
Oppenheimer's Grandson: We Need a Peaceful Nuclear Renaissance
One of those forgotten days is Aug. 17, 1945. Acting on behalf of the Scientific Panel of the Interim Committee, my grandfather, J. Robert Oppenheimer wrote advice from the top scientists on the Manhattan Project in a letter to Secretary of War Henry Stimson. Just a week after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the letter offered advice so rooted in first principles that all of it remains true 80 years later: no nation can achieve absolute security through nuclear dominance. Considering this reality, global leaders must collaborate to resolve the underlying tensions between their nations to achieve no less than making future wars impossible.
'We are not only unable to outline a program that would assure to this nation for the next decades hegemony in the field of atomic weapons; we are equally unable to ensure that such hegemony, if achieved, could protect us from the most terrible destruction,' he wrote 80 years ago.
During the war, scientists like Niels Bohr and my grandfather hoped the atomic bomb's terrible power might end all wars between great powers. They believed that once total war was recognized as unwinnable, nations could abandon zero-sum thinking and turn their energies to cooperation as the basis of international peace.
'We believe that the safety of this nation—as opposed to its ability to inflict damage on an enemy power—cannot lie wholly or even primarily in its scientific or technical prowess,' penned my grandfather. 'It can be based only on making future wars impossible.'
In one respect, that hope has been realized. Since 1945, there has not been another direct confrontation between great powers such as the two world wars. In another respect, we failed. We did not prevent the arms race, and we have lived under the shadow of nuclear armageddon for nearly eight decades. Every minute of every day, we live in a perpetual state of complete vulnerability to the psycho-emotional whims of the leaders of the nuclear weapons states who, by merely giving an order, can eradicate civilization as we know it. The level of cooperation that ended WWII, which the Interim Committee recommended be marshalled for atomic energy in 1945, has not been reached. Without it we are still in grave danger, particularly from the often forgotten but always present threat of nuclear war.
Despite our survival thus far, the latent danger from nuclear weapons remains. We must address and reduce the issue head-on.
That is why my family and I have made it our mission to keep driving toward the goals set out by Robert and the Interim Committee eight decades ago. In this moment of particular danger, we must remind the world that victory in a total war between great powers is impossible and that there is unparalleled value in cross-cultural engagement and international cooperation. We recognize this alone will not resolve all conflict, which is far too complex and context-specific for generalized solutions. Yet, this does not require us to maintain the illusion that a few more nuclear weapons—or even tanks and drones—will secure peace through military victory.
We believe nuclear energy can be a source of hope for international cooperation—not just weapons and fear. And we are not alone here. This belief is at the heart of the Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT), the cornerstone document of global nuclear governance signed by 191 countries which enshrines an 'inalienable right' to peaceful uses of nuclear energy for all parties, in exchange for reducing and eliminating nuclear weapons. The key question before us is whether our leaders will use this amazing technology to help solve our greatest challenges.
The nuclear renaissance is here. From powering the development of nations in the global south while lowering carbon emissions to potentially curing cancer through repurposing nuclear reactor waste, nuclear energy is already being used for peaceful purposes. However, we have not fully explored the peaceful potential of nuclear energy.
We can use atoms to power peace. We have done this before. From 1993 to 2013, creative diplomacy helped achieve nuclear disarmament and peaceful uses simultaneously through the Megatons to Megawatts program. Together, the United States and Russia collaborated to downblended fissionable material from 20,000 Soviet-era nuclear warheads that were used as reactor fuel at nuclear power plants in the United States. This program provided 10% of total U.S. electricity for two decades.
We can do better today. Here are three ways how:
First, rather than waiting for another Soviet-like collapse in the international environment to explore the untapped potential of nuclear energy, we must begin the process now. Our international financial institutions can support nuclear energy initiatives around the world, from financing 'first-of-a-kind' reactor technology to marshalling funders for a developing country's first reactor.
Second, private funders can do more. Throughout the last century, philanthropic giving from some of the wealthiest individuals in history has fueled technological and societal transformation. They have enabled groundbreaking research in academia and the nonprofit sector which has informed our understanding of nuclear risks, and have facilitated cross-cultural engagement to transcend geopolitical divides. To secure international peace tomorrow, we need to revitalize philanthropists and foundations who are willing to fund a new generation of innovative thinkers informed, but not bound, by the past who will help us to navigate the challenges of today.
And third, we can help avoid nuclear catastrophe and maximize global abundance by collaborating on the peaceful applications of nuclear energy. This is a degree of global benefit worth striving for at the highest levels of the governments who control the most weapons. We know nuclear superpowers such as the U.S., China and Russia do not and will not agree on everything. The three have a mutual interest to prevent nuclear annihilation together. It doesn't require a perfect peace to begin the discussion about reducing nuclear threats and increasing abundance—it is something we must talk about despite the tensions and other conflicts—for our very survival.
If we choose, the same atom that once symbolized destruction can become the foundation for peace.
That was the vision in 1945. It can still be our future.
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Epoch Times
19 hours ago
- Epoch Times
Taiwan Calls on Its People to Reject CCP's Distortion of WWII, Anniversary Events
Taiwan has denounced the Chinese communist regime for using this year's anniversary to push its false claim that it was the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) that led the fighting against Japan's invasion during World War II, rather than the Republic of China government, which at the time ruled China. Aug. 15 marked the 80th anniversary of the end of WWII in Asia, known as Victory over Japan Day (V-J Day), as Japan announced its surrender on that day in 1945. Taiwan, which uses the official name the Republic of China (ROC) as shown on its citizens' passports, is the last territory of the republic that also ruled mainland China from 1911 to 1949. After being defeated by the CCP in 1949 on the mainland, the ROC's nationalist government, led by Chiang Kai-shek, retreated to the island of Taiwan, which was returned to China from Japanese occupation in 1945. The Republic of China has remained Taiwan's official name since then. Meanwhile, the CCP established the communist regime, the People's Republic of China (PRC), on the mainland in 1949. The CCP claims sovereignty over Taiwan despite that it has never ruled the island and it has not ruled out the possibility of using force to annex Taiwan. As the communist regime held commemoration events, including a military parade in Beijing to celebrate the 'CCP-led victory against Japanese invasion,' Taipei's top China-policy maker warned its people to be vigilant against the CCP's distortion of history and threats against the island nation. Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council Minister Chiu Chui-cheng pointed out in a video released by his office on Aug. 15 that the PRC did not exist during WWII. 'The Chinese Communist regime has repeatedly distorted the facts in recent years, claiming that the war against Japan was led by the Communist Party, and has even fabricated the notion that Taiwan belongs to the People's Republic of China,' Chiu said. He called on Taiwanese people to 'unite and jointly defend national sovereignty and dignity' to participate in Taiwan-led events instead of taking part in the PRC's war commemorations, such as the parade. In a statement posted on his Facebook page on Aug. 15, Taiwan (ROC)'s president Lai Ching-te stated, without directly naming the PRC, 'the most valuable lesson of World War Two is that unity leads to victory, while aggression leads to defeat.' Lai said that as authoritarianism once again gathers strength, it is important that freedom and democracy prevail. ROC Led the War, Not CCP The ROC was part of the Allied Forces alongside the United States during WWII, and its nationalist troops played a crucial role against Japan, not the communist troops. Epoch Times columnist Li Jian examined the major battles against Japan during WWII with numbers and details in his article for the Chinese language edition on Aug. 14. He pointed out that 'during the eight-year war, there were 22 large-scale battles between China and Japan, each of them involving more than 100,000 troops. The CCP army only participated in two battles, the Pingxingguan Battle and the Hundred Regiments Offensive,' and the rest were all fought by the nationalist troops alone. 'The ROC's nationalist army led by Chiang Kai-shek was the main force in the decisive battles and the core of the war of resistance,' he wrote. After the CCP's Long March (1934–1935), which was in fact its long escape from the ROC government's pursuit from its base in the southeast inland province of Jiangxi to northwest China, the CCP built a new base in Yan'an in Shanbei, northern Shaanxi Province. The new location was away from the northeast, eastern, and southern China that were occupied by Japan and where the main battles took place during WWII in China and Asia (1937–1945). While nationalist troops fought the Japanese invasion, the CCP largely remained in Yan'an in northern China. In The Generalissimo: Chiang Kai-shek and the Struggle for Modern China (2008), U.S. historian Jay Taylor detailed the allied efforts between the nationalist troops led by Chiang and the U.S. troops during WWII in China, including the famous U.S. pilots group Flying Tigers–The American Volunteer Group of the Republic of China Air Force to help oppose the Japanese invasion of China. In Forgotten Ally: China's War with Japan, 1937–1945 (2013), British historian Rana Mitter sheds light on the major battles that China fought against Japan, mostly by the nationalist troops, over the long eight years during WWII. It also highlighted the Chinese nationalist troops' crucial role in fighting against Japanese troops in the jungle of Burma, alongside the British and the American troops, preventing Japan from moving westward in Southeast Asia and into South Asia. When the CCP arrived in Yan'an after the Long March, it had only 6,000 troops. In 1945, when the Japanese surrendered, the CCP's army had grown to more than 900,000 regular soldiers, in addition to 2 million militia fighters, according to the 'Nine Commentaries on the Communist Party,' published by The Epoch Times. 'During the war, the CCP made a show of calling for resistance to the Japanese, but they only had local armies and guerrilla forces in camps away from the frontlines,' the 'Nine Commentaries' said. 'By marching through these northern provinces, it could claim to be 'fighting the Japanese' and win people's hearts.' In 1945, when the war with the Japanese came to an end, the civil war began to break out. Chiang had 39 'American-trained divisions, he had equipment, he had a high morale among his troops,' according to Sen. Joe McCarthy in 'America's Retreat From Liberty.' However, George Marshall was posted to China from 1945 to 1947 as the U.S. special envoy to China and enforced a policy that disarmed the nationalist army and forced the ROC into a unified government with the communists, McCarthy said. 'Marshall described one of his own acts as follows: 'As Chief-of-Staff I armed 39 anti-Communist divisions. Now with a stroke of a pen I disarm them,'' he said of Marshall's actions after the war. McCarthy said that while Marshall cut off the flow of arms to Chiang, he allowed support from the communists in Russia to the communists in Yan'an to flow unabated. In contrast to the nationalists' resistance against Japan, CCP leader Mao Zedong expressed gratitude to Japan's invasion on more than one occasion, which were recorded in official documents of the CCP and have been widely cited by international historians and media. For example, in 1972, Mao met with Japanese Prime Minister Takuei in Nanjing and told him no need to apologize for Japan's atrocities committed in China during the war. '[Japan] doesn't have to say sorry, you had contributed towards China, Why? Because [if] Imperial Japan did not start the war of invasion, how could we communists have become mighty powerful?' Mao said at the time. 'How could we stage the coup d'état? How could we defeat Chiang Kai Shek? How are we going to pay back you guys? No, we do not want your war reparations!' Renowned Chinese historian Xin Haonian concluded in a speech at a forum in Texas about China's war of resistance against Japanese invasion that 'the CCP did not fight against the Japanese, falsely claimed it fought against the Japanese, and even collaborated with the enemy and sold out the country.' However, for decades, 'it has not only continued to slander the other party [the nationalists] that consistently fought against the Japanese and led the war of resistance as a party that did not fight against the Japanese, but also continued to portray itself as 'the hero who led the entire nation to fight against the Japanese and achieve final victory.'' Xin said that the CCP's purpose is to use continued deception to legitimize its rule. CCP Has Never Ruled Taiwan After WWII, Taiwan, occupied by Japan from 1895 to 1945, was returned to the ROC, according to the Cairo Declaration (1943) and the Potsdam Declaration (1945), of which the ROC's President Chiang Kai-shek was one of the signing parties along with the leaders of the UK and the United States. The ROC formally accepted the handover on Oct. 25, 1945. When the nationalist troops were defeated by the communists in mainland China in China's civil war in 1949, the ROC government retreated to Taiwan, while the CCP established its communist regime on the mainland. Taiwan's president Lai stated the fact in his presidential inaugural address in 2024 that 'the Republic of China and the People's Republic of China are not subordinate to each other.' The CCP responded to Lai's rejection of Beijing's sovereignty claim by calling him a 'separatist.' Lai emphasized earlier this year in his series of public speeches in Taiwan that the PRC has never exercised sovereignty over Taiwan or other outlying islands administered by the ROC. 'Regardless of what name we choose to call our nation—the Republic of China, the Republic of China Taiwan, or Taiwan, we are an independent country,' he said.


Time Magazine
a day ago
- Time Magazine
Oppenheimer's Grandson: We Need a Peaceful Nuclear Renaissance
History is not just a record of what happened, it is a well of wisdom we can draw from to guide our actions today and in the future. Some dates are burned into our collective memory, such as Aug. 6 and 9, 1945, when nuclear weapons were used in war for the first and only time. Others are nearly forgotten. One of those forgotten days is Aug. 17, 1945. Acting on behalf of the Scientific Panel of the Interim Committee, my grandfather, J. Robert Oppenheimer wrote advice from the top scientists on the Manhattan Project in a letter to Secretary of War Henry Stimson. Just a week after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the letter offered advice so rooted in first principles that all of it remains true 80 years later: no nation can achieve absolute security through nuclear dominance. Considering this reality, global leaders must collaborate to resolve the underlying tensions between their nations to achieve no less than making future wars impossible. 'We are not only unable to outline a program that would assure to this nation for the next decades hegemony in the field of atomic weapons; we are equally unable to ensure that such hegemony, if achieved, could protect us from the most terrible destruction,' he wrote 80 years ago. During the war, scientists like Niels Bohr and my grandfather hoped the atomic bomb's terrible power might end all wars between great powers. They believed that once total war was recognized as unwinnable, nations could abandon zero-sum thinking and turn their energies to cooperation as the basis of international peace. 'We believe that the safety of this nation—as opposed to its ability to inflict damage on an enemy power—cannot lie wholly or even primarily in its scientific or technical prowess,' penned my grandfather. 'It can be based only on making future wars impossible.' In one respect, that hope has been realized. Since 1945, there has not been another direct confrontation between great powers such as the two world wars. In another respect, we failed. We did not prevent the arms race, and we have lived under the shadow of nuclear armageddon for nearly eight decades. Every minute of every day, we live in a perpetual state of complete vulnerability to the psycho-emotional whims of the leaders of the nuclear weapons states who, by merely giving an order, can eradicate civilization as we know it. The level of cooperation that ended WWII, which the Interim Committee recommended be marshalled for atomic energy in 1945, has not been reached. Without it we are still in grave danger, particularly from the often forgotten but always present threat of nuclear war. Despite our survival thus far, the latent danger from nuclear weapons remains. We must address and reduce the issue head-on. That is why my family and I have made it our mission to keep driving toward the goals set out by Robert and the Interim Committee eight decades ago. In this moment of particular danger, we must remind the world that victory in a total war between great powers is impossible and that there is unparalleled value in cross-cultural engagement and international cooperation. We recognize this alone will not resolve all conflict, which is far too complex and context-specific for generalized solutions. Yet, this does not require us to maintain the illusion that a few more nuclear weapons—or even tanks and drones—will secure peace through military victory. We believe nuclear energy can be a source of hope for international cooperation—not just weapons and fear. And we are not alone here. This belief is at the heart of the Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT), the cornerstone document of global nuclear governance signed by 191 countries which enshrines an 'inalienable right' to peaceful uses of nuclear energy for all parties, in exchange for reducing and eliminating nuclear weapons. The key question before us is whether our leaders will use this amazing technology to help solve our greatest challenges. The nuclear renaissance is here. From powering the development of nations in the global south while lowering carbon emissions to potentially curing cancer through repurposing nuclear reactor waste, nuclear energy is already being used for peaceful purposes. However, we have not fully explored the peaceful potential of nuclear energy. We can use atoms to power peace. We have done this before. From 1993 to 2013, creative diplomacy helped achieve nuclear disarmament and peaceful uses simultaneously through the Megatons to Megawatts program. Together, the United States and Russia collaborated to downblended fissionable material from 20,000 Soviet-era nuclear warheads that were used as reactor fuel at nuclear power plants in the United States. This program provided 10% of total U.S. electricity for two decades. We can do better today. Here are three ways how: First, rather than waiting for another Soviet-like collapse in the international environment to explore the untapped potential of nuclear energy, we must begin the process now. Our international financial institutions can support nuclear energy initiatives around the world, from financing 'first-of-a-kind' reactor technology to marshalling funders for a developing country's first reactor. Second, private funders can do more. Throughout the last century, philanthropic giving from some of the wealthiest individuals in history has fueled technological and societal transformation. They have enabled groundbreaking research in academia and the nonprofit sector which has informed our understanding of nuclear risks, and have facilitated cross-cultural engagement to transcend geopolitical divides. To secure international peace tomorrow, we need to revitalize philanthropists and foundations who are willing to fund a new generation of innovative thinkers informed, but not bound, by the past who will help us to navigate the challenges of today. And third, we can help avoid nuclear catastrophe and maximize global abundance by collaborating on the peaceful applications of nuclear energy. This is a degree of global benefit worth striving for at the highest levels of the governments who control the most weapons. We know nuclear superpowers such as the U.S., China and Russia do not and will not agree on everything. The three have a mutual interest to prevent nuclear annihilation together. It doesn't require a perfect peace to begin the discussion about reducing nuclear threats and increasing abundance—it is something we must talk about despite the tensions and other conflicts—for our very survival. If we choose, the same atom that once symbolized destruction can become the foundation for peace. That was the vision in 1945. It can still be our future.
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
Taiwan tells its people to spurn China's 'distorted' war anniversary events
By Ben Blanchard and Faith Hung TAIPEI (Reuters) -Taiwan's people should spurn China's events to commemorate the end of World War Two, including a military parade in Beijing, given Chinese "distortion" of history and threats against the island, Taipei's top China-policy maker said on Friday. China, which views democratic Taiwan as its own territory, has invited Taiwanese veterans who fought against Japan to the parade next month which will be overseen by President Xi Jinping. Taiwan has denounced China for using this year's 80th anniversary of the war's end for political purposes against Taipei, saying Beijing has falsely claimed it was the Communist Party that led the fighting against Japan rather than the Republic of China government, which at the time ruled China. The republican government then fled to Taiwan in 1949 after finally being defeated by Mao Zedong, who then established the People's Republic of China, while Republic of China remains Taiwan's official name. In a video released by his office, Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council Minister Chiu Chui-cheng said the People's Republic of China did not even exist during World War Two. "The Chinese Communist regime has repeatedly distorted the facts in recent years, claiming that the war against Japan was led by the Communist Party, and has even fabricated the notion that Taiwan belongs to the People's Republic of China," Chiu said. The government urges Taiwan's people to "unite and jointly defend national sovereignty and dignity" and not take part in China's war commemorations, like the parade, he added. People should instead participate in Taiwan's own events to express their resolve to protect Taiwan and oppose aggression, Chiu said. China's Taiwan Affairs Office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. China has for its part also accused Taiwan of distorting the history of the war for its own purposes. In a statement posted on his Facebook page earlier on Friday to mark the anniversary, Taiwan President Lai Ching-te said, without directly mentioning China, that aggression only leads to defeat, and as authoritarianism once again gathers strength, it is important that freedom and democracy prevail. "The most valuable lesson of World War Two is that unity leads to victory, while aggression leads to defeat," he wrote. China calls Lai, who rejects Beijing's sovereignty claims, a "separatist" and has rebuffed his offers of talks. Late on Thursday, Taiwan said it had banned government officials and former senior defence, intelligence and diplomatic officials from attending Beijing's military parade.