252 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
252 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
[From The Wall Street Journal, Wed., November 5 1986]
|
||
|
||
The Melting of 'Nuclear Winter'
|
||
|
||
By Russell Seitz
|
||
|
||
"Apocalyptic predictions require, to be taken seriously,
|
||
higher standards of evidence than do assertions on other
|
||
matters where the stakes are not as great."
|
||
|
||
---Carl Sagan, Foreign Affairs,
|
||
Winter 1983 -84
|
||
|
||
The end of the world isn't what it used to be. "Nuclear Winter," the
|
||
theory launched three years ago this week that predicted a nuclear exchange
|
||
as small as 100 megatons ("a pure tactical war, in Europe, say" in Carl
|
||
Sagan's phrase), in addition to its lethal primary effects, would fill the
|
||
sky with smoke and dust, ushering in life-extinguishing sub-zero darkness,
|
||
has been laid to rest in the semantic potter's field alongside the "Energy
|
||
Crisis" and the "Population Bomb." Cause of death: notorious lack of
|
||
scientific integrity.
|
||
The Nuclear Winter conjecture has unraveled under scrutiny. Yet not
|
||
so long ago, policy analysts took it so seriously that there is reason to
|
||
examine how the powerful synergy of environmental concern and the politics
|
||
of disarmament drove some scientists to forge an unholy alliance with
|
||
Madison Avenue. Mere software has been advertised as hard scientific fact.
|
||
How did this polarization arise?
|
||
In 1982, a question arose within the inner circle of disarmament
|
||
activists: Could the moral force of Jonathan Schell's eloquent call to lay
|
||
down arms, "The Fate of the Earth," be transformed into a scientific
|
||
imperative? Peace-movement strategists wanted something new to dramatize
|
||
nuclear war's horrors. As Ralph K. White put it in his book "The Fearful
|
||
Warriors": "Horror is needed. The peace movement cannot do without it."
|
||
What they got was surreal -- a secular apocalypse.
|
||
A 1982 special issue of the Swedish environmental science journal
|
||
Ambio considered the environmental consequences of a nuclear war. This
|
||
special issue did little to evoke a mass response of the sort needed to
|
||
change the course of strategic doctrine. But one article contained the
|
||
seed of what would become Nuclear Winter.
|
||
Mr. Sagan seized upon an article by Messrs. Paul Crutzen and Steven
|
||
Birks that raised the question of a "Twilight at Noon" if the fires ignited
|
||
by nuclear holocaust were to convert much of the fuel in both woodlands and
|
||
cities into enough soot to enshroud the globe. In the hands of others
|
||
their concerns would be transformed into an exhortation.
|
||
The chilling climatic impact of this soot can be modeled with existing
|
||
software. The paper that resulted came to be known as TTAPS, after the
|
||
initials of its authors beginning with Richard Turco and ending with Carl
|
||
Sagan.
|
||
Audubon Society president Russell Peterson, whose wife was editor of
|
||
Ambio, sent the issue to Robert Scrivner of the Rockefeller Family Fund.
|
||
Mr. Scrivner convened an ad hoc consortium of foundations and scientific
|
||
groups with a bent for disarmament. Cornell astrophysicist and media
|
||
personality Carl Sagan assembled a scientific advisory board that drew
|
||
heavily from such organizations as the Union of Concerned Scientists,
|
||
Physicians for Social Responsibility, the Federation of American Scientists
|
||
and the Natural Resources Defense Council. Two-dozen foundations and more
|
||
than 100 scientists were recruited.
|
||
|
||
A BONE-DRY BILLIARD BALL
|
||
|
||
Nuclear Winter never existed outside of a computer, except as a
|
||
painting commissioned by a PR firm. Instead of an earth with continents
|
||
and oceans, the TTAPS model postulated a featureless, bone-dry billiard
|
||
ball. Instead of nights and days, it postulated 24-hour sunlight at one-
|
||
third strength. Instead of realistic smoke emissions, a 10-mile-thick soot
|
||
cloud magically materialized, creating an alien sky as black as the ink you
|
||
are reading. The model dealt with such complications as geography, winds,
|
||
sunrise, sunset and patchy clouds in a stunningly elegant manner -- they
|
||
were ignored. When later computer models incorporated these elements, the
|
||
flat black sky of TTAPS fell apart into a pale and broken shadow that
|
||
traveled less far and dissipated more quickly.
|
||
The TTAPS model entailed a long series of conjectures: if this much
|
||
smoke goes up, if it is this dense, if it moves like this, and so on. The
|
||
improbability of a string of 40 such coin tosses coming up heads approaches
|
||
that of a pat royal flush. Yet it was represented as a "sophisticated one-
|
||
dimensional model" -- a usage that is oxymoronic, unless applied to Twiggy.
|
||
To the limitations of the software were added those of the data. It
|
||
was an unknown and very complex topic, hard data was scant, so guesstimates
|
||
prevailed. Not only were these educated guesses rampant throughout the
|
||
process, but it was deemed prudent, given the gravity of the subject, to
|
||
lean toward the worst-case end of the spectrum for dozens of the numbers
|
||
involved. Political considerations subliminally skewed the model away from
|
||
natural history, while seeming to make the expression "nuclear freeze" a
|
||
part of it.
|
||
"The question of peer review is essential. That is why we have
|
||
delayed so long in the publication of these dire results," said Carl Sagan
|
||
in late 1983. But instead of going through the ordinary peer-review
|
||
process, the TTAPS study had been conveyed by Mr. Sagan and his colleagues
|
||
to a chosen few at a closed meeting in April 1983. Despite Mr. Sagan's
|
||
claim of responsible delay, before this peculiar review process had even
|
||
begun, an $80,000 retainer was paid to Porter-Novelli Associates, a
|
||
Washington, D.C., public-relations firm. More money was spent in the 1984
|
||
fiscal year on video and advertising than on doing the science.
|
||
The meeting did not go smoothly; most participants I interviewed did
|
||
not describe the reception accorded the Nuclear Winter theory as cordial or
|
||
consensual. The proceedings were tape recorded, but Mr. Sagan has
|
||
repeatedly refused to release the meeting's transcript. (The organizers
|
||
have said it was closed to the press to avoid sensationalism and premature
|
||
disclosure.) According to Dr. Kosta Tsipis of MIT, even a Soviet scientist
|
||
at the meeting said, "You guys are fools. You can't use mathematical
|
||
models like these to model perturbed states of the atmosphere. You're
|
||
playing with toys."
|
||
Having premiered on Oct. 30, 1983, as an article by Mr. Sagan in the
|
||
Sunday supplement Parade, the TTAPS results finally appeared in Science
|
||
magazine (Dec. 23, 1983). This is the very apex of scholarly publication,
|
||
customarily reserved for a review article expounding a mature addition to
|
||
an existing scientific disipline -- one that has withstood the testing of
|
||
its data and hypotheses by reproducible experiments recorded in the peer-
|
||
reviewed literature. Yet what became of the many complex and uncertain
|
||
variables necessary to operate the Nuclear Winter model? They were not set
|
||
forth in the text -- 136 pages of data were instead reduced to a reference
|
||
that said, simply, "In preparation." The critical details were missing.
|
||
They have languished in unpublished obscurity ever since.
|
||
The readers of Science were still bewildered when, just one week
|
||
later, another article by Mr. Sagan -- "Nuclear War and Climatic
|
||
Catastrophe" -- appeared in Foreign Affairs. Mr. Sagan argued that,
|
||
because of the TTAPS results, "What is urgently required is a coherent,
|
||
mutually agreed upon, long-term policy for dramatic reductions in nuclear
|
||
armaments..."
|
||
In hastening to maximize the impact, Mr. Sagan made mistakes. While
|
||
he cited the following passage as coming from a companion piece in Science
|
||
that he had co-authored, it did not actually appear in the published
|
||
version of that article: "IN ALMOST ANY REALISTIC CASE involving nuclear
|
||
exchanges between the superpowers, global environmental changes sufficient
|
||
to cause an extinction event equal to or more severe than that of the close
|
||
of the Cretaceous when the dinosaurs and many other species died out are
|
||
likely. (Emphasis added)." The ominous rhetoric italicized in this
|
||
passage puts even the 100 megaton scenario of TTAPS on a par with the 100
|
||
million megaton blast of an asteroid striking the Earth. This astronomical
|
||
mega-hype failed to pass peer review and never appeared in Science. Yet,
|
||
having appeared in Foreign Affairs, it has been repeatedly cited in the
|
||
literature of strategic doctrine as evidence.
|
||
Rather than "higher standards of evidence," Mr. Sagan merely provided
|
||
testimonials. He had sent return-mail questionnaires to the nearly 100
|
||
participants at the April meeting, and edited the replies down to his
|
||
favorite two-dozen quotations. What became of the hard copy of the less
|
||
enthusiastic reports remains a mystery, but it is evident from subsequent
|
||
comments by their authors that TTAPS received less than the unanimous
|
||
endorsement of "a large number of scientists." Prof. Victor Weisskopf of
|
||
MIT, sized up the matter in early 1984: "Ah! Nuclear Winter! The science
|
||
is terrible, but, perhaps the psychology is good."
|
||
Many scientists were reluctant to speak out, perhaps for fear of being
|
||
denounced as reactionaries or closet Strangeloves. For example, physicist
|
||
Freeman Dyson of the Institute for Advanced Studies at Princeton was
|
||
privately critical in early 1984. As he put it, "It's (TTAPS) an
|
||
absolutely atrocious piece of science, but I quite despair of setting the
|
||
public record straight....Who wants to be accused of being in favor of
|
||
nuclear war?"
|
||
Most of the intellectual tools necessary to demolish TTAPS's bleak
|
||
vision were already around then, but not the will to use them. From
|
||
respected scientists one heard this: "You know, I really don't think these
|
||
guys know what they're talking about" (Nobel laureate physicist Richard
|
||
Feynman); "They stacked the deck" (Prof. Michael McElroy, Harvard); and,
|
||
after a journalist's caution against four-letter words, "'Humbug' is six
|
||
[letters]" (Prof. Jonathan Katz, Washington University).
|
||
In 1985, a series of unheralded and completely unpublicized studies
|
||
started to appear in learned journals -- studies that, piece by piece,
|
||
started to fill in the blanks in the climate-modeling process that had
|
||
previously ben patched over with "educated" guesses.
|
||
The result was straightforward: As the science progressed and more
|
||
authentic sophistication was achieved in newer and more elegant models, the
|
||
postulated effects headed downhill. By 1986, these worst-case effects had
|
||
melted down from a year of arctic darkness to warmer temperatures than the
|
||
cool months in Palm Beach! A new paradigm of broken clouds and cool spots
|
||
had emerged. The once global hard frost had retreated back to the northern
|
||
tundra. Mr. Sagan's elaborate conjecture had fallen prey to Murphy's
|
||
lesser known Second Law: If everything MUST go wrong, don't bet on it.
|
||
By June 1986 it was over: In the Summer 1986 Foreign Affairs,
|
||
National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) scientists Starley Thompson
|
||
and Stephen Schneider declared, "...on scientific grounds the global
|
||
apocalyptic conclusions of the initial nuclear winter hypothesis can now be
|
||
relegated to a vanishingly low level of probability."
|
||
|
||
Yet the activist wing of the international scientific estabishment had
|
||
already announced the results of the first generations of interdisciplinary
|
||
ecological and climatological studies based on Nuclear Winter. Journalists
|
||
paid more attention to the press releases than the substance of these
|
||
already obsolescent efforts at ecological modeling, and proceeded to inform
|
||
the public that things were looking worse than ever. Bold headlines
|
||
carried casualty estimates that ran into the proverbial "billions and
|
||
billions."
|
||
|
||
This process culminated in the reception given the 1985 report of the
|
||
National Academy of Sciences (NAS). Stressing the uncertainties that
|
||
plagued the calculations then and now, it scrupulously excluded the
|
||
expression "Nuclear Winter" from its 193 pages of sober text, but the
|
||
report's press release was prefaced "Nuclear Winter...'Clear Possibility.'"
|
||
Mr. Sagan construed the reports to constitute an endorsement of the theory.
|
||
But in February 1986, NCAR's Dr. Schneider quietly informed a
|
||
gathering at the NASA-Ames Laboratory that Nuclear Winter had succumbed to
|
||
scientific progress and that, "in a severe" 6,500-megaton strategic
|
||
exchange, "The Day After" might witness July temperatures upwards of 50-
|
||
plus degrees Fahrenheit in mid-America. The depths of Nuclear Winter could
|
||
no longer easily be distinguished from the coolest days of summer.
|
||
As the truth slowly emerged, private skepticism turned often to public
|
||
outrage, and not just among the "hawks." Prof. George Rathjens of MIT,
|
||
chairman of the Council for a Livable World, offered this judgement:
|
||
Nuclear Winter is the worst example of the misrepresentation of science to
|
||
the public in my memory."
|
||
|
||
THE POLITICS OF THE MATTER
|
||
|
||
On Jan. 23, 1986, the leading British scientific journal Nature
|
||
pronounced on the political erosion ofthe objectivitiy vital to the
|
||
scientific endeavor: "Nowhere is this more evident than in the recent
|
||
literature on 'Nuclear Winter,' research which has become notorious for its
|
||
lack of scientific integrity."
|
||
But it is by no means solely within the halls of science that
|
||
responsibility lies or where redress and the prevention of a recurrence
|
||
must be sought. Policy analysts have shown themselves to be the lawful
|
||
prety of software salesmen. They seem to be chronically incapable of
|
||
distinguishing where science leaves off and the polemical abuse of global-
|
||
systems modeling begins. The results of this confusion can be serious
|
||
indeed. Doesn't anybody remember the last example of the "Garbage In,
|
||
Garbage Out" phenomenon -- the "Energy Crisis"? That crisis also began as
|
||
a curve plotted by a computer. But it ended as "The Oil Glut." Factoids,
|
||
scientific or economic, have a strange life of their own; woe to the polity
|
||
that ignores the interaction of science, myth and the popular imagination
|
||
in the age of the electronic media.
|
||
To historians of science, the Nuclear Winter episode may seem a
|
||
bizarre comedy of manners; having known sin at Hiroshima, physics was bound
|
||
to run into advertising sooner or later. But what about the politics of
|
||
this issue? Does all this matter? Mr. Sagan evidently thinks it does.
|
||
His homiletic overkill has been relentless. An animated version of his
|
||
obsolete apocalypse has been added to his updated documentary "Cosmos -- A
|
||
Special Edition." This fall, prime-time audiences will watch in horror as
|
||
the airbrushed edge of nuclear darknes overspreads planet Earth. Marshall
|
||
McLuhan was right on the mark -- with television's advent, advertising has
|
||
become more important than products.
|
||
What is being advertised is not science but a pernicious fantasy that
|
||
strikes at the very foundation of crisis management, one that attempts to
|
||
the transform the Alliance doctrine of flexible response into a dangerous
|
||
vision. For despite its scientific demise, the specter of Nuclear Winter
|
||
is haunting Europe, Soviet propagandists have seized upon Nuclear Winter in
|
||
their efforts to debilitate the political will of the Alliance. What more
|
||
destabilizing fantasy than the equation of theater deterrence with a global
|
||
Gotterdammerung could they dream of? What could be more dangerous than to
|
||
invite the Soviets that the Alliance is self-deterred -- and thus at the
|
||
mercy of those who possess so ominous an advantage in conventional forces?
|
||
The Roman historian Livy observed that "where there is less fear,
|
||
there is generally less danger." Until those who have put activism before
|
||
objectivity come to apprehend this, nuclear illusions, some spontaneous and
|
||
some carefully fostered, will continue to haunt the myth-loving animal that
|
||
is man.
|
||
|
||
__________________
|
||
|
||
Mr. Seitz is a Visiting Scholar in Harvard University's Center for
|
||
International Affairs. This is based on an article in the fall issue of
|
||
The National Interest.
|
||
|
||
|