No nation should own nuclear arms - not Iran, not North Korea, and not their
critics who take the moral high ground.
We cannot
intimidate others into behaving well when we ourselves are misbehaving. Yet
that is precisely what nations armed with nuclear weapons hope to do by
censuring North Korea for its nuclear tests and sounding alarm bells over
Iran's pursuit of enriched uranium. According to their logic, a select few
nations can ensure the security of all by having the capacity to destroy all.
Until we
overcome this double standard - until we accept that nuclear weapons are
abhorrent and a grave danger no matter who possesses them, that threatening a
city with radioactive incineration is intolerable no matter the nationality or
religion of its inhabitants - we are unlikely to make meaningful progress in
halting the spread of these monstrous devices, let alone banishing them from
national arsenals.
Why, for
instance, would a proliferating state pay heed to the exhortations of the US
and Russia, which retain thousands of their nuclear warheads on high alert? How
can Britain, France and China expect a hearing on non-proliferation while they
squander billions modernising their nuclear forces? What standing has Israel to
urge Iran not to acquire the bomb when it harbours its own atomic arsenal?
Nuclear
weapons do not discriminate; nor should our leaders. The nuclear powers must
apply the same standard to themselves as to others: zero nuclear weapons.
Whereas the international community has imposed blanket bans on other weapons
with horrendous effects - from biological and chemical agents to landmines and
cluster munitions - it has not yet done so for the very worst weapons of all.
Nuclear weapons are still seen as legitimate in the hands of some. This must
change.
Around 130
governments, various UN agencies, the Red Cross and the International Campaign
to Abolish Nuclear Weapons are gathering in Oslo this week to examine the
catastrophic consequences of nuclear weapons and the inability of relief
agencies to provide an effective response in the event of a nuclear attack. For
too long, debates about nuclear arms have been divorced from such realities,
focusing instead on geopolitics and narrow concepts of national security.
With enough
public pressure, I believe that governments can move beyond the hypocrisy that
has stymied multilateral disarmament discussions for decades, and be inspired
and persuaded to embark on negotiations for a treaty to outlaw and eradicate
these ultimate weapons of terror. Achieving such a ban would require somewhat
of a revolution in our thinking, but it is not out of the question. Entrenched
systems can be turned on their head almost overnight if there's the will.
Let us not
forget that it was only a few years ago when those who spoke about green energy
and climate change were considered peculiar. Now it is widely accepted that an
environmental disaster is upon us. There was once a time when people bought and
sold other human beings as if they were mere chattels, things. But people
eventually came to their senses. So it will be the case for nuclear arms, sooner
or later.
Indeed, 184
nations have already made a legal undertaking never to obtain nuclear weapons,
and three in four support a universal ban. In the early 1990s, with the
collapse of apartheid nigh, South Africa voluntarily dismantled its nuclear
stockpile, becoming the first nation to do so. This was an essential part of
its transition from a pariah state to an accepted member of the family of
nations. Around the same time, Kazakhstan, Belarus and Ukraine also
relinquished their Soviet-era atomic arsenals.
But today
nine nations still consider it their prerogative to possess these ghastly
bombs, each capable of obliterating many thousands of innocent civilians,
including children, in a flash. They appear to think that nuclear weapons
afford them prestige in the international arena. But nothing could be further
from the truth. Any nuclear-armed state, big or small, whatever its stripes,
ought to be condemned in the strongest terms for possessing these
indiscriminate, immoral weapons.
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