VFP's Mike Ferner Recognized by Toledo City Council for a Lifetime of Civic Courage and Activism8/29/2025 TOLEDO – During the Toledo City Council meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 12, Mike Ferner, a local activist and veteran, was honored. Julie Gibbons, the clerk of council, announced Ferner’s recognition for civic courage and activism, and a wave of applause followed Ferner up to the podium before city council. Council bestowed upon Ferner the Civic Courage award in light of his dedication to compassionate causes, including his advocacy for Palestinians in Gaza, work with the Lake Erie Advocates and other anti-war advocacy during the Iraq War. Nick Komives was the first council member to address and thank Ferner for his activism. Back in 2003 Komives’ first protest was an anti-war protest at the Franklin Park Mall, and that is where he first met Ferner. “We all owe a debt of gratitude to you,” Komives said, and he also highlighted Ferner’s wife, Sue Carter, for her role in community activism as well. Toledo Mayor Wade Kapszukiewicz speaks with Mike Ferner, a local activist and veteran, and his wife, Sue Carter, as Ferner is recognized for his activism and impact on Toledo during a Toledo City Council meeting. (TFP photo by Stephen Zenner) Council Member Sam Melden thanked Ferner for his work through Lake Erie Advocates, which was his individual touchstone with Ferner. “When someone comes in to get a resolution, and packs a room like this, that is obviously a sign. And I love that there are almost multiple different shirts and buttons that connect to what you’ve done,” Melden said. District 6’s representative, Theresa Morris, kept her words short, and thanked Ferner for being tireless in his work to advocate on behalf of others in need. Ferner, like Baumhower, pointed to the people surrounding him, whom he said deserved the same recognition he received. “You will meet the best people that you’ve ever met in your life if you get involved in a progressive political movement,” he said, and then asked the sergeant at arms to bring his wife, Carter, up front to be with him. When she joined him, Ferner said, “This is a person that has allowed me to do what I’ve done.” Ferner expressed sadness at the state of federal politics, but said there was room for people to get involved on the local level. “Government is the vehicle by which we express our love for each other,” Ferner said, and expressed sadness at the state of federal politics. But followed up by providing an outlet, “Here at the local level you can do that, we can do that.” The E3 constellation that was designed in 2003 to prevent war may, in 2025, be pushing us closer to one. Trita Parsi August 28, 2025 In a few hours, France, Germany, and the UK (E3) will trigger snapback sanctions on Iran at the UN. This will launch a 30-day process that likely culminates in the full reinstatement of all UN sanctions lifted under the 2015 nuclear deal. The move will carry four major consequences:
The E3 argues that snapback is necessary to pressure Iran into resuming talks with the US and granting the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) access to its nuclear facilities, including disclosure of the stockpile of 60% enriched uranium. On the surface, these demands may seem reasonable. But Tehran has legitimate reservations. Iranian officials suspect the IAEA of leaking sensitive information that enabled Mossad’s assassination campaign against their nuclear scientists, and they fear that revealing the stockpile’s location could simply invite another round of US airstrikes. Moreover, Iran was at the negotiating table when Israel and the US began bombing it. The E3 now insist Tehran return to talks, yet they make no parallel demand that Washington refrain from bombing again. Perhaps most importantly, given the unbridgeable gap over enrichment, Trump’s limited patience for diplomacy, and Israeli pressure to resume hostilities, restarting talks that are almost certain to collapse—unless both sides show greater flexibility on enrichment—only increases the likelihood that war will start sooner rather than later. But that may well be the point. The E3 of today bears little resemblance to the one of two decades ago. When it was created in 2003, its purpose was to prevent the Bush administration—fresh off its disastrous and illegal invasion of Iraq—from launching another war, this time against Iran. Today, the geopolitical context has shifted. Iran’s alignment with Russia in Ukraine has recast it as a direct threat in Europe’s eyes. The EU is also far more dependent on the transatlantic relationship than it was 20 years ago, while successive rounds of sanctions have rendered Iran a negligible economic partner for Europe. Escalation with Iran through snapback now serves two EU objectives: punishing Tehran for supporting Russia in Ukraine, and aligning Europe with hawkish elements in the Trump administration—an alignment calculated to ease tensions in other areas of a transatlantic relationship under unprecedented duress. In this sense, the E3 constellation that was designed in 2003 to prevent war may, in 2025, be pushing us closer to one. But don’t take it from me. After all, Germany’s chancellor has openly admitted that Israel “did Europe’s dirty work for it” by bombing Iran in June. One of the journalists murdered live on air by Israel at Nasser Hospital was the brave Maryam Abu Dagga. In recent weeks, she reported relentlessly on the starvation in Gaza for AP.
She had just donated her kidney to save a life. She was a mother, a journalist, and a longtime witness to Israeli crimes. The world failed her. Heartbreaking. Enraging. The much anticipated summit earlier this month in Anchorage was a flop: Putin rebuffed Trump’s request for a ceasefire, and the woefully unprepared Trump seemed more intent on finding a way to earn a Nobel Peace Prize than striking a realistic bargain on Ukraine.
What was missing in the public exchanges between Trump and Putin was any talk of a revitalized international treaty that would bar any nation from first use of a nuclear weapon, though I was told that the issue of mutual arms control was raised by Putin at the summit. Nonetheless, nuclear disarmament, once the most important response to a burgeoning nuclear world, is clearly out of favor in this White House. This terrifying state of affairs was spelled out in a recent essay by Mark Medish, a Washington attorney and arms control and disarmament expert who spent years working at high levels in the Treasury, the State Department, and the White House. In 2000 he helped prepare the first US-Russia summit meetings after Putin took office. Writing in the Washington Spectator, Medish argued that a renewed major power interest in nuclear freeze talks is urgently needed because “the complexity of this subject has increased due to major technological advances in the nuclear, space, rocketry, biological and cyber/AI/quantum areas.” I asked Medish about the importance of nuclear disarmament talks and why there are not any going on today. HERSH: I have been a reporter covering international affairs for six decades, but I’ve never paid much attention to disarmament. The issue was just too boring. I remember in early 1973 when Leslie Gelb, a former Defense Department official, joined the New York Times after a stint as a fellow at the Brookings Institution. I had returned from a visit to Hanoi the year before and had had a helpful chat with him there about the state of the peace talks then being led by Henry Kissinger. I came away thinking the guy knew his stuff. Gelb came to the Times primarily as a specialist on arms control and so he handled the ongoing talks between Kissinger and his Soviet counterparts on nuclear weapons disarmament. Despite my instinctive distrust of those who worked for Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, one of the major American liars on the progress of the Vietnam War, I found Les to be a delight as a colleague and a fellow skeptic on the war. (I would not learn for years that he was the director of the Pentagon Papers, a detailed account of the lies and blunders that turned the war into a civilian bloodbath.) What Les could not understand, as he reported on Kissinger’s vital disarmament talks with Russia and China in the early 1970s, was the near total ignorance of some of the Times editors about the intricacies of those talks. Time after time Les would come to me in shock at the inability of the senior editors to know what was important and what wasn’t. Stories that he deemed vital would be whittled down in the editing process and consigned to the back pages of the paper. When the stories did make page one, they often were rewritten, to Les’s dismay, in nonsensical ways. (Gelb went on, nonetheless, to become a columnist for the Times and later served for a decade as president of the Council on Foreign Relations. He died in 2019 at the age of 82.) So my first question to you is why does the media here and around the world have so little interest in international arms talks? Is it just too complicated? Or does other international wrongdoing—the ongoing horrors committed by Israel in Gaza, for example—suck the air out of that issue, and its need? MEDISH: It’s up to our political leaders to focus on these paramount national security issues and explain why they are doing it to the public. “Strategic stability” is not a catchy phrase. Arms control has never been a terribly sexy topic, but before the Cold War ended it could get some attention, for example when we came to the brink of nuclear confrontation with the Soviets during the Cuban Missile Crisis and a couple of other times. Of course, the blockbuster film Oppenheimer, which grossed nearly $1 billion, showed that the story of nuclear physics and the risk of Armageddon can still stimulate popular audiences. HERSH: I recall being one of millions, with my family, who in the early 1980s marched and protested in Washington, New York, and scores of other cities against President Ronald Reagan’s early anti-Soviet stance on nuclear disarmament and his decision to deploy Pershing II nuclear missiles in Western Europe. The outpouring would lead to the nuclear freeze movement that is now a historical artifact. Millions cared back then—why not now? MEDISH: In a way, it’s a healthy sign that people don’t lose sleep about the risk of nuclear holocaust, but that doesn’t mean the risk is gone and can be ignored. The American people were told that we had “won” the Cold War, the evil Soviet empire was gone, and we could move on with the “peace dividend,” globalization on our terms, etc. But the technological threat from WMD, not limited to nuclear, is still there and growing more potent and more complex. If we want peace, we need to get back to work on this topic. Let’s also make a distinction here. There are basically three ways to respond to the rise of nuclear or any other WMD technology: prepare to win a confrontation by engaging in an arms race for supremacy, push to neutralize the dangerous technology either by fully disarming or creating a perfect defense, or accept mutual assured destruction and work diplomatically on ways to reduce the risk of accidental conflict and escalation—that means arms control treaties. The movement to end nuclear weapons has been noble and highly aspirational—putting the genie back in the bottle. Since the 1960s, arms control diplomacy has been a pragmatic alternative to both the noble dream of disarmament and the nightmare of a nuclear-war fighting arms race. Today we need to be equally concerned about the interlinked arms races in AI, in space, and in the biological lab. In the first Cold War, only two superpowers really mattered for the arms control talks. But now we have multiple actors, with China an absolutely necessary partner in any meaningful dialogue on strategic stability including cyber. This challenge will take more diplomacy, not less. HERSH: As some of us remember, Reagan would do a 180 while in the White House and there was some talk late in his second term, to the dismay of Russophobic Washington, of his agreeing with Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev, then pursuing perestroika, to ban all nuclear weapons. That went no place and some of the disarmament agreements of the following decades—including the ABM treaty and the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty—were rebuffed by the United States. Russia, in turn, has suspended its participation in a breakthrough New START treaty, which set limits of the number of nuclear warheads the US and Russia could have, on grounds that the US has been unfair in its participation. MEDISH: Bilateral mistrust between the US and Russia has steadily risen since the Bush-Cheney team treated Russia as a largely irrelevant weakening power after 9/11. The US withdrawal from the ABM treaty was interpreted in Moscow as a sign that the US would pursue its own interests in the strategic sphere unilaterally and without consultation. Yet despite increasing tensions including the short Georgia war in 2008, the US and Russia managed to negotiate a landmark arms reduction agreement with New START in 2010. So nothing is inevitable, there is an opportunity to arrest and reverse the current trend of confrontation. Let’s keep in mind that we negotiated the Limited Test Ban Treaty, ABM, and SALT I during the height of the Cold War, including the bloody Vietnam conflict with US troops on the ground. Those who say that the tragic Ukraine War must prevent us from strategic dialogue with Russia are missing the lessons of our own history. Nuclear talks and arms control treaties are not a sign of approval, but a recognition of shared interests. Nixon rightly met with Brezhnev and Mao not because they were our friends but because it was in the US national interest to do so. Another important note: Pursuing a perfect missile defense—like the space-based Golden Dome project based on phased pulse lasers—which is the latest incarnation of Star Wars and Brilliant Pebbles is a risky game. Any non-cooperative effort to insulate from nuclear attack can easily be interpreted by the other side as an attempt to gain supremacy and first-strike capacity, in other words the ability to strike with impunity. In the nuclear game, unilateral “defense” moves of this kind are inherently destabilizing and take us further from peace. The context of multiple technologies of mass destruction—not only nuclear but also space-based weapons, biological weapons and increasingly powerful AI that can control the other technologies—makes strategic stability even harder to achieve and maintain. HERSH: The big issue now is the fact that Russia is nuclear-armed and Ukraine is not. There is little question that Russia is winning the war against Ukraine, in terms of territories gained and ability to sustain a higher level of violence. Is there any hope of the disarmament community finding a way to help the two powers reach a settlement? Is the community up for it? MEDISH: I would commend the Trump administration for trying to advance talks on ending the war in Ukraine. Many critics insisted Trump should not meet with Putin in Alaska and discuss Ukraine without Ukraine at the table, and then the same people chided him for failing to deliver a deal. That view makes no sense. It’s in our interest to try to broker a Ukraine deal if we can, but also to pursue diplomacy on strategic interests which go way beyond Ukraine. The same is true of the Taiwan Straits issue and our interest in engaging China on cyber/AI arms control. It’s noteworthy that the Trump team managed to broker a deal to resolve the Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict. The devil is always in the details, but it’s a good start. Trump should build on his array of peace efforts and consider appointing a special envoy on arms control diplomacy across all WMD technologies. It would be a smart legacy move for the president and it’s in our vital interest. The choice is once again between the arms race and the human race. As George Kennan said in 1980 to leaders of the superpowers: “For the love of God, of your children, and of the civilization to which you belong, cease this madness. You are mortal men. You are capable of error. You have no right to hold in your hands . . . destructive power sufficient to put an end to civilized life on a great portion of our planet.” We can’t undo the technology, but we can control the risk. |
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