The Imperative of Revitalizing Nuclear Disarmament
August 24, 2007 |
This documents is based on an Extradordinary
Workshop convened by
The Pugwash Conferences on Science
and World Affairs and the Middle Powers Initiative
on the occasion of the 50th Anniversary
of the Pugwash Conferences
Pugwash, Nova Scotia, 5-7 July 2007
Preface
On
the 50th anniversary of the first meeting of the Pugwash
Conferences on Science and World Affairs, held in at the
Cyrus Eaton home, Thinker’s Lodge, in Pugwash, Nova
Scotia, a distinguished group of 25 international specialists
on nuclear weapons issues convened to discuss the urgency
of revitalizing nuclear disarmament in order to free the
world from the ever-present threat posed by nuclear weapons. Under
the auspices of the Pugwash Conferences and the Middle
Powers Initiative, the participants discussed a variety
of measures that need to be taken by both the nuclear weapons-states
and the non-nuclear weapons states who are members of the
1968 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in order to provide
needed momentum toward the goal of declaring nuclear weapons
illegal and immoral and eliminating them entirely.
The
Pugwash Conferences and the Middle Powers Initiative believe
strongly that global cooperation on an entirely new scale
will be needed to eliminate the many common threats to
humanity, including nuclear weapons. While the Pugwash
50th anniversary workshop focused on the nuclear threat,
new modes of international cooperation will also be needed
to tackle the many other global challenges that threaten
basic human security, such as climate change, the scourge
of HIV-AIDS and other diseases, the lack of adequate food,
water, health care and education for many of the world’s
peoples, and environmental degradation. It is imperative
that we recall the words of the 1955 Russell-Einstein Manifesto,
of “thinking in a new way” and “remembering
our humanity”, as we seek to solve the challenges
of the 21st century.
In their Manifesto, Lord Russell and Albert Einstein gave
equal emphasis to the renunciation of war as an instrument
of policy, and it is to that end that the Pugwash Conferences
have focused on “practical non-proliferation” by
focusing its work in precisely those regions where, should
armed conflict occur, nuclear weapons could well be used.
Introduction
Over
the past several years, events around the world have conspired
to seriously jeopardize the nuclear non-proliferation regime
and increase the danger that nuclear weapons might be used
in conflict for the first time since 1945.
Not
since the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the end of
the Cold War in the early 1990s have so many ominous threads
converged to call into question the ability of the international
community to both check the spread of nuclear weapons and
reduce existing stockpiles that still number more than
25,000 such weapons.
Active
negotiations between the United States and Russia, which
between them control more than 95 percent of the world’s
nuclear weapons, are non-existent. While the Moscow
Treaty calls for each country to reduce its arsenal to
1,700 to 2,200 each by the end of 2012, there are no provisions
for destroying excess warheads (which can be kept in operational
reserve), and each country is expected to retain many thousands
of nuclear warheads - absurd numbers in today’s international
security environment.
Equally
worrisome are rising tensions between Washington and Moscow
over planned deployments of US missile defense systems
in Poland and the Czech Republic, and the possible breakdown
of two long-standing arms control agreements: the 1987
INF Treaty on intermediate-range nuclear forces, and the
1990 Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty.
The
situation with the other existing nuclear weapons states – the
UK, France, China, Israel, India, Pakistan, and North Korea – is
hardly more reassuring. None of them are implementing
the obligation, affirmed by the International Court of
Justice in 1996, to pursue negotiations in good faith on
nuclear disarmament in all its aspects under strict and
effective international control. The UK and France
have expanded their nuclear doctrine to include the threat
or use of nuclear weapons in a wider range of circumstances.
The UK has all but taken the political decision to modernize
and extend its nuclear Trident submarine deterrent until
the year 2050 or later.
As
for the more recent nuclear weapons states – Israel,
India, Pakistan, and North Korea – all of them live
in dangerous and unstable neighborhoods. Advocates
of nuclear weapons in these countries would argue that
this is precisely why their countries need nuclear weapons,
as a deterrent against existential threats to security. Should
open conflict break out in any of these regions, however,
the risk of nuclear weapons use will be dangerously high,
with unimaginable consequences.
Moreover,
the risks remain high of nuclear weapons spreading to more
countries, and possibly to non-state terrorist groups. International
concern over Iran’s nuclear program is but symptomatic
of the fact that some 40 countries around the world have
sufficient know-how when it comes to uranium enrichment
and plutonium reprocessing technologies to possibly have
the capability of developing nuclear weapons. As
we have seen recently with the interest shown by several
states in the volatile Middle East – including Egypt,
Saudia Arabia, the Gulf states, and Turkey – the
nuclear program of a neighboring country (in this case,
Iran) can initiate a chain-reaction of interest in mastering
the nuclear fuel cycle.
The
Pugwash 50th Anniversary workshop – Revitalizing
Nuclear Disarmament – was co-sponsored by
the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs and
the Middle Powers Initiative from 5-7 July 2007 in Pugwash,
Nova Scotia, site of the very first Pugwash meeting of
scientists from around the world in July 1957. The
findings of the Middle Powers Initiative through four meetings
of the Article VI Forum, published in “Towards 2010:
Priorities for NPT Consensus,” provided important
inputs for the workshop discussion.
Although
nuclear weapons have not been used since Hiroshima and
Nagasaki in 1945, we are now entering an entirely new phase
of the nuclear dilemma, where the proliferation threats
posed by non-state terrorist groups and new nuclear-weapons
states demand entirely new ways of thinking about nuclear
weapons and security. As the Pugwash Council noted
following its meeting in Hiroshima, Japan in 2005 – with
the evidence of the horrors of nuclear warfare still fresh
for all to see – “as long as nuclear weapons
exist, they will one day be used.”
The
goal of eliminating all nuclear weapons is indeed becoming
feasible, 50 years after the Pugwash Conferences committed
itself to that objective. Mainstream political figures
are coming to endorse the urgent need to move toward that
end, as stated by George Shultz, William Perry, Henry Kissinger,
and Sam Nunn, in their now famous opinion piece in the
Wall Street Journal on 4 January 2007: We endorse setting
the goal of a world free of nuclear weapons and working
energetically on the actions required to achieve that goal.
In
May of 2007, in Vienna, the first PrepCom was held in advance
of the 2010 NPT Review Conference. In comparison
to the woefully weak conclusion of the 2005 NPT Review
Conference, the 2007 PrepCom agreed on a modestly encouraging
document that affirmed the Non-Proliferation Treaty as “the
cornerstone of the non-proliferation regime”. The
document further noted that “multilateralism and
mutually agreed solutions… provide the only (emphasis
added) sustainable method” for working toward nuclear
disarmament and nuclear non-proliferation.
From
many quarters of the international community, momentum
is building to re-energize the campaign to control, reduce
and eliminate nuclear weapons. The time for decisive
leadership and action is now, before it is too late.
Recommendations
Devaluing
Nuclear Weapons - Now
In order to make feasible and practical
the goal of eliminating nuclear weapons, it is important
to point out, as many military officials have done, that
nuclear weapons have very little role to play in operational
military planning, beyond that of providing existential
deterrence. And,
if nuclear weapons are only meant to deter the use of nuclear
weapons by others, there is no justification for them in
a world free of nuclear weapons.
Toward
this end, the US and Russia must take lead in reducing
the salience of nuclear weapons in their military doctrines. In
2001, Presidents Bush and Putin jointly declared that the
US and Russia no longer “regard the other as an enemy
or threat.” Yet thousands upon thousands of
nuclear weapons remain in the American and Russian arsenals.
Important
actions that can convince the international community that
the two major nuclear weapons powers are serious about
devaluing the role of nuclear weapons in their security
and foreign policies should include:
- The US and Russia should take immediate steps to de-alert
the 1,600 and 1,000 warheads, respectively, that they
have on operational alert status, ready to be launched
within minutes of an order to do so. Such warheads
can be stored separately from their launch vehicles (missiles
and aircraft), and strategic nuclear submarines can be
kept in port, to increase assurances that neither country
will launch their weapons through accident or miscalculation.
- The other nuclear weapons states (UK, France,
China, India, Pakistan and Israel) should take all necessary
steps to minimize the risk of nuclear use through accident
or miscalculation.
- All nuclear weapons states should declare
a No First Use policy, with explicit declarations that
nuclear weapons, until such time as they are eliminated,
will only ever be used in retaliation for a nuclear weapons
attack against them. These so-called Negative Security
Assurances (that nuclear weapons will never be used against
those countries who have legally bound themselves not
to acquire nuclear weapons) should be codified in a legally-binding
instrument.
Those countries not possessing nuclear weapons can take
steps as well to advance the goal of a nuclear weapons-free
world. As is the case with the chemical and biological
weapons conventions, national legislation can be enacted
making it a crime for their citizens to engage in nuclear
weapons activities.
US-Russian
Nuclear Weapons Negotiations
Having
made a firm commitment to the future elimination of nuclear
weapons, Washington and Moscow must take the lead in greatly
reducing their nuclear arsenals, destroying excess warheads,
controlling and eliminating excess nuclear fissile material,
and implementing effective transparency and verification
measures. In particular, the US and Russia should:
- Negotiate a new treaty that will extend the 2002 Strategic
Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT) and provide effective
verification and transparency measures for a total limit
(operational and reserve) of no more than 2,200 strategic
warheads for each country by the year 2012.
- The US and Russia should confirm their commitment to
existing nuclear agreements, especially the 1987 Intermediate
Nuclear Forces agreement negotiated by Presidents Reagan
and Gorbachev that eliminated an entire class of nuclear
weapons (all intermediate-range, ground-based nuclear
missiles between 500 and 5,500 kilometers).
- Agreement should be reached on eliminating short-range
nuclear weapons that are intended for forward-deployment,
NATO should unilaterally withdraw all US nuclear weapons
stationed on NATO territory, and the US and Russia should
agree not to deploy their nuclear weapons on the territory
of other states.
- The US and Russia should work together, with the international
community, to ensure that the 1967 Outer Space Treaty
is strengthened and that space remains free of weaponization.
Multilateral Nuclear Weapons Treaties
Prompt action is needed on the following:
- The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT): While 138
countries have signed and ratified the 1996 CTBT, which
prohibits all testing of nuclear weapons and devices,
whether for military or civilian purposes, ten of the
44 states whose ratification is required for entry into
force have failed to do so. The US, China and Israel
have signed but not ratified the treaty, while India,
Pakistan and North Korea have neither signed nor ratified. The
International Monitoring System for detecting nuclear
explosions of as little as one or two kilotons will soon
be completed (perhaps in 2007), giving high confidence
of detecting any and all clandestine nuclear testing. First,
though, those states such as the US who are behind in
their financial contributions to the CTBO must make good
their contributions so that the IMS can be fully effective. The
entry into force of the first treaty to ban all nuclear
explosions would signal the seriousness of the nuclear
weapons states in living up to their NPT Article VI obligations
to take significant steps towards nuclear disarmament,
while greatly enhancing the non-proliferation norms of
Article IV of the NPT.
- The Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty
(FMCT): Under discussion since the 1990s, a FMCT would
extend current IAEA prohibitions on the production of
weapons-grade fissile materials in the non-nuclear weapons
states to the declared enrichment and reprocessing facilities
in the weapons-possessing states. In addition
to prohibiting any further production of weapons-grade
material, the FMCT should be expanded to include prohibitions
on converting existing large stocks of civilian fissile
material to weapons use, of banning the use of excess
military fissile material for the production of weapons,
and of controlling the highly enriched uranium (HEU)
currently used in naval and civilian research reactors. The
entry into force of a FMCT would, similar to the CTBT,
be a significant signal to the international community
on the feasibility of reaching a nuclear weapons-free
world.
- NPT Governance: There is a demonstrable need for
strengthening the oversight, implementation and enforcement
mechanisms that can ensure compliance with the non-proliferation
and disarmament obligations of the NPT regime. A
combination of increased resources (staff and funds)
and new provisions would greatly enhance the ability
of the IAEA and the UN Office for Disarmament Affairs
to undertake compliance assessment and enforcement, while
greater political will and advance planning would allow
the UN Security Council to decide on measures to be taken
in the event of treaty violations and withdrawal.
- Strengthening
and extending Nuclear Weapons-Free Zones: NWFZs prevent
proliferation in regimes, provide security from the threat
of nuclear weapons use, and advance the norm of non-nuclear
security paving the way for a nuclear weapons free world.
The NWS should acknowledge and respect all existing NWFZs
by ratifying the appropriate protocols to the zones.
States Parties to NWFZs are encouraged to enhance their
cooperation in order to jointly promote nuclear disarmament
initiatives. All efforts should be made for the establishment
of additional NWFZs particularly in North East Asia,
Central Europe, the Middle East and the Nordic/Arctic
regions.
- Towards a Nuclear Weapons Convention: All States
should affirm the goal of the complete abolition and
elimination of nuclear weapons through a multilaterally
verified instrument or package of instruments, i.e. a
Nuclear Weapons Convention. Practical work should be
undertaken to explore and advance the legal, technical
and political requirements to make such a convention
a reality.
Civilian Nuclear Energy and Nuclear Weapons
A
renewed global interest in developing nuclear power is
bringing increased demand for uranium enrichment and plutonium
reprocessing capabilities. About a dozen countries
currently possess full-scale facilities, including four
non-weapons states (Brazil, Germany, Japan, and The Netherlands),
while Iran is seeking to master the nuclear fuel cycle. Others,
notably in the Middle East and Persian Gulf, have announced
plans to develop such capabilities in the future. Given
current weaknesses in the NPT regime to ensure that countries
which possess nuclear-fuel capabilities do not divert resources
and materials into producing nuclear weapons, the only
short-term solution is a moratorium on the construction
of additional enrichment and reprocessing facilities coupled
with an international mechanism for the production and
delivery of fuel for civilian nuclear energy generation.
In the long-term sustainable and environmentally sound
alternatives must be further developed to eliminate demand
for nuclear energy.
- In conjunction with a moratorium on the construction
of additional enrichment and reprocessing facilities,
the IAEA should establish an international fuel bank
that can provide guaranteed supplies of nuclear fuel
to NPT-compliant states.
- The international community must
invest more in sustainable energy resources and devote
substantial new funding to research and technology that
can lead to new sources of energy generation that are
not reliant on either nuclear power or fossil fuels.
Disarmament as the Compass Point
As noted in the Middle Powers Initiative document, “Towards
2010,” the above measures are valuable in and of
themselves. They decrease risks of use, diminish
the access of terrorists to catastrophic weapons and materials
to build them, raise barriers to acquisition by additional
states, and generate support for strengthening the regime
and resolving regional crises. Moreover, the measures
pass key tests: they do not diminish the security of any
state; they reinforce the NPT and enhance the rule of law;
they make the world safer now; and they move the world
towards the elimination of nuclear weapons.
Achievement of the measures is difficult, however, in
the context of an unstable, two-tier world in which nuclear
weapons seem to have a permanent place. Some weapons
states will hesitate to reduce flexibility by agreeing
to the CTBT, the FMCT, intrusive verification of reductions
and de-alerting, and strengthened security assurances. Some
non-weapons states will be reluctant to agree to further
steps to ensure peaceful use of nuclear energy such as
the Additional Protocol and multilateral regulation of
nuclear fuel production and supply. Accordingly,
implementation of the measures should take place in the
context of a visible intent to achieve a nuclear weapons-free
world, such as was manifested at the 2000 NPT Review Conference
by the unequivocal undertaking of the weapons states to
accomplish the total elimination of nuclear weapons.
In the wake of stalled progress over the past several
years, meaningful disarmament measures are needed on the
part of the nuclear weapons states, both in and of themselves,
and to enhance non-proliferation efforts.
A Global Campaign to Eliminate Nuclear
Weapons
In
1986 at the Reykjavik summit, Ronald Reagan and Mikhail
Gorbachev laid out a vision of a world free of nuclear
weapons. Their efforts led to an entire class of
nuclear weapons – intermediate nuclear forces – being
eliminated for the first time in the nuclear age.
In
the more than 20 years since Reykjavik, despite the end
of the Cold War, we have seen numerous missed opportunities
for taking bold steps to implement this vision of a nuclear
weapons-free world.
Momentum
is building, however, for revitalizing global efforts to
eliminate nuclear weapons. From the Blix Commission
on Weapons of Mass Destruction, to the political efforts
of Mayors for Peace, to the sober assessments of policy
figures such as George Shultz, William Perry, Henry Kissinger,
and Sam Nunn, a broader political coalition than ever before
is uniting behind the need to eliminate nuclear weapons
before we witness the catastrophic consequences of their
use.
To
help sustain and increase that momentum, national and international
organizations should undertake broad public education efforts
to inform political leaders and the global community of
the need to act before it is too late. To an extent
not seen since the nuclear atmospheric testing days of
the 1950s and early 1960s, the international community
at all levels must become engaged with the need to eliminate
the threat posed by nuclear weapons. The world may
have been lulled into a false sense of security given the
fact that nuclear weapons have not been used since the
Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings in 1945, but time is not
on our side. The sober reality is that, as long as
nuclear weapons exist, they will one day be used.
It is precisely to prevent such a catastrophe that the
Pugwash Conferences and Middle Powers Initiative issue
this call, on the 50th anniversary of the first meeting
of Pugwash scientists in the small fishing village of Pugwash,
Nova Scotia, that the international community galvanize
its efforts to declare illegal and eliminate nuclear weapons
forever.
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