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Opportunities
Ray Acheson, Reaching Critical Will
Front page article from the News in Review,
the daily NGO newsletter from the second session of the
Preparatory Committee for the 2010 nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty Review Conference
Monday, 28 April 2008
Complete PDF of this
edition.
Last week at the United Nations Disarmament Commission, delegates
failed to agree on recommendations for either of the Commission's
agenda items, unable to compromise on even the lowest-common
denominator documents. A month ago, the Conference on Disarmament
closed the first part of its 2008 session without adopting
a programme of work. Last year, the first session of the PrepCom
nearly collapsed over the agenda. All of these failures and
disappointments are seeded in the world outside of multilateral
diplomatic fora—the world of politics and policies,
global corporate capitalism, mass media, occupations and interventions,
wars. The world where decisions are made and actions taken
that affect everything that happens here, that limit the possibility
of progress by constantly reinforcing the status quo.
Dr. Patricia Lewis of UNIDIR explained to the First Committee
in October that our disarmament machinery is a complex system:
it is composed of a multiplicity of fora, which are composed
of multiple elements—treaties, negotiating and deliberative
bodies, international organizations—each of which in
turn are composed of issues, methods, and actors. All these
components of the system interact with each other and with
components of broader systems of domestic politics and international
relations. Exchanges between diplomats at the PrepCom are
not simply a product of their experiences in the Assembly
Hall. But as Dr. Lewis explained, small changes in environment,
such as the introduction of new methods of work or external
events, can affect the entire system.
Creative, responsive, and adaptive structures are needed
in order to move forward. Cooperation and community are essential—progress
toward disarmament, peace, security, and environmental sustainability
requires constructive engagement with others, the development
and maintenance of collective and critical consciousness,
and the determination—and capacity—to resist the
status quo and to create and sustain an alternative.
While PrepComs and other elements of our existing disarmament
machinery do not provide the best opportunities for the kind
of community- and capacity-building we need and while interactions
between and among delegates and NGO representatives at these
conferences can be stagnant and repetitive, we should work
to build the structures we need wherever we can and resist
the status quo whenever we can. We can be creative—the
process of banning cluster munitions, which was removed from
an existing structure that was not fulfilling its potential,
is going strong and is expected to produce a treaty by the
end of 2008. We can lay the seeds for the future we want by
making our vision clear and loud. We can emphasize to governments
that we want a stronger, non-discriminatory NPT, by laying
out steps and strategies for them to follow and supporting
delegations' working papers that make suggestions to this
end.
Civil society representatives have come to this PrepCom to
deliver critiques, discuss ideas, and circulate proposals.
Side events have been scheduled throughout the PrepCom on
topics ranging from a nuclear weapons convention, a nuclear
free Middle East, a fissile materials treaty, good faith and
international law, the operational status of nuclear weapons,
environmental aspects of nuclear power, and much more. See
page 8 of this News in Review for a listing of today's events
and visit www.reachingcriticalwill.org for events throughout
the conference.
Members of the NGO community have also prepared reports and
publications for this PrepCom to provide analysis and information
and give good examples of what substantive work looks like.
Project Ploughshares has prepared a review of NPT reporting:
“Building a Culture of Accountability: States Parties
Reporting to the NPT Review Process.” Staff from the
Lawyers' Committee on Nuclear Policy and Reaching Critical
Will will be previewing the revitalized Arms Control Reporter,
a reference journal that covers international efforts to limit
all types of weapons, including nuclear, biological, and chemical
weapons and their delivery systems; major conventional weapons;
small arms and light weapons; cluster munitions; and landmines—more
information is available at www.armscontrolreporter.org. Ban
All Nukes generation (BANg), INESAP, and Darmstadt University
of Technology will be holding a simulation game on Saturday,
3 May, when 40–50 youth and students will negotiate
a nuclear weapons convention.
We encourage delegates to consider these analyses, to engage
with civil society on our ideas and suggestions, to attend
our events, ask questions, and find the common ground necessary
to carry these initiatives for a nuclear weapon free world
forward. We encourage members of civil society to engage your
governments, to give their support for what is being done
and ask for what is not—and more importantly, to engage
with each other: with your local representatives, with your
community groups, your schools, your churches, your media.
The goals of the NPT cannot be achieved without a collective
and critical consciousness, which can only be developed by
people working, talking, resisting, and organizing everywhere.
777 UN Plaza - 6th Floor - New York, NY - 10017 - Ph: 212.682.1265 - Fax: 212.286.8211 - info@reachingcriticalwill.org
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