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Discussion of a Middle East NWFZ:
Dialogue of the deaf
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
Tuesday, 6 May 2008
Complete PDF of this
edition.
On Monday, delegations finished delivering statements on
cluster 2 and began discussing regional issues, including
implementation of the 1995 Middle East resolution. This always
contentious and divisive issue has become even more of a political
powder keg in the NPT context due to the recent accusations
made by the US government about Syria’s alleged cooperation
with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea to construct
a clandestine nuclear reactor that the US believes “was
indeed not intended for peaceful purposes.”
During the PrepCom, other states have expressed concern about
these allegations, including Australia, Canada, the European
Union, France, the Republic of Korea, and the United Kingdom.
On Monday, the UK delegation said their government’s
officials “found the evidence presented to be convincing,”
and Canada’s Amb. Grinius called on both the DPRK and
Syria “to cooperate fully with the IAEA to clarify the
situation.”
These expressions of concern have prompted the Syrian delegation
to exercise its right of reply several times throughout the
PrepCom, including twice on Monday. He argued that these governments,
which maintain silence about or even assist Israel’s
nuclear programme, have no right to accuse Syria of violating
its safeguards agreements or the NPT. He complained that Amb.
Grinius didn’t even mention Israel or request that Israel
accede to the NPT, concluding that Canada lacks credibility
not just in the NPT but in all international fora. Iranian
Amb. Soltanieh also complained that Canada “made a dangerous
prescription” in its report on the Middle East nuclear
weapon free zone to the PrepCom (see NPT/CONF.2010/PC.II/3),
arguing that Canada’s proposal for states not party
to the NPT in the Middle East to “separate civilian
and military fuel cycles and to place all civilian nuclear
activities under IAEA safeguards” as an interim confidence-building
measure until they accede to the NPT.is an “irresponsible
suggestion”. He insisted, “The countries in the
region cannot accept anything less than the total and unconditional
elimination of Israeli nuclear weapons and its facilities
and its acceding to the NPT.”
Most delegations recognize the connection between the peace
process in the Middle East and the establishment of a nuclear
weapon free zone (NWFZ) in the region. However, almost all
states take the position that one has to happen before the
other, which Greenpeace International Political Advisor Merav
Datan described as a “chicken or the egg” dilemma,
in a event organized by Greenpeace on the experience of campaigning
for disarmament in Israel (see page 6). On Monday, many Arab
delegations argued that the establishment of a NWFZ in the
Middle East would, as the Egyptian delegate said, “advance
the prospects of overall peace in the region.” He also
argued it would “represent a practical attestation that
destructive arms and weapons would no longer remain the guarantor
of security.” China’s delegate agreed it would
advance the peace process in the Middle East, by helping create
a political atmosphere of trust and conciliation.
As a fundamental step toward creating a Middle East NWFZ,
many states repeated calls for Israel to join the NPT as a
non-nuclear weapon state and place its nuclear facilities
under IAEA safeguards. Yet others, particularly those from
the West, refrained from mentioning Israel by name, simply
calling on “all states in the region to accede to the
NPT as a non-nuclear weapon state,” without mentioning
that Israel is the only state who has not yet done so. These
are often the same states that tend to emphasize the need
for progress in the peace process as a precursor to the establishment
of a NWFZ.
Meanwhile, Western delegations have increasingly called on
Iran to cease uranium enrichment and other “proliferation
sensitive” activities and to comply with relevant UN
Security Council resolutions. During the PrepCom, the United
States has even gone as far as to proclaim that non-nuclear
armed Iran is single largest barrier to a MENWFZ, without
any reference at all to nuclear-armed Israel. On Monday, the
US delegation recommended that Iran follow Libya’s example
and give up its nuclear programme, noting that it has been
offered a “remarkably generous package of incentives
that present the regime in Tehran with two choices”—“defiance
and noncompliance ... isolation ... continuing and additional
sanctions ... further stunted economic opportunities,”
or “international reconciliation [and] the eventual
restoration of international trust in its peaceful intentions.”
This “choice” offered by the US further undermines
what Norway’s delegate described as the already “fragile
consensus” on the Middle East. For example, a statement
made by the UK delegation prompted right of replies from both
the Russian and Chinese delegations, who criticized the UK
representative for making political comments about the Iran
situation on their behalf without their consent. In addition,
the perception of double standards—or what Amb. Soltanieh
referred to as “nuclear apartheid” in the Middle
East—is a major source of tension during the NPT review
cycles. These double standards contradict the fundamental
bargain of the NPT itself and undermine the basis upon which
the decision to indefinitely extend the Treaty was agreed
to the Arab states and many other non-nuclear weapon states.
In response to these tensions, a few states appealed to reason
and sincerity. Malaysia’s delegation called for “genuine
dialogue,” while New Zealand’s representative
argued that promises of the past need to be effectively implemented
in good faith. Botswana’s delegation, noting that the
situation requires leadership, flexibility, and compromise
from the nuclear weapon states in particular, warned that
the disarmament debate is in danger of turning out “to
be a dialogue of the deaf with no end in sight.”
NGO observers often find the circuitous, repetitive nature
of “discussions” of the NPT review cycle extremely
frustrating, and are sometimes made to feel incapable of doing
anything about it. Yet it is here where we and all of civil
society should feel the most empowered to act creatively,
to reject and resist our governments’ policies and actions
that reinforce double standards, undermine consensus, or do
not foster peace through genuine dialogue. In our own countries,
we can stimulate and maintain a dialogue among citizens and
between the people and their representatives. At the event
mentioned above, representatives of Greenpeace spoke about
their work in Israel, where a culture of fear can limit or
even “prohibit” discussion about security and
nuclear issues. They try to foster communication and understanding
about their government’s official policies and encourage
citizens to question its actions. For example, Sharon Dolev
of Greenpeace explained that Israel’s occupation of
Palestine and human rights issues were once taboo, through
a grassroots movement to use all available political tools
and employing creative ways to reach out and stimulate dialogue,
those issues have now entered the realm of mainstream political
discourse. Through sustained efforts to question and resist
the status quo, we can influence government priorities and
policies and help bring about the nuclear free world of peace,
justice, and equality that we desire. •
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