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Joseph Cirincione:A ray of
light amid the weapons hype
BY MITCHELL J. TROPIN
Photo: Julie Wiatt
Takoma Park's Joseph Cirincione, nicknamed the "dirty
bomb expert," is a leading source for information on
nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons.
Since September 11th, the
government and the media have engaged in a steady downpour
of hype on the threat from weapons of mass destruction. Standing
up to this storm of exaggeration, like a beacon in the darkness,
is Takoma Parks Joseph Cirincione, director of the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peaces Non-Proliferation
Project.
Nicknamed the "dirty bomb expert," Cirincione is
a leading source for non-hysterical information on nuclear,
biological, and chemical weapons.
Less than a month after Cirincione became director in 1998,
India and Pakistan tested nuclear devices.
"The phones have not stopped ringing," he said.
"Its one crisis after another. Either its
North Korea, the Iranian nuclear program, the U.S. debate
on building new nuclear weapons, or loose nukes in Russia,"
he said.
The events following Sept. 11including the Iraqi Warhave
only increased a heavy workload.
To show the objective side of the story, Cirincione will
simplify critical issues by "stripping them of their
political skins so that people can know the facts and make
up their own mind."
He said it is imperative that those who want to counter the
governments hype work closely with the media.
"Activists cant do it alone; you have to use the
media as a leveler and to amplify your message," he said.
But making a connection with the press requires establishing
credibility. Cirinciones approach involves months of
research, distilling the information into comprehensive studies,
refining the studies into shorter news articles, and then
compressing the essence of the issue even further into quick
news bites.
"A journalist needs to know that behind a 10-second
sound bite is a foundation of comprehensive research,"
he said, adding that he often spends hours working with a
journalist so they receive the best possible factual analysis.
"Theyve got to see that I am more than a wise guy
with a clever slogan."
The son of a drug store manager, Cirincione was born in Bronx,
N.Y., growing up in a small town in Connecticut. After attending
Boston College, Cirincione settled in the Boston area.
Years of interest in social justice led to work as a tenant
organizer. He was a chief organizer for the Tenants First
Coalition, the largest organization in Massachusetts for residents
of federally subsidized housing. It was then that Cirincione
discovered he had a knack for organizing.
Through his social justice work, Cirincione met a young lawyer
who was representing tenants in a rent strike. The attorney
was Priscilla Labovitz, who is widely known in Takoma Park
for her work with immigrants. Cirincione and Priscilla recently
celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary.
The tenant movement ran its course, and international events
were beginning to heat up. It was 1979, the year of the Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan. Deciding to "retool" his
energy, Cirincione attended Georgetown Universitys School
of Foreign Service.
Joseph and Priscilla then moved to Takoma Park. Their plan
was to relocate to New England once Joseph earned his masters
degree. Twenty-four years and two houses later, they are still
residents of Takoma Park.
"Each time we decided to move, we looked at other neighborhoodseven
Virginiabut we couldnt find anything nicer,"
Cirincione said. "We did not want give up what Takoma
Park gave us."
While at Georgetown, Cirincione met Scott Thompson, a professor
who had been a liberal but had turned neo-conservative, before
the term was coined. Thompson became Assistant Director of
the U.S. Information Agency under President Reagan, bringing
Cirincione along. The liberal Cirincione found himself surrounded
by conservative thinkerspeople like Oliver North, before
the former Marine became a household name.
While still intending to leave Washington, Cirincione found
himself working for Florida Congressman Charles Bennett. Bennett
created with then-Pennsylvania Congressman Tom Ridge the Military
Reform Caucus, appointing Cirincione as staff director. The
caucus won a major victory by helping cut funds for Star Wars,
limiting appropriations for five straight years, Cirincione
said.
Then a call came from the Henry L. Stimson Center, a DuPont
Circle think tank. With great reluctance, Cirincione left
Congress to join the center. It turned out to be most fortuitous
decision. Several months later, Republicans gained control
of the House in 1995 and fired virtually every Democratic
staffer.
"If you didnt have a red R on your
office door, avenging angels came along and whacked you,"
Cirincione said.
At Stimson, Cirincione launched a project to promote the
extension of nuclear proliferation treaty. The timing was
perfect.
"Proliferation had always been around but always as
a secondary concern," he said.
But by 1995, defense and intelligence officials were realizing
that the spread of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons
were increasing as threats to the United States.
Cirincione headed up a coalition of arms control and national
security groups which wanted to extend the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty, signed in 1970 by the United States and 61 other countries.
The coalition faced a dilemma: an international conference
was planned for April 1995 that would decide the future of
the treaty, which had become the sole legal global document
against the spread of nuclear weapons.
The Clinton Administration, however, was showing little interest
in the treaty or the conference. Concerted efforts by Cirincione
and others made the Clinton White House sit up and take notice.
The conference led to the indefinite extension of the treaty
and its expansion.
The campaigns success prompted several groups to hire
Cirincione to take on a related project: build support for
Senate ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.
This time, however, the treaty was unable to overcome staunch
opposition from conservative Senate Republicans, who refused
to bring the treaty up for a Senate vote. The Bush Administration
has steadfastly refused to ask the Senate to consider the
CTBT.
"The CTBT ran into trouble with Republican conservatives
because it was Bill Clintons treaty," Cirincione
said. "They also are opposed to the very idea that the
United States would agree to restraint any of its military
options. The Bush Administration wants nothing to do with
it."
Despite being "on life support," Cirincione sees
the CTBT as being very much alive and effective despite the
fact it has not been ratified, adding it is one of the most
important achievements in Clintons eight years in office.
"The CTBT serves as an effective barrier to nuclear
testing. The very existence of the treatyeven though
it hasnt entered into forcehas helped mobilized
public opinion against nuclear testing," he said. "Any
test would be considered a major international crisis, and
no testing has happened despite pressure from nuclear bureaucracies
to test, including those in the United States."
Cirincione also is outraged by "the mass exaggeration
of the mass destruction threat." He believes that much
of the hyperbole is coming from people who are "exaggering
the threat to justify pre-existing agenda, whether it is vast
increases in spending for defense, a missile defense system,
or curtailing of civil liberties, or pre-emptive war."
Cirincione acknowledges there are real dangers to Americans,
but he doesnt believe that that we should live in fear
of nuclear attack.
"There is little danger that a terrorist group is going
to fire an intercontinental ballistic missile with a nuclear
warhead and lob it at Washington. Thats not going to
happen," Cirincione said. "[But] one would never
know that from the Bush Administrations budget for defense,
which has hit $9 billion a year with no end in sight, and
the rush to deploy a missile defense system in time for the
2004 elections. It is all being promoted in the name of anti-terrorism.
My job is to question it."
Cirincione compares the Bush Administration to the operators
of the computer-generated Matrix, saying that, as shown in
the film of the same name, the president has generated a false
realitya reality that the American public has accepted.
One of Cirinciones best opportunities to shed light
on the truth came along in April 2002, when he appeared on
Comedy Centrals "Daily Show," hosted by comedian
Jon Stewart.
Just prior to Cirinciones appearance, Attorney General
John Ashcroft had disclosed that the U.S. has acquired information
that terrorists were planning to explode a dirty bomb that
would spread radioactive materials across a major city, killing
thousands.
Once Circincione went on stage, Stewart had some fun with
him, making wisecracks. But he then gave Cirincione that one
critical moment to speak. Cirincione made the most of the
occasion, commenting on the news development and stressing
that Ashcroft only had produced "loose talk," with
no concrete evidence of an imminent attack. The threat is
not as immediate or as grave as the media or the administration
has made it, he said, and a dirty bomb, while theoretically
possible, would not cause mass destruction or loss or lives.
Cirincione then spoke about what officials have been doing
to limit the threat of proliferation, noting the achievements
of non-proliferation treaties.
"The world is safer than when I was a kid," Stewart
said.
It may have only been a few minutes on a cable television
show, but Cirincione said it was a great chance to give solid,
undistorted information to the 18-to-25 segment of the population.
Moreover, the appearance made Cirincione a big hit with his
two children, Peter and Amy, and their friends.
"I was able to reach a group that is not watching NBC
news or reading a newspaper," he said.
Amidst the daily onslaught of fear-inducing news stories,
the public has overlooked the good news, Cirincione said.
"So much of the news stems from the fear that millions
could die, but people tend to lose sight of what has been
accomplished: the world hasnt blown up; there is no
threat of global nuclear war, and no one has used nuclear
weapons in the more than 50 years since World War II. The
number of nuclear weapons has decreased greatly and so has
the number of countries pursuing nuclear weapon programs,"
he said.
He credits the decline in the threat of nuclear war to dedicated
efforts by many countriesincluding the United States,
which used to take the lead in such efforts.
"What is so tragic is that the current leadership of
the Republican Party is turning its back on the regime created
by Eisenhower, Nixon, Reagan, and [George H.W.] Bush."
Cirincione also criticizes the George W. Bush White House
for reversing decades of achievement by prior administrations
to reduce the danger from nuclear, chemical, and biological
weapons.
"We have shifted from eliminating weapons to eliminating
regimes," he told an American University audience in
March.
Noting concern over reports that Iran is developing nuclear
weapons, Cirincione said that Bushs foreign policies
could be increasing problems in that region.
"Iran may believe that nuclear weapons may be the only
way to stop a U.S. invasion," he said. "The U.S.
needs to reach out to Irans leaders and give them a
reason to pursue an alternative that doesnt include
having nuclear weapons."
Cirincione is the author of Deadly Arsenals: Tracking
Weapons of Mass Destruction, which examines the dangers
nations face today from those weapons, and the successes and
failures of international nonproliferation efforts. Cirincione
also is experimenting with other means of getting information,
such as a DVD on the proliferation threat. But Cirincione
has already accomplished more than he could have imagined.
"The stopping of Star Wars and the development of the
CTBT are two of the things Im most proud of," Cirincione
said. "Theyre the kind of things you think of achieving
when youre a student. Then you come to Washington and,
no kiddingan individual makes a difference."
On Sunday, July 20 at 5 p.m., Joe Cirincione will be discussing
his book Deadly Arsenals: Tracking Weapons of Mass Destruction
at Politics and Prose Bookstore & Coffeehouse, 5015 Connecticut
Avenue, NW. For information, call 202-364-1919.
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