4 SEPT 2016
US TESTING NUCLEAR MISSILE THAT CAN INCINERATE MILLIONS,HO HUM
NO SANCTIONS, NO FUSS FOR MINUTEMAN-III TEST
(...IF THE DPRK HAD TESTED IT WOULD BE THE END OF THE WORLD)
As  the US tests yet another (unarmed) Minuteman-III at Vandenberg  Air-force Base, on the Californian west coast not so far from San  Francisco, LA and Santa Barbara, the local – and global reaction can  only be described as 'Ho, Hum'. Though the event is announced clearly on  the website of Vandenberg Air-force Base, those who do not obsessively  follow such events would be blissfully unaware of it.
The US  regularly tests Minuteman-III missiles, capable of lofting  city-destroying nuclear warheads anywhere from 100Kt to a megaton or  larger in size, firing them from Vandenberg Air-force base to its  missile testing site in Kwajelein Atoll in the Marshall Islands. Russia,  China, France, India, Pakistan and occasionally Israel regularly test  missiles as or more deadly than the now aging US Minuteman-III. Like  those of the US, these tests attract little or no attention.
The  Marshall Islands, in whose territory the missile will land, has taken  the US, the UK, France, India, Pakistan, China, Russia, the DPRK and  Israel to the International Court of Justice in an attempt to show that  their nuclear weapons programs violate international law.
A Citizens Tribunal in Sydney recently indicted the same governments for endangering civilization and human survival.
http://www.global-directions.c om/ipt.pdf
http://sydney.edu.au/arts/peac e_conflict/practice/HSP_Tribun al.shtml
If  the DPRK had tested a missile with capabilities remotely close to the  Minuteman-III,(or Russia's Topol-M, or the Indian Agni, or the Chinese  DF5 or 41) it would have been figuratively speaking, the 'end of the  world', with sanctions and UN Security Council resolutions.
No doubt there will be no diplomatic reaction at all to this Sundays Minuteman-III test.
There  should be. The test comes immediately after the Geneva-Based Open-Ended  Working Group on Nuclear Disarmament demonstrated clearly that an  overwhelming majority of the worlds governments want to negotiate a  multilateral legally binding 'instrument' that will outlaw nuclear  weapons.
A vote on that will come up in October at the UN General  Assembly. It will hopefully pass with a big majority, but there isn't a  government that should not be voting for it. That includes the  Australian Government, who has consistently tried to undermine what it  calls an 'unrealistic' ban.
The irony is that, of course, the US  and Russia, with a number of thousands of very powerful nuclear weapons  each, and just under 2000 of them kept on high alert, able to be  launched in 'a few dozens of seconds', really CAN end the world. They  have come terrifyingly close on just over a dozen occasions.
The DPRK is not remotely close to this unique capability. Most of the DPRKs recent tests haven't even worked at all.
So  perhaps, when the US (Or Russia, France, China, Pakistan, or India)  tests an utterly lethal missile, one that we already know for sure works  with terrifying reliability, there really should be an outcry, as the  end of everything inches just a centimeter closer.
John Hallam
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