Article 26
A neglected instrument for sustainable disarmament and
sustainable development
Introduction
The United Nations Charter was negotiated by 50 governments
and opened for signature in June 1945. Article 26 of the Charter
offers evidence of assumptions made about this new institution
and how nations united and working together could actually
prevent conflict and deliver peace and security, not just
talk about it. Article 26 gives the Security Council and the
Military Staff Committee the responsibility for creating a
plan for regulating armaments and reducing military expenditures,
a task it has neglected entirely. The text of Article
26 reads:
In order to promote the establishment and maintenance
of international peace and security with the least diversion
for armaments of the world's human and economic resources,
the Security Council shall be responsible for formulating,
with the assistance of the Military Staff Committee referred
to in Article 47, plans to be submitted to the Members of
the United Nations for the establishment of a system for
the regulation of armaments.
Article 26 directly challenges and addresses militarism—the
concept that international relations and national security
can only be determined through the threat of military force,
as well as continuous preparation and readiness for armed
conflict. Article 26 demands disarmament and reduced military
expenditures as a precondition for increased security,
development, and peace. Article 26 places the Security
Council at the centre of enforcing disarmament and redirecting
resources away from military security and towards human security.
The Military Staff Committee referred to in Article 26 is
made up of the military Chiefs of Staffof the permanent members
of the Security Council and is charged with advising and assisting
the Security Council “on all questions relating to the
Security Council’s military requirements for the maintenance
of international peace and security, the employment and command
of forces placed at its disposal, the regulations of armaments,
and possible disarmament.” It stopped functioning after
29 months, in July 1948, rendered defunct by the Cold War
and the arms race it institutionalized.
Article 26 was further undermined by the UN Security Council’s
presidential statement of 31 January 2002, S/23500. This statement
arguably represents an agreement between the permanent members
of the Security Council—China, France, Russia, the United
Kingdom, and the United States—on the post-Cold War
world order, in which proliferation of weapons of mass destruction
constitutes a threat to international peace and security.
The statement tacitly reaffirms the continuation of unchecked
militarism and military spending, with the Council committing
itself to take “appropriate action” to prevent
the proliferation of WMD. While the statement calls on all
UN member states to “fulfil their obligations in relation
to arms control and disarmament,” it does not mention
the Security Council’s own obligation under Article
26.
Instead of creating a plan for the control of armament and
the reduction of military spending, the permanent members
of the Security Council have engaged in weapons profiteering
and arms races. These countries, which collectively spent
US$725.2 billion on their own militaries in 2006, benefit
the most from arms transfers to developing countries—in
2006, the United States, Russia, and the United Kingdom dominated
the arms market in the developing world, with the US accounting
for $10.3 billion or 35.8% of such transfers; Russia for $8.1
billion or 28.1%; and the UK for $3.1 billion or 10.8%[1]—and
therefore promote rather than regulate or reduce the manufacture
and sale of weapons. The UN has not failed to deliver peace
and security; powerful UN member states have failed the spirit
and letter of the UN Charter. In so doing, they have failed
to fulfill a mandate of the UN Charter.
Consequences: over-armament and
underdevelopment
The failure to develop a sufficient plan to regulate armaments
has undermined the goals of the United Nations and created
crises of international, national, and human security,
and of sustainable development.
Governments that spend excessive financial, technological,
and human resources on their militaries divert resources from
economic, social, and environmental programs. The military-industrial-academic
complex, composed of a state’s armed forces, the
government, suppliers of weapons systems and services (corporations),
and academic institutions that conduct research on weapon
systems and designs, absorbs vast amounts of funding that
could otherwise be spent on human security, including education,
health, housing, etc.
Furthermore, funds reserved for development initiatives are
increasingly spent on emergency relief and rehabilitation
operations to clean up after violent conflict. Armed conflict
destroys lives and infrastructure, creating a culture of fear,
violence, and instability. This impedes development by upsetting
social programs, education, transportation, business, and
tourism, which prevents economic stability and sustainable
livelihoods. The manufacture and use of weapons also prevents
sustainable ecological development and preservation, creating
unequal access to resources.
Disarmament and development do not automatically trigger
each other: disarmament must be accompanied by efforts
to build or rebuild economic, social, and governing structures
that foster political participation and social integration
and equality, and that transfer resources effectively to the
programmes and efforts that require them most. In addition,
disarmament does not automatically result in a surplus of
resources—the disarmament process can be expensive,
and funds freed from a reduction in military spending will
not necessarily be immediately plugged into disarmament measures.
However, reducing military expenditures does release funds
to be used in other ways, and reducing armaments lowers levels
of instability, violence, and death, which creates conditions
more conducive to development.
US$163 million pay for:
One Littoral Combat Ship
OR
Sending 6.8 million children to school in Afghanistan for
nine years
US$34 billion pays for:
The UK’s military personnel and equipment
OR
Universal access to sexual and reproductive health services.
US$1.7 billion pays for:
A year of R&D and production of unmanned vehicles
OR
Saving the lives of 7.4 million women or infants
in cases of complications during pregnancy or delivery
in low income countries.
The task of disarmament
While the responsibility to implement Article 26 remains with
the Security Council and the Military Staff Committee, the
General Assembly has assumed the burden of moving forward
with disarmament without a formal plan sanctioned by the Security
Council—and thus without the full support of its five
permanent members, and without a legally-binding resolution
to give authority to its actions.
In 1976, the General Assembly, deploring the “meagre
achievements” of the development and implementation
of truly effective disarmament measures, decided to hold a
special session devoted entirely to disarmament in 1978. The
goal of the session was to redefine international relations,
to end the nuclear and conventional arms race, to curb military
spending, and to develop a global, comprehensive strategy
for disarmament.
The special session resulted in a Programme of Action that
outlined priorities and measures in disarmament to be undertaken
“as a matter of urgency with a view to halting and reversing
the arms race and to giving the necessary impetus to efforts
designed to achieve genuine disarmament leading to general
and complete disarmament under effective international control.”
The special session also resulted in the revitalization or
creation of disarmament machinery to take up the task of implementing
its Programme of Action. The final document of the session
explains, “The General Assembly has been and should
remain the main deliberative organ of the United Nations in
the field of disarmament and should make every effort to facilitate
the implementation of disarmament measures.”
Multilateral Disarmament Fora
Thus, without being specifically mandated to formulate a plan
to regulate armaments, the task set out in Article 26 fell
to a group of multilateral disarmament bodies, including the
UN Disarmament Commission (mandated to make recommendations
on disarmament issues to the General Assembly), the General
Assembly First Committee on Disarmament and International
Security (mandated to “build consensus” on disarmament
issues), and the Conference on Disarmament (mandated to negotiate
multilateral disarmament treaties).
Unfortunately, these bodies failed to implement the special
session’s Programme of Action. While cooperation in
these fora has led to certain disarmament measures being successfully
deliberated, negotiated, and implemented, the UN Disarmament
Commission and First Committee have in recent years largely
become showcases to highlight divisions of governmental opinion
on matters of disarmament, non-proliferation, and international
security. The Conference on Disarmament, which convened a
working group on the item “comprehensive programme for
disarmament” between 1980 and 1989, has not adopted
a programme of work since 1999.
The nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) includes disarmament
provisions in its text, both in the preambular and operative
paragraphs. The preamble recalls “that the establishment
and maintenance of international peace and security are to
be promoted with the least diversion for armaments of the
world’s human and economic resources,” and Article
VI of the Treaty obligates all States Parties of the NPT “to
pursue negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating
to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and
to nuclear disarmament, and on a treaty on general and complete
disarmament under strict and effective international control.”
Unfortunately, since the 2000 NPT Review Conference, when
thirteen practical steps to disarmament were agreed to by
all states parties, no progress has been made in implementing
these steps, and some states have since argued they are not
obligated to implement them.
How to proceed?
The Security Council must deliver: Pressure must be
placed on the Security Council to deliver the overdue plans.
Civil society needs to emphasize the importance of Article
26 and the failure of the Security Council and Military Staff
Committee to comply with their obligations under the UN Charter
in whichever fora and media they can. They must vigorously
and consistently call for compliance with Article 26. They
need to encourage their government representatives—parliamentarians,
mayors, foreign ministers, and diplomats—to echo these
calls in their spheres of influence. Governments, in turn,
need to apply pressure, through their statements in multilateral
fora, during bilateral discussions, in their resolutions in
the General Assembly. They should not let the military powers
of the world silently neglect Article 26, but should instead
ostracize those who have prevented it from coming to fruition,
just as those states outside of the Ottawa Convention (Mine
Ban Treaty) have been ostracized enough to comply with most
of the provisions under the Convention despite being non-state
parties.
Civil society and governments alike should:
- Call on the Security Council to report on progress made
towards a plan to reduce the human and economic resources
spent on armaments;
- Request that, within one year, the Office of Legal Affairs,
Office for Disarmament Affairs, individual governments,
and NGOs report on ways and means for implementing Article
26;
- Indicate an intention to evaluate the Security Council’s
performance and initiatives towards advancing Article 26
in the next General Assembly session;
- Call on the world’s disarmament experts concentrated
in Geneva at the Conference on Disarmament to report on
various paths of action that could be taken up to ensure
that the Article 26 obligation is fulfilled, in the interests
of revitalizing the First Committee to undertake the tasks
for which it was created, and revitalizing the Conference
on Disarmament which has been blocked for 9 years.
Delegations to the UNGA First Committee on Disarmament and
International Security could promote and adopt a resolution
containing the above elements. In addition, they could draft
a UN Convention or Protocol on implementing Article 26, as
the Arms Reduction Coalition has done, calling on all UN member
states to make a legally-binding commitment to reducing the
diversion for armaments of their state’s human and economic
resources by an agreed percentage per year.[2]
Governments must report military spending and arms trade:
The United Nations established a Register of Conventional
Arms to enhance transparency of international arms transfers,
procurement through national production, holdings, and relevant
policies, and an Instrument for Reporting Military Expenditures
to enhance transparency of spending on military personnel,
operations, maintenance, procurement, construction, research,
and development.
However, in any given year, less than a third of UN member
states contribute to the Instrument for Reporting Military
Expenditures. More states participate in the Register of Conventional
Arms; 117 participated in 2005.
While these tools make an effort to enhance transparency
in armaments and military expenditures, which is necessary
for building confidence between governments, they are no replacement
for a formalized plan to reduce armaments and expenditures.
Make the reduction of militarism a global norm: To
implement sustained pressure on governments, civil society
must be behind the concepts of reduced military spending,
disarmament, and human security. Attitudes toward militarism
must be changed, through sustained development of a culture
of peace, in order to help shift policies and budgets onto
different paths. This can be done primarily through education
(see the Hague Appeal for Peace and PeaceBoat). Disarmament
will require democratic action; citizens need to engage with
each other and their elected officials on this issue.
[1] Richard F. Grimmett, “Conventional
Arms Transfers to Developing Nations, 1999–2006,”
CRS Report for Congress, RL34187, 26 September 2007.
[2] http://www.arcuk.org/pages/proposal.htm
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