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Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty

  • Arms Control Today
    April 1, 2010

    For anyone who attended the 2005 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference, where the parties failed to agree on anything at all, the recent debacle at the Copenhagen climate change conference seemed very familiar. In both cases, nation-based egocentrism made it impossible even to try to solve problems that are truly and fundamentally global, such as the health of the biosphere and weapons threatening to destroy the planet.

  • Arms Control Today
    April 1, 2010

    As initiatives for nuclear disarmament and nonproliferation have been emerging in rapid succession, the 2010 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference is approaching. The review conference is a unique forum for evaluating the operations of the NPT “with a view to assuring that the purposes of the Preamble and the provisions of the Treaty are being realized,” as the treaty puts it.

  • Arms Control Today
    April 1, 2010

    The nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) regime is in a state of crisis. That at least has been a leitmotif of discussions among experts during the past decade. The failure of the 2005 NPT Review Conference to arrive at an agreed result clearly seemed to support this notion.

  • ACA Events
    March 31, 2010

    Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, March 31 3:00-5:00

  • ACA Events
    March 31, 2010

    Remarks by ACA Executive Director Daryl G. Kimball at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace on March 31, 2010.

  • Arms Control TV
    March 31, 2010

    On March 31, ACA Executive Director Daryl Kimball spoke on a panel at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace alongside Ambassador Susan Burk and Deepti Choubey.  They discussed the upcoming NPT Review Conference.

  • Press Room
    March 30, 2010

    Today, the nonpartisan research and policy advocacy organization Arms Control Association (ACA) released a detailed study of major government and nongovernmental proposals designed to bolster the 40-year old nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.

  • Documents & Reports
    March 5, 2010
    Brief history of events related to the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty from the 1950s through 2009.
  • Arms Control Today
    March 5, 2010

    In their 1995 agreement to extend the life of the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) indefinitely, the parties to the treaty, including the five countries that the pact designates as nuclear-weapon states, committed themselves to a set of principles and objectives for nuclear nonproliferation and disarmament. The lack of progress over the past 15 years has led to increasing frustration among many of the non-nuclear-weapon states.

  • Interviews
    March 4, 2010

    Interviewed by Peter Crail, Daniel Horner, and Daryl G. Kimball