PragueVision Institute endorsed a statement of 100 NGOs “Nuclear Weapons and the International Security Context” presented to the UN General Assembly First Committee on October 28, 2014.
Nuclear Weapons and the International Security Context
At the 2010 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty Review Conference, states parties reaffirmed their commitment to a “diminishing role for nuclear weapons in security policies to minimize the risk that these weapons ever be used and to facilitate the process of their total elimination.”[1] Nearly five years have passed; another Review Conference is in the offing. Nuclear stockpiles of civilization-destroying size persist, and progress on disarmament has stalled.[2]
The commitment to diminish the role of nuclear weapons in security policies assumed that de-coupling nuclear weapons from conventional military forces would help facilitate elimination of nuclear arsenals. Yet there has been little progress in reducing the role of nuclear weapons. All nuclear-armed states are modernizing their nuclear arsenals. Modernization efforts include development by the leading nuclear weapons states of new nuclear-capable missiles, aircraft, and submarines that will incorporate advances in stealth and accuracy.[3] Publicly available information shows that nuclear weapons continue to have a central role in security policies, and in the case of the United States, the integration of conventional and nuclear forces in current war planning.[4] Potential adversaries of the United States see its advantage in long-range conventional forces as a rationale for retaining and modernizing their nuclear arsenals.
The decoupling of nuclear from conventional military forces is further impeded by arms-racing in non-nuclear weapons of strategic significance. These include missile defenses, more accurate and powerful stand-off weapons, and concepts such as “prompt global strike” that aim to hit targets anywhere on earth with a non-nuclear payload in an hour or less. The United States has taken the lead, but many others are participating in this accelerating new arms race which is not constrained to a bi-polar confrontation.
Nuclear war will not come as a bolt from the blue. It will come when national elites misjudge one another’s interests in a conflict on the borderlands of some nuclear-armed country, and “conventional” warfare escalates out of control. This is all the more likely in the 21st century strategic context where stealthy, precision stand-off weapons and delivery platforms face sophisticated and increasingly capable air and missile defenses, while electronic warfare measures target sensors and data-dependent systems. These elements can interact at levels of speed and complexity that defy human comprehension, much less rational decision-making.
For more than two decades, the political and military elites of the leading nuclear-armed states have engaged in perilous double-think about their arsenals. They have assured their publics that the continued existence of nuclear weapons in civilization-destroying numbers no longer presented a real danger because the risk of war among nuclear-armed states was a feature of the Cold War, now safely past. At the same time, they have done everything necessary to keep catastrophe-capable nuclear arsenals long into the future, as a hedge against the day when the most powerful states again might make war with one another.
Today we see a new round of confrontations among nuclear-armed states, in economic and political circumstances that bear worrisome resemblances to those that brought about the devastating wars of the 20th century. Amidst one crisis after another from Ukraine to the Western Pacific, the world’s most powerful militaries brandish their nuclear arms, while claiming that “routine” exercises with weapons of mass destruction pose no danger, could never be misconstrued or get out of hand.
To those who view the world from the heights of power and privilege in nuclear-armed states, all this only gives further reason to hold on to the weapons they have, and to develop more. For the vast majority of humanity, struggling just to get by in a world of immensely stratified wealth and power, it means a return to madness, to a world where at any moment the people can be annihilated to preserve the state. The lack of urgency on disarmament in the ruling circles of the most powerful states should shock the conscience of every person who still has one.
The growing risks of great power war and use of nuclear weapons make the abolition of nuclear weapons all the more imperative. It is far more likely to succeed if linked to economic equity, democracy, climate and environmental protection, and dismantlement of highly militarized security postures. For our part, Abolition 2000 members and partner groups are organizing a large-scale civil society conference, march and rally on these themes on the eve of the 2015 NPT Review Conference, the presentation of millions of signatures calling for the total ban and elimination of nuclear weapons, and local actions around the world.[5]
Statement coordinated by Western States Legal Foundation, Oakland, California, USA, a member of the Abolition 2000 Global Network to Eliminate Nuclear Weapons. Endorsed by 100 international, national, regional and local civil society organizations in 11 countries (plus 8 individuals for organizational identification only).Statement endorsed by:
- Action AWE, London, United Kingdom
- Arab Human Security Network, Damascus, Syria
- Architects/Designers/Planners for Social Responsibility, USA
- Ban All Nukes generation (BANg, international)
- Basel Peace Office, Basel, Switzerland
- Beacon Presbyterian Fellowship, Oakland, California, USA
- Beyond Nuclear, Takoma Park, Maryland, USA
- Brooklyn for Peace, New York City, New York, USA
- Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, United Kingdom
- Christians For The Mountains, Dunmore, West Virginia, USA
- Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace (CNDP), India
- CODEPINK, USA
- Code Pink Golden Gate Chapter (Bay Area Code Pink), California, USA
- Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
- Crabshell Alliance, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
- Democratic World Federalists (international)
- Earth Action (international)
- Ecumenical Peace Institute/CALC (Clergy and Laity Concerned), Berkeley, California, USA
- Fairmont, MN Peace Group, Fairmont, Minnesota, USA
- Fellowship of Reconciliation, USA
- Western Washington Fellowship of Reconciliation, Washington, USA
- Friends Committee on National Legislation, USA
- Fukushima Response Bay Area, northern California, USA
- German chapter, International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms, Berlin, Germany
- Green Shadow Cabinet, USA
- International Network of Engineers and Scientists (INES)
- INND (Institute of Neurotoxicology & Neurological Disorders), Seattle, Washington, USA
- International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW)
- International Peace Bureau
- Japan Council against A and H Bombs (Gensuikyo), Japan
- Jeannette Rankin Peace Center, Missoula, Montana, USA
- Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy, New York City, New York, USA
- Le Mouvement de la Paix, France
- LEPOCO Peace Center, Lehigh-Pocono Committee of Concern, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, USA
- Long Island Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives, Garden City, New York, USA
- Los Altos Voices for Peace, Los Altos, California, USA
- Metta Center for Nonviolence, Petaluma, California, USA
- MLK (Martin Luther King) Coalition of Greater Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA
- Montrose Peace Vigil, Montrose, California, USA
- Mt. Diablo Peace and Justice Center, Walnut Creek, California, USA
- Multifaith Voices for Peace & Justice, Palo Alto, California, USA
- Nafsi Ya Jamii community center, Oakland, California, USA
- Nevada Desert Experience, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
- No Nukes Action Committee, northern California, USA/Japan
- Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, Santa Barbara, California, USA
- Silicon Valley Chapter, Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, Menlo Park, California, USA
- Nuclear Information and Resource Service, Takoma Park, Maryland, USA
- Nuclear Watch New Mexico, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
- Nukewatch, Luck, Wisconsin, USA
- Oakland CAN (Community Action Network), Oakland, California, USA
- Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA
- Office of the Americas, Santa Monica, California, USA
- Oregon PeaceWorks, Salem, Oregon, USA
- Our Developing World, Saratoga, California, USA
- Pacem in Terris, Wilmington, Delaware, USA
- Pax Christi International
- Pax Christi USA
- Pax Christi Long Island, New York, USA
- Pax Christi Metro New York, New York City, USA
- Peace Action, USA
- Peace Action West, California, USA
- Peace Action Staten Island, Staten Island, New York, USA
- Peace Boat, Japan/international
- Peace Foundation, New Zealand
- Peaceworkers, San Francisco, California, USA
- People for Nuclear Disarmament, Australia
- Physicians for Social Responsibility, USA
- Physicians for Social Responsibility – Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri, USA
- San Francisco Bay Area Chapter Physicians for Social Responsibility, California, USA
- Popular Resistance, USA
- Prague Vision Institute for Sustainable Security, Prague, Czech Republic
- Proposition One Campaign, Tryon, North Carolina, USA
- Rachel Carson Council, Bethesda, Maryland, USA
- Reach and Teach, San Mateo, California, USA
- Rocky Mountain Peace and Justice Center, Boulder, Colorado, USA
- RootsAction.org, USA
- Scientists for Peace, Germany
- Sisters of Charity Federation, North America
- Sisters of Charity of New York, New York City, New York, USA
- Soka Gakkai International (SGI)
- Swedish Peace Council. Sweden
- The Acronym Institute for Disarmament Diplomacy
- The Colorado Coalition for the Prevention of Nuclear War, Denver, Colorado, USA
- The Ecological Options Network, EON, Bolinas, California, USA
- The Human Survival Project, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia
- The Nuclear Resister, USA
- The Peace Farm, Amarillo, Texas, USA
- The United Methodist Church, General Board of Church and Society (international)
- Topanga Peace Alliance. California, USA
- Tri-Valley CAREs (Communities Against a Radioactive Environment), Livermore, California, USA
- 2020 Action, USA
- United for Peace and Justice, USA
- United Nations Association, San Francisco, California, USA
- US Peace Council, USA
- Veterans for Peace, USA
- War Prevention Initiative, Portland, Oregon, USA
- WarIsACrime.org, USA
- Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom – US Section (WILPF US)
- World Future Council (international)
- World Peace Now, Point Arena, California, USA
- Dr. Joseph Gerson, American Friends Service Committee, USA*
- Stephen McNeil, American Friends Service Committee, Wage Peace program, San Francisco, California, USA*
- Aaron Tovish, International Campaign Director, Mayors for Peace 2020 Vision Campaign*
- David McReynolds, former Chair, War Resisters International*
- Rev. Marilyn Chilcote, Parish Associate St. John’s Presbyterian Church, Berkeley, California, USA*
- Sarah H. Lorya, MA, School Outreach Coordinator, AFS-USA, Inc.*
- Don Eichelberger, Abalone Alliance Safe Energy Clearinghouse, San Francisco, California, USA*
- Libbe HaLevy, Nuclear Hotseat Podcast, USA*
*for purposes of identification only
[1] 2000 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, Final Document, Volume I, NPT/CONF.2000/28 (Parts I and II), p.15; reaffirmed by 2010 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, Final Document, Volume I, p.19.