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Challenges and choices at the 2010
Review Conference
Ray Acheson | Reaching Critical Will of WILPF
Front page article from the NPT News in
Review, the daily NGO newsletter from the
2010 nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference
Monday, 3 May 2010
Complete
PDF of this edition.
Government officials from the 189 countries that are party
to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) are gathered
at the United Nations to review the implementation of the
world’s most widely adhered to multilateral disarmament
agreement. They are joined by well over a thousand non-governmental
representatives from 121 different organizations from around
the world, primarily representing a range of peace and disarmament
interests and constituents.
They are all are here because the NPT Review Conference is
an opportunity for governments to make concrete and substantive
progress on nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation. It
is a chance for governments to work together cooperatively
in the interest of a shared humanity and planet. They also
have an opportunity to work with civil society to ensure that
the words of the Conference become reality.
There are plenty of obstacles on the path to a “successful”
Review Conference—the definition of which varies widely
from country to country and group to group. The 2005 Review
Conference was a failure because of its inability to achieve
and substantive outcome document and the acrimonious environment
in which it conducted its work. After a year of rising expectation
for disarmament, pressure is high this year for the Conference
to conclude with a substantive outcome that sees meaningful
commitments to nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation.
The government officials mandated to negotiate an outcome
for this Review Conference and the civil society representatives
interested in holding them accountable are not the only ones
paying attention. Corporate, academic, and political spheres
of power within many countries each have economic, political,
or social interests in the outcome. Following the money can
offer an important illustration—with global military
expenditure reaching USD 1.464 trillion in 2008 and nuclear-armed
states spending billions on their nuclear programmes every
year, the trend is toward increasing armament, not disarmament;
toward perpetual war, not peace.
Yet most civil society organizations and governments attending
this Conference argue that nuclear weapons do not provide
security. Nuclear weapons cannot respond to the world’s
converging crises of climate change, famine, drought, poverty,
and infectious disease. Instead, the development, deployment,
and proliferation of nuclear weapons increases global tensions,
disparities, polarization, and environmental degradation.
It also squanders the economic, political, and human resources
that could otherwise be used to confront and solve the collective
crises we face.
In order to save our planet from the direct and indirect
consequences of nuclear weapons, most civil society voices
will be continuing to encourage all governments at the NPT
Review Conference to work towards negotiations of a nuclear
weapons convention (NWC), which would prohibit the development,
testing, production, stockpiling, transfer, use, and threat
of use of nuclear weapons—thus fulfilling the requirements
of article VI of the NPT. A NWC would also close article V
and fill in the gaps left in articles II and III.
Most government and non-governmental representatives will
also be encouraging the cessation of investments in nuclear
weapon programmes and of nuclear weapon research, development,
testing, and component production, as a way to prevent further
proliferation of nuclear weapons within and between countries.
And they will be pushing for an end to nuclear “sharing”
and nuclear “umbrella” arrangements that extend
the shadow of these weapons over wide expanses of the globe.
The decisions taken at this Review Conference are directly
relevant to building a more politically, economically, and
socially just world in which the majority of the world’s
people are empowered to live a healthy, dignified, and productive
life. The Conference can thus demonstrate the true commitments
of governments, whether it is to corporate and political elitism
or to true collective security—to lucre or survival.
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