ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Emma Belcher - Nuclear security expert
Emma Belcher develops and implements strategy for reducing the threat posed by nuclear weapons.

Why you should listen

Emma Belcher is the Director of Nuclear Challenges at the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. In partnership with the MacArthur Foundation board of directors and president, she allocates roughly 20 million dollars in grants annually to organizations worldwide focused on nuclear policy. The MacArthur Foundation is the largest funder in the nuclear field. Prior to joining the MacArthur Foundation, Belcher published research on nuclear weapons at the Council on Foreign Relations as a Stanton Nuclear Security Fellow. She has also worked as an advisor in Australia’s Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet on national security and international affairs and as a public affairs officer at the Australian embassy in Washington, D.C.

Belcher is currently on the Advisor Board for N Square, a project of the New Venture Fund, which consists of a network of innovators working to end the nuclear threat. She was a fellow at the Harvard University's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs and was named an Emerging Leader by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. Belcher has a PhD and master’s degree from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, and a bachelor of arts from University of Melbourne.  

More profile about the speaker
Emma Belcher | Speaker | TED.com
TEDxMidAtlantic

Emma Belcher: 3 questions we should ask about nuclear weapons

Filmed:
1,178,036 views

There are more than 10,000 nuclear weapons in existence today, each one capable of causing immense destruction. Why don't we talk about this threat as much as some other major issues? In this practical talk, nuclear security expert Emma Belcher shares three questions you can ask your elected officials to gain a better understanding of nuclear weapons and the measures we need to stay safe.
- Nuclear security expert
Emma Belcher develops and implements strategy for reducing the threat posed by nuclear weapons. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:13
So you know when
you're doubled over in pain
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and you're wondering, is it your appendix
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or maybe you ate something funny?
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Well, when that happens to me,
I call my friend Sasha --
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Sasha is a doctor --
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and I say, "Should I rush
to the nearest emergency room
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in a panic?
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Or am I OK to relax and just wait it out?"
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Yes, I am that annoying friend.
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But in September 2017,
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friends of mine were suddenly calling me
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for my professional opinion.
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And no, I'm not a doctor,
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but they were asking me
questions of life and death.
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So what was going on in September of 2017?
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Well, North Korea was suddenly
and scarily all over the news.
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Kim Jong-un had tested missiles
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potentially capable of hitting
major US cities,
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and President Trump had responded
with tweets of "fire and fury."
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And there was real concern
that tensions would escalate
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to a potential war
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or even nuclear weapons use.
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So what my friends
were calling and asking was:
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Should they panic or were the OK to relax?
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But really, they were asking me
a fundamental question:
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"Am I safe?"
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While I was reassuring them that,
no, they didn't need to worry just yet,
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the irony of their question dawned on me.
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What they hadn't really thought about
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is that we've all been living
under a much larger cloud for decades --
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potentially a mushroom cloud --
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without giving it much thought.
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Now it's not surprising
that friends of mine
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and many others like them
don't know much about nuclear weapons
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and don't think about them.
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After all, the end of the Cold War,
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the United States and Russia,
tension abated,
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we started dismantling nuclear weapons,
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and they started to become
a relic of the past.
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Generations didn't have to grow up
with the specter of nuclear war
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hanging over their heads.
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And there other reasons people don't like
to think about nuclear weapons.
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It's scary, overwhelming.
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I get it.
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Sometimes I wish I could have chosen
a cheerier field to study.
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(Laughter)
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Perhaps tax law would
have been more uplifting.
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(Laughter)
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But in addition to that,
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people have so many other things
to think about in their busy lives,
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and they'd much prefer to think
about something over which
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they feel they have
some semblance of control,
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and they assume that other people,
smarter than they on this topic,
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are working away to keep us all safe.
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And then, there are other reasons
people don't talk about this,
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and one is because we, as nuclear experts,
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use a whole lot of convoluted
jargon and terminology
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to talk about these issues:
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CVID, ICBM, JCPOA.
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It's really inaccessible
for a lot of people.
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And, in reality, it actually sometimes
I think makes us numb
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to what we're really talking about here.
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And what we are really talking about here
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is the fact that,
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while we've made dramatic reductions
in the number of nuclear weapons
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since the Cold War,
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right now, there are almost 15,000
in the world today.
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15,000.
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The United States and Russia have
over 90 percent of these nuclear weapons.
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If you're wondering, these are
the countries that have the rest.
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But they have far fewer,
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ranging in the sort of
300-ish range and below.
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Adding to this situation is the fact
that we have new technologies
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that potentially bring us new challenges.
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Could you imagine, one day,
countries like ours and others
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potentially ceding decisions
about a nuclear strike to a robot,
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based on algorithms?
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And what data do they use
to inform those algorithms?
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This is pretty terrifying.
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So adding to this are terrorism potential,
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cyberattacks, miscalculation,
misunderstanding.
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The list of nuclear nightmares
tends to grow longer by the day.
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And there are a number
of former officials,
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as well as experts,
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who worry that right now,
we're in greater danger
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than we were in various points
in the Cold War.
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So this is scary.
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What can we do?
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Well, thankfully,
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["Duck and Cover"]
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we don't have to rely
on the advice from the 1950s.
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(Laughter)
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We can take some control,
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and the way we do that
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is by starting to ask
some fundamental questions
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about the status quo
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and whether we are happy
with the way it is.
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We need to begin asking
questions of ourselves
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and of our elected officials,
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and I'd like to share
three with you today.
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The first one is,
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"How much nuclear risk
are you willing to take or tolerate?"
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Right now, nuclear policy
depends on deterrence theory.
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Developed in the 1950s,
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the idea is that one
country's nuclear weapons
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prevents another country
from using theirs.
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So you nuke me, I nuke you,
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and we both lose.
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So in a way, there's a stalemate.
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No one uses their weapons,
and we're all safe.
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But this theory has real questions.
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There are experts
who challenge this theory
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and wonder: Does it really work
this way in practice?
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It certainly doesn't allow
for mistakes or miscalculations.
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Now, I don't know about you,
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but I feel pretty uncomfortable
gambling my future survival,
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yours, and our future generations',
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on a theory that is questionable
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and doesn't allow any room for a mistake.
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It makes me even more uncomfortable
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to be threatening the evaporation
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of millions of people
on the other side of the Earth.
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Surely we can do better for ourselves,
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drawing on our ingenuity
to solve complex problems,
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as we have in the past.
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After all, this is a man-made,
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human-made --
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I shouldn't say "man,"
because women were involved --
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a human-made problem.
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We have human solutions
that should be possible.
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So, next question: "Who do you think
should make nuclear decisions?"
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Right now, in this democracy,
in the United States,
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one person
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gets to decide whether or not
to launch a nuclear strike.
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They don't have to consult anybody.
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So that's the president.
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He or she can decide --
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within a very limited amount of time,
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under great pressure, potentially,
depending on the scenario,
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maybe based on a miscalculation
or a misunderstanding --
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they can decide the fate
of millions of lives:
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yours, mine, our community's.
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And they can do this
and launch a nuclear strike,
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potentially setting in motion
the annihilation of the human race.
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Wow.
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This doesn't have to be
our reality, though, and in fact,
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in a number of other countries
that have nuclear weapons, it's not,
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including countries
that are not democracies.
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We created this system. We can change it.
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And there's actually a movement
underway to do so.
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So this leads me to my third question:
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"What do your elected officials
know about nuclear weapons,
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and what types of decisions
are they likely to take on your behalf?"
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Well, Congress has
a very important role to play
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in oversight of and interrogating
US nuclear weapons policy.
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They can decide what to fund,
what not to fund,
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and they represent you.
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Now unfortunately,
since the end of the Cold War,
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we've seen a real decline
in the level of understanding,
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on Capitol Hill, about these issues.
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While we are starting to see
some terrific new champions emerge,
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the reality is that the general
lack of awareness
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is highly concerning,
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given that these people need to make
critically important decisions.
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To make matters worse,
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the political partisanship
that currently grips Washington
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also affects this issue.
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This wasn't always the case, though.
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At the end of the Cold War,
members from both sides of the aisle
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had a really good understanding about
the nuclear challenges we were facing
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and worked together
on cooperative programs.
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They recognized
that nuclear risk reduction
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was far too important to allow it
to succumb to political partisanship.
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They created programs
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such as the Nunn-Lugar Cooperative
Threat Reduction Program,
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which sought to lock down and eliminate
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vulnerable nuclear material
in the former Soviet Union.
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So we need to return to this era
of bipartisanship,
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mutual problem-solving
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that's based on understanding
and awareness about the challenges we face
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and the real nuclear dangers.
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And that's where you come in.
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Public pressure is important.
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Leaders need a constituent base to act.
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So create that constituent base,
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by asking them some simple questions.
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Ask them, "What do you know
about nuclear weapons?"
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"Do you have a nuclear expert
on your staff?
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Or, if not, do you know
somebody you could refer to
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if you need to make
an important decision?"
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Start to find out what they believe
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and whether it aligns
with your own views and values.
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Ask them, "How would you choose
to spend US national treasure?
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On a new nuclear arms race
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or another national security priority,
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such as cybersecurity or climate change?"
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Ask them, "Are you willing
to put aside partisanship
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to address this existential threat
that affects my survival
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and your constituents' survival?"
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Now, people will tell you nuclear policy
is far too difficult to understand
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and complexed and nuanced
for the general public to understand,
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let alone debate.
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After all, this is "national security."
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There needs to be secrets.
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Don't let that put you off.
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We debate all sorts of issues
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that are critically important
to our lives --
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why should nuclear weapons
be any different?
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We debate health care,
education, the environment.
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Surely congressional oversight,
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civic participation that are
such hallmarks of US democracy,
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surely they apply here.
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After all, these are cases of life
and death that we're talking about.
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And we won't all agree,
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but whether or not you believe
nuclear weapons keep us safe
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or that nuclear weapons are a liability,
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I urge you to put aside
partisan, ideological issues
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and listen to each other.
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So I'll tell you now what I didn't have
the guts to tell my friends at the time.
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No, you're not safe --
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not just because of North Korea.
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But there is something
you can do about it.
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Demand that your elected representatives
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can give you answers to your questions,
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and answers that you can live with
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and that billions of others
can live with too.
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And if they can't,
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stay on them until they can.
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And if that doesn't work,
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find others, who are able
to represent your views.
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Because by doing so, we can begin
to change the answer to the question
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"Am I safe?"
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(Applause)
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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Emma Belcher - Nuclear security expert
Emma Belcher develops and implements strategy for reducing the threat posed by nuclear weapons.

Why you should listen

Emma Belcher is the Director of Nuclear Challenges at the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. In partnership with the MacArthur Foundation board of directors and president, she allocates roughly 20 million dollars in grants annually to organizations worldwide focused on nuclear policy. The MacArthur Foundation is the largest funder in the nuclear field. Prior to joining the MacArthur Foundation, Belcher published research on nuclear weapons at the Council on Foreign Relations as a Stanton Nuclear Security Fellow. She has also worked as an advisor in Australia’s Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet on national security and international affairs and as a public affairs officer at the Australian embassy in Washington, D.C.

Belcher is currently on the Advisor Board for N Square, a project of the New Venture Fund, which consists of a network of innovators working to end the nuclear threat. She was a fellow at the Harvard University's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs and was named an Emerging Leader by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. Belcher has a PhD and master’s degree from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, and a bachelor of arts from University of Melbourne.  

More profile about the speaker
Emma Belcher | Speaker | TED.com