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We Have a PrepCom
Front page article from the News in
Review, the daily NGO newsletter from the Preparatory Committee
for the 2010 Review Conference of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty
Friday, 4 May 2007
For the full edition of the News in Review, click
here.
PrepCom participants appeared fairly surprised yesterday morning
when Iran, after a long-winded statement that sounded like an explanation
for blocking the agenda, suddenly said it “had the honor to
announce” it could agree to the agenda and South Africa's
proposal from Friday. The Conference then agreed to the agenda,
the understanding that “compliance with the Treaty”
means with all provisions of the Treaty, and to proceed with the
indicative timetable. Then, instead of packing our bags and heading
home, we proceeded to substantive debate on Cluster 1 issues yesterday
afternoon.
The morning session was not without its fireworks, of course. Iran
did not accept the South African proposal as it was, but amended
it so that there is an explicit connection between the understanding
of the “compliance” phrase and the agenda (via a familiar
asterisk). Chairman Amano nearly complicated the matter by separating
the amendment from the proposal before South Africa welcomed it,
clarified it, and no one objected. The ordinarily subdued Japanese
Chair showed frustration and even gave a rebuttal to the attacks
delivered in Iran's “acceptance speech”, citing dates
and occasions of his consultations on the agenda.
By the end of the day, however, we found ourselves settling into
meeting mode. The PrepCom spent the afternoon buzzing through 26
statements on Cluster 1, which is generally understood as the nuclear
disarmament cluster. Chairman Amano had requested states to keep
to five minutes or less, and a number of delegations shortened their
delivered statements while circulating longer written statements.
Governments across the political spectrum reaffirmed their commitment
to the outcomes of the 1995 and 2000 review conferences. Egypt reminded
the PrepCom that the indefinite extension of the NPT was largely
agreed to because of the resolution calling for a nuclear weapon
free zone in the Middle East. Canada articulated the general understanding
of the international community that the 13 practical steps towards
nuclear disarmament from 2000 are the objective benchmarks by which
to measure compliance with Article VI of the Treaty. The New Agenda
Coalition noted that these steps are the agreed process for systematic
nuclear disarmament.
States also highlighted various steps of the 13 practical steps,
and commented on their implementation. It was regularly noted that
the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty has not entered into force, and
a treaty banning the production of fissile materials for nuclear
weapons has not been negotiated. Governments also called for further
verified treaty-based reductions from the US and Russia, and, while
noting what has been done, generally assessed that it has not been
enough. Many states also called for a diminished role for nuclear
weapons in security doctrines, and noted concern about new military
doctrines with expanded scenarios for nuclear use, and the development
of new nuclear weapons. States called for the nuclear weapon states
to de-alert their nuclear weapons, reducing the immediate risks
of accidental nuclear war.
Governments also reaffirmed the importance of transparency, irreversibility,
and verification in disarmament measures. Canada, New Zealand, Norway,
Mexico, the Republic of Korea, Brazil, Australia, and Iran supported
submitting regular reports on the implementation of Article VI,
as called for in step 12 of the 13 steps. Canada gave details on
what this reporting might look like, while Brazil suggested the
Secretariat make a chart of disarmament measures based on statements
delivered by the nuclear weapon states, which Canada supported.
Because Reaching Critical Will also believes such reporting is necessary
for the international community to monitor Article VI implementation,
we produce a Model Nuclear Inventory for each NPT meeting. (Please
see the RCW team to get your delegation’s copy.) States Parties
should make such reporting and monitoring a feature of the review
process.
Although we do not have much time left at this PrepCom, we do have
a great deal of substance. After 26 statements impressively delivered
almost entirely within the five-minute time limit set by the Chair,
there were a couple minutes left for “interactive debate”.
This morning, governments will focus on nuclear disarmament and
security assurances, and will hopefully have more time for discussion.
Leaving the chamber, participants could be seen bewilderedly muttering,
“We have a PrepCom. A late PrepCom, a short PrepCom, but a
PrepCom.”
Jennifer Nordstrom, Reaching Critical Will
777 UN Plaza - 6th Floor - New York, NY - 10017 - Ph: 212.682.1265 - Fax: 212.286.8211 - info@reachingcriticalwill.org
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