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Opinion: ‘Oppenheimer’ only makes it harder to control nuclear weapons

A movie scene of a man in glaring light, wearing protective glasses looking through a porthole
Cillian Murphy as the father of the atomic bomb in the movie “Oppenheimer.”
(Universal Pictures)
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The movie “Oppenheimer” hypes a serious issue of national survival, and in the process makes matters much, much worse. By mythologizing J. Robert Oppenheimer (and in the process ascribing god-like powers to nuclear weapons), the movie sets back efforts to control these dangerous devices.

True, people who watch the movie will emerge frightened about nuclear war. But decades of terrifying pictures of ash, rubble and burned bodies haven’t, apparently, stifled governments’ desire for these weapons. All nine nuclear-armed states are currently increasing their arsenals or upgrading them. Fear, in other words, hasn’t worked.

Hyping the danger has the unintended consequence of hyping the weapons. If the danger is awesome, then the weapons must be, too.

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Starring Cillian Murphy in the title role as the architect of the Manhattan Project, the historical drama also features Florence Pugh and Robert Downey Jr.

Nuclear weapons have always been overhyped. All this “Now I am become Death, the Destroyer of Worlds” stuff (the phrase that Oppenheimer said came to his mind as he watched the first atomic test) is great showmanship, but it’s hardly realistic.

Oppenheimer didn’t become Death: His security clearance was revoked, and he was put out to pasture in Princeton. And nuclear weapons, although they are appallingly destructive, are unlikely to be the Destroyer of Worlds. There are about 800 million people living in the Southern Hemisphere, where there are no nuclear weapons and no likely targets.

The risks of playing the danger card are neatly summed up by what happens when you substitute the word “apocalypse” for “nuclear war.” Apocalypse narratives are mythological stories about the end of the world. What’s easy to overlook about these narratives is the way they disempower. War, catastrophe, plague or whatever brings about divine retribution is always far beyond human control. Applying apocalypse mythology to nuclear weapons takes agency and control out of our hands. Framing nuclear war as apocalypse subconsciously insists that we are powerless.

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Onscreen portrayals of the bomb’s history have been incomplete at best, sanitized at worst. How will Christopher Nolan’s film stack up?

“Oppenheimer” goes all-out to reinforce the god-like power of nuclear weapons. The ear-numbing soundtrack, the explosions and flashing lights, the boiling clouds of fire — all of it is designed to overawe us with almighty power. One scene in the movie literally shows the globe slowly being engulfed in flames.

And not only does hyping the weapons make us feel hopeless, it fills the power-mad with burning desire. Do you imagine that someone like North Korea’s Kim Jong Un could watch this movie and come away with any other conclusion than that nuclear weapons give him god-like power?

Which is nonsense.

Nuclear weapons are dangerous, sure, but the truth is they are too big to be practically useful. They’re so big they’re clumsy. You can’t use them on the battlefield because if you bomb your adversary’s front-line troops the explosion is so big it kills some of your own. And the radiation makes it hard to use the weapons even 20 miles behind the lines.

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There’s a reason no military officers came forward to angrily denounce President George H.W. Bush when he declared that the United States was unilaterally removing all but a handful of its nuclear weapons from Europe. The military had done the simulations, they’d studied the data, and they apparently concluded — just as President Eisenhower apparently did in Korea, the French did in Vietnam, and Colin Powell did in the Gulf War — that nuclear weapons are too clumsy to use in battle. Why do you think the average yield of nuclear weapons warheads in the U.S. arsenal is roughly five times smaller today than it was in the 1960s? They’re smaller because practically speaking, the weapons are just too big to be useful.

Think about it: If nuclear weapons are so decisive why don’t they get used more often? War is a remorselessly pragmatic business. If a weapon can help you win a war, then it likely will be used. The notion that nuclear weapons haven’t been used for the better part of a century because of scruples or some sort of taboo underestimates the human capacity for brutality.

‘Oppenheimer’ is right about some aspects of the Manhattan Project, wrong about others, and skates over aspects that you might find interesting. Here’s a rundown.

What seems far more likely is that nuclear weapons haven’t been used because it’s hard to find a practical use for them. If a tool stays in the drawer year after year after year, that’s probably not a sign that you’re reverentially holding back from using it. It’s probably a sign that it has limited utility.

“Oppenheimer” breeds fatalism. It puts the weapons in charge and casts humans as walk-ons. The truth, however, is the opposite. As President Kennedy said: “No problem of human destiny is beyond human beings.” We decide what happens, not the machinery of war. The more we hype the machinery, and treat weapons like gods, the less we live in reality.

If nuclear weapons are a problem, we need to take sensible, pragmatic action. Want to watch a movie that scares you into throwing your hands in the air and admitting you’re helpless? See “Oppenheimer.” Want to step up and actually do something useful about the danger nuclear weapons pose? All right, then. Let’s get to it.

Ward Hayes Wilson is the executive director of RealistRevolt and the author of the forthcoming “It Is Possible: A Future Without Nuclear Weapons.”

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