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A new decade for disarmament?
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
Wednesday, 5 May 2010
Complete
PDF of this edition.
As the general debate went into its second day, ministers
and ambassadors from around the world continued to address
the Review Conference with words of hope and aspiration for
increased security, cooperation, and peace in a world without
nuclear weapons. Serbia’s foreign minister argued that
zero sum approaches to nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation
could adversely affect international peace and stability.
Germany’s minister of state similarly noted that the
Review Conference needs to send a strong signal of unity,
emphasizing that all of us want more cooperation in arms control
and less weaponry.
However, as several delegations pointed out on Tuesday, there
is a real risk that the 2010 Review Conference will end in
failure as it did in 2005 if governments cannot work together.
The German minister of state, calling for a new decade for
disarmament, noted that much time has been lost already this
century. Many delegates expressed their priority not
just for a “successful” Review Conference, but
for restoring confidence in the NPT regime as a global norm
for international peace and stability. The Norwegian deputy
foreign minister noted that Norway’s broad based civil
society has made it clear to the government that a failed
Review Conference would seriously undermine the authority
and credibility of the NPT.
In reaction to buzz about the “lack of confidence”
in the NPT, some states have characterized calls for the negotiation
of a nuclear weapons convention—which would operationalize
the implementation of the NPT—as a distraction from
the NPT. Some have even suggested that such a convention would
undermine the NPT. However, many delegates and most non-governmental
representatives at this Conference argue that the best way
to restore confidence in the NPT is by implementing it—with
concrete actions, not just words.
All states claim that they are in compliance with their NPT
obligations. However, mechanisms only exist to ensure that
non-nuclear weapon states implement their non-proliferation
obligations. For these states, the most substantial mechanism
to ensure compliance—the comprehensive IAEA safeguards
agreement—must be concluded within 90 days of ratification
and stays in force indefinitely; the non-proliferation obligation
is thus in force swiftly and in perpetuity. With respect
to the disarmament obligation, the international community
is resigned to rely on the “good faith” clause
of article VI. No time lines are specified, nor is there any
mechanism to ensure compliance. The failure to engage in negotiations
to eliminate nuclear weapons 40 years after the Treaty entered
into force, along with nuclear sharing and the engagement
in nuclear trade with non-states parties, are indicative of
the need for mechanisms to ensure nuclear weapon states’
compliance with the Treaty.
This imbalance of obligations does undermine the credibility
of the Treaty. However, as Brazilian foreign minister said
on 3 May, article VI “contains the seed of [the Treaty’s]
own self-correction.” This seed is the obligation to
disarm and cease the arms race. The seed needs to grow into
a nuclear weapons convention.
Restoring the credibility of the NPT will require the concrete
demonstration of good faith by all NPT states parties. Good
faith, according to the International Court of Justice, “obliges
the Parties to apply [a treaty] in a reasonable way
and in such a manner that its purpose can be realized.”
Governments and civil society alike look forward to further
discussion of methods to strengthen the Treaty at this Review
Conference—and all of us hope that discussion leads
to concrete action that leads to improving the Treaty’s
implementation rather than simply maintaining the status quo.
Definitions of success may vary, but we all have a stake in
seeing a progressive, forward-looking outcome—which
is something we should all work for together.
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