days of the
Nixon presidency he had issued an unprecedented set of orders: If the president
gave any nuclear launch order, military commanders should check with either him
or Secretary of State Henry Kissinger before executing them. Schlesinger feared
that the president, who seemed depressed and was drinking heavily, might order
Armageddon.[2]
The article goes on to describe the
obvious problem with having the launch decision vested in one individual:
The “mutually assured destruction” of the Cold War was
predicated on the idea that the leaders of both superpowers were rational
enough to avoid a war that would end with the destruction of both nations. The
Madman Theory forced the world to consider a more frightening option: That the
man in charge of the nukes might not be rational at all.
Some late efforts are now being made
to revise the command structure that is a vestige of the Cold War when
strategists thought they would have to get their missiles in the air within
minutes in order to not have them destroyed by a massive surprise attack. This
urgency is no longer a concern because both Russia and the US have the capacity
to strike back after an initial nuclear onslaught. Two congressmen introduced
legislation in January 2017 that would prohibit a president from launching a
first nuclear strike without a congressional declaration of war. When they get
done with these baby steps, perhaps they can move on to figuring out a way to
make that football a dead ball by eliminating nuclear weapons entirely, then
they can shrink the military budget, safely unwind the empire, and ensure that
another incompetent and mentally unstable demagogue won't be able to buy his
way to the presidency.
The table below is not meant to
suggest that China has invented the perfect social and political order, but
this comparison is notable in this time of political crisis in the United
States. China doesn’t have anyone like Trump holding high office, or anywhere
near it. The US is already governed by a rigged duopoly in which there is no
effective democratic involvement of the people. If they are going to rule like
mandarins, they might as well find a way to choose the best ones and govern
well. Just sayin,’ as they say on cable news...
USA
|
China
|
-elite power, diffuse and
invisible, operating behind a shadowy screen, in a network of think tanks,
foundations, private planning commissions, exclusive corporate and financial
clubs, secret intelligence forces, private secret armies
-a system of devolving, revolving,
and unstable laws, executive orders
-an intricate system of corporate lobby-controlled
elections
-highest position of political
leadership vulnerable to being grabbed (“they let you do it!”) by an
insurgent unqualified populist billionaire
|
-visible, openly vested, leading
people’s political party
-central planning
-a functioning economy with plans
reviewed every five years, following consultation with people’s assemblies
-leaders chosen from the most
competent who emerge through a meritocratic, competitive education system and
work in public service
|
Comparison adapted from a facebook post
by Luciana
Bohne
Readers unfamiliar with football
terms such as sack, quarterback,
fumble, dead ball and tackle can
consult the glossary of
American football.
Notes
[1] Blake Stillwell, “That
time a drunk Richard Nixon tried to nuke North Korea,” We Are the Mighty, January 9, 2017, http://www.wearethemighty.com/articles/that-time-a-drunk-richard-nixon-tried-to-nuke-north-korea.
[2] Garrett M. Graff, “The
Madman and the Bomb,” Politico,
August 11, 2017, http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/08/11/donald-trump-nuclear-weapons-richard-nixon-215478.
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