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- <text>
- <title>
- (56 Elect) The H-Bomb Argument
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1956 Election
- </history>
- <link 11483>
- <link 11890>
- <link 15378><article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- October 29, 1956
- THE CAMPAIGN
- The H-Bomb Argument
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> After his defeat in 1952, Adlai Stevenson discovered that
- a good number of the nation's idealists, reformers and
- vocational do-gooders were still willing to beat a path to his
- door. Most of the grand designs got a polite brushoff. But one
- that caught Stevenson's eye was a proposal for the U.S. to halt
- its hydrogen-bomb tests. Over the months, Stevenson studied the
- proposition, deemed it worthy. Last April he advocated it
- publicly during his heated campaign for the Democratic
- presidential nomination. After that he became so preoccupied
- with the subject that his staffers began griping because he was
- always closeted with "some scientists"--at the cost of paying
- attention to more mundane, but equally important, political
- chores.
- </p>
- <p> During his West Coast campaign trip Stevenson again struck
- for an end to U.S. H-bomb tests. Somewhat to his surprise, the
- proposal received enthusiastic applause. Thus encouraged,
- Stevenson's professionally intellectual, politically amateurish
- advisers pushed their advantage, urging him to make the H-bomb
- his top campaign issue. Arguing against them in a top-level
- Chicago conference was Campaign Manager Jim Finnegan, a
- tough-minded political pro. Finnegan finally gave in on the
- ground that the H-bomb was "a way of talking about peace"--and
- peace was an issue that Finnegan was distressed to see the
- Republicans monopolizing. The strategy settled, Caltech
- Geochemist Harrison Brown (who had argued against the H-bomb
- before the H-bomb was ever developed) flew into Chicago to give
- technical advice on a 30-minute Stevenson television speech.
- </p>
- <p> Simple, Safe & Workable. Despite Brown's help, last week's
- thoughtful speech was distinctly Stevenson's own. He recalled
- that he proposed last April that the U.S. take the initiative
- "by announcing our willingness to stop these tests, `calling
- upon other nations to follow our lead,' and making it clear that
- unless they did likewise we would have to resume our experiments
- too. That was my proposal. It was simple. It was safe. It was
- workable. And since that time both Russia and Great Britain have
- declared their willingness to join us in trying to establish
- that kind of policy...
- </p>
- <p> "Therefore, if elected President, I would count it the
- first order of business to follow up on the opportunity
- presented now by the other atomic powers. I would do this by
- conference or consultation--at whatever level--in whatever
- place--the circumstances might suggest..." If one of the
- other powers were to break its agreement, Stevenson argued, the
- U.S. could resume its hydrogen tests in "not more than eight
- weeks."
- </p>
- <p> "A Valid Subject." On the television program with Adlai,
- heartily approving his ideas, was New Mexico's Senator Clinton
- Anderson, chairman of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy (who
- had previously said he did not believe the U.S. should call off
- its tests). Also there was Missouri's Senator Stuart Symington
- (he quickly changed the subject to the need for greater
- national defense). Public backing for Stevenson came from ten
- Caltech scientists (including Speech Adviser Harrison Brown).
- They were promptly rebuked by Caltech President Lee DuBridge for
- their "partisan stand." Sixty-two scientists from the Atomic
- Energy Commission's Brookhaven Laboratory edged in with a
- notation that the dangers of Strontium 90 were "a valid subject
- for further discussion and study"--as indeed they are.
- </p>
- <p> For a few days the issue ballooned in the headlines, and
- President Eisenhower, after slashing back at Stevenson in his
- Portland and Hollywood Bowl speeches, announced that Secretary
- of State John Foster Dulles, Defense Secretary Charles Wilson
- and Atomic Energy Commissioner Lewis Strauss would prepare a
- full-dress answer to Stevenson and explanation of the
- Administration's thermonuclear program. Although no one knew
- precisely how much new information they might bring to bear,
- some of the obvious answers were that Stevenson:
- </p>
- <p>-- Grossly exaggerated the dangers of fall-out from the
- H-bomb tests; the four-month-old, nonpolitical National Academy
- of Sciences report found that the radioactive fall-out from
- hydrogen tests, if continued for the next 30 years at the rate
- of the last five, would amount to about one-thirtieth of the
- dose the average person would receive from routine X ray and
- fluoroscopic examinations. Atomic Energy Commissioner Willard
- Libby has said that even if tests were to continue at the
- present rate indefinitely, the quantity of radioactive Strontium
- 90 in humans might increase only 64/1,000ths of the "maximum
- permissible concentration."
- </p>
- <p>-- Erred grievously in his claim that if the Russians
- violate the cease-fire, the U.S. can set up tests and get going
- within eight weeks; a major test requires about two years'
- preparation, involves a task force of more than 10,000
- scientists, technicians and military men, along with fabulously
- intricate and delicate instrumentation that changes from test
- to test.
- </p>
- <p>-- Missed the basic point of atomic weapons research:
- nuclear experimentation is in its infancy. To stop thermonuclear
- testing now would mean that scientists might not discover their
- mistakes until too late (some of the most profitable tests have
- been the fizzles), might miss a breakthrough to a whole new
- magnitude of nuclear understanding.
- </p>
- <p> When Stevenson first broached his H-bomb proposal last
- April, he seemed to be arguing for unilateral U.S. action in
- halting tests. Last week he was talking about a treaty
- arrangement--without conditions beyond mutual promise to stop
- testing H-bombs. He found a ready taker for that sort of
- arrangement. In the United Nations, Chief Soviet Delegate Arkady
- Sobolev said Russia is ready to enter into an agreement for "an
- immediate halt" to the hydrogen tests--"without conditions."
- For years, the Russians had been arguing for nuclear disarmament--without conditions. Dwight Eisenhower, and Harry Truman
- before him, have rejected the proposition. Reason: the U.S.
- insists on at least one condition, mutual inspection, that would
- make the Soviet word worth the paper it is written on.
- </p>
- <p>Warsaw v. Moscow
- </p>
- <p> On the way home from the campaign swing along the West
- Coast, President Eisenhower was handed a Teletype report from
- Secretary of State John Foster Dulles about the latest
- development in Poland, where nationalist-minded Communist
- leaders were defying the edicts of Moscow. In Denver, the
- President studied fresh messages, made a brief airport speech,
- talked long-distance to Dulles, and instructed Press Secretary
- James Hagerty to issue a statement warmly sympathizing with
- traditional Polish yearning for liberty and independence.
- </p>
- <p> All weekend, lights burned late at the State Department as
- Washington weighed the implications of the Polish move. It was
- the biggest moment of decision in the cold war since Khrushchev
- last spring tore down the Stalin image and conceded to Tito
- that alternate roads to "socialism" are possible. (It was the
- State Department that first published the Khrushchev text.) The
- pattern had already been set. The U.S., by backing up Tito when
- he first broke with the Kremlin, had launched its first major
- step in breaking up the Soviet empire eight years ago.
- President Eisenhower, by deciding to continue that aid last
- week, took another step in encouraging the Soviet satellites to
- demonstrate their independence.
- </p>
- <p> To the State Department, the Polish attempt--which had
- been gathering momentum for weeks--seemed to be a vindication
- of Western policy. Whether the U.S. will now proffer aid to the
- Poles is still under consideration. As Secretary of State Dulles
- put it: "Anything which weakens this great structure of Soviet
- Communist power and leads to its breaking up" is in the interest
- of the United States.
- </p>
- <p> Landing in Washington, President Eisenhower turned his
- attention to another facet of Moscow relations--a personal
- note to Ike from Premier Bulganin calling on the U.S. to join
- with Russia in bringing H-bomb tests to a halt (but making no
- mention of the U.S. insistence on safeguards). Ike was nettled
- because Moscow had published the text before he had seen it. He
- was angry because Bulganin noted that "certain prominent public
- figures in the United States"--i.e., Adlai Stevenson--had
- proposed a plan to stop H-bomb tests. And the President
- characterized as "personally offensive to me" a charge that
- Secretary of State Dulles had distorted recent Soviet atomic
- proposals.
- </p>
- <p> In the stiffest message of his Administration, the
- President charged Bulganin with a serious violation of
- international practices in which "you seem to impugn my own
- sincerity." By sending the note in the middle of an election
- campaign, he said, and especially by referring, by implication,
- to Stevenson's views on atomic testing, Bulganin had interfered
- in U.S. internal affairs in a way that "if indulged in by an
- ambassador, would lead to his being declared persona non grata."
- </p>
- <list>
- <l>November 5, 1956</l>
- <l>"Critical Issue"</l>
- </list>
- <p> "The White House seems to have dismissed the Russian offer
- out of hand, but he world and the American people expect sober
- consideration from our leaders." So spoke Candidate Adlai
- Stevenson one day last week after he had learned that the
- President had rejected a letter from Russia's Premier Bulganin
- backing Adlai's campaign proposals to stop H-bomb tests.
- </p>
- <p> Next day Stevenson read the text of Bulganin's letter and
- the President's sizzling reply, and he decided that Bulganin was
- too close to his coattails for comfort. "I share fully
- President Eisenhower's resentment at the manner and timing of
- Premier Bulganin's interference in the political affairs of the
- U.S.," he said, in a second statement. "This is not the first
- time the Russian leaders have said things related to our
- presidential election. Mr. Bulganin himself expressed the hope
- some time ago that Mr. Eisenhower would run for re-election and
- then, more recently, other Russian leaders have said they
- favored Eisenhower for President."
- </p>
- <p> Course of Wisdom. With such bewildering international
- counterpoint, the argument over the testing of thermonuclear
- weapons soared to a crescendo with the 1956 campaign. The
- headlines had barely caught up with Adlai before the White House
- was back with the promised Government report, in which the
- President reiterated that the course of wisdom was to negotiate
- a foolproof disarmament agreement with the Russians before
- throwing away the U.S. nuclear lead. "One truth must never be
- lost from sight," Ike wrote. "It is this: the critical issue is
- not a matter of testing nuclear weapons--but of preventing
- their use in nuclear war."
- </p>
- <p> Moving on point by point to the specifics of Adlai
- Stevenson's campaign argument, the President:
- </p>
- <p>-- Assured the U.S. that the current rate of fallout of
- radioactive strontium 90, "by the most sober and responsible
- scientific judgment," does not imperil the health of humanity.
- </p>
- <p>-- Pointed out that strontium 90 derives not from the
- testing of H-bombs alone--which Stevenson would stop--but
- from any process of nuclear fission. "Thus the idea that we can
- `stop sending this dangerous material into the air,' by
- concentrating upon small fission weapons, is based upon apparent
- unawareness of facts."
- </p>
- <p>-- Explained that is was not always possible, Stevenson to
- the contrary, to detect thermonuclear tests in Russia. "We
- believe that we have detected practically all such tests to
- date. It is however impossible...to have positive assurance...except in the case of the largest weapons."
- </p>
- <p>-- Contradicted Stevenson's statement that the U.S. could
- always start up H-bomb tests again, if necessary, "within not
- more than eight weeks"; it takes the U.S. "a year or more to
- organize and effect such tests as those conducted at our proving
- ground in the Pacific Ocean"; under Stevenson's cease-test
- provision "we could find our present commanding lead...erased or even reversed."
- </p>
- <p> In the past two years of his Administration, said the
- President, the U.S. has proposed and the Russians have rejected
- no fewer than 14 new plans to break the disarmament deadlock and
- to work out a foolproof agreement. Under such circumstances the
- U.S. has no alternative but to keep up its guard. "The power of
- these weapons to deter aggression and to guard world peace could
- be lost if we failed to hold our superiority."
- </p>
- <p> "This Is Madness!" Adlai Stevenson was not impressed. In
- his speech in Manhattan's Madison Square Garden he called again
- for an agreement with Russia to end H-bomb tests, added
- afterward that 270 scientists support his position. He quoted
- Pope Pius XII on the fearful prospects of nuclear war ("a pall
- of death over pulverized ruins covering countless victims with
- limbs burned, twisted and scattered while others groan in their
- death agony"). (But left unmentioned the Pope's insistence that
- an enforceable international agreement on disarmament must be
- part of a "sum total" agreement to stop "experimentation.") Said
- Adlai: "Our arsenal of hydrogen bombs and other weapons is
- enough to deface the earth. Our stockpile continues to grow..."
- </p>
- <p> The way to peace, he added in Rock Island, Ill., "is not
- to stubbornly insist as Eisenhower does that our security lies
- in the deterrent effect of our lead in nuclear weapons." After
- all, the Russians had caught up with the U.S. on A-bombs, and
- "they'll do it again" on H-bombs. "What does Mr. Eisenhower
- propose then? That we go ahead with the development of the
- cobalt bomb to try to gain another advantage--or a force that
- can shake the earth off its axis?
- </p>
- <p> "But this is madness--this policy of trying to preserve
- peace by a preponderance of terror. And what is it going to do
- to mankind in the process--bone cancer, deformed children,
- sterility?" Instead, Stevenson said, the way to peace lies amid
- the faith, confidence and rising standards of living of the
- have-not peoples, "the millions of people who tremble on the
- sidelines of this mad arms race in helpless terror and expanding
- hunger."
- </p>
- <p> Yet the best reply to Stevenson's rootless eloquence was
- not the presidential report or the imprecations of Republican
- orators. It was an equally eloquent passage from a speech made
- four years ago: "Until it [the atomic bomb] is subjected to a
- safe international control, we have no choice but to insure our
- atomic superiority...We can never yield on the objective of
- securing a foolproof system of international inspection and
- control. And we can never confuse negotiation with appeasement."
- </p>
- <p> The place: Hartford, Connecticut; the date: Sept. 18,
- 1952; the speaker, Adlai Stevenson. </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-