Repairing the Nonproliferation Regime
Daryl G. Kimball
Six decades after the first atomic blasts, the world’s leaders
agree that nuclear weapons pose one of the greatest threats
to global security and human existence. But as the recently
concluded nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) review
conference demonstrates, there is a growing divide about how
to address this danger. The four week-long conference closed in
New York on May 27 without any agreed assessment or plan to
bolster the global nonproliferation and disarmament regime.
Future progress will depend on correcting the policies that
sank the 2005 review conference. Well before the meeting, the
Bush administration signaled that it would not support core disarmament-related commitments
and decisions made at the 2000
and 1995 review conferences, including
supporting the entry into
force of the Comprehensive Test
Ban Treaty, irreversibly and verifiably reducing nuclear arms, and negotiating a verifiable ban on
the production of fissile material for weapons. Yet, U.S. representatives
claimed their disarmament record is “unassailable.”
At the same time, they argued that peaceful nuclear cooperation
is put at risk unless cases of noncompliance involving North
Korea and Iran are forcefully addressed.
Predictably, Egypt and other nonaligned states did not want
to allow the repudiation of past NPT conference commitments,
which include pursuit of a nuclear-free Middle East and negative
nuclear security assurances. Meanwhile, Iran, under investigation
by the International Atomic Energy Agency for safeguards
violations, mischaracterized concern about its nuclear ambitions
as an assault on developing states’ treaty “right” to peaceful
nuclear endeavors. As a result, participants took weeks
reaching agreement on an agenda and none of the three “main
committees” could produce consensus reports.
U.S. officials deny any responsibility for the breakdown of the
conference and blame Cairo’s stubborn resistance. But Egypt
and others might have been more flexible if the United States
did not seek to discard prior NPT agreements. U.S. intransigence
scuttled the chance for agreement on Western proposals to
make treaty withdrawal more difficult; toughen treaty monitoring,
compliance, and enforcement; and tighten controls on
nuclear weapons-related technology.
The NPT remains vital, but a crucial opportunity to strengthen
it was squandered. Overcoming the differences revealed at
the 2005 NPT Review Conference and avoiding further setbacks
will not be easy but are possible, especially if the United States
can adopt a more balanced, pragmatic, and flexible strategy.
The most urgent tasks are the resumption of talks leading to
the verifiable dismantlement of North Korea’s nuclear capabilities
and the successful conclusion of an agreement between
the European Union and Iran that recognizes Iran’s “right” to
pursue peaceful nuclear endeavors but produces a voluntary and
indefinite freeze of its uranium enrichment program. Failure on
either front could lead neighboring countries to rethink their
nuclear options and/or lead to a military confrontation.
The Bush administration must seize on North Korea’s recently
stated intention to resume long-stalled negotiations on
its nuclear program and be prepared to offer a new and more
practical proposal to resolve the crisis. To increase Iran’s incentives
to cooperate and comply
with the NPT, the White House
must make it clear that it will
not seek regime change and that
it will support the guaranteed
and controlled supply of nuclear
energy fuel as a substitute for an Iranian uranium enrichment
program.
To prevent the further production and proliferation of weapons-usable nuclear material, the United States, EU, and others
should back an indefinite moratorium on all new uranium enrichment
and plutonium separation plants. Even with tougher
international inspection authority and tighter controls on
nuclear technology transfers, confidence in the nonproliferation
system will erode if more states produce more nuclear bomb material.
The pause would provide time to consider options for the
guaranteed supply of nuclear energy fuel services and launch
long-stalled talks on a global ban on the production of fissile
material for weapons.
Finally, the leaders of the nuclear-weapon states must restore
confidence that they will continue to reduce the number and
the role of nuclear weapons. It is in the United States’ self-interest
to resume talks with Russia on verifiable strategic nuclear
reductions before START I and its verification provisions expire
in 2009. NATO should move to withdraw the obsolete U.S. tactical
nuclear weapons stockpile in Europe to encourage Russia to
account for and reduce its even larger tactical nuclear arsenal,
parts of which could fall into terrorist hands. The nuclear-weapon
states should also disavow the development of new types of
nuclear weapons and the use of nuclear weapons against nonnuclear-
weapon states and targets.
The dangers of the bomb are obvious and the need for action
is as clear as ever. Without more effective global leadership in
all—not just some—of these areas, the struggle against nuclear
proliferation will fall short and leave behind an even more dangerous
world for generations to come.
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