"As a nuclear power - as the only nuclear power to have used a nuclear weapon - the United States has a moral responsibility to act"
About this Quote
Obama builds this line like a lawyer writing a closing argument, but he delivers it like a pastor: the premise is undeniable, the conclusion feels like obligation. The dash-driven phrasing is doing real work. "As a nuclear power" is the bland credential every major state claims; "as the only nuclear power to have used a nuclear weapon" is the moral scar tissue no American leader can fully cauterize. By nesting the second clause inside the first, he shifts from status to sin, from capability to history. The sentence forces the listener to sit with the uncomfortable fact that US nuclear authority is inseparable from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, whether you frame that legacy as wartime necessity or catastrophic overreach.
The intent is strategic: to justify American leadership on arms control and nonproliferation without sounding naive about geopolitics. Obama isn't confessing to score points; he's staking a kind of moral monopoly. If the US is uniquely implicated, it is also uniquely licensed to lead. That is the subtextual trade: accountability in exchange for legitimacy.
Context matters. In the late-2000s reset era, with Iran and North Korea in the headlines and the Iraq War still staining US credibility, "moral responsibility" is a corrective to the image of America as mere enforcer. He isn't promising unilateral disarmament; he's reframing restraint as strength. The line tries to convert historical guilt into diplomatic capital, turning the darkest precedent in modern warfare into a rationale for setting rules everyone else must live by.
The intent is strategic: to justify American leadership on arms control and nonproliferation without sounding naive about geopolitics. Obama isn't confessing to score points; he's staking a kind of moral monopoly. If the US is uniquely implicated, it is also uniquely licensed to lead. That is the subtextual trade: accountability in exchange for legitimacy.
Context matters. In the late-2000s reset era, with Iran and North Korea in the headlines and the Iraq War still staining US credibility, "moral responsibility" is a corrective to the image of America as mere enforcer. He isn't promising unilateral disarmament; he's reframing restraint as strength. The line tries to convert historical guilt into diplomatic capital, turning the darkest precedent in modern warfare into a rationale for setting rules everyone else must live by.
Quote Details
| Topic | Peace |
|---|---|
| Source | Remarks by President Barack Obama, Prague, Czech Republic (speech transcript), April 5, 2009 — contains line: "So as the only nuclear power to have used a nuclear weapon, the United States has a moral responsibility to act." |
More Quotes by Barack
Add to List


