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North Korea Incites More US Nuclear
Hypocrisy
by David Krieger*, January 17, 2003
On January 10th, North Korea announced its withdrawal
from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). US Secretary
of State Colin Powell responded by stating, “North Korea
has thumbed its nose at the international community. This kind
of disrespect for such an agreement cannot go undealt with.”
Dick Cheney opined that North Korea’s withdrawal from the
NPT “could undermine decades of non-proliferation efforts.”
Yet, those who have read and understand the NPT
appreciate that the treaty intertwines the issues of nuclear non-proliferation
and nuclear disarmament. The one is dependent on the other. Since
the US and the other declared nuclear weapons states have failed
in their obligations to achieve nuclear disarmament, particularly
in the aftermath of the Cold War, they should expect, sooner or
later, that one result will be a breakdown of the NPT regime.
The NPT was created in 1968 by the US, UK and Russia
as a means of preventing the spread of nuclear weapons. Non-nuclear
weapons states agreed not to acquire or develop nuclear weapons
and, in return, the nuclear weapons states agreed to engage in
good faith negotiations for nuclear disarmament.
In the years since 1970 when the treaty entered
into force, 187 countries have signed and ratified the treaty.
All of these countries are non-nuclear except for the five declared
nuclear weapons states (US, UK, France, Russia and China). The
only four states that are not parties to the treaty are India,
Pakistan, Israel and Cuba, and Cuba has indicated its intention
to join the treaty.
India, Pakistan and Israel have all developed nuclear
arsenals outside the framework of the treaty. India made clear
for many years that it was willing to forego its nuclear option
if the five declared nuclear weapons states would take seriously
their obligations for nuclear disarmament. After years of waiting
in vain for the implementation of serious nuclear disarmament
efforts by the nuclear weapons states, India went nuclear in 1998
and Pakistan followed suit.
In 1995 when the NPT was extended indefinitely,
the declared nuclear weapons states promised “[t]he determined
pursuit of systematic and progressive efforts to reduce nuclear
weapons globally, with the ultimate goals of eliminating those
weapons….”
In 2000, when the parties to the NPT held their
sixth review conference, the nuclear weapons states again promised
“[a]n unequivocal undertaking…to accomplish the total
elimination of their nuclear arsenals leading to nuclear disarmament….”
In addition to violating this obligation, the US has also withdrawn
from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty after promising in 2000
that it would preserve and strengthen this treaty “as a
cornerstone of strategic stability.”
The US also agreed to apply the “principle
of irreversibility” to nuclear disarmament, meaning that
deactivated warheads would be destroyed. Instead of following
this principle, however, the US pushed the Russians to agree to
the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty that is based upon the
opposite principle, that of reversibility. The US announced that
at its discretion the strategic nuclear weapons taken off active
deployment pursuant to the agreement would be kept in storage
for potential future redeployment.
After the US promised “the early entry into
force of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty” in 2000,
the Bush administration has refused to re-send this treaty to
the Senate for ratification (the Senate failed to ratify in 1999).
The Bush administration has also sought to reduce the time needed
to resume nuclear testing.
Bush spokesperson Ari Fleischer commented on North
Korea’s withdrawal from the NPT, “There is a light
at the end of the tunnel, and that begins with North Korea’s
immediately dismantling its nuclear weapons programs and coming
into compliance with its obligations around the world.”
The light at the end of the tunnel could also begin with the United
States coming into compliance with its obligations around the
world, starting with its obligation under the Non-Proliferation
Treaty to achieve total nuclear disarmament.
To defuse the current crisis with North Korea,
the US should pursue a policy of engagement. It should accept
North Korea’s offer to enter into negotiations for a non-aggression
pact. The US should also offer to provide North Korea with additional
development assistance to help them in building their economy
and eliminating starvation.
Assurances of peace and non-aggression on the Korean
Peninsula would make all of North Korea’s neighbors more
comfortable. Such assurances would also be an acceptable trade-off
for North Korea to end its nuclear weapons program and to allow
inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency back into
the country to verify the termination and dismantlement of any
nuclear weapons program. These assurances would allow North Korea
to return to the Non-Proliferation Treaty and the 1994 Agreed
Framework.
*David Krieger is president
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. He is the co-author of Choose
Hope, Your Role in Waging Peace in the Nuclear Age.
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