Appeal for Negotiations
to Eliminate Nuclear Arms
August 1998
The nuclear tests in South Asia have jarred the
world into new awareness of nuclear danger. They have demonstrated
unmistakably the peril of nuclear proliferation and the weakness
of international measures of control. They have also cast harsh
new light on the persistence of the arsenals of the United States,
Russia, China, Great Britain, and France, who jointly possess
some 35,000 nuclear weapons. These two main components of nuclear
danger-proliferation on the one hand, and the remaining cold war
arsenals on the other-can no longer be considered in isolation.
They must be addressed together.
To this end, we call for negotiations to reduce
and eliminate nuclear weapons in a series of well defined stages
accompanied by increasing verification and control. We direct
our appeal especially to the nuclear powers, to confirm and implement
their existing commitment to the elimination of nuclear weapons
in Article VI of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. India has
declared a moratorium on tests and its willingness to give up
nuclear weapons in the context of a global plan for their elimination.
Today, only a commitment to nuclear abolition can realistically
halt nuclear proliferation.
The tests of South Asia pose great danger but,
against the background of the end of the cold war, they have also
created an opportunity that must not be missed to take action
that can at last free the world of nuclear danger. The hour is
late, and the time for action is now.
Signatories are:
Oscar Arias, Alan Cranston, Daniel Ellsberg, Mark Hatfield, Joseph
Rotblat, Admiral Eugene Carroll, Richard Barnet, Mikhail Gorbachev,
Marcus Raskin, Bishop Walter R. Sullivan, Jimmy Carter, Jonathan
Dean, Morton Halperin, Douglas Roche, David Cortright.
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