| REVISED DRAFT RESOLUTION
(A/c.1/58/L.40)
Fifty-eight session
First Committee
Agenda item 73 (d)
General and complete disarmament: towards a
Nuclear-weapon-free world: a new agenda
Brazil, Egypt, Ireland, Mexico, New Zealand, South
Africa and Sweden:
Draft resolution
Towards a nuclear weapon free world: a new agenda
The General Assembly,
Recalling its resolutions 53/77 Y of 4 December 1998, 54/54 G of
1 December 1999, 55/33 C of 20 November 2000 and 57/59 of 22 November
2002,
Convinced that the existence of nuclear weapons is a threat to the
survival of humanity and that the only real guarantee against the
use or threat of use of these weapons is their complete elimination
and the assurance that they will never be used or produced again,
Convinced also that the retention of nuclear weapons carries the
inherent risk of contributing to proliferation and falling into
the hands of non-State actors,
Reaffirming that nuclear non-proliferation and nuclear disarmament
are mutually equally important and mutually reinforcing processes,
requiring continuous irreversible progress on both fronts,
Declaring that the participation of the international community
as a whole is central to the maintenance and enhancement of international
peace and stability and that international security is a collective
concern requiring collective engagement,
Declaring also that internationally negotiated treaties in the field
of disarmament have made a fundamental contribution to international
peace and security and that unilateral and bilateral nuclear disarmament
measures complement the treaty-based multilateral approach towards
nuclear disarmament,
Noting the Advisory Opinion of the International Court of Justice,
on the Legality of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons, issued
on 8 July 1996,
Declaring that any presumption of the indefinite possession of nuclear
weapons by the nuclear- weapon States is incompatible with the integrity
and sustainability of the nuclear non-proliferation regime and with
the broader goal of the maintenance of international peace and security,
Declaring that each article of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons is binding on the States parties at all times
and in all circumstances and that it is imperative that all States
parties be held fully accountable with respect to the strict compliance
with their obligations under the Treaty, and that the undertakings
therein on nuclear disarmament have been given and that implementation
of them remains the imperative,
Expressing its deep concern at the limited progress to date in implementing
the thirteen steps on nuclear disarmament and determined to implement
these thirteen practical steps to which all States parties agreed
at the 2000 Review Conference of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons,
Expressing its deep concern at the continued failure of the Conference
on Disarmament to deal with nuclear disarmament and to resume negotiations
on a non-discriminatory, multilateral and international and effectively
verifiable treaty banning the production of fissile material for
nuclear weapons and other devices, taking into consideration both
nuclear disarmament and nuclear non-proliferation objectives;
Expressing grave concern that the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban
Treaty has not yet entered into force,
Stressing the importance of regular reporting in promoting confidence
in the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,
Noting the successful completion in September 2002 of the first
phase of the Trilateral Initiative - involving the International
Atomic Energy Agency, the Russian Federation and the United States
- which aims to enable the placement of excess nuclear materials
from dismantled weapons under international safeguards,
Convinced that the further reduction of non-strategic nuclear weapons
constitutes an integral part of the nuclear arms reduction and disarmament
process,
Noting that, despite bilateral agreements, there is no sign of engagement
of all of the five nuclear-weapon States in the multilateral process
leading to the total elimination of nuclear weapons,
Declaring that it is essential that the fundamental principles of
transparency, verification and irreversibility should apply to all
nuclear disarmament measures,
Expressing its deep concern at the continued retention of the nuclear-weapons
option by those three States - India, Israel and Pakistan - that
have not yet acceded to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons and operate unsafeguarded nuclear facilities, in particular
given the effects of regional volatility on international security,
and in this context, the continued regional tensions and deteriorating
security situation in South Asia and the Middle East,
Expressing also its deep concern at the announcement by the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea to withdraw from the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons and at its decision to restart the Yongbyon nuclear
reactor without IAEA safeguards,
Expressing concern that the development of missile defenses could
impact negatively on nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation and
lead to a new arms race on earth and in outer space and stressing
that no steps should be taken which would lead to the weaponization
of outer space,
Expressing its deep concern about emerging approaches to the broader
role of nuclear weapons as part of security strategies, including
rationalizations for the use of, and the possible development of
new types of, nuclear weapons,
Welcoming further the progress in the development of nuclear-weapon-
free zones,
Recalling the United Nations Millennium Declaration , in which the
Heads of State and Government resolved to strive for the elimination
of weapons of mass destruction, in particular nuclear weapons, and
to keep all options open for achieving this aim, including the possibility
of convening an international conference to identify ways of eliminating
nuclear dangers,
Taking into consideration the unequivocal undertaking by the nuclear-weapon
States, in the Final Document of the 2000 Review Conference of the
Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,
to accomplish the total elimination of their nuclear arsenals leading
to nuclear disarmament, to which all the States parties to the Treaty
are committed under Article VI of the Treaty,
1. Reaffirms that any possibility that nuclear weapons could be
used represents a continued risk for humanity;
2. Calls upon all States to refrain from any action that could lead
to a new nuclear arms race or that could impact negatively on nuclear
disarmament and non-proliferation;
3. Calls upon all States to fulfil all their obligations under international
treaties and international law in the field of nuclear disarmament
and non-proliferation;
4. Calls upon all States parties to pursue, with determination,
the full and effective implementation of the agreements reached
at the 2000 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons , the outcome of which provides
the requisite plan to achieve nuclear disarmament;
5. Agrees on the importance and urgency of signatures and ratifications
required to achieve the early entry into force of the Comprehensive
Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty;
6. Calls for the upholding and maintenance of the moratorium on
nuclear-weapon-test explosions or any other nuclear explosions pending
the entry into force of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty;
7. Underlines the urgency of the entry into force of the Comprehensive
Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty in the context of the progress in implementing
the international monitoring system;
8. Calls upon the nuclear-weapon States to implement the commitments
made in the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,
as well as in other nuclear disarmament or reductions agreements
or initiatives, and to apply the principle of irreversibility by
destroying their nuclear warheads and avoid keeping them in a state
that lends itself to their possible redeployment;
9. Acknowledges that the reductions in the numbers of deployed strategic
nuclear warheads envisaged by the Treaty on Strategic Offensive
Reductions ("the Moscow Treaty") represents a positive
first step in the relationship between the United States of America
and the Russian Federation, and calls on the United States of America
and the Russian Federation to make the Treaty verifiable, irreversible
and transparent and to address non-operational warheads, thus making
it a nuclear disarmament measure;
10. Agrees that the further reduction of non-strategic nuclear weapons
should be accorded a higher priority, as an important step towards
the elimination of nuclear weapons, and be carried out in a comprehensive
manner, including:
a) Further reductions in and elimination of non-strategic nuclear
weapons based on unilateral initiatives and included as an integral
part of the nuclear arms reduction and disarmament process;
b) The implementation of reductions in a transparent, verifiable
and irreversible manner;
c) The preservation, reaffirmation and implementation of the 1991
and 1992 presidential nuclear initiatives of the United States of
America and the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republic/Russian Federation
on non-strategic nuclear weapons;
d) The formalization by the Russian Federation and the United States
of America of their Presidential Nuclear Initiatives into legal
instruments, and the initiation of negotiations on further reductions
of such weapons;
e) The enhancement of special security and the physical protection
measures for the transport and storage of non-strategic nuclear
weapons, their components and related materials through, inter alia,
the placing of these weapons in physically secure central storage
sites with a view to their removal and subsequent elimination by
the nuclear-weapon States as a part of the nuclear disarmament process
to which they are committed under the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons, as well as the necessary steps taken by all
nuclear-weapon States in possession of such weapons in this regard;
f) The achievement of further confidence-building and transparency
measures to reduce the threats posed by non-strategic nuclear weapons;
g) The achievement of concrete agreed measures to further reduce
the operational status of non-strategic nuclear weapons systems,
so as to reduce the risk of use of non-strategic nuclear weapons;
h) The undertaking by the nuclear-weapon States that possess such
weapons not to increase the number or types of weapons deployed
and not to develop new types of these weapons or rationalizations
for their use;
i) The prohibition of those types of non-strategic nuclear weapons
that have already been removed from the arsenals of some nuclear-weapon
States, and the development of transparency mechanisms for the verification
of their elimination;
11. Calls upon the nuclear-weapon States to increase their transparency
and accountability with regard to their nuclear weapons arsenals
and their implementation of disarmament measures;
12. Agrees that the Conference on Disarmament should establish,
without delay, an appropriate ad hoc committee to deal with nuclear
disarmament;
13. Agrees that the Conference on Disarmament should resume negotiations
on a non-discriminatory, multilateral and internationally and effectively
verifiable treaty banning the production of fissile material for
nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices taking into consideration
both nuclear disarmament and nuclear non-proliferation objectives;
14. Agrees also that the Conference on Disarmament should complete
the examination and updating of the mandate on the prevention of
an arms race in outer space in all its aspects, as contained in
its decision of 13 February 1992, and re-establish an ad hoc committee
as early as possible;
15. Calls upon the nuclear-weapon States to undertake the necessary
steps towards the seamless integration of all five nuclear-weapon
States into a process leading to the total elimination of nuclear
weapons;
16. Notes that the third and, as appropriate, the fourth meeting
of the Preparatory Committee to the 2005 Review Conference of the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, taking into
account the deliberations and results of the previous sessions,
should make every effort to produce a report containing recommendations
to the Review Conference;
17. Stresses the importance of regular reporting in promoting confidence
in the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons;
18. Calls upon the nuclear-weapon States to respect fully their
existing commitments with regard to security assurances, pending
the conclusion of multilaterally negotiated legally binding security
assurances to all non-nuclear-weapon States parties;
19. Notes the proposals on security assurances that has been submitted
to the States parties of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of
Nuclear Weapons and calls upon the Preparatory Committee to the
2005 Review Conference of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation on
Nuclear Weapons to allow time to thoroughly consider the matter
of security assurances at its third meeting so as to make recommendations
to the Review Conference on how to take the matter forward;
20. Calls upon those three States - India, Israel and Pakistan -,
which are not yet parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons and which operate unsafeguarded nuclear facilities,
to accede to the Treaty as non-nuclear-weapon States, promptly and
without condition, to bring into force the required comprehensive
safeguards agreements, together with additional protocols, consistent
with the Model Protocol Additional to the Agreement(s) between State(s)
and the International Atomic Energy Agency for the Application of
Safeguards approved by the Board of Governors of the International
Atomic Energy Agency on 15 May 1997 , for ensuring nuclear nonproliferation,
and to reverse clearly and urgently any policies to pursue any nuclear
weapons development or deployment and refrain from any action that
could undermine regional and international peace and security and
the efforts of the international community towards nuclear disarmament
and the prevention of nuclear weapons proliferation;
21. Reaffirms the conviction that the establishment of internationally
recognized nuclear-weapon-free zones on the basis of arrangements
freely arrived at among the States of the regions concerned enhances
global and regional peace and security, strengthens the nuclear
non-proliferation regime and contributes towards realizing the objective
of nuclear disarmament;
22. Expresses concern at tensions in the Middle East and South Asia
and renews the support for the establishment of a Middle East zone
free of nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction and
of nuclear-weapon-free zone in South Asia;
23. Calls upon those States that have not yet done so to conclude
full-scope safeguards agreements with the International Atomic Energy
Agency and to conclude additional protocols to their safeguards
agreements on the basis of the Model Protocol;
24. Calls upon the Democratic People's Republic of Korea to reconsider
its recent announcements, with a view to being in full compliance
with the provisions of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons, and in this connection supports all diplomatic efforts
for an early, peaceful resolution of the situation, and for the
establishment of an area free of nuclear weapons in the Korean peninsula;
25. Stresses that the International Atomic Energy Agency must be
able to verify and ensure that nuclear facilities of the States
Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons
are being used for peaceful purposes only, and calls on States to
cooperate fully and immediately with the Agency in resolving issues
arising from the implementation of their respective obligations
towards it;
26. Calls on the Russian Federation and the United States of America
to approach the International Atomic Energy Agency to carry out
the verification requirements set forth in the Plutonium Management
and Disposition Agreement signed by the two States on the basis
of the model legal framework that has been agreed and that is now
available to be used in new verification agreements between the
IAEA and the Russian Federation or the United States of America;
27. Calls upon all nuclear-weapon States to make arrangements for
the placing, as soon as practicable, of their fissile material no
longer required for military purposes under International Atomic
Energy Agency or other relevant international verification and to
make arrangements for the disposition of such material for peaceful
purposes in order to ensure that such material remains permanently
outside military programmes;
28. Affirms that a nuclear-weapon-free world will ultimately require
the underpinning of a universal and multilaterally negotiated legally
binding instrument or a framework encompassing a mutually reinforcing
set of instruments;
29. Acknowledges the report of the Secretary-General on the implementation
of resolution 57/59 , and requests him, within existing resources,
to prepare a report on the implementation of the present resolution;
30. Decides to include in the provisional agenda of its fifty-ninth
session the item entitled "Towards a nuclear-weapon free world:
a new agenda", and to review the implementation of the present
resolution at that session.
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