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- US Allies Break Ranks On Nuclear Policy
Alice
Slater, President, Global Resource Action Center for the Environment (GRACE)
- December 22, 1998
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- Calling on the nuclear weapons states "to demonstrate an unequivocal
commitment to the speedy and total elimination" of their nuclear arsenals,
the New Agenda Coalition of eight nations-- Ireland, Sweden, New Zealand,
South Africa, Mexico, Brazil, Egypt and Slovenia-- won an extraordinary
victory in the UN this December on their resolution for a new nuclear policy
agenda. Despite intense lobbying by United States envoys in capitols all
over the world, urging governments to vote against the resolution, it passed
by a vote of 114 in favor, 18 against and 38 abstentions. Slovenia, a NATO-wannabe,
had to withdraw its sponsorship and voted to abstain after some arm-twisting
by Uncle Sam.
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- Overturning long-standing precedent, all of the non-nuclear NATO nations
with the exception of Turkey withstood heavy-handed pressure from the US,
aided by France and the UK, breaking ranks to abstain on the resolution.
Canada, emulating its leadership role in pushing through the landmines
treaty and International Criminal Court agreement over US objections, sent
representatives to NATO capitols urging those nations to resist US pressure.
Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Greece, Spain, Belgium, Luxembourg,
Iceland, Portugal, and Denmark, as well as non-NATO allies Japan and Australia
all rejected the rusty cold war position of the US.
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- The New Agenda Coalition has issued a clarion call to the nuclear weapons
states and the nuclear capable states which are not members of the Non-Proliferation
Treaty (India, Pakistan, Israel), to take more immediate and practical
steps towards nuclear disarmament, urging that we not enter the next millenium
without a clear and rapid path towards the elimination of nuclear weapons.
The US strenuously objected in the UN debate to the New Agenda,s call to
review existing nuclear strategic doctrines and to dealert all nuclear
weapons, stating that such measures would undermine its policy of nuclear
deterrence.
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- The new German Foreign Minister recently issued a call that NATO adopt
a no first use policy, although Germany,s Defense Minister, on a subsequent
visit to Washington avoided a clear statement on no first use, responding
to US pressure and expressions of alarm that NATO Cold War doctrine might
actually be changed to conform to new realities. Canada,s Foreign Affairs
Committee recently issued a parliamentary report urging that Canada and
NATO allies should work with the New Agenda Coalition and encourage the
nuclear weapons states to conclude negotiations leading to the elimination
of nuclear weapons. It also endorsed the de-alerting of all nuclear weapons,
and called upon the government to "argue forcefully" for a re-examination
of NATO,s nuclear policy.
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- Now is the time for the US to heed its allies and begin taking the
practical steps recommended by the New Agenda Coalition. With the Y2K problem
threatening uncertain possibilities for tragic nuclear accidents due to
faulty computer programming, taking our weapons off hair-trigger alert
is particularly appealing. Reports from Russia that the Duma is likely
to pass START II, reducing arsenals to about 3500 deployed strategic warheads
in each country, and then to move for cuts much deeper than the 2500 warheads
contemplated under START III, is an added further incentive for the US
to support the lead of its partners in NATO and friends in the New Agenda
Coalition by moving towards meaningful nuclear disarmament.
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- The continued reliance on nuclear weapons as instruments of national
security is a provocative invitation to other nations to acquire themwitness
events in India and Pakistan. It,s time to put the cold war behind us and
negotiate a treaty to eliminate nuclear weapons. By clinging so obdurately
to its useless and dangerous nuclear capability, the US is perceived by
other nations as having joined the league of so-called "rogue"
states which use the terror of weapons of mass destruction as an instrument
of policy. The US should join with its allies in working rapidly to eliminate
the nuclear scourge. It must not repeat the tragic and shameful conduct
that led to its pariah status on the landmines and International Criminal
Court treaties.
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- ** Alice Slater is President of the Global Resource Action Center for
the Environment and a founder of Abolition 2000, an international network
working for a treaty to eliminate nuclear weapons.
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- Return to Global
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