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"Aaaannnd...ACTION!"
Front page article from the News in Review,
the daily NGO newsletter from the Seventh Review Conference of the
Nuclear NonProliferation Treaty
No. 2, May 3, 2005
The full PDF of this edition of
the News in Review can be found here.
The first day of this much-anticipated Review Conference
opened rather anticlimatically. Sure, there were hordes of NGOs
estimated at about 2000 individuals who arrived at the United Nations
only to be met with extemporaneous rules governing their access
to the debate. Yes, it was true that the President of the Review
Conference, Brazilian Ambassadoratlarge Sergio Q. Duarte, announced
that, despite months of consultations, there was still no agenda.
And yes, the NGOs who did make it up to the gallery collectively
guffawed when Stephen G. Rademaker, speaking on behalf of the US
delegation, announced that the NonNuclear Weapon States parties
to the Treaty benefit from knowing “that their neighbors also
do not possess nuclear weapons.” (The snickers of disbelief
from some Canadian NGOs were particularly loud.)
All of these challenges, disappointments and surprises
seemed a bit torpid in the shadow of the largest public demonstration
for nuclear disarmament in over twenty years.
On Sunday, May 1, approximately 45,000 people from
New York and the world marched through the heart of Manhattan to
Central Park, demanding total nuclear abolition. Activists from
all corners of the world from Malaysia to Europe to the Pacific
Islands shared a stage with dozens of musical and cultural acts,
overlooking throngs of people sprawled out on the lawn or interacting
with educational booths set up around the area’s perimeter.
That’s an act that’s hard to follow.
States parties to the Review Conference must, however,
heed the demands of this massive outpouring of civil society support
for the Treaty’s objectives. Kofi Annan, SecretaryGeneral
of the United Nations, opened his remarks to the Conference by highlighting
just a few of the catastrophes engendered by a nuclear attack: “Tens,
if not hundreds, of thousands of people would perish in an instant,
and many more would die from exposure to radiation…Carefully
nurtured collective security mechanisms could be discredited. Hardwon
freedoms and human rights could be compromised.” Tens of thousands
of people marched in New York to prevent the exact type of scenario
so hauntingly predicted by the SecretaryGeneral.
For their part, States and observers have already
put forth ideas and prescriptions for strengthening the Treaty,
so often hailed as the “cornerstone of disarmament.”
Germany’s Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, for instance,
highlighted four important areas upon which the Review Conference
should make progress, including: universalizing the Additional Protocol;
ensuring civil nuclear energy is not misused for military purposes;
providing security and physical protection of nuclear weapons and
material; and strengthening enforcement against “severe violations
of the Treaty.”
Germany was one of many delegations, including Canada,
the NonAligned Movement (NAM), Ireland, Brazil and New Zealand,
which reaffirmed the 13 Practical Steps as “the basis for
and benchmarks by which we will measure” nuclear disarmament
progress, as noted by Foreign Minister Fischer. These reaffirmations
are a particularly significant element of these opening speeches,
at a time when some delegations have worked hard to undermine the
agreements reached in 2000.
New Zealand’s Minister for Disarmament and Arms
Control Marion Hobbs, speaking on behalf of the New Agenda Coalition
(NAC), called for stricter adherence to the 13 Practical Steps,
including entryintoforce of the Comprehensive Nuclear TestBan Treaty
(CTBT), verification and irreversibility, as well as universalization
of the NPT and strengthening of and support for Nuclear WeaponFree
Zones (NWFZs).
For the NAM, represented yesterday by Malaysian Minister
of Foreign Affairs Syed Hamid Albar, the Package of Decisions reached
in 1995 are equally important agreements that should not be so easily
forgotten or discarded. The NAM, for instance, very much want a
subsidiary body to focus on issues pertaining to the Middle East,
one of the main features of the 1995 Package of Decisions.
For many of the States that spoke yesterday, as well
as for NGOs, a major priority of this Review Conference will be
to “pursu(e)… nuclear disarmament as a fundamental tool
in addressing the international community’s deep concern about
proliferation,” as asserted by Minister Hobbs. To these delegations,
the crisis of the NPT lies not only in suspected proliferation by
Iran and North Korea, but also, as Minister Albar pointed out, “the
lack of balance in the implementation of the NPT” as well
as the Nuclear Weapon States’ “continue(d)…belie(f)
in the relevance of nuclear weapons” which they “continue
to develop and modernize..., threatening international peace and
security.” Minister Albar insisted that “(w)e must all
call for an end to this madness and seek the elimination and ban
on all forms of nuclear weapons testing as well as the rejection
of the doctrine of nuclear deterrence.”
In an effort to meet these demands for accelerated
nuclear disarmament, the US went to great lengths to produce several
glossy brochures and pamphlets on their Article VI compliance, though
none of these goodlooking documents offer anything by way of new
nuclear reductions.
Not all delegations were as alarmed by the lack of
nuclear disarmament, however. Australia, coordinator of the next
CTBT entryintoforce conference scheduled for September, focused
their statement nearly entirely on the proliferation threats to
the Treaty’s integrity, citing nuclear terrorism, Iran and
Libya as the main causes for concern. Australia parted ways from
its American ally, however, when it maintained that negotiations
on a Fissile Material CutOff Treaty (FMCT) “should include
measures to verify that parties are complying with their obligations,”
measures opposed by the United States government.
We are sure, however, to hear more statements along
the lines of Canada’s position, a NATO State under that alliance’s
nuclear umbrella that remains nevertheless an adamant nuclear disarmament
advocate. Canada continued to press for its notoriously “Canadian”
priorities that strengthen both disarmament and nonproliferation
goals, such as regular reporting, increased NGO access and participation
and a strengthened review process. Interestingly, Ireland’s
Foreign Minister Dermot Ahern voiced support for the Canadian proposals
to replace Preparatory Committee meetings with annual General Conferences,
which would have the authority and mandate to make decisions as
required by international events.
Of course, it will not be one singular proposal that
will save the cornerstone of disarmament. Rather, “action
is required on many fronts,” as asserted by the SecretaryGeneral.
If May 1 is any indication, we already know what type of action
that civil society is prepared to take. Just what actions this Conference
will take remains to be seen.
Rhianna Tyson, WILPF
777 UN Plaza - 6th Floor - New York, NY - 10017 - Ph: 212.682.1265 - Fax: 212.286.8211 - info@reachingcriticalwill.org
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