Truman
was president when the
Doomsday Clock was unveiled in
1947, at 7 minutes to
midnight. Truman stoked the
nuclear arms race and left
office with the clock at just
3 minutes to midnight.
Eisenhower continued the
nuclear arms race but also
entered into the first-ever
negotiations with the Soviet
Union regarding nuclear
disarmament. By the time he
left office, the clock was put
back to 7 minutes to midnight.
Kennedy saved the world by
coolly reasoning his way
through the Cuban Missile
Crisis, rather than following
the advice of hothead advisors
who called for war (for a
detailed account, see Martin
Sherwin’s magisterial Gambling
with Armageddon, 2020).
He then negotiated the Partial
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty with
Khrushchev in 1963. By the
time of his death, which may
well have been a government
coup resulting from Kennedy’s
peace initiative, JFK had
pushed the clock back to 12
minutes to midnight, a
magnificent and historic
achievement.
It was not to last. Lyndon
Johnson soon escalated in
Vietnam and pushed the clock
back again to just 7 minutes
to midnight. Richard Nixon
eased tensions with both the
Soviet Union and China, and
concluded the Strategic Arms
Limitation Treaty (SALT I),
pushing the clock again to 12
minutes from midnight. Yet
Gerald Ford and Jimmy
Carter failed to secure SALT
II, and Carter fatefully and
unwisely gave a green light to
the CIA in 1979 to destabilize
Afghanistan. By the time
Ronald Reagan took office, the
clock was at just 4 minutes to
midnight.
The next 12 years marked the
end of the Cold War. Much of
the credit is due to Mikhail
Gorbachev, who aimed to reform
the Soviet Union politically
and economically, and to end
the confrontation with the
West. Yet credit is also due
to Reagan and his successor
George Bush, Sr., who
successfully worked with
Gorbachev to end the Cold War,
which in turn was followed by
the end of the Soviet Union
itself in December 1991. By
the time Bush left office, the
Doomsday clock was at 17
minutes to midnight, the
safest since the start of the
nuclear age.
Sadly, the U.S. security
establishment could not take
“Yes” for an answer when
Russia said an emphatic yes to
peaceful and cooperative
relations. The U.S. needed to
“win” the Cold War, not just
end it. It needed to declare
itself and prove itself to be
the sole superpower of the
world, the one that would
unilaterally write the rules
of a new U.S.-led “rules-based
order.” The post-1992 U.S.
therefore launched wars and
expanded its vast network of
military bases as it saw fit,
steadfastly and ostentatiously
ignoring the red lines of
other nations, indeed aiming
to drive nuclear adversaries
into humiliating retreats.
Since 1992, every president
has left the U.S. and the
world closer to nuclear
annihilation than his
predecessor. The Doomsday
Clock was at 17 minutes to
midnight when Clinton came to
office, but just 9 minutes
when he left it. Bush pushed
the clock to just 5 minutes,
Obama to 3 minutes, and Trump
to a mere 100 seconds. Now
Biden has taken the clock to
90 seconds.
Biden has led the U.S. into
three fulminant crises, any
one of which could end up in
Armageddon. By insisting on
NATO enlargement to Ukraine,
against Russia’s bright red
line, Biden has repeatedly
pushed for Russia’s
humiliating retreat. By siding
with a genocidal Israel,
he has stoked a new Middle
East arms race and a
dangerously expanding Middle
East conflict. By taunting
China over Taiwan, which the
U.S. ostensibly recognizes as
part of one China, he is
inviting a war with China.
Trump similarly stirred the
nuclear pot on several fronts,
most flagrantly with China and
Iran.
Washington seems of a single
mind these days: more funding
for wars in Ukraine and Gaza,
more armaments for Taiwan. We
slouch ever closer to
Armageddon. Polls show the
American people overwhelmingly
disapprove of U.S. foreign
policy, but their
opinion counts for very
little. We need to shout for
peace from every hilltop. The
survival of our children and
grandchildren depends on it.