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"Unmasking Success?"
Front page article from the News in Review,
the daily NGO newsletter from the Seventh Review Conference of the
Nuclear NonProliferation Treaty
No. 3, May 4, 2005
The full PDF of this edition of
the News in Review can be found here.
Yesterday, the Review Conference continued to plod
on through its poorlyattended General Debate, even as the prolonged
lack of an agenda threatens the continuance of the Conference itself.
While President Duarte acknowledged that some progress has been
made on particularly sticky points (without divulging further details),
the time remaining for serious work is running out.
The second day of the General Debate perfectly demonstrated
the type of polarization that has mired so much of the international
disarmament machinery. On one side of the spectrum, there are States
such as Sweden, South Africa and Indonesia, which remain determined
to use the Review Conference to strengthen the disarmament commitments
under the treaty and accelerate the implementation of agreements
already reached. For these countries, which are equally worried
about proliferation of nuclear weapons, they rightly understand,
as South Africa noted, that “(t)hose who rely on nuclear weapons
to demonstrate and exercise power should recognize that such dependence
on weapons of mass destruction only serve to increase insecurity
rather than promote security, peace and development.”
On the other side of the spectrum, there are States
such as Poland and South Korea, which failed to even mention the
word “disarmament” in any substantive way. After espousing
support for a laundry list of non and counterproliferation measures
such as the Proliferation Security Initiative, Security Council
Resolution 1540 and the Global Threat Reduction Initiative, Poland
called upon the Conference to “avoid our energy being wasted
on petty and secondary issues.” Then there are other delegations,
such as Slovakia, which, while viewing the Final Document of the
2000 Review Conference as “highly relevant and of particular
importance,” continue to prioritize nonproliferation of nuclear
weapons as an issue “at the very top of the international
danger list.”
To make matters worse, we have also seen some significant
backtracking and weakening of expectations of our international
disarmament and nonproliferation regime. Almost a year after the
US announced that it no longer supports the previouslyagreed upon
Shannon Mandate as a basis for negotiations of a Fissile Materials
CutOff Treaty, we hear more and more delegations dropping references
to the need for this treaty’s verifiability, such as Kyrgyzstan,
Poland, China, Russia and Slovakia.
Some lip service is paid to universalization of the
Treaty, as well as early entryintoforce of the CTBT, by both disarmament
and nonproliferation advocates. (Though perhaps we need to clarify
for the delegates the meaning of “early”, which surely
was not intended to mean nine years the time that has passed since
the negotiation of the CTBT concluded.)
Kazakhstan expressed hope that the Review Conference
works to universalize not only the Treaty, but also the responses
of States when dealing with suspected cases of nonproliferation.
“Some States are punished upon mere suspicion that they might
possess weapons of mass destruction; others are constantly warned
about the harmful nature of such a policy course or censured by
means of unilateral embargo, while still others May 4, 2005
are simply forgiven.” Hence Kazakhstan recognized
a need to adopt “a unified and fair approach” to handling
these cases. Equally, they maintained, there should be standardized
mechanisms in place “that reward States for honoring…their
NPT obligations.
At this stage in the game, States parties are becoming
increasingly concerned with the prospects of a failed Review Conference;
the perceived need to adopt a final document at all costs seems
to be growing. Perhaps Sweden’s assertion that, to do otherwise,
would “weaken our collective security” and make us “all
be losers.” Perhaps it is the low expectation of this Review
Conference that dissuaded governmental representatives from filling
the floor of the General Assembly, which remains, two days into
this seemingly historic event, eerily empty, with just a dozen or
so governments at their seats at any given time.
Though perhaps the delegates, cognizant as Indonesia
is of the “unprecedented opportunity” of the Review
Conference, are squirreled away somewhere, ironing out the remaining
disagreements over a program of work, rather than sitting in the
GA hall, listening to the somewhat predictable General Debate.
So perhaps, then, progress isn’t always visible
to the naked eye. Perhaps, just like the unobservable poison of
radioactivity, the Conference that will save the world from the
scourge of nuclear weapons has begun in the rays of invisible progress,
sorted out behind the scenes, away from the spotlights of the General
Assembly and the watchful eye of civil society.
But just as civil society i.e., hibakusha, downwinders,
physicians, mothers and scientists is needed to shed light on the
invisible dangers of the nuclear age, perhaps it is precisely this
type of public attention that will illuminate the potential successes
of this meeting as well.
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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