Highlights from NGO statements at the NPT Review
[The following excerpts are from the written versions of NGO statements to the 2010 NPT Review Conference that were delivered orally on May 7 during a special three-hour session. The presentations to the delegates were sometimes shortened to fit the available time. Nobel Laureate Jody Williams departed from her prepared text entirely to deliver a passionate, stirring appeal for the eradication of nuclear weapons. All of the papers are available at Reaching Critical Will.]
“We welcome and embrace the increased attention to and talk about nuclear weapons and a world free of these unconscionable weapons of mass destruction. After all, opinion polls conducted in 21 countries in 2008 found that an estimated 76% of people around the world–including majorities in the nuclear states–support the idea of a binding, verifiable nuclear weapons convention.
“If this does not demonstrate to governments that they have a clear popular mandate to begin serious negotiations now, what will it take? If the nuclear states ignore the will of the overwhelming majority of people around the world, I worry what that means for our collective future. Since Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the people of this planet have been in thrall to those few nations who all too literally hold our very existence in their nuclear hands. There have been moments of great hope–Reykjavik–and moments of horrific fear–the Cuban Missile Crisis. After the NPT Review Conference of 2005, the nuclear future looked dismal. Now, with new possibilities again palpable, we cannot and we must not let this moment pass.
“The states gathered here in New York can seize this opportunity and change our future forever. With brave vision and even bolder action, the Promise of Prague can be transformed into the reality of nuclear abolition.
“This will not happen with rousing rhetoric or nuclear legerdemain. This will happen with a clear and honest assessment of the progress made and the challenges remaining in the implementation of the Non-Proliferation Treaty….
“Civil society and non-governmental organizations suffer no illusion that the journey to nuclear abolition will be easy, but we do know that it must begin now. Those few who hold our collective fate in their hands must respond to the collective will of the billions they allege to protect with nuclear weapons we do not want. It is time for all governments to come together–with the support of civil society around the world–to chart our course to a nuclear free future by beginning the negotiation of a comprehensive treaty banning the use, production, transfer and stockpiling of nuclear weapons. Now. Not in years or decades. Now.”
— Jody Williams, Chair, Nobel Women’s Initiative; 1997 Nobel Peace Laureate
Both the expertise of non-governmental organizations and the commitment of abolition activists were on display Friday, as the first week of the month-long NPT Review Conference came to a close. Here are some photos from the day’s events. In a separate post, I’ll highlight some key quotes from the NGO papers. I’m heading back to the IPPNW office in Boston now, but will return to New York for the conclusion of the Conference. In the meantime, keep reading the posts by IPPNW’s other bloggers, who have been doing a great job all week. I’ll monitor the NPT remotely until I return and comment on any breaking news. You can also keep up on day-to-day developments by reading Rebecca Johnson’s blog.

Former IPPNW co-president Gunnar Westberg of Sweden joined Nobel Laureate Jody Williams at an ICAN event urging NPT member states to make serious, concrete plans for ridding the world of nuclear weapons.

Nobel Laureate and mine ban campaigner Jody Williams tells the NPT member states at the 2010 Review Conference "You have a mandate to eliminate nuclear weapons NOW...." Earlier in the day Williams spoke at an ICAN event about the importance and urgency of a Nuclear Weapons Convention.

Nagasaki survivor Taniguchi Sumiteru shows the assembled diplomats a graphic photo of the injuries he sustained when he was 16 years old. "Please don't turn your eyes away from me...I cannot die in peace until I witness the last nuclear warhead eliminated from this world."

Rebecca Johnson of the Acronym Institute explains that the Nuclear Weapons Convention fulfills the NPT at a special Review Conference session for NGOs on May 7. 2010.
[The following paper was delivered by Rebecca Johnson, Acronym Institute for Disarmament Diplomacy, on Friday, May 7 at the 2010 NPT Review Conference. It was drafted by Ms. Johnson and John Loretz of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, with input from Juergen Scheffran and Peter Weiss, International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms; John Burroughs, Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy; Regina Hagen, International Network of Engineers and Scientists Against Proliferation; and Alice Slater, Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. A PDF version, including appended material is available at Reaching Critical Will.]

Rebecca Johnson of the Acronym Institute explains that the Nuclear Weapons Convention fulfills the NPT at a special Review Conference session for NGOs on May 7. 2010.
Mr President, Your Excellencies, Distinguished Delegates and Colleagues,
In their second Wall Street Journal article of January 2008, Henry Kissinger, George Shultz, Sam Nunn and William Perry liken the goal of a world free of nuclear weapons to “the top of a very tall mountain”. They see it as desirable and recognise the necessity of climbing to higher ground as there are too many dangers inherent in either staying where we are or, worse still, sliding back down into proliferation chaos. But to them, the goal and the route to get there are both out of sight. We agree that the dangers of clinging to the status quo are far greater than the challenges of climbing towards disarmament, but we think humanity is closer to achieving the summit than the cold warriors have realised.
In fact, we are so confident that the objective of a nuclear-weapons-free world is reachable in our lifetimes (and many of us are older than President Obama!) that we can envision ourselves at the summit, looking back at the path we took to get here, and realizing that the difficulties, while formidable, were overcome with persistence, creative problem solving, and flexibility to find different ways when paths we were following became obstructed. Read more…
The case against deterrence doctrine
[Today’s edition of the daily NGO newsletter for the NPT Review Conference — News in Review — contained the following article I wrote, which grew out of some online discussions about the NGO paper on deterrence that will be presented to the Conference this afternoon. IPPNW also co-authored the presentation on the Nuclear Weapons Convention, which I will post after it has been delivered.
All of the NGO presentations will be available on the Reaching Critical Will website, where you can also download each issue of News in Review.]
By some accounts, nuclear weapons are like the flu. As long as they exist, we will continue to need the most powerful flu vaccines we can get our hands on; in this case, “effective” nuclear arsenals to prevent an outbreak. According to this analogy, deterrence is a prophylactic against a threat we have no other means to address.
There are two big problems with this viewpoint, which appears to be held in common by all the nuclear-weapon states and by those who aspire to join the club. Nuclear weapons are not our inevitable lot in life; they don’t just happen to exist. And insistence that the nuclear threat can only be fended off by a nuclear deterrent is a tautological trap: “we will need nuclear weapons as long as they exist.”
On Friday May 7, NGOs will make the case to the NPT Member States that abandoning deterrence doctrine is the key to achieving a world in which nuclear weapons do not exist, a world that is safer and more secure than the one we currently inhabit. That case is straightforward and, we believe, irrefutable.
Nuclear weapons are uniquely and obscenely destructive. Threatening such destruction as a basis for security (the bottom line of nuclear deterrence) is morally reprehensible.
Unlike other forms of deterrence, failure of which can have tragic consequences, we cannot afford for nuclear deterrence to fail because the consequences are unthinkable. Therefore, we should not put ourselves in a position where it can fail. The truth deterrence theorists refuse to face is that nuclear deterrence sooner or later will fail; the history of war has taught us that sooner or later desperation trumps rationality.
There is a strong basis in international humanitarian law for the illegality of invoking nuclear deterrence in the first place.
Finally, continued adherence to deterrence doctrine fuels proliferation and undermines alternative pathways to security, including the pathway to a nuclear-weapons-free world, which is now the declared goal of the US government, echoed by a growing chorus of international leaders.
Despite that goal, the nuclear-weapon-states have continued to rationalize deterrence and to sell that rationalization to willing buyers. Some non-nuclear-weapon states are convincing themselves that they need nuclear weapons to deter others. The virus appears to be unresponsive to the vaccine.
If nuclear weapons were, in fact, as endemic as the flu or the common cold, our only resort might well be to keep reformulating the deterrence “vaccine” in an attempt to stay one step ahead of a devastating outbreak. But we actually have an alternative. We have the option and the means to rid the world of nuclear weapons and, in the process, to see nuclear deterrence in terms of a more appropriate medical analogy: snake oil.
By Misha Byrne
It’s Day Two of the NPT, and I’m rapidly coming to realise just how important civil society organizations are to the running of official UN events. Far from being passive observers, NGOs are known, respected and often consulted by missions from NPT countries; there’s definitely a scope for making a difference.
A few brief examples from the last few days…
Example 1: WILPF and Reaching Critical Will
The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) has a long history, dating right back to its founding in 1915 (making it the oldest women’s peace organisation in the world). To be honest, I’d never really heard of it before I arrived in New York, but the NPT Review Conference certainly seems to know and respects WILPF’s work. Why? Read more…
The growing tide of support for a Convention
by Tim Wright

UN Photo/Mark Garten - May 5, 2010, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon (left) speaks prior to a special screening of "Countdown to Zero", a documentary film on the history of the atomic bomb. Also at the podium are: actor and UN Peace Messenger Michael Douglas (centre) and the President of the 2010 Review Conference, Libran N. Cabactulan.
Yesterday more than a dozen states and groups of states mentioned the need for a Nuclear Weapons Convention in their statements at the NPT Review Conference. This vocal display of government support for a global ban on nuclear weapons is unprecedented in this forum, and it is encouraging for the many civil society groups — and governments — intent on shifting the focus of the debate from the failed policy of arms control to a roadmap for abolition. Read more…
Slaves of fear
By Malte Andre
On the 14th of June 1946, when Bernard Baruch presented his famous plan to the United Nations Energy Commission, nuclear abolition was within reach. “If we fail”, the report said, “then we have damned every man to be the slave of fear”. They obviously failed, they even keep failing today. If the plan had contained less egoism, it may have had a chance. The nuclear industry would have been controlled before having spread and surely, history would have run another path.
But as all arguments remain the same today, we can state that the intellectual level never changed. Nuclear warheads are still treated like sandbox toys and elected leaders behave like children. Whole populations keep living under the announced slavery, just struggling to look away. Various techniques of looking away even became quite comfortable in the recent years. Whole industries were raised to conduct and guide “ordinary” people through their “ordinary” worlds.
Everything’s gonna be alright, one day. Somebody will take care of it. In this struggle, the entire concept of “civil society” and how we are living and working, our basic democratic values are put to the proof. To reinvent a sane society, we as doctors have to speak up loudly. We will not be silent. That was not news. It only has to be repeated from time to time, not to lose the moral basis, from which we know it is infinitely true.
As another couple of dozen states made their opening statements to the 2010 NPT Review Conference, IPPNW held an expert panel on the medical and environmental consequences of nuclear war and launched its new publication, “Zero Is the Only Option.” The panel, chaired by former IPPNW co-president Vic Sidel, included Dr. James Yamazaki of PSR-Los Angeles, Prof. Brian Toon of the University of Colorado, long-time PSR and IPPNW leader Ira Helfand, science and policy consultant Steven Starr, and Peter Herby, head of the arms unit of the International Committee of the Red Cross.
Dr. Yamazaki, at 93, is an articulate and enormously resilient man who was assigned to the first team that went into Nagasaki under the auspices of the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission. He focused this afternoon on the kinds of illnesses that have afflicted not only survivors of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but also the victims of fallout from nuclear testing in the Pacific region. His talk was a vivid reminder that the human suffering caused by nuclear explosions lasts for decades.
Something else that could last for a decade or more is the sudden global cooling that would result from even a relatively small nuclear war involving arsenals of only 100 weapons. Prof. Toon described how massive amounts of smoke and soot from urban firestorms would block sunlight and reduce rainfall over much of the Earth, shortening growing seasons by as much as a month each year for many years to come. Dr. Helfand explained the impact on global food supplies and nutrition, warning that a billion people or more who already live on the edge of starvation would likely die from a nuclear-war-induced famine.
One member of the audience, a grassroots activist from Philadelphia, told Prof. Toon afterwards that she could not clap for such a terrible message, but deeply appreciated the work done by the messenger. She wondered if we could produce a webinar around these talks to get the information out to as many people as possible. Not a bad idea. What we were able to arrange on the spot was for Brian and Ira to film interviews with some young videographers from the Ban All Nukes generation (BANg). I’ll post links as soon as those videos are online.
Steven Starr bridged the gap between science and policy by explaining that the only possible response to these scientific findings is a crash program to eliminate nuclear weapons by commencing work on a Nuclear Weapons Convention as soon as possible. Steven has created a great website based on the work of Prof. Toon and more than half a dozen other scientists who have been studying the climate effects of nuclear war for more than 20 years.
Peter Herby distributed a major statement about nuclear weapons from ICRC president Jakob Kellenberger — the first and most important the organization has made since the end of the Cold War — and said that after reviewing its past positions and the current threat, the ICRC had felt compelled to issue an unequivocal condemnation of nuclear weapons on humanitarian grounds, and to call for their elimination as the only way to ensure that they are never used again. He noted that IPPNW and the ICRC are talking essentially the same language, and suggested that we explore ways to work together — an idea that was received warmly by the IPPNW members in the room.
Ira Helfand: On the climate effects of nuclear war
Ira Helfand: Risk and impact of nuclear detonations
O. B. Toon: Global consequences of regional nuclear war
We have heard over the last two days the foreign ministers from numerous countries repeat the call for a “successful” Review Conference outcome. But what defines success? The Norwegian deputy foreign minister, Ms. Gry Larsen, said yesterday: “Our ambitions should be far higher than merely agreeing on a final document. We need an outcome document that makes a real difference.”
The Non-Aligned Movement has made it clear that movement towards a Nuclear Weapons Convention is “integral” to any agreed plan of action at the conference. Some European countries have also expressed support for an abolition-focused outcome. This Friday, Norway will co-sponsor an event with the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons titled “Nuclear Weapons Convention: Now We Can”, which will explore the political and legal requirements of achieving zero.
China remains the only NPT nuclear-weapon state to have expressed its support for such an approach, although the United Kingdom has accepted that a convention will likely be necessary at some point in the future. The Chinese head of delegation, Mr. Li Baodong, argued yesterday that “[t]he international community should develop, at an appropriate time, a viable, long-term plan composed of phased actions, including a convention on the complete prohibition of nuclear weapons”.
The final government speaker on the second day of the conference was Mr. Nasser Bin Abdulaziz Al-Nasser of Qatar, who stressed that the Review Conference should adopt an action plan to eliminate nuclear weapons, and concluded on this optimistic note: “We hope that we will not wait long before we celebrate a universal treaty for disarmament and prohibition of nuclear weapons, for this has legal and political importance.”
Campaigners and diplomats met at lunchtime to examine ways to advance the idea of a Nuclear Weapons Convention at this Review Conference. The model convention developed by civil society was presented as a useful tool with which to stimulate debate. Ban Ki-moon described it in 2008 as a “good point of departure” for actual negotiations.
Ten key arguments for advancing a Nuclear Weapons Convention now are: Read more…
The 2010 NPT Review Conference: May 5th
By Tova Fuller
For those students who have never attended the NPT review conference, I would like to first give a snapshot of what the experience–or at least the first couple of days–is like. First, you queue…for hours. We waited outside in a line with visitors and other NGO representatives. Unfortunately there were only two people working at the registration on day 1, and this inside line inside was even worse – perhaps spending five minutes on each person, and well, with, say, 75 people in front of you…and you can do the math. The NGO representatives flit between the North Lawn building where a room was reserved specifically for them, and the general assembly. By contrast, the general assembly takes place in the main building, with balcony seating from which one can view the delegates and speakers below. Each morning at 8, and I’ve heard this is a tradition at the NPT review conferences, an abolition caucus meets and reviews and discusses the past day’s events, suggesting forming committees to address specific issues.
In the past two days of the NPT review conference, there have been three major recurrent themes addressed by the NGOs and those in the general assembly (from my experience). The first, not surprisingly perhaps, is the idea of a nuclear weapons convention (NWC). Tim Wright of ICAN presented a model NWC in a workshop in the North Lawn building yesterday, and it was emphasized that such a model serves as a template or suggestion only, to prove that one can be written. Some arguments against such a NWC are that it may compete with the NPT, whereas it may be obvious to us in the disarmament community that the two are complementary. Some have claimed that the nuclear weapons industry is really the one competing with the NWC, however. Egypt, Liechtenstein, Costa Rica, Malaysia, Mongolia, Tunisia, Kenya and Colombia have all come out in support of a NWC.
As an aside, in this session one responded to the idea that the nuclear weapons complex must be preserved to dismantle the weapons, an idea which has been promoted in the US. She responded that we don’t need a huge infrastructure to dismantle the weapons, and in fact, all that was needed was a large vat of molasses to gunk up the inner workings of each weapon.
The other theme I have come across is the promotion of nuclear energy. Ahmadinejad, Clinton, and others have come out in support of nuclear energy in recent days. In addition, so have representatives from South Africa, Kuwait, Slovenia, Tunisia and Mongolia, to name a few. Over and over, I have heard the phrase “the peaceful use of nuclear energy.” In fact, the permanent representative of Tunisia claimed that we need, not choose, nuclear energy because of financial constraints. It is apparently seen as an engine of development, leading to prosperity, but as addressed by the representative of Slovenia, it comes hand in hand with increased proliferation risks. However, as the ambassador from Kuwait quoted Einstein, “The release of atom power has changed everything except our way of thinking.” One might wonder what role nuclear energy industry plays in encouraging the pro-nuclear energy sentiments expressed by nearly everyone but the NGOs, who for obvious reasons oppose it.
The third theme, expressed strongly by different countries’ representatives is the inherent hypocrisy of Israel’s possession of nuclear weapons.
On another note, IPPNW held a specifically relevant session entitled “Expert briefing on the medical and environmental consequences of nuclear war.” Amongst other presentations, Dr. James Yamazaki, the lead physician of the US Atomic Bomb Medical Team, spoke to the medical consequences of the atomic blasts from his studies and experience. The effects of nuclear war were covered: reduction of temperatures to the lowest levels in 1000 years, shortening of growing seasons at midlatitudes, a reduction of rainfall in topic zones, and the destruction of the ozone levels. Dr. Ira Helfand spoke about the famine that would result from even a limited nuclear war, and the effects of a 20 megaton bomb in NYC. He relayed that this model is unlikely today. More likely, 15 or 20 half ton bombs would be used in an attack, but the destruction would be spread out much more efficiently, causing an even greater catastrophe with less total tonnage. Professor O. B. Toom also addressed the reduction of global temperatures to ice age conditions and the reduction of global precipitation by 50%. Steven Starr followed up by, amongst other topics, addressing a NWC. During the ensuing discussing, Dr. Ira Helfand used the example of the recent oil spill as an example of failure of a “failsafe” system. He also talked about the potential on someone hacking into the system and creating an unauthorized launch. Finally, the topic of the economics of the weapons industry was raised.











