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IPPNW Interview: Andrew Pinto

April 28, 2009

Dr. Andrew Pinto at TEACH-VIP

Dr. Andrew Pinto is a family physician and a member of Physicians for Global Survival (IPPNW-Canada). He is currently pursuing speciality training in public health at the University of Toronto.  This interview relates to his paper that was recently published in Medicine, Conflict and Survival titled “Engaging Health Professionals in Advocacy Against Gun Violence,” as well as his own involvement in violence prevention activities.

IPPNW: Was there something specific that happened that prompted you to become involved in joining IPPNW and working for peace?

AP: I was incredibly fortunate to complete my undergraduate degree at McMaster University, where I met Joanna Santa Barbara, Vic Neufeld, Neil Arya and others who were engaged in “peace through health”. These people became my mentors and continue to advise me today. I had always known that health was influenced by social, economic and political factors, but began to see how to frame problems like war from a public health perspective. Further, I came to understand the links between armed conflict, poverty, underdevelopment and the spread of diseases such as HIV. In my third year, the attacks of September 11, 2001 occurred. I witnessed an outpouring of hatred and a desire for vengeance amongst my fellow students, and the world community blindly joining the “War on Terror”. This was juxtaposed against the 2001 Peace Through Health Conference at McMaster. It was here that I met Dr. Olupot-Olupot, a Ugandan physician. This led to my first research on gun violence and was the beginning of my involvement in advocacy on this issue. I should emphasize that I am still a novice in many ways, and have a great deal more to learn from others about working for peace.

IPPNW: Health professionals have long been involved with advocacy around the social determinants of health, including poverty. Can you tell us what special expertise health professionals bring to the work of preventing violence? Read more…

New Life for Nuclear Disarmament at the UN?

April 20, 2009

Keynote Address

Coalition for a Strong UN Annual Meeting
April 18, 2009

John Loretz
Program Director, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War

I think it’s fair to say that a discussion about the prospects for achieving a nuclear-weapons-free world—and the important role the United Nations can and must play in getting us there—couldn’t come at a more opportune time.

I’ve been working on this issue going on 30 years now, and I share the sense of hope and excitement that we now have a US president who has made the elimination of nuclear weapons the policy goal of this country. President Obama has gone so far as to say that the US, as the only country ever to have used a nuclear weapon, has a moral responsibility to lead us to a world without nuclear weapons. He is right, and he’s going to need plenty of courage, persistence, and support to make it happen.

I’d like to refresh our memories about the nature of nuclear weapons, and what’s at stake as long as they continue to fill the world’s arsenals. This is an unavoidable consequence of inviting a speaker from IPPNW, but it’s also an important thing to do whenever the topic relates to these unconscionable instruments of mass extermination.

The 12.5-kiloton bomb detonated in the air over Hiroshima on August 6, 1945 created ground temperatures that reached about 12,600 degrees (F) and incinerated the city. More than 100,000 people died and approximately 75,000 were injured among a population of nearly 250,000.

The 21-kiloton bomb detonated in the air over Nagasaki three days later leveled 2.6 square miles, killed 75,000 people immediately, and left 75,000 terribly injured. The cancers, birth defects, and other generational effects of radiation exposure among survivors and their families in both cities persist to this day.

A similar explosion over New York City today would kill more than a quarter of a million people.

A nuclear war involving only 100 Hiroshima-sized weapons targeted on megacities — something now within the capability of India and Pakistan, for example — would kill 20 million people outright, a number equal to half of all those killed worldwide during the six years of World War II. As if that weren’t horrifying enough, the smoke and soot thrown into the upper atmosphere would cause a sudden global cooling severe enough to disrupt agriculture worldwide for at least a decade. The resulting “nuclear famine” among populations already living on the edge of starvation could kill another billion people.

A nuclear war between the US and Russia—whose leaders have persisted up until now in keeping thousands of weapons ready to be launched on missiles in a matter of minutes—would kill hundreds of millions and could trigger a nuclear winter. As remote as that possibility might seem two decades after the end of the Cold War, it has never gone away.

The stakes could not be higher. Increasing knowledge of how to construct nuclear weapons, increasing availability of the materials with which to make a bomb, increasing numbers of people desperate enough to use the bomb, and, most important, a lack of international resolve to fulfill the pledge of disarmament make the use of nuclear weapons inevitable if we do not act decisively.

The bottom line is that sooner or later we will either abolish nuclear weapons, or they will abolish us.

On March 23, IPPNW released a Medical Appeal signed by more than 300 physicians and medical leaders from 39 countries —senior faculty and deans of medical schools, heads of medical associations, health ministers, medical journal editors, and Nobel laureates—calling on President Obama and Russian President Medvedev to confront “this gravest threat to human survival” and to “end the nuclear weapons era once and for all.”

The release of the letter was timed to precede the first meeting of the two leaders at the G-20 summit in London this month, and coincided with an intense period of diplomatic and media interest in the goal of a nuclear-weapons-free world, including the joint US-Russian statement and the subsequent speech by President Obama in Prague, which cemented the dramatic shift in US nuclear policy to which I just referred. These recent events have transformed IPPNW’s work—and that of civil society as a whole—from that of an opposition movement trying to prevent the development of new nuclear weapons and their global spread, to that of advocates for a new, widely shared vision of a world in which nuclear weapons no longer exist.

Now comes the heavy lifting, which includes making important decisions about how to frame the entire project of getting to zero so that individual, incremental steps taken in the short term are clearly seen as parts of a whole, rather than as ends in themselves. Getting down to 1,000 or fewer warheads each in a new US-Russian agreement to replace the expiring START would constitute real progress. But reductions in arsenal size — even deep reductions — need to be treated as a down payment toward the goal of elimination.

At some point, the other nuclear weapon states must become engaged in the process. One possible pathway is closing the gap between the enormous arsenal sizes of the US and Russia and the arsenals of China, France, and the UK, which number in the hundreds. That would be a sign of real good faith and could help kick start negotiations among the five NPT nuclear weapon states. India and Pakistan, who have said two things consistently—that they will not join the NPT as non-nuclear-weapon states and that they would join negotiations on a global nuclear disarmament treaty if the US and Russia make the first move—would find it increasingly difficult to avoid sitting at the table.

A big unanswered question, in my view, is how to engage Israel, which has never acknowledged its nuclear arsenal but, at the same time, has given unmistakable signals that it will not relinquish its nuclear weapons in the absence of a Middle East peace agreement and security guarantees. Experts with whom I’ve consulted believe that multilateral negotiations on a nuclear weapons convention could proceed a long way before this issue would have to be addressed directly.

Working with international lawyers, scientists, and other civil society experts, IPPNW has offered a roadmap toward a nuclear-weapons-free world in the Nuclear Weapons Convention — a comprehensive framework for global nuclear disarmament. The Model Convention we helped to draft has been a working document of the General Assembly since 1997 and majorities of UN Member States have repeatedly voiced their support for it.

A lot will have to change in the UN system if it is to make a constructive contribution to the goal of a nuclear-weapons-free world.

The first resolution of the General Assembly, adopted in 1946, called for “the elimination from national armaments of atomic weapons and of all other major weapons adaptable to mass destruction.”

That urgent task not only remains unfulfilled more than 60 years later, but, with regard to nuclear weapons, it has barely begun. Nuclear arms control and disarmament proposals continue to be offered in a piecemeal, disconnected fashion while existing arsenals are “modernized” and new arsenals come into existence. Procedural disputes have been used as stalling tactics.

The UN Conference on Disarmament, the world’s sole multilateral disarmament negotiating body, is engaged in no negotiations. The UN First Committee sends dozens of strongly worded resolutions on different aspects of nuclear disarmament to the General Assembly each year, and each year the General Assembly adopts them and moves to the next item on its agenda.

NPT Review Conferences and Preparatory Committee sessions have been dominated by debates about whether disarmament or non-proliferation should come first, when the Treaty obliges Member States to pursue both simultaneously.

Former Secretary-General Kofi Annan made this point eloquently in 2006, at the conclusion of his term: “[T]hese two objectives –- disarmament and non-proliferation -– are inextricably linked, and…to achieve progress on either front we must also advance on the other.…It would be much easier to confront proliferators, if the very existence of nuclear weapons were universally acknowledged as dangerous and ultimately illegitimate.”

In making that assertion, Secretary-General Annan reiterated the view of the International Court of Justice, which, 10 years earlier, had advised the General Assembly that all states had an obligation, under international law, “to pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament in all its aspects under strict and effective international control.”

Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, who told the Conference on Disarmament in January 2008 that it must “rekindle the ambition and sense of common purpose that produced its past accomplishments,” has more recently called the Nuclear Weapons Convention “a good point of departure” for negotiations.

I’d now like to take a closer look at the two UN bodies with primary responsibility for working on nuclear disarmament — the First Committee and the Conference on Disarmament — and end with the Non-Proliferation Treaty, which is coming up for a pivotal five-year review in May 2010.

First Committee

The UN has six specialized committees that meet each year during regular General Assembly sessions, and that return to the GA with recommended resolutions. The very first resolution adopted by the General Assembly in 1946 called for “the elimination from national armaments of atomic weapons and of all other major weapons adaptable to mass destruction.”

In keeping with the priority given to that first resolution, the GA made its First Committee responsible for disarmament and international security. Every year, the General Assembly adopts dozens of First Committee resolutions by majority vote or by consensus.

Unlike the Conference on Disarmament, the First Committee is not a negotiating body. Its purpose is to facilitate discussion, compromise, and consensus building, and to help states reach common understandings about the value of disarmament proposals and the most effective and acceptable ways to pursue them.

Unfortunately, the First Committee shares one trait in common with the CD: its discussions rarely seem to get anywhere because of the rigidity of its process, and the relative ease with which states can block consensus. The FC offers delegates an opportunity to be flexible and creative, and to consider security issues from each other’s perspectives rather than just from their own. Yet delegations too often remain entrenched in their own governments’ policies and security doctrines and are unwilling to deviate from hardened positions. Rather than engage in real debate, therefore, the First Committee has largely degenerated into what Reaching Critical Will calls “a resolution-generating machine, from which repetitive, redundant resolutions are tabled and voted on year after year.”

The 63rd session of the General Assembly was no different, in that regard, from those of the recent past. The GA last December adopted 57 First Committee resolutions on w e a p o n s   o f   mass  destruction, conventional weapons, and regional disarmament and security, including 22 resolutions on nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation issues.

In the latter category were resolutions on the risk of nuclear proliferation in the Middle East, decreasing the operational readiness of nuclear weapons, a ban on new types of weapons of mass destruction, nuclear disarmament (that is, the complete elimination of nuclear weapons), a nuclear weapons convention, reducing nuclear danger, the central role of the NPT in achieving a nuclear-weapon-free world, nuclear-weapons-free zones, entry into force of the CTBT, and a UN conference to eliminate nuclear dangers.

The GA adopted all these important resolutions by large-to-overwhelming majorities. For the most part, the yeas and nays depicted the fault lines on these issues between the nuclear weapon states and their allies (whether willing or reluctant) and the non-nuclear-weapon states. The US, for the record, voted against every single nuclear disarmament resolution in 2008, with the exception of two that it sponsored—one to solicit support for Bush administration counter-proliferation programs; and the other to demand compliance with non-proliferation obligations, innocuously worded to mask its ulterior motive, which was to send a message to Iran. (Not surprisingly, Iran and several other members of the non-aligned movement abstained.)

Many of us in the NGO community were perplexed by the vote of support for the nuclear weapons convention, mention of which was embedded in a resolution reiterating the unanimous conclusion of the International Court of Justice that there is an obligation under international law for states to pursue nuclear disarmament in good faith and, in particular, to commence multilateral negotiations leading to an early conclusion of a convention to eliminate nuclear weapons. That resolution got 127 votes. The Model Convention is a working document of the GA and of the NPT. Yet to this day NGOs get nothing but resistance to our requests for substantive discussion of the Convention among governments and UN diplomats. We plan to confront this situation head on at the upcoming NPT PrepCom, as I’ll explain in a bit.

All of the First Committee resolutions, once adopted, essentially went back into the hopper for resubmission during the 64th session.

A properly functioning First Committee could do a lot to advance creative thinking about disarmament and to promote good faith implementation of disarmament and non-proliferation obligations. A more effective and accountable First Committee should be high on the list of goals for strengthening the UN and reforming its institutions.

Conference on Disarmament

The CD came out of the General Assembly’s First Special Session on Disarmament in 1978, and was created to fill the need for a single multilateral negotiating forum on disarmament issues, including nuclear disarmament.  The CD’s rules require decision making by consensus, which is frequently given as the reason why the only successfully concluded disarmament treaties in the subsequent 30 years have taken place outside the CD.

The last time the CD took a decision to negotiate on a substantive issue—fissile materials—was in 1998. Those negotiations never started. Since 2000, the CD has declared its intent to focus on four core issues: nuclear disarmament, a fissile materials ban, prevention of an arms race in outer space, and negative security assurances. The word “focus” may be a bit of a reach, because the CD has been in gridlock during this entire decade, and has not even been able to agree on a program of work, let alone conduct actual negotiations on any of these issues.

The hangup on the fissile materials ban has centered on the problem of verification — not disagreements over how to verify compliance with a treaty in a technically sound and politically acceptable way, but disputes over whether verification should even be a subject of negotiations. The Bush administration said that a fissile materials ban could not be verified (more to the point, it was not about to countenance the idea of intrusive inspections in the US itself), but said it was willing to negotiate a treaty without verification measures—an approach similar to that taken in the deeply flawed Moscow Treaty (SORT) negotiated by the US and Russia in 2000. Not surprisingly, most other CD members have rejected this notion, consensus has not been achievable, and the discussion has gone in circles.

The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty was a different kind of example of the dysfunctionality of the CD. After consensus on the draft CTBT was blocked in the CD by India and Iran in 1996, Australia, with the support of 127 state co-sponsors and NGOs such as IPPNW, brought a CTBT resolution to a special session of the General Assembly, where it was approved by an overwhelming 158 to 3 vote. Even liberated from CD deadlock, the CTBT has yet to enter into force.

(Interestingly, one of the more divisive issues within the CD has been the role of civil society and, in particular, the influence of NGOs. NGOs, as a rule, have not been allowed to address the CD for several years, although this is common practice in other UN forums, including the First Committee and NPT Reviews and Preparatory Committee meetings.)

The situation has degenerated to the point where the head of one delegation to the Conference on Disarmament recently referred to “the cycle of hope, missed opportunities, and despair” that has characterized the CD’s work for many years. Some have gone so far as to suggest that the CD is actually an obstacle to nuclear disarmament, because it stands in the way of efforts to promote alternative negotiating forums.

Some useful ideas have been proposed for breaking the deadlock in the CD and getting things back on track. The Blix Commission and others have recommended that the CD conduct its normal business by two-thirds majority voting, and that it adopt veto-free procedures. Another suggestion is that the CD restrict itself in the short term to some single achievable piece of work, so that it can have a success on which to build. Hope is also being expressed that a change in US attitudes and behavior under the Obama administration will open up new possibilities for productive work in the CD, with or without changes in operational norms. We’ll get a sense of that soon enough.

Non-Proliferation Treaty

In a couple of weeks, the parties to the NPT will gather at UN headquarters in New York for the third and final Preparatory Committee for the 2010 NPT Review. This is a critical meeting for a number of reasons. Frustrations over non-compliance with Article VI of the Treaty have reached a breaking point; anger over the nuclear double standard and erosion of confidence in the non-proliferation regime—with Iran and North Korea as the current focal points; and a growing sense among NGOs that the Treaty is being exploited by the proponents of global nuclear energy expansion have all contributed to a widely shared belief that the NPT is at a crossroads.

The Treaty has always had its problems, but they have gotten worse over the last decade after a brief period of raised expectations. At the 1995 NPT Review and Extension Conference, the parties agreed “to pursue systematic and progressive efforts to reduce nuclear weapons globally, with the ultimate goal of eliminating those weapons.” They went further in 2000, committing themselves to an “unequivocal undertaking” to eliminate nuclear weapons, and endorsing specific benchmarks spelled out in a 13-step action plan. By the way, each of these benchmarks — including entry into force of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, a ban on the production of fissile materials for nuclear weapons, reduced operational status, a diminished role for nuclear weapons in security policies, and the continued development of verification capabilities, among others — is an integral part of the Model Nuclear Weapons Convention.

With the arrival of a neoconservative regime in the US, all that changed. During the PrepComs for the 2005 Review, the US not only walked away from the commitments made in 1995 and 2000, but shamelessly blocked any mention of their existence from subsequent reports. The US was not alone in causing trouble, but the other NPT member states did not — or did not want to — confront John Bolton and his Bush-appointed successors. The 2005 Review failed, and the attitude of many delegations during the first two PrepComs for 2010, it seems to me, was to deliberately run out the clock on the Bush administration and to quietly develop proposals that might receive a better reception from his successor. That’s where we are right now, and the NGOs preparing to descend on Conference Room 4 in two weeks are waiting with bated breath for evidence of a meaningful change for the better.

The Member States of the United Nations set out to achieve a nuclear-weapons-free world in the 20th century, and failed to reach that goal. This failure can be traced back, in part, to the fact that the General Assembly did not insist upon the commencement of negotiations on a time bound schedule.

In contrast, Mayors for Peace, under the leadership of Hiroshima Mayor Taditoshi Akiba, has called for the elimination of all nuclear weapons by 2020 — the 75th anniversary of the US atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This goal—endorsed by IPPNW — is achievable if negotiations on a Nuclear Weapons Convention commence no later than the conclusion of the 2010 NPT Review.

We face an enormous challenge, even in a political climate where the elimination of nuclear weapons has moved into mainstream thinking about global security policy. Those who favor a nuclear-armed world—as long as they can decide who gets to own nuclear weapons and who does not—are already starting to push back from their exile in right-wing think tanks. A United Nations that overcomes its institutional shortcomings, and becomes an effective champion of a world without nuclear weapons, can play an important role in getting us to the long-awaited end of this road.

Zero Nuclear Weapons is the New Benchmark

April 7, 2009

The leaders of the world’s two largest nuclear powers have committed themselves and their countries to achieving a nuclear-weapons-free world. That pledge, made by presidents Barack Obama and Dmitri Medvedev at their April 1 meeting in London—and elaborated by President Obama in a policy-transforming speech in Prague on April 5— must be the benchmark against which all progress to reduce the threat of nuclear destruction is now measured.

Presidents Medvedev and Obama have outlined a course of near term actions that, if negotiated successfully, will bring us closer to the goal of global nuclear disarmament than at any time since the end of the Cold War. Over the next few months, we will find out how high they plan to set the bar.

For example, arms control experts have suggested that the goal of negotiations on a new treaty to replace the expiring START 1 could be a reduction to no more than 1,000 warheads on each side. This would be undeniable progress. A reduction to 500 warheads, however, would be an eye-catching demonstration of the intention to reach zero. It could also stand as a good faith challenge to the other nuclear weapon states, whose arsenals already number in the hundreds or fewer, to commence negotiations on a comprehensive agreement to rid the world of all nuclear weapons.

The US and Russian leaders also promised “to work together to fulfill our obligations under Article VI” of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). For most of the near-40-year history of the NPT, the nuclear weapon states have paid lip service to their nuclear disarmament commitment under Article VI, while doing everything possible to avoid compliance. As a result, the patience of the non-nuclear-weapon states—and their willingness to comply with their own non-proliferation obligations—has been strained to the breaking point. With a crucial five-year review of the NPT scheduled for 2010 and a final preparatory meeting coming up in New York next month, solid evidence of this fresh intent to comply with Article VI will be essential.

The joint statement contained a familiar but important list of measures to reduce reliance on nuclear weapons and to make their spread less likely. Among these are entry into force of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, the negotiation of a ban on production of fissile materials, and stepped-up efforts to prevent terrorists and other non-state actors from acquiring nuclear weapons. An unambiguous decision to end the development of all new US and Russian nuclear weapons—both warhead designs and delivery systems—would send a clear signal to the rest of the world that eliminating these instruments of mass extermination is not just a goal, but a plan.

For several years, Russian anger at the prospect of US missile defense deployments in Europe and the rapid expansion of NATO, matched by US objections that Russia has not done more to hold Iran accountable to its non-proliferation obligations, had all but derailed progress in bilateral relations, and had threatened to escalate into a new arms race. That both leaders seem willing to step back from confrontation on these issues, to consider each other’s perspectives, and to seek mutually acceptable solutions comes as a breath of fresh air. The long-overdue removal of US nuclear weapons from European bases, a moratorium on the installation of missile defense components, and assurances from Moscow that it will not modernize its missile delivery systems would go a long way toward rebuilding eroded trust.

The lesson of the US atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was that a single nuclear weapon could destroy an entire city. During the Cold War, we came face-to-face with the horrifying realization that the explosion of thousands of nuclear weapons in a war between the US and the former Soviet Union would have destroyed humanity itself. That threat has not gone away. New scientific research has shown that even 100 Hiroshima-size warheads, exploded over major cities, would cause a sudden global cooling, the disruption of agriculture worldwide, and could lead to the deaths of a billion people who already live on the margins of starvation.

The stakes are far too high to risk the use of these weapons by accident or miscalculation. For this reason, the US and Russia should take all their missiles off high alert. That step could be taken immediately, with a simple presidential directive.

Presidents Obama and Medvedev concluded their first meeting by stating that “Now it is time to get down to business and translate our warms words into actual achievements of benefit to Russia, the United States, and all those around the world interested in peace and prosperity.”

To resounding and well-deserved applause in Prague, President Obama acknowledged that the US, “as the only nuclear power to have used a nuclear weapon…has a moral responsibility to act.” Making sure he and the leaders of the other nuclear weapon states act together to make this new vision a reality is both a responsibility and an opportunity that may not come our way again.

The large majorities who have said they want to live in a world without nuclear weapons will support Presidents Medvedev and Obama as they “get down to business.” At the same time, we should make clear our expectation that their pledge to free the world from the threat of annihilation by the most destructive weapons ever created will soon take the form of a comprehensive plan for getting to zero.

A nuclear-weapons-free world: Champions, detractors, and the urgency of getting to zero—Part 3

March 23, 2009

A new medical appeal for a nuclear-weapons-free world

“What do doctors have to do with nuclear war?” That’s invariably the first question I get when I say I work for IPPNW.

For the 300 or so prominent physicians who have just signed a letter calling on US President Obama and Russian President Medvedev to partner up and rid the world of nuclear weapons, the answer to that question is self evident: the consequences of a nuclear war—the overwhelming numbers of casualties, the horrific nature of the injuries among survivors, the destruction of hospitals and other health facilities, the cancers and genetic damage carried over into future generations—would leave them helpless to respond.

Physicians understand that they must work to prevent what they can’t treat. So for almost 50 years they have been pleading with world leaders—those who have their fingers directly on the nuclear button and those without their own bomb who, regardless, can’t protect their citizens from a catastrophe unleashed by others—that the only way to prevent nuclear war is to eliminate these instruments of mass extermination altogether. From the physician’s perspective, the prognosis is simple: either we will abolish nuclear weapons or they will abolish us.

The letter released on March 23, 2009—about a week before the first meeting between presidents Obama and Medvedev, in London for the G-20 summit—was not signed by the pediatrician at the neighborhood clinic (although IPPNW now invites her to endorse it, along with every other pediatrician and cardiologist and obstetrician and radiologist and oncologist and general practitioner and medical student and public health expert and on and on). Among the signatories are health ministers, deans of medical schools, presidents of national medical associations, emeritus professors, and heads of hospitals from 39 countries. A few survived the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. All of them want to make sure that there is never another Hiroshima or Nagasaki.

This appeal is the latest expression of revulsion against nuclear weapons in a decades-long medical movement that was called into existence by those first bombings. Albert Schweitzer published his “Declaration of Conscience” in 1957 and told the world that “the end of further experiments with atom bombs would be like the early sunrays of hope which suffering humanity is longing for.” Benjamin Spock educated doctors and parents about the health effects of nuclear testing, and helped organize mass protests throughout the 1960s. The US Institute of Medicine, the British Medical Association, the Russian Academy, the WHO, and other major research institutions published the data that would form the scientific basis of IPPNW’s campaigns in the 1980s and 90s.

Some of that research told us that the explosion of one or two thousand nuclear weapons in a war between the US and the Soviet Union would have led to a nuclear winter and the collapse of the fundamental ecosystems on which human life and society depend. The US and Russia still have more than enough nuclear weapons kept at the ready today to precipitate that catastrophe and destroy everyone on Earth.

Now we’ve learned that even 100 Hiroshima-size warheads, exploded over megacities, could cause a sudden global cooling, the disruption of agriculture worldwide, and the deaths of a billion people who already live on the margins of starvation. That’s after killing tens of millions of people outright.

What more do we need to know? If 100 bombs can kill a billion people, can any reason for continuing to rely on them outweigh the shame and hypocrisy of owning them at all?

That’s what these leaders in global medicine are asking presidents Obama and Medvedev to consider when they meet in London and in the months ahead, as they discuss their options in leading us to a nuclear-weapons-free world. Two of the physicians who have signed the medical appeal—Bernard Lown and Evgueni Chazov—helped persuade Mikhail Gorbachev to become an abolitionist when they met with him in 1985. Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan came heartbreakingly close to an agreement to get rid of all their nuclear weapons when they met in Reykjavik in 1986. The times (and, more to the point, their advisers) were against them.

In 2009, the leaders of the two largest nuclear powers don’t have to be persuaded that the future depends on the elimination of nuclear weapons. They have said so themselves. What they seem to need is a practical roadmap—which already exists in the form of the Model Nuclear Weapons Convention—and the confidence that if they act decisively, a grateful world will embrace their action. The physicians’ letter, delivered today, can be seen as a confidence-building measure—part of the growing public chorus of voices calling for sanity and courage at an opportune time.

The text of the letter and a list of signatories is at www.ippnw.org.

Academic medicine question peace through health

March 17, 2009

Academic Medicine has provided an interesting opportunity to discuss peace through health in their “Question of the Year”:

“How should academic medicine contribute to peace-building efforts around the world?”

http://journals.lww.com/academicmedicine/Fulltext/2009/01000/2009_Question_of_the_Year.1.aspx

The deadline for submission is May 1.  Dr. Andrew Pinto of IPPNW’s PGS in Canada is hoping to put something together and would like comments from colleagues.

What do you think?

Prescription for a Healthy, Secure Planet

March 12, 2009

SPSR 2009 Conference

April 3rd – 5th, 2009

New York City

Medical students and physicians from around the nation will be gathering in New York City in April for a groundbreaking conference on how public health professionals can help heal our planet.  Join us!

Details


  • When: Friday, April 3rd – Sunday, April 5th, 2009

  • Where: Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York City, NY
  • Who: medical students, nursing students, public health students, physicians, public health professionals, community members interested in environmental health and security issues
  • Speakers include: Dr. Paul Epstein-Associate Director of the Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School , Joe Cirincione– President of Ploughshares Fund, Peggy Shepard– Executive Director of WEACT for Environmental Justice, Dr. Phil Landrigan– Chairman of Community and Preventative Medicine at Mount Sinai, Dr. Vic Sidel-Professor of Family & Social Medicine at Albert Einstein School of Medicine, Dr. Barry Levy– Adjunct Professor of Public Health at Tufts University School of Medicine, and many other renowned medical, policy experts.
  • Conference Highlights: Tour of the United Nations on Friday afternoon, performance of Damaged Care-The Musical Comedy about Health Care in America, keynote addresses by Dr. Paul Epstein, Joe Cirincione, and Peggy Shepard, screening of “Scarred Lands and Wounded Lives” and subsequent discussion with film producers.
  • Topics Include: the public health impact of global warming and how health professionals can respond, how to “green” hospitals and healthcare, health and the new energy economy, combating environmental toxins, preventing the use of nuclear weapons through their global elimination, violence and health, medical activism.

More Information

Register Here

Click here to apply for a registration fee waiver

Senator Kerry Responds to Questions about a Nuclear Weapons-Free World

February 9, 2009

The team at www.askyourlawmaker.org spoke with US Senator John F. Kerry (D-MA) on February 6, 2009. During the interview he was asked:

What priority do you give to the goal of a nuclear-weapons-free world? What steps would you propose for moving all the nuclear weapon states, including the US, toward abolition of nuclear weapons? Do you believe the US should halt programs to produce new nuclear weapons and challenge the other nuclear weapon states to do the same?

His answer is now public record thanks to the new project www.askyourlawmaker.org.

To listen to Senator Kerry’s response, please click here.

A nuclear-weapons-free world: Champions, detractors, and the urgency of getting to zero (Part 2)

February 6, 2009

Some heavy hands are definitely on the brakes

Most of the world is already finished with the idea of nuclear weapons (See Part 1: The abolition express is rolling). Public opinion polls in country after country—even in the nuclear-weapon states—reflect broad and growing support for a nuclear-weapons-free world. Serious mainstream politicians and diplomats, including US President Barack Obama, have embraced the goal of zero nuclear weapons, though they mostly advocate near-term— though important — incremental steps such as dealerting and making deeper cuts in the US and Russian arsenals, and stop short of calling for negotiations on a comprehensive, universal agreement—a nuclear weapons convention similar to the treaties that already ban chemical and biological weapons.

Rightly or wrongly (and good arguments can be made either way), the international community—by which I primarily mean the diplomats who participate in the Conference on Disarmament, the UN First Committee, and Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) Reviews—expects leadership on disarmament to come from the US and Russia, which possess 95% of the world’s nuclear weapons between them. Without such leadership, arguably, not much will happen. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, for example, has told IPPNW leaders and other NGOs that India will fully participate in a global nuclear disarmament agreement, but that negotiations will have to be initiated by the US and Russia. Many make the further argument that the primary moral responsibility for leadership on disarmament lies with the only country that has ever used nuclear weapons against defenseless populations. Again, rightly or wrongly, all eyes are on the US.

For those who have been championing nuclear abolition for decades, the inauguration of President Obama at a time when the international community is expressing a strong desire to eliminate nuclear weapons represents the best—and perhaps the last—chance the world has to rid itself once and for all the only instruments of mass destruction capable of taking the future away from all humanity. What stands in the way of decisive US action is a lingering, false, but seemingly intractable belief that nuclear weapons, in some hands, provide an irreplaceable safety net in a dangerous world. The convoluted argument based on this faulty premise is that the world must be made safe for zero nuclear weapons before we can actually achieve a world without nuclear weapons; that such a precondition is unlikely if not impossible; and that, therefore, some number of nuclear weapons in some places will always be necessary.

Who’s making that argument? Chris Ford, for one. Christopher Ford was the US Special Representative for Nuclear Nonproliferation in the Bush administration, and complained repeatedly at the 2007 and 2008 NPT PrepComs that the US wasn’t being given enough credit for its nuclear weapons reductions. He simultaneously—and with a straight face—suggested that modernization of the US nuclear arsenal was actually a disarmament initiative.

Ford is now a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, a right-wing Washington think tank, where he has spun out the notion that disarmament proponents should abandon “unrealistic” proposals and embrace “unconventional thinking.”

Here’s an example of Ford’s “unconventional thinking,” from a speech he gave to the Nonproliferation Forum in November 2008 [1]:

In my view, disarmament’s advocates still need to show that no world with nuclear weapons would be preferable – in terms of global stability and international peace and security – to any world without them. My own suspicion is that this cannot be demonstrated, and therefore that while some hypothetical future worlds without nuclear weapons would be greatly preferable to our own, some would not be (italics in the original).”

Ford did not describe any particular world with the capacity to exterminate all of humanity that he would prefer to a world that had renounced omnicide and had done everything possible to remove that capacity, but that’s not his real purpose. He concedes that “a world free of nuclear weapons would indeed be in the United States’ interest” and declares that nuclear disarmament is “a genuine US policy goal.” What he doesn’t support are any of the actual steps toward a nuclear-weapons-free world that were endorsed by the NPT member states in 2000 in the form of a practical action plan to fulfill the treaty’s Article VI disarmament obligations.

If all of this hadn’t been settled in 2000, only to be repudiated by Ford’s employers in the Bush administration for the next eight years, one could almost see the point of arguing the whole thing out again. But it was settled (italics mine), and it’s time to move on.

Ford sniped that he had “recently scolded the disarmament community for not caring enough about such practical details,” in particular the difficulties that will be encountered along the path to zero nuclear weapons—difficulties that, to be fair, are real enough. Nonetheless, some truly unconventional thinking about paths to the elimination of nuclear weapons, along with careful consideration of the obstacles, is on offer from disarmament NGOs to anyone with a serious interest in getting there.  (They can be found in the Model Nuclear Weapons Convention, the text of which is part of Securing Our Survival, downloadable from the ICAN website.)

That makes Ford’s adulatory quote of Hudson Institute founder Herman Kahn all the harder to take. Kahn, Ford reminds us, wrote nearly 50 years ago that it was “the hallmark of the amateur and the dilettante that he has almost no interest in how to get to his particular utopia.” (Kahn, for those unfamiliar with the author of the 1962 classic, On Thermonuclear War, tops most lists of certifiably insane nuclear strategists. His book, which was required reading for my high school debate team, gave me nightmares for an entire school year.) One might counter that it’s the hallmark of the obstructionist and the troublemaker that he characterizes as a “utopia” any goal that he doesn’t really want to reach in the first place.

Because he starts with the false premise that nuclear weapons are necessary and, in some worlds (i.e., the one in which we live) worth keeping (at least in small numbers, in some hands), Ford comes down on the side of the Reliable Replacement Warhead, missile defenses, and something he calls “countervailing reconstitution.” The latter is a proposal that the US, in particular, should retain a capacity to quickly rebuild a nuclear force in the face of an emerging threat, regardless of how far it goes with the “disarmament project.” Perhaps that’s a confidence-building measure.

Heritage Foundation fellow Baker Spring has made a career out of trashing arms control treaties both as a congressional staffer and as a freelancer. He recently posted a web article called  “Toward an Alternative Strategic Security Posture” on the Heritage website.

Under the guise of commenting on an interim report from the Congressional Commission on the Strategic Posture of the United States, Spring produces what could be a two-page primer on logical fallacies. He starts with the obvious, that “there is no consensus in Congress on an appropriate strategic posture”; acknowledges that “individuals both within the commission and outside it fervently desire to rid the world of nuclear weapons”; and accurately quotes from the interim report that the goal is “extremely difficult to attain and would require a fundamental transformation of the world political order.”

Those are the last things he says that aren’t completely made up. From a predictable lack of consensus on nuclear policy among the members of a bipartisan commission comprising both nuclear weapons advocates and skeptics, Spring crafts a brazen non-sequitur. “This means,” he says, “those favoring nuclear disarmament have recognized that their preferred outcome is not appropriate under present circumstances and that there is no direct path to nuclear disarmament.” Nothing could be more absurd.

Well, except the things he writes next. Since abolitionists have now been forced to concede the error of their ways, he continues, they [we] will now “abandon unilateral steps aimed at atrophying the US nuclear weapons infrastructure. They [we] will, for example, have to abandon immediate steps to de-alert US nuclear forces, cease efforts to curtail all programs for modernizing the nuclear force, put off ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and cease efforts to impose changes on the declared policy governing the use of US nuclear weapons.” What a relief! I’d been hoping for some extra time to go skiing this winter.

Spring has more recommendations for an intellectually defeated movement (isn’t sarcasm wonderful?): “…those who strongly favor nuclear disarmament should recognize that robust strategic defensive measures—including ballistic missile defenses— and conventional superiority can create a circumstance where nuclear disarmament is appropriate.” Like Ford, Spring does not seem to find an “appropriate” reason for the global elimination of nuclear weapons in the undisputed fact that they stand ready to exterminate everyone on Earth (see Part 3, coming soon).

The views of a couple of Reagan and Bush-era policy wonks in exile would matter less if they were not the basis of the case being made by US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates for rebuilding the US nuclear weapons infrastructure and cranking out thousands of “reliable replacement warheads” for the rest of this century. Gates may well be out of synch on this issue with President Obama, who has said he opposes production of new nuclear weapons. Nevertheless, Obama’s decision to keep Gates on for other reasons can only complicate what was already going to be a struggle to reverse 60 years of entrenched nuclear madness in Congress, the Pentagon, and the weapons labs.

When it comes to deterrence, Gates is a true believer. (Deterrence of what is a little harder to say, but that’s been a problem ever since the end of the Cold War.) Last October, in what appeared to some of us to be a shot across Obama’s bow (by then the signals had been sent that the new president would ask Gates to stay on, at least temporarily), the former CIA director told an audience at the Carnegie Endowment that “our [nuclear] arsenal plays an irreplaceable role in reducing proliferation….While we have a long-term goal of abolishing nuclear weapons once and for all, given the world in which we live, we have to be realistic about that proposition.” [2] (There’s that “real world” again, the one in which the ability to blow the whole place up ensures one’s security — or was that supremacy?)

Unfortunately—and not surprisingly, since they share some core assumptions—being “realistic” about nuclear policy means the same thing to Gates that it means to Ford and Spring. “To be blunt,” he said during his Carnegie speech, “there is absolutely no way we can maintain a credible deterrent and reduce the number of weapons in our stockpile without either resorting to testing our stockpile or pursuing a modernization program….We must take steps to transform from an aging Cold War nuclear weapons complex that is too large and too expensive to a smaller, less costly, but modern enterprise that can meet our nation’s nuclear security needs for the future.”

Last year, Gates and former Energy Secretary Samuel Bodmann  laid out a detailed plan for how to revitalize the US nuclear infrastructure and ensure a steady flow of new nuclear warheads between now and 2114. Chris Ford’s proposal for “countervailing reconstitution” is a comfortable fit with Gates’s “realistic” approach to nuclear policy. How President Obama frames his quest for a nuclear-weapons-free world in relation to this contrary set of recommendations from his own Defense Secretary will speak volumes about how much progress we can expect during the next four-to-eight years.

Next: How and why the medical message still decides the issue

1) Christopher A. Ford. Deterrence to – and through – “zero”:  challenges of disarmament and proliferation. Nonproliferation Forum, Woodrow Wilson Center and the Los Alamos National Laboratory, Washington, DC, November 14, 2008.

2) Robert Gates. Nuclear weapons and deterrence in the 21st century. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Washington, DC. October 28, 2008.

IPPNW Speaks Out Against Use of White Phosphorus by Israeli Forces

February 6, 2009

https://i0.wp.com/www.abc.net.au/reslib/200511/r64600_178355.jpg

Download statement here.

IPPNW notes with grave concern the use of white phosphorus by Israeli forces in the recent war against Gaza. As physicians committed to reducing the suffering brought by warfare, we recognize the inhumane and indiscriminate effects of white phosphorus, and strongly condemn its use in armed conflict under any circumstances.

White Phosphorus (WP) ignites spontaneously in air, the resultant oxide combining rapidly with moisture to form droplets which produce a very effective smoke screen. On contact with skin, WP causes painful and deep chemical burns, often extending to bone that are very slow to heal. Such burns, or the inhalation of WP droplets that can cause severe damage to the airways, are often fatal.

WP’s military utility stems from both its smoke-screening and its incendiary properties. It has been used for both purposes many times since 1916, including against Dresden, Hamburg and Cherbourg in the Second World War; by Iraqi forces, principally as ground-bursts, in the 1980s war against Iran, by US forces against Fallujah in Iraq in 2004; and now by Israeli forces in Gaza, often as air-bursts.

IPPNW calls for a ban on the use of white phosphorus in armed conflict. Its use against positions holding many civilians (including children), must be particularly condemned, its inhumane medical effects are such that its use in weaponry can never be justified.

IPPNW notes that the use of WP is not regarded as illegal under the Chemical Weapons Convention as it is deemed to be a conventional weapon for creating smoke screens. However weapons which “may be deemed to be excessively injurious or to have indiscriminate effects” are also banned by Protocol III of the “Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons”. Noting that WP causes injuries that are both excessively injurious and indiscriminate, and that these effects are entirely predictable when the weapon is used, IPPNW calls for the explicit and complete banning of WP from armed conflict, and for its use to be prohibited by the Chemical Weapons Convention and recognized as a criminal offence under international law

International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW), recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1985, is a non-partisan, global federation of national affiliates in more than 60 countries, including Israel and Palestine, dedicated to research, education and advocacy, relevant to the prevention of all wars. To this end, IPPNW seeks to promote non-violent conflict resolution and to minimize the effects of war. IPPNW has long advocated a peaceful and just resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and has developed a Medical Roadmap for peace in the Middle East.

Helsinki, Moscow, and Stockholm on February 6, 2009
Vappu Taipale, Sergey Kolesnikov, and Ime John
Co-presidents of IPPNW

A nuclear-weapons-free world: Champions, detractors, and the urgency of getting to zero (Part 1)

January 30, 2009

The abolition express is rolling

What a difference a year or two can make. These days nearly everyone to the left of John Bolton prefaces discussions of nuclear policy with at least a nod toward the goal of a nuclear-weapons-free world. Even those who don’t especially want to eliminate nuclear weapons in this century (more about them in part 2) make a show of endorsing the general idea before systematically attacking the specific proposals that would actually move us in the right direction.

Through most of the years of the Bush administration, the international community was desperately trying to salvage what it could of hard-won arms control and disarmament agreements, and dismissed all talk of abolition as wishful thinking. Merely saving the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) from total collapse seemed like a Promethean task. NGOs who reminded diplomats that the nuclear-weapon states had committed themselves to an “unequivocal undertaking” to nuclear disarmament at the 2000 NPT Review, or tried to engage them in a serious conversation about the 13 “practical” steps that went along with that pledge, would get the kind of uncomfortable stare usually reserved for those afflicted with Tourette syndrome.

Now it seems like a week doesn’t go by without a declaration by someone with serious political or diplomatic credentials that the need for global nuclear disarmament is self evident and urgent. (See Michael Christ’s blog entry, “Look Who’s Talking.”)

First and foremost has to be the new US President, Barack Obama, whose campaign platform contained a pledge to work for a world without nuclear weapons, and who has carried that goal over into the administration’s foreign policy agenda, published on the White House website days after his inauguration.

Some credit for this new abolitionist spirit among mainstream politicians and diplomats has to go to George Shultz, Henry Kissinger, Sam Nunn, and William Perry who, on January 4, 2007, penned the first of two Wall Street Journal articles that shook up the mainstream arms control community and made abolition a legitimate agenda item at international conferences and in the pages of respectable foreign policy journals. NGOs that had been carrying the abolition torch for decades grumbled at the irony (Kissinger was an architect of Cold War deterrence strategy, after all), but no one could deny that a sea change had occurred.

Here’s what the Gang of Four said two years ago:

Reassertion of the vision of a world free of nuclear weapons and practical measures toward achieving that goal would be… a bold initiative consistent with America’s moral heritage. The effort could have a profoundly positive impact on the security of future generations.…We endorse setting the goal of a world free of nuclear weapons and working energetically on the actions required to achieve that goal…” (1)

Their call has been endorsed by a majority of former US secretaries of state and defense and national security advisers.

Ronald Reagan’s original partner in seeking a nuclear-weapons-free world, Mikhail Gorbachev, wrote in response to the first Journal article: “It is becoming clearer that nuclear weapons are no longer a means of achieving security; in fact, with every passing year they make our security more precarious.”

Not to be outdone, some British decision makers promptly came out as abolitionists themselves. In June 2007, Margaret Beckett, the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs in the UK, told the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace “What we need is both vision—a scenario for a world free of nuclear weapons—and action—progressive steps to reduce warhead numbers and to limit the role of nuclear weapons in security policy. These two strands are separate but they are mutually reinforcing. Both are necessary, both at the moment too weak.”

Prime Minister Gordon Brown took this a step further in January 2008, stating that Britain “will be at the forefront of the international campaign to accelerate disarmament amongst possessor states, to prevent proliferation to new states, and to ultimately achieve a world that is free from nuclear weapons.”

The UK, of course, is moving full steam ahead to replace its Trident program but, that inconvenient fact aside, a group of former foreign secretaries and a former NATO secretary-general echoed the views of their US counterparts in a London Times article published on June 30, 2008.

“Substantial progress towards a dramatic reduction in the world’s nuclear weapons is possible,” wrote Sir Malcolm Rifkind, Lord David Owen, Lord Douglas Hurd, and Lord George Robertson. “The ultimate aspiration should be to have a world free of nuclear weapons. It will take time, but with political will and improvements in monitoring, the goal is achievable. We must act before it is too late, and we can begin by supporting the campaign in America for a non-nuclear weapons world.”

That “campaign in America” got a big boost when presidential candidate Barack Obama stated his own position during a now-famous speech in Berlin in July 2008:

This is the moment when we must renew the goal of a world without nuclear weapons.… It is time to secure all loose nuclear materials; to stop the spread of nuclear weapons; and to reduce the arsenals from another era. This is the moment to begin the work of seeking the peace of a world without nuclear weapons.”

Even Obama’s Republican opponent, John McCain, said he shared Ronald Reagan’s “dream” of a nuclear-weapons-free world, though he sounded less convinced it was possible. Still, he said it.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon said it, too, and in the process he endorsed the important missing piece. The Nuclear Weapons Convention, he told the UN First Committee in October, is “a good point of departure” to “revitalize the international disarmament agenda.”

And there’s the rub. These new abolitionists, for the most part, are more comfortable talking about incremental first steps than comprehensive frameworks. Ratifying the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, taking nuclear weapons off alert, banning production of fissile materials, and further reducing the size of existing arsenals, are all familiar ideas with broad support outside the neo-con community. When the US President says he is opposed to the production of new nuclear weapons, something new is clearly on the table, although the language of deterrence still seems to have a hold on Obama, who talks of the need to have lots of “reliable” nuclear weapons as long as others do. That’s the kind of circular reasoning abolition’s detractors make hay (i.e., reliable replacement warheads) with.

“In some respects,” Shultz and company wrote in the second of their two Journal articles in January 2008, “the goal of a world free of nuclear weapons is like the top of a very tall mountain. From the vantage point of our troubled world today, we can’t even see the top of the mountain…We must chart a course to higher ground where the mountaintop becomes more visible.”

The roadmap to the top of that mountain already exists, at least in draft form. It’s the Model Nuclear Weapons Convention produced by the International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms (IALANA), the International Network of Engineers and Scientists Against Proliferation (INESAP), and IPPNW. The NWC – the focal point of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) — is the “good point of departure” to which Secretary-General Ban referred, and it has been a working document of the United Nations for more than 10 years. Commencing negotiations on an NWC – something the US and Russia could start to organize and promote early in the Obama presidency – should be the goal of everyone who takes the idea of a nuclear-weapons-free world seriously.

The number of self-proclaimed abolitionists has swelled even further with the launch in December of Global Zero, a public outreach campaign the goal of which is “to achieve a comprehensive agreement to eliminate all nuclear weapons worldwide through phased and verified reductions.” More than 100 political, military, business, and celebrity heavyweights have already endorsed Global Zero, including Richard Branson, Gro Harlem Brundtland, Zbigniew Brzezinkski, Jimmy Carter, Michael Douglas, Mikhail Gorbachev, Robert McNamara, Queen Noor, Jonathan Schell, and Desmond Tutu.

US Senator Dianne Feinstein of California may have given the clearest, most straightforward advice of all to the incoming leader of the world’s largest nuclear superpower:

The bottom line: We must recognize nuclear weapons for what they are—not a deterrent, but a grave and gathering threat to humanity. As president, Barack Obama should dedicate himself to their world-wide elimination.”

With this kind of momentum, you’d think we should have no trouble achieving a nuclear-weapons-free world, if not overnight, certainly by 2020, which is the target date set by Mayors for Peace. Well, not if Chris Ford, Baker Spring, and, sad to say, Robert Gates have anything to say about it.

Next: Some heavy hands are definitely on the brakes

1) George P. Shultz, William J. Perry, Henry A. Kissinger, Sam Nunn. A world free of nuclear weapons. Wall Street Journal. January 4, 2007:A15.
2) Mikhail Gorbachev. The nuclear threat. Wall Street Journal. January 31, 2007:13.
3) Margaret Beckett. Speech to the Carnegie Endowment Non-Proliferation Conference. Washington, DC. June 25, 2007.
4) Gordon Brown. Speech at Chamber of Commerce in Delhi. January 21, 2008.
5) Douglas Hurd, Malcolm Rifkind, David Owen, George Robertson. Start worrying and learn to ditch the bomb: It won’t be easy, but a world free of nuclear weapons is possible. The Times of London.
June 30, 2008.
6) Barack Obama. A world that stands as one. Berlin. July 24, 2008.
7) Ban Ki-Moon. The United Nations and security in a nuclear-weapon-free world. Address to East-West Institute. New York. October 24, 2008.
8) George P. Shultz, William J. Perry, Henry A. Kissinger, Sam Nunn. Toward a nuclear-free world. Wall Street Journal. January 15, 2008:A13.
9) Dianne Feinstein. Let’s commit to a nuclear-free world. Wall Street Journal. January 3, 2009:A13.