UN General Assembly
First Committee
Resolution A/C.1/53/L.48/REV.1
Towards a Nuclear Weapon-Free World:
The Need for a New Agenda
November 13 1998
Benin, Botswana, Brazil, Cameroon, Chile, Colombia,
Congo, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, Fiji, Guatemala,
Ireland, Lesotho, Liberia, Malaysia, Mali, Mexico, New Zealand,
Nigeria, Panama, Peru, Samoa, Slovenia, Solomon Islands, South
Africa, Swaziland, Sweden, Thailand, Togo, Uruguay, Venezuela
and Zambia:
Revised Draft Resolution
The General Assembly,
Alarmed by the threat to the very survival of mankind
posed by the existence of nuclear weapons,
Concerned at the prospect of the indefinite possession
of nuclear weapons,
Concerned at the continued retention of the nuclear-weapons
option by those three States that are nuclear-weapons capable
and that have not acceded to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons (NPT),
Believing that the proposition that nuclear weapons
can be retained in perpetuity and never used accidentally or by
decision - defies credibility, and that the only complete defence
is the elimination of nuclear weapons and the assurance that they
will never be produced again,
Concerned that the Nuclear-Weapon States have not
fulfilled speedily and totally their commitment to the elimination
of their nuclear weapons,
Concerned also that those three States that are
nuclear-weapons capable and that have not acceded to the NPT have
failed to renounce their nuclear-weapons option,
Bearing in mind that the overwhelming majority
of States entered into legally-binding commitments not to receive,
manufacture or otherwise acquire nuclear weapons or other nuclear
explosive devices, and that these undertakings have been made
in the context of the corresponding legally-binding commitments
by the nuclear-weapons States to the pursuit of nuclear disarmament,
Recalling the unanimous conclusion of the International
Court of Justice (ICJ) in its 1996 Advisory Opinion that there
exists an obligation to pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion
negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament in all its aspects
under strict and effective international control,
Stressing that the international community must
not enter the third millennium with the prospect that the possession
of nuclear weapons will be considered legitimate for the indefinite
future and convinced that the present juncture provides a unique
opportunity to proceed to prohibit and eradicate them for all
time,
Recognizing that the total elimination of nuclear
weapons will require measures to be taken firstly by those nuclear-weapon
States that have the largest arsenals, and Stressing that these
States must be joined in a seamless process by those nuclear-weapon
States with lesser arsenals in the near future,
Welcoming the achievements to date and the future
promise of the START process and the possibility it offers for
development as a plurilateral mechanism including all the nuclear-weapon
States, for the practical dismantling and destruction of nuclear
armaments undertaken in pursuit of the elimination of nuclear
weapons,
Believing that there are a number of practical
steps that the nuclear-weapon States can and should take immediately
before the actual elimination of nuclear arsenals and the development
of requisite verification regimes take place, and in this connection
noting certain recent unilateral and other steps,
Welcoming the agreement recently reached in the
Conference on Disarmament (CD) on the establishment of an Ad Hoc
Committee under Item 1 of its agenda entitled 'Cessation of the
nuclear arms race and nuclear disarmament' to negotiate, on the
basis of the report of the Special Coordinator (CD/1299) and the
mandate contained therein, a non-discriminatory, multilateral
and internationally and effectively verifiable treaty banning
the production of fissile material for nuclear weapons or other
nuclear explosive devices, and considering that such a treaty
must further underpin the process towards the total elimination
of nuclear weapons,
Emphasising that for the total elimination of nuclear
weapons to be achieved, effective international cooperation to
prevent the proliferation of nuclear weapons is vital and must
be enhanced through, inter alia, the extension of international
controls over all fissile material for nuclear weapons or other
nuclear explosive devices,
Emphasising the importance of existing Nuclear-Weapon-Free
Zone treaties and of the signature and ratification of the relevant
protocols to these treaties,
Noting the Joint Ministerial Declaration of 9 June
1998 and its call for a new international agenda to achieve a
nuclear-weapon-free world, through the pursuit, in parallel, of
a series of mutually reinforcing measures at the bilateral, plurilateral
and multilateral levels,
1. Calls upon the Nuclear-Weapon States to demonstrate
an unequivocal commitment to the speedy and total elimination
of their respective nuclear weapons and without delay to pursue
in good faith and bring to a conclusion negotiations leading to
the elimination of these weapons, thereby fulfilling their obligations
under Article VI of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons (NPT);
2. Calls upon the United States and the Russian
Federation to bring START II into force without further delay
and immediately thereafter to proceed with negotiations on START
III with a view to its early conclusion;
3. Calls upon the Nuclear-Weapon States to undertake
the necessary steps towards the seamless integration of all five
Nuclear-Weapon States into the process leading to the total elimination
of nuclear weapons;
4. Calls upon the Nuclear-Weapon States to pursue
vigorously the reduction of reliance on non-strategic nuclear
weapons and negotiations on their elimination as an integral part
of their overall nuclear disarmament activities;
5. Calls upon the Nuclear-Weapon States, as an
interim measure, to proceed to the de-alerting of their nuclear
weapons and in turn to the removal of nuclear warheads from delivery
vehicles;
6. Urges the Nuclear-Weapon States to examine further
interim measures, including the measures to enhance strategic
stability and accordingly to review strategic doctrines;
7. Calls upon those three States that are nuclear
weapons-capable and that have not yet acceded to the Treaty on
the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) to clearly and
urgently reverse the pursuit of all nuclear weapons development
or deployment and to refrain from any actions which 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;
8. Calls upon those States that have not yet done
so to adhere unconditionally and without delay to the Treaty on
the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) and to take all
the necessary measures which flow from adherence to this instrument;
9. Calls upon those States that have not yet done
so to conclude full-scope safeguards agreements with the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and to conclude additional protocols
to their safeguards agreements on the basis of the Model Protocol
approved by the IAEA Board of Governors on 15 May 1997;
10. Calls upon those States that have not yet done
so to sign and ratify, unconditionally and without delay, the
Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) and, pending the
Treaty's entry into force, to observe a moratorium on nuclear
tests;
11. Calls upon those States that have not yet done
so to adhere to the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear
Material and to work towards its further strengthening;
12. Calls upon the Conference on Disarmament (CD)
to pursue its negotiations in the Ad Hoc Committee established
under Item 1 of its agenda entitled 'Cessation of the nuclear
arms race and nuclear disarmament' on the basis of the report
of the Special Coordinator (CD/1299) and the mandate contained
therein, of 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 non-proliferation and nuclear
disarmament objectives, and to conclude these negotiations without
delay; and pending the entry into force of the treaty, urges States
to observe a moratorium on the production of fissile materials
for nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices;
13. Calls upon the Conference on Disarmament to
establish an appropriate subsidiary body to deal with nuclear
disarmament and, to that end, to pursue as a matter of priority
its intensive consultations on appropriate methods and approaches
with a view to reaching such a decision without delay;
14. Considers that an international conference
on nuclear disarmament and nuclear non-proliferation, which would
effectively complement efforts being undertaken in other settings,
could facilitate the consolidation of a new agenda for a nuclear-weapon-free-
world.
15. Recalls the importance of the Decisions and
Resolution adopted at the 1995 NPT Review and Extension Conference,
and underlines the importance of implementing fully the "Strengthening
the Review Process for the Treaty" Decision;
16. Affirms that the development of verification
arrangements will be necessary for the maintenance of a world
free from nuclear weapons and requests the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA), together with any other relevant international
organisations and bodies, to explore the elements of such a system;
17. Calls for the conclusion of an internationally
legally-binding instrument to effectively assure non-nuclear-weapon
States Party to the Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons (NPT) against the use or threat of use of nuclear weapons;
18. Stresses that the pursuit, extension and establishment
of Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zones, on the basis of arrangements freely
arrived at, especially in regions of tension, such as the Middle
East and South Asia, represent a significant contribution to the
goal of a nuclear- weapon-free world;
19. Affirms that a nuclear-weapon-free world will
ultimately require the underpinnings of a universal and multilaterally
negotiated legally binding instrument or a framework encompassing
a mutually reinforcing set of instruments;
20. Requests the Secretary General, within existing
resources, to compile a report on the implementation of the resolution;
21. Decides to include in the provisional agenda
of its fifty-fourth session the item entitled "Towards a
Nuclear Weapons Free-World: The Need for a New Agenda", and
to review the implementation of this resolution.
ADOPTED
YES 97
NO 19
ABSTAIN 32
|