N. 43, November 2003
Edward Teller, Dr. Strangelove
Physicist Edward Teller has moved
on, as the ancient Romans used to say, to the
Elysian Fields. Good riddance, I say, paraphrasing
George W. Bushs comment in another context.
Which is ironic, because obviously Bush thought
highly enough of Teller to accord him the Presidential
Medal of Freedom in 2003, the highest civilian
honor in the United States.
Famously, of a different opinion
was physicist Nobel laureate Isidor Rabi, who
remarked that the world would have been a better
place without Teller. E. Teller was a real-life
Dr. Strangelove (of how I learned to stop
worrying and love the bomb memory), the
immortal character played by Peter Sellers in
the film directed by Stanley Kubrick in 1964.
(A Google search revealed that there are three
primary suspects for being the inspiration for
Strangelove: Henri Kissinger, Werner von Braun,
and Edward Teller -- I vote for a nicely split
award).
Perhaps Tellers most outspoken
critic was Carl Sagan, who wrote a poignant
essay on Teller-Strangelove entitled When
Scientists Know Sin (republished in his
The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle
in the Dark). Sagan met Teller several times,
both in private and in public debate, and --
as a physicist himself -- was in a primary position
to evaluate not only Tellers technical
work, but also how accurately he portrayed it
to the public and to politicians like Ronald
Reagan. Sagan reminds us of Tellers advocacy
of all sorts of civilian uses for
the H-bomb (which Teller helped develop and
aggresively advocated): from scientific experiments
(lets explode one on the moon to analyze
the resulting gas and dust and see what our
satellite is made of), to -- believe it or not
-- construction projects (e.g., to eliminate
mountains that may get in the way of roads or
dams).
Sagan take on it is that
perhaps Teller was desperately trying to justify
to the world his life-long work in nuclear weapons
development, truly an attempt to make all of
us love the bomb (and, by reflection,
his chief inventor and advocate). There are
also plenty of personal circumstances that help
explain Tellers hawkshiness, like the
fact that when he was young the communists confiscated
his familys property in his native Hungary.
That he lost a leg as a result of a streetcar
accident, and was in permanent pain throughout
the rest of his long life, probably didnt
help to soften Tellers character either.
Be that as it may, Teller took
advantage of McCarthyism and the paranoia that
swept the US during the first phases of the
cold war, to attack his colleague Robert Oppenheimer
(who coordinated the Manhattan Project that
had led to the development of the atomic bomb)
for being too soft as well as disloyal to the
United States. Oppenheimers crime, in
Tellers eyes, was his critical stance
on the further development and use of weapons
of mass destruction, tough Oppenheimer was joined
in his campaign by many leading scientific figures
of the time, most famously Albert Einstein.
Tellers academic life was
also rather controversial. While he was called
the father of the H-bomb, there
is good reason to believe that his original
idea was flawed and would not have worked without
substantial revisions carried out by many people
working under him. When Sagan and other scientists
discovered the possibility of a nuclear
winter following the launch of a thermo-nuclear
attack (even without retaliation), Teller both
claimed that the science underlying the nuclear
winter scenario was flawed, and that he had
discovered the possibility several years earlier,
but did not alert the public or politicians
about it.
Now, what sort of monster can
stumble on a discovery that could very well
annihilate humankind, or at the very least cause
the death and suffering of hundreds of millions
of people, and make the unilateral and private
decision of not sharing such discovery with
the rest of the world? The sheer arrogance of
such an attitude is hard to comprehend, although
it would fit very well with the current administrations
policy of secrecy and military aggression (it
may not be a coincidence that one of the many
good things President Clinton did not do was
to award Teller the Presidential Medal of Freedom).
In Kubricks movie, in response
to President Merkin Muffleys (also played
by Sellers) question about why the Doomsday
Machine can be automatically triggered,
but not manually untriggered, Strangelove answers
with perfect il-logic: "Mr. President,
it is not only possible, it is essential. That
is the whole idea of this machine, you know.
Deterrence is the art of producing in the mind
of the enemy the fear to attack. And so, because
of the automated and irrevocable decision-making
process which rules out human meddling, the
doomsday machine is terrifying. It's simple
to understand. And completely credible, and
convincing." That is the sort of reasoning
that Teller advocated in real life, and which
brought us the hydrogen bomb and Star Wars (not
the movie). Teller is finally now gone, but
his twisted logic is still endorsed by the Hawks
currently usurping the White House, and the
War Room is as busy as ever. It is most urgent
that each one of us contribute to write a different
finale to this movie than the apocaliptic one
Kubrick chose for his fictional version.