Welcoming the Disarmament
Committee
of the United Nations General Assembly
Statement by Under-Secretary General Jayantha Dhanapala,
October 8, 2001
I begin by congratulating you, Mr. Chairman, upon
your election to guide the work of this Committee. Your distinguished
career equips you well for the tasks ahead -- a career that, in
the disarmament area, features your prominent role in the historic
1995 Review and Extension Conference of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) as well as your chairmanship of the Secretary-General's
Advisory Board on Disarmament Matters. I also congratulate the
other members of the bureau and pledge the fullest support of
the Department for Disarmament Affairs (DDA) in all your efforts
to make this a productive session.
On 10 September 2001, the Secretary-General issued
his annual Message on the eve of what was to be the International
Day of Peace. He urged people everywhere to "try to imagine
a world quite different from the one we know." He called
on everybody to "picture those who wage war laying down their
arms and talking out their differences." He stated that this
"should be a day of global ceasefire and non-violence."
And he closed with these words of hope: "let us seize the
opportunity for peace to take hold, day by day, year by year,
until every day is a day of peace."
The next morning, only an hour before the Secretary-General
was planning to ring the Peace Bell, thousands of citizens from
dozens of countries perished in acts of unmitigated brutality
that defy description. The challenge now facing this Committee,
as it convenes in the shadow of this dark and ominous cloud, is
to confront these new and old threats to international peace and
security. At this critical juncture -- when the peoples of the
world stand together in repudiating mass terrorism -- we must
all work together to build upon this remarkable display of unity.
This is a time for cooperation, for reaffirming the rule of law,
for recognizing common threats, and for acknowledging the extent
to which our common security depends upon justice, fundamental
human rights, and equitable development for all societies. For
this Committee, it is particularly a time for reinforcing the
roads and bridges leading to the fulfilment of multilateral disarmament
commitments, while exploring new paths to reach the same destinations.
It is, in short, a time to resume the work of realizing the vision
described in the Secretary-General's Message on the International
Day of Peace.
Only history will decide how much of a defining
moment 11 September will be. But history will certainly not absolve
us for failing to learn the lessons of this unspeakable tragedy.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in his address on 1 October to the
General Assembly, stated "While the world was unable to prevent
the 11 September attacks, there is much we can do to help prevent
future terrorist acts carried out with weapons of mass destruction."
For us in the disarmament community he set out several guidelines
for future actions that I hope delegations will consider carefully.
Some specific initiatives that merit serious consideration
include:
· First, the need to expand the membership
of the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material,
while strengthening controls over nuclear facilities and the storage
and transportation of nuclear materials.
· Second, the need for new efforts to negotiate
a convention for the suppression of acts of nuclear terrorism
-- the recent terrorist attacks should add new urgency to these
efforts.
· Third, the need for a global database
-- based on publicly available material -- on acts, threatened
acts, or suspected acts of terrorism involving weapons of mass
destruction. The Department for Disarmament Affairs is in contact
with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the Organization
for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) on many of these
issues and is prepared, if so mandated, to establish such a database.
Mr. Chairman, the starting point for the work of
this Committee must be the sobering realization that last month's
tragedy could have been so much worse had nuclear, biological,
or chemical weapons been used. The objective facts require that
we be neither alarmist sowers of panic, nor complacent do-nothings.
We do, however, have a duty to protect innocent citizens throughout
the world by reinforcing the multilateral disarmament regime.
Many of the deadliest super-weapons remain difficult to manufacture
due to the unique characteristics of their weapons materials,
improvements in methods of detecting the production or testing
of such weapons, and technical problems in converting dangerous
materials into effective, deliverable weapons. The world community
must do all it can to raise these hurdles, while strengthening
the fundamental norms against the possession or use of such weapons.
The best way to accomplish this is through the active pursuit
of a robust disarmament agenda. Of one thing we must be clear
-- in the disarmament area there is no going back to business
as usual.
The agenda of this Committee has always been challenging,
yet the tasks ahead are more critical than ever. Many of these
challenges, however, existed well before the tragic events of
11 September. At the conclusion of its 37th session in Geneva
last July, the Secretary-General's Advisory Board on Disarmament
Matters concluded that "there currently exists a crisis of
multilateral disarmament diplomacy."
The symptoms of that crisis -- while numerous earlier
in the year -- are now self-apparent even to casual observers.
We are witnessing a weakening of the basic infrastructure of disarmament
-- one of the eight priority areas in the United Nations work
programme. This state of affairs -- if allowed to continue --
will threaten the very sustainability of disarmament as a means
of enhancing international peace and security.
Disarmament is facing difficult times. There is
no doubt that its future rests heavily upon a strong level of
understanding and support in civil society. Yet today we see signs
of private foundations and other funding agencies moving out of
the field of disarmament or reducing their commitments to this
goal. As funding grows scarce -- a problem aggravated by the turbulent
global financial markets -- key groups in civil society are finding
it increasingly difficult to sustain their work on disarmament
issues. In academia, we find all too few articles in serious scholarly
journals on disarmament per se and very few new doctoral dissertations
that deal directly with disarmament. We find the news media focusing
on the glare of current conflicts rather than the typically slow
and incremental process of eliminating the weapons used in such
conflicts -- or eliminating the weapons that could even destroy
the world. These trends must be reversed, and at a minimum, more
funding made available to non-governmental groups working in the
field of disarmament.
On an inter-state level, we find few governments
with offices specifically devoted to disarmament issues, and New
Zealand still has the distinction of having the only minister
of disarmament. We see a flourishing global arms market -- the
U.S. Congressional Research Service estimates the total value
of arms transfers from 1993 through 2000 at around $303 billion
-- and almost 70 percent of these arms were imported by developing
countries. Meanwhile, global military expenditures are again on
the rise -- amounting last year to an estimated $800 billion.
This growth in the arms trade and military spending contrasts
with the terms of Article 26 of the Charter, which refer to the
least diversion of the world's human and economic resources for
armaments.
At times it appears -- certainly in terms of the
United Nations budgetary procedures -- that we are seeing instead
the least diversion of resources for disarmament. It goes without
saying that the smallest department in the United Nations is the
Department for Disarmament Affairs, which is now seeking a modest
increase in the 2002-2003 biennium budget that is before this
session of the General Assembly. It is also not uncommon to read
of financial problems and resource shortages in key treaty-based
organizations like the IAEA and OPCW.
Two of the classic diplomatic measures for advancing
disarmament, non-proliferation, and anti-terrorism goals -- export
controls and sanctions -- are now in dispute, based on claims
that they are ineffective, discriminatory, or harmful to other
global values. The utility and legitimacy of these mechanisms
requires that these criticisms be addressed, with a view to reaching
universally-agreed guidelines. The danger remains that without
them, the world community would find itself confronted with a
stark choice between ignoring gross violations of global disarmament
and non-proliferation norms and having to defend such norms by
force of arms.
The treaties that constitute the global legal regime
for disarmament are also seriously incomplete. None of the key
treaties prescribing the elimination of weapons of mass destruction
has universal membership, and un-documented allegations of non-compliance
continue to be heard among the States parties, eroding confidence
in the various treaty regimes. Many important treaties have still
not entered into force, including START II and the Comprehensive
Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT), whose members will soon meet in
New York to consider ways of accelerating the ratification process.
With respect to the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC), many
years of efforts to conclude a protocol to strengthen this key
treaty have ended abruptly. The treaty's next five-year Review
Conference, scheduled to convene next month in Geneva, provides
an opportunity to revisit this issue. It must not be missed.
With regard to the NPT, while it is still too early
to predict the fate of the "thirteen steps" to nuclear
disarmament agreed at the NPT 2000 Review Conference, it is fair
to say that delegates attending next year's first Preparatory
Committee meeting for the treaty's 2005 Review Conference will
certainly expect hard evidence of a good faith effort to implement
each of these important goals.
The elimination of landmines is another very important
international disarmament activity, given that they continue to
impede the development and security of populations in almost one
third of the world's countries. Last month, I attended the third
annual meeting of the States parties to the Mine Ban Convention
in Managua, Nicaragua, convened by the United Nations pursuant
to Resolution 55/33 V. Despite the uncertainties of air travel
at the time, the event was marked both by an impressive attendance
of more than 90 states and by positive results that augur well
for the future implementation of this convention. The second annual
conference of States parties to Amended Protocol II of the Convention
on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW) will take place later this
year. It will consider several proposals addressing the scope
of the convention, compliance issues, small calibre weapons and
ammunition, anti-vehicle mines, and the problem of explosive remnants
of war. The Secretary-General is committed to fulfilling his responsibilities
as Depositary to both of these important legal instruments.
The global legal regime is particularly underdeveloped
in the fields of conventional weapons, small arms and light weapons,
preventing an arms race in outer space, and missiles and other
delivery vehicles for weapons of mass destruction. Some of these
problems, however, have been getting increased attention in recent
years. General Assembly Resolution 55/33 A has asked the Secretary-General
to prepare a report, with the assistance of a panel of governmental
experts, on the issue of missiles in all its aspects, and to submit
this report to the General Assembly at its 57th session. China
has introduced in the Conference on Disarmament a proposal for
a treaty banning the deployment of weapons in space. The Programme
of Action successfully adopted at the July 2001 Conference on
the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects
provides a blueprint for international cooperation that may eventually
lead to binding international norms. A question remains: will
the events of 11 September encourage States to consider once again
the need to prohibit the transfer of military-grade small arms
and light weapons to non-state actors?
The chronic deadlock in the Conference on Disarmament
-- the world's single multilateral disarmament negotiating forum
-- is another serious problem that demands an urgent solution,
one that will be found only in the political will of Member States
to begin negotiations. Perhaps the new spirit of cooperation that
has been re-kindled by the events of 11 September will help to
breathe new life into this vitally important international institution.
Taken alone, any one of these obstacles would be
a cause for concern, but taken together, they suggest that disarmament
is facing a very difficult road ahead. The crisis that disarmament
is facing in multilateral diplomacy may reflect a deeper crisis
of the nation-state system as it copes with the new forces of
globalization. Large-scale terrorist events, and the possession
or proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, are only two
of a growing list of twenty-first century problems that are straining
the capacities of political institutions that were developed in
other historical contexts, while casting new doubts on the utility
of attempting to solve such problems through the exercise of military
might. As highlighted in the Millennium Declaration, the Road
Map to implement that declaration, and the Secretary-General's
recent report on the work of the organization, the United Nations
offers indispensable tools to address precisely such twenty-first
century problems.
Despite the difficult challenges ahead for international
peace and security, disarmament remains an attractive alternative
to both deterrence and military defensive measures as responses
to these challenges. One of the most important contributions of
the United Nations in this field comes in the gathering and dissemination
of information about worldwide progress in achieving important
arms limitation and disarmament goals. On behalf of Member States,
the DDA maintains the Register of Conventional Arms, which keeps
track of the production and trade of seven categories of major
weapons systems. This year more than a hundred governments made
submissions to the Register, the highest level of participation
since the Register was created nine years ago.
More Member States are also using the Standardized
Instrument for Reporting Military Expenditures -- this year, nearly
60 have reported data using this instrument, almost double the
average number from previous years. Last July, the States attending
the United Nations Small Arms Conference assigned the DDA the
responsibility of collating and circulating data on the implementation
of the Programme of Action agreed at that conference. DDA's role
as the coordination centre in the Secretariat of all United Nations
activities in the field of small arms was specifically welcomed
in UNGA Resolution 55/33 F.
As requested by the General Assembly, DDA is also
working with a group of outside experts to prepare a study on
disarmament and non-proliferation education that the Secretary-General
will submit to the General Assembly at its 57th session. These
experts have met twice this year and are making progress in identifying
constructive initiatives at the primary, secondary, university
and postgraduate levels of education, in all regions of the world.
Through its many symposia, newsletters, databases, monographs,
films, posters, brochures, lectures to student groups, intern
and fellowship programmes, a regularly-updated web site, and its
new 454-page annual United Nations Disarmament Yearbook -- DDA
is giving its educational responsibilities every bit of attention
they deserve, despite the heavy strain on its limited resources.
I would like to take this occasion to invite all
members of this Committee to attend a special symposium on "Terrorism
and Disarmament" that the DDA will host on the afternoon
of 25 October, involving experts from the IAEA, the OPCW, and
other institutions. This timely event will examine the specific
contributions that disarmament can make in addressing global terrorist
threats.
Mr. Chairman, this Committee faces the difficult
task of moving beyond the tears, the grief, and the anger from
11 September -- and from all acts of terrorism in all countries
-- to the re-establishment of a just and stable foundation for
international peace and security. The Committee must adhere to
its long-standing priorities -- it must keep its focus on discovering
the ways and means of eliminating all weapons of mass destruction,
especially nuclear weapons. As the Secretary-General stated in
his message last month to the General Conference of the IAEA,
"Making progress in the areas of nuclear non-proliferation
and nuclear disarmament is more important than ever in the aftermath
of last week's appalling terrorist attack on the United States."
Though all terrorism is tragic and unacceptable, the United Nations
must place its highest priority on eliminating threats that potentially
affect the greatest number of people -- threats to international
peace and security -- threats, in short, that arise from weapons
of mass destruction.
The Committee has before it many resolutions that
point the way ahead in achieving this basic aim. As it considers
these resolutions, Member States may also wish to consider in
their deliberations some broader questions that concern the disarmament
machinery of the United Nations. Recent events, combined with
the current crisis in multilateral disarmament diplomacy, may
also suggest that the time has come to re-visit the proposal to
convene a Fourth Special Session of the General Assembly on Disarmament.
There is one question, however, that surely does
not belong on this agenda, and that is the question of whether
the primary focus of this Committee should change from "disarmament"
to merely the regulation or limitation of arms. There is of course
an important need for efforts on both fronts. When it comes to
weapons of mass destruction, there is no question that the world
would be far better off pursuing the total and verifiable elimination
of such weapons than in perpetuating the fantasy that their possession
can be permanently limited to an assortment of exclusive, but
by no means leak-proof clubs. By contrast, controls over conventional
weapons are in general better pursued by transparent regulatory
approaches that limit the numbers or characteristics of agreed
weapons systems -- approaches that are consistent with the inherent
right of self defence in Article 51 of the Charter. Together,
both approaches complement each other well in serving the common
interest of international peace and security
Much ground has already been tilled. In their Final
Document of the 2000 NPT Review Conference, the States parties
reaffirmed their common conviction that "the total elimination
of nuclear weapons is the only absolute guarantee against the
use or threat of use of nuclear weapons" -- and that includes
a terrorist use of a nuclear weapon. Given the consequences of
even a single use of a nuclear weapon, is international peace
and security best preserved by partial or conditional guarantees,
or by an absolute guarantee? The same question also applies to
other weapons of mass destruction.
It is not at all unrealistic or inappropriate for
this Committee to keep its focus on the search for absolute guarantees,
and the more it searches, the more it will return to disarmament
-- not regulation -- as the solution for weapons of mass destruction.
In addressing such weapons, the Committee should explore ways
of bringing disarmament to the world, or of bringing the world
to disarmament, but disarmament must be done. As members of this
committee, ask not for whom the Peace Bell tolls. It tolls for
you.
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