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US Nuclear Hypocrisy:
Bad For The US, Bad For The World
by David Krieger, May 31, 2005
Every five years the parties to the nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty meet in a review conference to further the non-proliferation and
disarmament goals of the treaty. This year the conference ended in a
spectacular failure with no final document and no agreement on moving
forward. For the first ten days of the conference, the US resisted
agreement on an agenda that made any reference to past commitments.
The failure of the treaty conference is overwhelmingly
attributable to the nuclear policies of the Bush administration, which has
disavowed previous US nuclear disarmament commitments under the treaty. The
Bush administration does not seem to grasp the hypocrisy of pressing other
nations to forego their nuclear options, while failing to fulfill its own
obligations under the disarmament provisions of the treaty.
The treaty is crumbling under the double standards of American policy, and
may not be able to recover from the rigid "do-as-I-say, not-as-I-do" positions of the Bush administration. These policies are viewed by most of
the world as high-level nuclear hypocrisy.
Paul Meyer, the head of Canada's delegation to the treaty conference,
reflected on the conference, "The vast majority of states have to be
acknowledged, but we did not get that kind of diplomacy from the US." Former UK Foreign Minister Robin Cook also singled out the Bush
administration in explaining the failure of the conference. "How strange," he wrote, "that no delegation should have worked harder to frustrate
agreement on what needs to be done than the representatives of George Bush."
What the US did at the treaty conference was to point the finger at Iran and
North Korea, while refusing to discuss or even acknowledge its own failure
to meet its obligations under the treaty. Five years ago, at the 2000
Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference, the parties to the treaty,
including the US, agreed to 13 Practical Steps for Nuclear Disarmament.
Under the Bush administration, nearly all of these obligations have been
disavowed.
Although President Clinton signed the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty in 1996,
the Bush administration does not support it and refused to allow
ratification of this treaty, which is part of the 13 Practical Steps, to
even be discussed at the 2005 review conference. The parties to the treaty
are aware that the Bush administration is seeking funding from Congress to
continue work on new earth penetrating nuclear weapons ("bunker busters"),
while telling other nations not to develop nuclear arms.
They are also aware that the Bush administration has withdrawn from the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in order to pursue a destabilizing missile
defense program, and has not supported a verifiable Fissile Material Cut-off
Treaty, although the US had agreed to support these treaties in the 13
Practical Steps.
The failure of this treaty conference makes nuclear proliferation more
likely, including proliferation to terrorist organizations that cannot be
deterred from using the weapons. The fault for this failure does not lie
with other governments as the Bush administration would have us believe. It
does not lie with Egypt for seeking consideration of previous promises to
achieve a Middle East Nuclear Weapons Free Zone. Nor does the fault lie with Iran for seeking to enrich uranium for its
nuclear energy program, as is done by many other states, including the US,
under the provisions of the Non-Proliferation Treaty. It would no doubt be
preferable to have the enrichment of uranium and the separation of
plutonium, both of which can be used for nuclear weapons programs, done
under strict international controls, but this requires a change in the
treaty that must be applicable to all parties, not just to those singled out
by the US.
Nor can the fault be said to lie with those states that, having given up
their option to develop nuclear weapons, sought renewed commitments from the
nuclear weapons states not to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear
weapons states. It is hard to imagine a more reasonable request. Yet the
US has refused to relinquish the option of first use of nuclear weapons,
even against non-nuclear weapons states.
The fault for the failure of the treaty conference lies clearly with the
Bush administration, which must take full responsibility for undermining the
security of every American by its double standards and nuclear hypocrisy.
The American people must understand the full magnitude of the Bush
administration's failure at the Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference.
This may not happen because the administration has been so remarkably
successful in spinning the news to suit its unilateralist, militarist and
triumphalist worldviews.
As Americans, we can not afford to wait until we experience an American
Hiroshima before we wake up to the very real dangers posed by US nuclear
policies. We must demand the reversal of these policies and the resumption
of constructive engagement with the rest of the world.
David Krieger is the president of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (www.wagingpeace.org), and the Deputy Chair of the International Network of Engineers and Scientists for Global Responsibility (www.inesglobal.org). He has written extensively on nuclear dangers.
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