The people
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
experienced the massive, profound, long-lasting horror and trauma of
atomic bombing on August 6 and 9, 1945, respectively. On our behalf,
they tasted the hellish end of the world that nuclear weapons hold in
store, and for sixty years the survivors have done everything in their
power to communicate a single message: it must never happen again. Will
they succeed in awakening the world from its insane nuclear trance? Or
will the past be forgotten, and repeated.
Incredibly,
some in the United States,
Russia, Britain, France, China, Israel, India, Pakistan and North Korea
still believe that nuclear weapons have a legitimate purpose and can be
used to their benefit. They fail to understand that any use of even a
single nuclear weapon for whatever purpose will benefit only warmongers
seeking to increase violence and terrorists seeking to destroy
civilization. Any use of nuclear weapons will overwhelm any meaningful
medical response.
The day of
deterrence is done. The great
majority of people and nations on Earth want nuclear weapons
permanently gone. It is technically feasible to be safely rid of these
expensive, heinous, and absurdly dangerous weapons by the year 2020.
All that is needed is the political will, and we are the majority. The
time has come to liberate ourselves, our children, and their children
from the intolerable, unconscionable threat of annihilation. Please let
your leaders know that you will accept nothing less.
Morality is
at the core of the nuclear
issue: are we going to base our world on a culture of peace or on a
culture of violence? Nuclear weapons are fundamentally immoral: their
action is indiscriminate, killing people alive now and generations as
yet unborn. And the consequence of their use might be to bring the
human race to an end. We do not believe that the people of the world
would accept a policy that is inherently immoral and likely to end in
catastrophe.
We all have
a common interest: survival.
We have to move forward from a now outdated security system based on
nuclear deterrence and alliances, to one based on cooperation and
allegiance to humankind. In the words of the Russell-Einstein
Manifesto, signed by Albert Einstein as one of the last acts of his
life: "We appeal, as human beings to human beings: Remember your
humanity and forget the rest. If you can do so, the way lies open to a
new Paradise; if you cannot, there lies before you the risk of
universal death."
Above all:
Remember your humanity.
Tadatoshi Akiba, Mayor of Hiroshima
Iccho Itoh, Mayor of Nagasaki
Sir Joseph Rotblat, Nobel Peace Laureate
Dr Ronald McCoy and Dr Gunnar Westberg
Co-Presidents, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear
War