Daniel Ellsberg Has Passed Away. He Left Us a Message.
by Norman
Solomon Posted on June 17, 2023
When Daniel Ellsberg died on Friday, the world lost a
transcendent whistleblower with a powerful ethos of compassion and resolve.
Ellsberg’s renown for openly challenging the
mentalities of militarism began on June 23, 1971, when he appeared on CBS
Evening News ten days after news broke about the Pentagon Papers that he’d
provided to journalists. Ellsberg pointedly said that in the 7,000 pages of
top-secret documents, "I don’t think there is a line in them that contains
an estimate of the likely impact of our policy on the overall casualties among
Vietnamese or the refugees to be caused, the effects of defoliation in an
ecological sense. There’s neither an estimate nor a calculation of past
effects, ever."
And he added: "The documents simply reflect the
internal concerns of our officials. That says nothing more nor less that our
officials never did concern themselves with the effect of our policies on the
Vietnamese."
Ellsberg told anchor
Walter Cronkite: "I think we cannot let the officials of the Executive
Branch determine for us what it is that the public needs to know about how well
and how they are discharging their functions."
The functions of overseeing the war on Vietnam had
become repugnant to Ellsberg as an insider. Many other government officials and
top-level consultants with security clearances also had access to documents
that showed how mendacious four administrations had been as the U.S. role in
Vietnam expanded and then escalated into wholesale slaughter.
Unlike the others, he finally broke free and provided
the Pentagon Papers to news media. As he said in the CBS interview, "The
fact is that secrets can be held by men in the government whose careers have
been spent learning how to keep their mouths shut. I was one of those."
Ellsberg’s mouth, and heart, never stayed shut again.
For the 52 full years that followed his release of the Pentagon Papers, he
devoted himself to speaking, writing, and protesting. When the war on Vietnam
finally ended, Ellsberg mainly returned to his earlier preoccupation – how to
help prevent nuclear war.
This spring, during the three months after diagnosis
of pancreatic cancer, Ellsberg made the most of every day, spending time with
loved ones and speaking out about the all-too-real dangers of nuclear
annihilation. He left behind two brilliant, monumental books published in this
century – "Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers"
(2002) and "The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War
Planner" (2017). They illuminate in sharp ghastly light the patterns of
official lies and secrecy about military matters, and the ultimate foreseeable
result – nuclear holocaust.
Ellsberg was deeply determined to do all he could to
help prevent omnicide. As he said in an interview when
"The Doomsday Machine" came out, scientific research has concluded
that nuclear war "would loft into the stratosphere many millions of tons
of soot and black smoke from the burning cities. It wouldn’t be rained out in
the stratosphere. It would go around the globe very quickly and reduce sunlight
by as much as 70 percent, causing temperatures like that of the Little Ice Age,
killing harvests worldwide and starving to death nearly everyone on earth. It
probably wouldn’t cause extinction. We’re so adaptable. Maybe 1 percent of our
current population of 7.4 billion could survive, but 98 or 99 percent would
not."
During the profuse interviews that he engaged in
during the last few months, what clearly preoccupied Ellsberg was not his own
fate but the fate of the Earth’s inhabitants.
He was acutely aware that while admiration for brave
whistleblowers might sometimes be widespread, actual emulation is scarce.
Ellsberg often heard that he was inspiring, but he was always far more
interested in what people would be inspired to do – in a world
of war and on the precipice of inconceivable nuclear catastrophe.
During the last decades of his life, standard assumptions and efforts by
mainstream media and the political establishment aimed to consign Ellsberg to
the era of the Vietnam War. But in real time, Dan Ellsberg continually inspired
so many of us to be more than merely inspired. We loved him not only for what
he had done but also for what he kept doing, for who he was, luminously,
ongoing. The power of his vibrant example spurred us to become better than we
were.
In a recent series of short illustrated podcasts created
by filmmaker Judith Ehrlich – who co-directed the documentary "The Most Dangerous Man in
America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers" – Ellsberg speaks about
the growing dangers of global apocalypse, saying that nuclear war planners
"have written plans to kill billions of people," preparations that
amount to "a conspiracy to commit omnicide, near omnicide, the death of
everyone." And he adds: "Can humanity survive the nuclear era? We
don’t know. I choose to act as if we have a chance."
Norman Solomon is national director of
RootsAction.org and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy.
His book War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human
Toll of Its Military Machine was
published this week by The New Press.
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