Why We Need Nukes and Gitmo
By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
What do Yucca Mountain and Guantanamo Bay have in common?
Well, there's the obvious stuff. Both have Spanish names. Neither is a great
spot for a family vacation. Each is controlled by the federal government.
Oh, and both are essential tools in wars a lot of people claim they want to
win.
See, Yucca Mountain is where the government wants to keep incredibly
dangerous substances - nuclear waste - until we figure out a better way to
handle it.
Guantanamo Bay is where the government keeps incredibly dangerous people -
jihadi enemy combatants - until we figure out a better way to handle them.
Victory in the war against climate change is inconceivable without nuclear
power. Even if we turned America's breadbasket into ethanol-corn and solar
farms, we wouldn't come close to reducing carbon emissions to 80 percent
below 1990 levels by 2050 (Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama's avowed goal,
compared with John McCain's target of 60 percent). Even if every American
lived like a Prius-driving, vegan eco-feminist, we'd still fall far short. A
recent MIT study found that even the homeless in America have twice the
carbon footprint of the global average.
Clean, efficient, safe nuclear energy could force enormous savings in CO2
emissions, replacing coal- and gas-burning power plants on a scale solar
never can. It also would boost America's "energy independence," a phrase
environmentalists use to enlist support from Americans immune to climate
fear-mongering.
Is it a silver bullet? Surely not. But expanding our nuclear energy
infrastructure belongs near the top of the list of options for those who say
we must do "everything in our power" to stop global warming. (I'm not one of
those people, by the way.)
But generating nuclear power produces radioactive waste, so we really should
find a safe place to put it. Yucca Mountain, in the Nevada desert, is just
such a place. But anti-nuclear environmentalists have done everything they
can to keep it from opening, largely because having a safe waste repository
would make nuclear power more attractive.
Which brings me back to Guantanamo Bay, where the Yuccafication process is
nearly complete.
Much like Yucca Mountain, lots of things are said about Gitmo that aren't
true. Yucca is derided as unsafe, when its biggest shortcoming is that its
designers can't promise that in 10,000 years a passerby who digs up waste
won't be exposed to much more than a few chest X-rays' worth of radiation.
Gitmo, likewise, is routinely lumped in with the more legitimate outrage
over mistreatment of detainees at Abu Ghraib and the more complicated
controversies over renditions and CIA black sites. In reality, argues Andrew
McCarthy in the National Review, Gitmo "is probably the most scrutinized
prison in modern history." McCarthy, who as assistant U.S. attorney
prosecuted the first World Trade Center bombers, is the author of an
invaluable new book, "Willful Blindness: A Memoir of the Jihad." His
assessment of Guantanamo continues: "It is also among the most humane,
complete with halal meals, a bursting library, lush recreation facilities,
communal prayer breaks and even white-gloved U.S. soldiers - Muslims only,
please - delivering to each detainee a Koran (U.S. government-issued, even
though the inmates believe it commands them to kill Americans)."
Nonetheless, Gitmo will soon be closed because President Bush and his likely
successors all want it closed. OK, fine. But here's the thing: If you want
to fight a war on terrorism, or any war, you need to put captured combatants
someplace - someplace other than a conventional U.S. prison, where they're
treated like any other criminals.
McCarthy prosecuted jihadi terrorists as criminals in the 1990s, but he
rightly scorns the idea that we can treat terrorists like bank robbers. That
Clinton-era strategy "can be considered a success only if one's chief
preoccupation is due process. Viewed through the prism of national security,
the effort was an abysmal failure." According to McCarthy, from the 1993
World Trade Center bombing to 9/11, only 29 mostly low-level operatives were
caught and tried in the U.S., costing taxpayers millions and doing little to
prevent the 9/11 attacks.
The halls of Congress echo with righteous denunciations of Gitmo's alleged
horrors, but silence reigns supreme when it comes time to offer serious
alternatives. Likewise, Yucca Mountain is ridiculed as a white elephant by
the same politicians who want to pour billions into ethanol and solar power.
The Yuccafication of Gitmo, or the Gitmoizing of Yucca Mountain, are two
versions of the same story. Political elites passionately declare their
commitment to a desired end - victory in this war or that - but are feckless
about providing means to those ends.
Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online.
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