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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.

Nigerian Students and Doctors Get “Peace Through Health” Training

January 29, 2009
by

From November 20th-22nd a very successful workshop was conducted in Kano, Nigeria. The workshop was initiated by Dr.  Bene Benard from Nigeria and Dr. Caecilie Buhmann from Denmark with the purpose of training 20 new trainers in topics of violent conflict and health.

The training was to be conducted in such a way that the participants would be able to conduct trainings themselves after the 3-day workshop. The workshop was sponsored by Danish Physicans Against Nuclear Weapons, Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital, Dr. Aminu Mohammed, Dr. Daniel Bassey, the IPPNW International Student Fund, and The Society of Nigerian Doctors for the Welfare of Mankind (SNDWM).

A group of Nigerian students and doctors in training had made all practical arrangements for the workshop. International Student representative Agyeno Ehase not only made a great effort in the preparations, but will also with regional representatives and Dr. Caecilie Buhmann bring the initiative international in the student movement. The students were supported by IPPNW Co-president Dr. Ime John and SNDWM Dr. Aminu Mohammed, who both attended parts of the workshop and without whom the workshop would not have become a reality.

During the three day programme Dr. Ime John Presented on small arms and nuclear weapons and Dr. Chris Kwaja presented on humanitarian assistance, refugees and protection of human rights in complex emergencies.  Dr. Caecilie Buhmann conducted 4 2-hour modules on “Globalization & Health”, “Peace through Health”, “Health & Human Rights” and “Advocacy and Dialogue”.  Each of the modules was manualized during the training and the last day the participants conducted test trainings of all 4 manuals under the supervision of Dr. Buhmann.

The outcomes of the workshop thereby include the training of 30 medical students and doctors in training from all over Nigeria, the piloting of 4 “training of trainers” modules on topics relevant for peace through health and written manuals on each of the topics. The workshop participants left inspired and full of ideas of how they could pass their knowledge and training skills on to others. At a future session in the end of the training suggestions were made for training medical students, communities prone to conflict, school teachers, secondary school students and professionals. Plans were made for forming new IPPNW groups in various parts of the country and to use the training modules at local, national, regional and international meetings of medical students and IPPNW. Participants were asked to grade the training on a scale from 0 to 10 and it received an average score of 8.7. Quotes from the evaluation forms include:

Quotes

In a world increasingly plagued by conflict, which undermine health and health service delivery, it only makes sense for doctors to take active part in brokering peace. The Peace through Health initiative shows them how.

—Agyeno Ehase Sunday

There’s no epithet in any human language that can describe or truly capture the exhilaration and fulfillment that I currently bask in following the enrichment I got from the intellectual discourse that this training offered me.

—Abdullateef Nafiu

This training not only trained me, but inspired me to do the same. I have never felt more confident about myself. I started with very little and got a lot back.  I hope and pray to spread the message.

—Hafsatu  Garba Bawa

It was very nice, interactive, knowledgeable, interesting, fabulous. The nice words are endless… The days went very fast as if it should never have ended, but like every good thing that happens in life, time consumes it so fast. I have learned a lot, the methods of teaching were the best I have heard in years. Keep it up I must say. I think with this I will be a better advocate, a better teacher and a human rights activist. No improvements needed. All I would say is a big thank you.

—Zaynbmed

We came with little knowledge, we’ve gained a lot. With knowledge comes power. We shall conquer!

—Sani Abdulmumin Saaif

Human rights, peace advocacy and their related issues are noble causes and even more noble is the teacher that ensures that the world properly understands and apply their knowledge.

—John Ikwuobe

The world has suffered many things because of the explosion of untrained people in relevant circles of life. Training is essential for our quest for world peace in IPPNW.

—Ogebe Onazi

Some workshops are for attending, some workshops are to get a certificate, while some are to be lived with. This workshop is to be lived with because it is part of us.

—Francis Sunday

The training is exceptional, generally informative and sensational.

—A. Adamu

I love the interaction classes and the use of communication between one another instead of power point. The tutor was patient and was not quick to judge or condemn our views, but accepted all views with a smile. I learned most importantly that there is more to being a doctor than carrying a stethoscope.

—Anonymous

The snowball effect is the best way of telling humanity that change can be made.

-Ban

Before I thought the issue of nuclear weapons is only an issue of the West, but now I understand it affects the whole common humanity.

—Shamsuddean Abdulrahman

The training brings youth together with the trainer, which taught us about how important this issue of disarmament is for humanity. We will be the decision-makers and leaders of tomorrow, so the concept is “catch them young” and we were moved.

—Anonymous

IPPNW Zambian Leader co-hosts a workshop in Lusaka, Zambia

January 29, 2009

Dr. Robert Mtonga, a leader of IPPNW-affiliate Zambian Healthworkers for Social Responsibility (ZHSR), has been active in his country and worldwide on Aiming for Prevention issues including educating that “guns are bad for health,” advocating for policy changes to prevent armed violence, and conducting violent injury research.

Here’s a link to a very recent article in Medicine, Conflict and Survival featuring Dr. Mtonga’s work.

He recently co-hosted a workshop in Lusaka, Zambia, “Towards a Common Understanding of the Arms Trade Treaty in Zambia” with Joseph Dube, African representative of the International Action Network on Small Arms (IANSA). Dr. Mtonga is also the medical field director of the IANSA Public Health Network, which is coordinated by IPPNW.

Speakers included the Deputy British High Commissioner, Paula Walsh, and the Director of the Zambia Anti-Personnel Mine Action Centre, Sheila Mweemba. The Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, Fashion Phiri, was in attendance. The Arms Trade Treaty that is advocated will establish common standards and institutions to control small arms, making sure that they are produced, bought, sold and used legally.

Ms. Mweeba spoke specifically about lessons learned from the cluster bomb campaign, which recently resulted in a landmark Convention on Cluster Munitions (IPPNW Zambia and IPPNW Russia both serve on the steering committee of the coalition that helped enact this historic treaty. Other IPPNW affiliates have also participated in this campaign.

Obama Reasserts Pledge for a Nuclear Weapons Free World During First Week in Office

January 29, 2009

During its first week in office, the new US administration of President Barack Obama published its foreign policy agenda on the revamped White House website. A summary of steps that Obama took as a US Senator to address the nuclear threat is followed by a series of explicit pledges to stop the development of new nuclear weapons, to take existing weapons off hair trigger alert, and to strengthen the Non-Proliferation Treaty.

IPPNW welcomes these clear breaks with the failed and counterproductive policies of the Bush administration, and will continue to press for a comprehensive solution: commencement of negotiations on a Nuclear Weapons Convention.

If you haven’t visited the new White House website, Start here.

Nuclear Weapons

  • A Record of Results: The gravest danger to the American people is the threat of a terrorist attack with a nuclear weapon and the spread of nuclear weapons to dangerous regimes. Obama has taken bipartisan action to secure nuclear weapons and materials:
    • He joined Senator Dick Lugar (R-In) in passing a law to help the United States and our allies detect and stop the smuggling of weapons of mass destruction throughout the world.
    • He joined Senator Chuck Hagel (R-Ne) to introduce a bill that seeks to prevent nuclear terrorism, reduce global nuclear arsenals, and stop the spread of nuclear weapons.
  • Secure Loose Nuclear Materials from Terrorists: Obama and Biden will secure all loose nuclear materials in the world within four years. While working to secure existing stockpiles of nuclear material, Obama and Biden will negotiate a verifiable global ban on the production of new nuclear weapons material. This will deny terrorists the ability to steal or buy loose nuclear materials.
  • Strengthen the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty: Obama and Biden will crack down on nuclear proliferation by strengthening the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty so that countries like North Korea and Iran that break the rules will automatically face strong international sanctions.
  • Move Toward a Nuclear Free World: Obama and Biden will set a goal of a world without nuclear weapons, and pursue it. Obama and Biden will always maintain a strong deterrent as long as nuclear weapons exist. But they will take several steps down the long road toward eliminating nuclear weapons. They will stop the development of new nuclear weapons; work with Russia to take U.S. and Russian ballistic missiles off hair trigger alert; seek dramatic reductions in U.S. and Russian stockpiles of nuclear weapons and material; and set a goal to expand the U.S.-Russian ban on intermediate-range missiles so that the agreement is global.

What do you think about these bold commitments? Consider this an open thread.  We’ll respond to your comments below.

Look Who’s Talking

January 29, 2009

For years, IPPNW was one of a few lone voices in the wilderness calling for the complete abolition of nuclear weapons to ensure humanity’s future – a position once derided as naïve and even dangerous by many “pragmatists.”  Now, a sea change is taking place with a growing list of political and defense experts in the US and around the world proclaiming that a nuclear weapon free world is desirable, urgent and achievable.

From where you sit, do you see nuclear weapons abolition entering mainstream thinking? Is a nuclear weapon free world an idea whose time has come? Let us know what you think by posting a comment below!

A world without nuclear weapons is profoundly in America’s interest and the world’s interest. It is our responsibility to make the commitment, and to do the hard work to make this a reality.”

Campaign statement of then-Senator Barack Obama, Jan 17, 2008. http://tinyurl.com/USPresident-says-ICAN

Without the vision of moving toward zero [nuclear weapons], we will not find the essential cooperation required to stop our downward spiral.”

– George Shultz, former US Secretary of State; William Perry, former Secretary of Defense; Henry Kissinger, former Secretary of State; Sam Nunn, former Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Wall Street Journal, Jan 15, 2008.

http://tinyurl.com/ColdWarriors-say-ICAN

I urge all NPT parties, in particular the nuclear-weapon-states, to fulfill their obligation under the treaty to undertake negotiations on effective measures leading to nuclear disarmament. They could pursue this goal by agreement on a framework of separate, mutually reinforcing instruments. Or they could consider negotiating a nuclear-weapons convention, backed by a strong system of verification, as has long been proposed at the United Nations.”

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon in a speech entitled “The United Nations and Security in a Nuclear Weapons-Free World”, Oct 24, 2008. http://tinyurl.com/UNChief-says-ICAN

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.”

US Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), Chair of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. The Wall Street Journal, Jan 3, 2009.

http://tinyurl.com/Senator-says-ICAN

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”

Margaret Beckett, then Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, United Kingdom. Carnegie International Nonproliferation Conference June 25, 2007.

http://tinyurl.com/BritishMinister-Says-ICAN

The vision of a world free of the nuclear threat, as developed by Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev in Reykjavik, must be rekindled.”

– Helmut Schmidt, former German Chancellor; Richard von Weizsäcker, former German President; Egon Bahr, a minister in Social Democratic governments; and Hans-Dietrich Genscher, former German Foreign Minister. International Herald Tribune, Jan 9, 2009.

http://tinyurl.com/German-Statesmen-say-ICAN

Nuclear weapons have shown themselves to be completely useless as a deterrent to the threats and scale of violence we currently face or are likely to face, particularly international terrorism.”

– Field Marshal Lord Bramall, a former head of the UK armed forces, and retired generals Lord David Ramsbotham and Sir Hugh Beach. Times of London, Jan 16, 2009.

http://tinyurl.com/military-says-ICAN

Nuclear weapons abolition – a fundamental human right in a democratic world

January 7, 2009

From December 11-13, 2008, IPPNW Co-Presidents Ime John and Vappu Taipale participated in the 9th Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates in Paris, France. The theme of the summit was “human rights and a world without violence,” and it coincided with the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Drs. John and Taipale gave the speeches that follow, and were instrumental in drafting the Summit press statement, which stated:  “There is no greater threat to human rights than nuclear weapons. We call for the global legally verifiable elimination of all nuclear weapons through the prompt adoption of a nuclear weapons convention.’’

__________

Nuclear weapons abolition – a fundamental human right in a democratic world

Dr. Ime A. John

Co-President, IPPNW

Mr Chairman,
Fellow Nobel Laureates and Nobel Laureates Organisations
Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen

It gives me great pleasure to address this distinguished assembly of Leaders and Statesmen who have excelled in so many important endeavours to achieve a more peaceful world in which human dignity and security have the highest priority. I also wish to thank the Gorbachev Foundation for its unwavering commitment to engage and nurture a community of Nobel Laureates during the nine years in which it has sponsored these annual summits.

This year’s theme, “Human rights and a world without violence,” is not only timely, but urgent in our present world, where the Universal Declaration adopted 60 years ago must not only be preserved and respected in its original intent, but must be adapted to encompass and guarantee human rights in social, political, and cultural contexts that have changed and evolved — sometimes dramatically — since 1948.

We are used to thinking about the right to health, the right to a secure environment, and the right to live free of fear and oppression as fundamental human rights. In a world awash in nuclear weapons, a commitment to human rights must also be a commitment to a world in which the threat of nuclear annihilation is eliminated. A world in which each generation, in pursuit of its own human rights, makes a promise to protect the right to existence of the next generation, and the ones after that. Therefore, I have decided to address the topic of nuclear weapons abolition as a fundamental human right in a democratic world.

Colleagues,
Human societies have long searched for more peaceful ways to resolve conflicts and to settle disputes on the basis of equity and fair play. Yet nations continue to seek domination over each other through war and the exercise of raw power. It was no coincidence that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was conceived and adopted in the years just after the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, while the world was still recoiling in horror from the introduction of weapons of mass destruction into a world that had already exhausted itself in two world wars and the deaths of tens of millions — combatants and non-combatants alike.  We still see the consequences of that egregious affront to human rights and human dignity in the faces of the Hibakusha and their families.

The international community has made more than one attempt to abolish these instruments of mass extermination and to ensure that they will never be used again. Those attempts have been only partially successful, but persisted throughout the decades of the nuclear age, most recently in the form of resolutions on nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation passed by the First Committee of the UN in October and adopted by the General Assembly in December. Within the past year, a chorus of prominent voices has begun to call seriously for a nuclear-weapons-free world. In a now-famous pair of editorials in the Wall Street Journal, George Shultz, Henry Kissinger, Sam Nunn, and William Perry broke ranks with the nuclear cold warriors and echoed what IPPNW and other Nobel Laureates had been saying for decades — that we would either abolish nuclear weapons or they would abolish us. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon told the East-West Institute on 24 October that “a world free of nuclear weapons would be a global public good of the highest order,” and said that the Model Nuclear Weapons Convention drafted by NGOs and championed by Costa Rica and Malaysia would be a good starting point. During his successful election campaign, President-Elect Barack Obama said that he wanted to provide leadership toward a nuclear-weapons-free world. India has resurrected the Rajiv Gandhi nuclear disarmament plan, and even President Sarkozy of France has now endorsed the goal of abolition.

Nevertheless, the good-faith commitment to nuclear disarmament enshrined in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) remains unfulfilled, and the nuclear weapon states, without exception, are modernizing their nuclear arsenals and the infrastructures that will produce new weapons well into this century. Some nuclear weapon states are not party to the NPT, and many non-nuclear-weapon states that are NPT members are losing patience with a double standard that has dragged on for almost 40 years. The failure to complete this long overdue task is not only a threat to global security, but poses a serious danger to the human rights of people in all countries of the world. These dangers are too often imposed on citizens who do not have a meaningful say on matters of global life and death. What is this, if not a human rights violation of the highest order?

Role of democracy
In the 1980s, millions of people around the world demonstrated in the streets for nuclear disarmament, while decision makers said the idea of a nuclear-weapons-free world was naïve and impractical. Today, the situation is strangely reversed, with serious statesmen and diplomats asserting that a world without nuclear weapons is a necessity, while the public is largely silent, preoccupied with other critical issues such as global warming and the economic crisis. Yet when asked, citizens of countries throughout the world express opinions in support of a Nuclear Weapons Convention. We find ourselves in a historical moment when the voices of the civil society and the voices of the powerful can make common cause in promoting a nuclear free world.

Will the Obama administration fulfill the President-Elect’s pledge to rid the world of these weapons? What of Russia, the UK, France and China? Can the democratic institutions in these Countries be placed in the service of this ultimate human rights project? How do we respond to countries such as Iran, which claim a human right to develop nuclear facilities for energy, but which leave the world anxious about their intentions? South Africa, which once had a nuclear weapons capability, renounced it, but now nuclear energy is making  resurgence. Even my own country, Nigeria, is working seriously to acquire nuclear energy technologies that are only a few steps removed from a bomb-making capability.

Many non-nuclear-weapon states have already come together in exercises of democracy resulting in the creation of nuclear free zones in Africa, Latin America, and Asia. They are contributing to the momentum building up within civil society for nuclear abolition.

The call itself is not new. The World Health Assembly adopted a resolution in 1983 asserting that “nuclear weapons constitute the greatest immediate threat to the health and survival of mankind.” The World Medical Association condemned nuclear weapons in 1998, and just renewed its call for their elimination at this year’s WMA annual meeting in Seoul, in October.

IPPNW, which has mobilized physicians and medical students in 62 countries to educate the public and decision makers about the irremediable medical consequences of nuclear war, launched the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) in 2007. The goal of ICAN is to reawaken public concern about the growing threat posed by nuclear weapons, and to mobilize civil society to demand a nuclear-weapon-free world through the negotiation and adoption of a Nuclear Weapons Convention. The international community reached such agreements on chemical and biological weapons, on landmines, and, most recently, on cluster munitions. There is no reason, other than political resistance, why we cannot come to agreement around the prohibition of nuclear weapons as well.

Nuclear abolition and a healthy world
The WHO has made it clear that the definition of health encompasses far more than freedom from diseases and their symptoms, but that health is “a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being.” Nuclear war — and security policies based on the capability to threaten the use of nuclear weapons — is the antithesis of health as defined by the WHO. Our fundamental message — that doctors can offer NO meaningful medical response to a nuclear war, and that prevention is the only responsible option — has not changed from the earliest days of our movement.

Chairman and Colleagues,
With tensions in the Caucasus, the Middle East, Africa, South Asia and elsewhere, the world must take a decision about security and freedom from the devastation of armed conflict as a human right. As Nobel Peace Laureates, we have an opportunity and a responsibility to engage with political decision makers in promoting a concrete agenda for health, security, human dignity, and human rights. A convention that abolishes nuclear weapons is an important advancement of fundamental human rights that can no longer be postponed.
Thank you for attention.

__________

Women and mothers promoters of change –
a total global freeze of  military expenditure is needed now to face the global economical situation

Vappu Taipale

Co-President, IPPNW

IPPNW is a physician’s movement and therefore we look at the world through our profession. When IPPNW was set up in the early 1980s, the fear of a nuclear war was very real and palpable. Prevention of nuclear war was our urgent priority in health.

Today the environment of world politics is different. Still, the nuclear weapons have not disappeared; the stores are there and even refilled with increasingly modern technology. The imagined threat has become weaker, if not forgotten. But a disease will not disappear just by rejecting information about it and a cancer will not heal just by making it disappear from our consciousness.

There have been dramatic reductions in mortality in all industrialised countries, particularly for infants and children. However, this overall improvement masks less favourable trends: there are systematic differences in health across the population within all countries. Especially the situation as regards mental health and mental sickness has steadily deteriorated in the developing countries and particularly among poor people. Even the rich countries face a steady increase in depression, suicide and anxiety disorders but do not show much ambition and progress in the mental health field.

There is an uneven distribution of health and disease, favouring those in socially advantaged position, whether measured by income, education, occupation or other measures of socio-economic status. In fact, the world has grown more unequal. The WHO rapport on Social Determinants of Health (2008) has pointed out the crucial importance of social justice in health. Today, the problem still exists: human rights are violated and there is structural violence as to people´s rights to health.

Poverty and poverty-bound ill-health means that opportunities and choices most basic to human development are denied. Health is one of the most prominent choice people everywhere in the world appreciate. The world has today the material and natural resources, the know-how and the people to make a poverty-free world a reality in less than a generation. This requires conscious policies and a strong civil society everywhere.

When investing in child human rights and child health, some of the measures are taken on a macro scale, on the level of the society in general. These measures include the provision of education and training, safeguarding the economic circumstances of families with children, and a long-term family policy. Some of the measures are environmental, because it has become more and more difficult to guarantee the basic qualities of environment to the children: healthy food, fresh air and pure water — just the challenges from the beginning of the hygienic movement in the 19th century.

I am mother of four children and grandmother of six. As a child psychiatrist I was one of the first in IPPNW to raise the issue of children and war on our agenda. Militarism means subordinating of the values of the society to the needs of the war and to the preparation of war. Militarism can be structural; it can be targeted to the minds of people or reach the behaviour of people. Children have always been, as a part of any human society, influenced by famines, illnesses, conflicts and occupations, eye witnessing human violence and participating in many ways in crises and warfare. Methods and means of warfare have become increasingly sophisticated. Conflicts opposing regular armed forces and irregular combatants are more frequent. In modern warfare, losses are much more severe among civilians, and they even are consequently growing in severity all the time. Military expenditure in the world is high, consuming resources needed to alleviate poverty and to reach Millennium Development Goals.

Therefore,

we mothers and women are here to protect our children.

The major economic recession which affects all the countries will hit children worst and have several consequences during next decades. All the nations should freeze immediately their military expenditure in order to protect their children. This will serve as the first step to total nuclear disarmament, to protect human rights and to build up a world without violence.

There are positive signs to be found in the world during last months. Secretary General Ban Ki Moon has uttered his strong will to nuclear disarmament as well as President –elect Barack Obama. President Nicholas Sarkozy, France holding the presidency of European Union has come out with strong support to nuclear abolition. Global Zero group has prominent members and supporters.

Future innovations are neither merely macroeconomic nor technical but social. They involve increased social understanding, deeper cultural interpretations, better co-operation between different scientific fields, and enhanced dialogue between science, civil society and politics.

A nuclear-weapons-free world? Not if those building a 100-year production line can help it

October 9, 2008

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

If a change is coming in US nuclear policy after the 2008 elections, there is no hint of it in a policy paper released quietly by the outgoing Bush administration in September. “National Security and Nuclear Weapons in the 21st Century,” a followup to a report issued by Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and Secretary of Energy Samuel Bodman last year, provides a rationale and a timetable (actually, a choice among timetables) for rebuilding the US nuclear weapons infrastructure, with the goal of ensuring a steady flow of new nuclear warheads for the next 50 to 100 years.

Gates and Bodman conclude that the number of operational nuclear warheads required for the security of the US and its allies for the remainder of this century is 1,700 to 2,200. Reserve warheads would, perhaps, double the size of the stockpile to about 4,500, although 3,500 is another ceiling they consider. Depending on the projected size of the stockpile and the rate at which new plutonium triggers (pits) and replacement warheads are produced, reconstruction of the US arsenal would be completed between 2039 and 2114. Once the infrastructure is rebuilt and running up to speed, it can always be expanded if the Pentagon wants more warheads.

If you are having a hard time connecting the dots between this vision of the future and a world without nuclear weapons, welcome to the club. Gates and Bodman don’t make a single reference to US disarmament commitments under the NPT. They note that the US is meeting its goals under SORT (the 2002 Moscow Treaty), but describe the nuclear force levels established by that treaty as a carefully determined operational threshold, not as a stopover on any path to zero. (It’s no stretch to read this report as confirmation of a long-held suspicion that SORT was not a disarmament treaty at all, rather a “gentlemen’s agreement” to stabilize the US and Russian arsenals at a predetermined, long term threshold.)

The cabinet secretaries, who share responsibility for the size and structure of the US arsenal, chafe under the moratorium on nuclear testing, but believe they have solved the problem of how to keep new warhead designs coming without necessarily having to explode them to make sure they work. And they fret that aging warheads are not the only worrisome part of the system:

Critical personnel, with experience in the design and testing of nuclear weapons, are also aging and retiring, and in the absence of a viable nuclear infrastructure, their expertise cannot be replaced. Moreover, as new design efforts are further delayed, the ability and availability of experienced designers and engineers to mentor the next generation will decrease over time.

The rationale offered by Gates and Bodman for a large, permanent nuclear warmaking capability (which, by the way, is incompatible with Article VI of the NPT despite often repeated US claims to the contrary) is just the latest iteration of the false and unexamined assumptions laid out in the 2001 Nuclear Posture Review. The Cold War is over, but “the international security environment remains dangerous and unpredictable.” Nuclear weapons “play unique roles in supporting US national security” and “remain an essential element in modern strategy.” US nuclear weapons defend not only the US but also its allies. They do this by providing assurances to friends, by dissuading adversaries (and also friends) from acquiring nuclear weapons of their own, and by deterring nuclear-armed adversaries. Gates and Bodman assert that nuclear weapons will be used to defeat our adversaries if deterrence fails, but sidestep the question of how the US expects to avoid mutually assured destruction, even in a post-Cold-War world. The fact that nuclear weapons are meant to enforce US political will globally is openly acknowledged.

What we have here is a faith-based initiative, with the object of faith being a guaranteed capability to destroy humanity. According to Gates and Bodman — and a succession of US administrations from both political parties — “The United States will need to maintain a nuclear force, though smaller and less prominent than in the past, for the foreseeable future.” Contrast this with statements made by both presidential candidates. Earlier this year, Sen. Barack Obama said “A world without nuclear weapons is profoundly in America’s interest and the world’s interest. It is our responsibility to make the commitment, and to do the hard work to make this vision a reality.” Sen. John McCain agreed a short while later, though he expressed himself in the language of wishful thinking: “A quarter of a century ago, President Ronald Reagan declared, ‘our dream is to see the day when nuclear weapons will be banished from the face of the Earth.’ That is my dream, too.”

Despite their encouraging rhetoric, both candidates, to varying degrees and with varying levels of enthusiasm, are committed to maintaining what they call a “strong nuclear deterrent” as long as nuclear weapons exist. Whether either of them has a serious, practical plan to achieve a nuclear-weapons-free world remains to be seen. What seems certain is that, in the absence of a clear and unambiguous presidential directive to start pursuing and planning for a nuclear-weapons-free world, what we will get is the 21st century nuclear force envisioned by Gates and Bodman. A global pandemic of nuclear weapons will then be a foregone conclusion.

Read “National Security and Nuclear Weapons in the 21st Century” here

Should anything trigger the use of nuclear weapons?

October 3, 2008

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

The next President of the United States has an awesome responsibility for the security of the entire world. He (or potentially she) can either lead us toward the global elimination of nuclear weapons, or he can continue to claim that they are essential for US security and ensure their almost inevitable use—whether deliberately or through tragic error.

During the US vice presidential debate on Thursday, October 2, moderator Gwen Ifill asked Senator Joe Biden and Governor Sarah Palin “What should be the trigger, or should there be a trigger, when nuclear weapons use is ever put into play?”

Neither candidate answered the question. Gov. Palin spoke vaguely about the lethality of nuclear weapons and made an inaccurate statement about US nuclear policy. “Nuclear weaponry,” she said:

“of course, would be the be all, end all of just too many people in too many parts of our planet, so those dangerous regimes, again, cannot be allowed to acquire nuclear weapons, period. Our nuclear weaponry here in the US is used as a deterrent. And that’s a safe, stable way to use nuclear weaponry.”

Not only is there is no “safe, stable way” to use nuclear weapons, given their intolerably destructive nature, but US nuclear policy defines a number of situations in which national leaders might use or threaten to use nuclear weapons preemptively or in response to a non-nuclear attack. Such policies are extremely dangerous; they violate the norms of international law; and they provoke other countries into considering the acquisition of their own nuclear arsenals.

Sen. Biden also sidestepped the question about the use of nuclear weapons and gave an incomplete answer about the importance of arms control. “Barack Obama” he said “…reached across the aisle to my colleague, Dick Lugar, a Republican, and said, ‘We’ve got to do something about keeping nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists.’ They put together a piece of legislation that, in fact, was serious and real.” He also spoke about the importance of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.

His answer, while it demonstrated his expertise in nuclear policy, stopped short of expressing what both Sen. Obama and Sen. McCain have said during the campaign: that the world will be safer without nuclear weapons. As a number of senior American statesmen have argued over the past year, any individual arms control measures need to be seen as steps toward the global elimination of nuclear weapons.

The answer to Ms. Ifill’s question is simple and irrefutable. We must never allow anything to trigger the use of nuclear weapons, because if we use them they will destroy all of us — our adversaries, our allies, and ourselves. There can be no responsible owners of nuclear weapons. Because of their inherent destructiveness, the mere existence of nuclear weapons threatens the future of all humanity.

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 banish the bomb from the arsenals of the world, make the use of nuclear weapons inevitable if the next US President and the international community do not act decisively. IPPNW, through the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) has called for negotiaton and adoption of a Nuclear Weapons Convention that would eliminate all the world’s nuclear weapons.

You can learn more about nuclear weapons and what would happen if they are ever used again here [nwarmedicalcons.pdf]. You can learn how to become part of the solution and become an ICAN supporter here [www.ippnw.org/Program/ICAN].

Most important, please tell both Sen. Obama and Sen. McCain that there are no responsible owners of nuclear weapons, only responsible leaders who will take the necessary steps to abolish these weapons of mass extermination from the world.

Please let us know how you feel about the remarks of the Vice Presidential Candidates and our opinion of their responses by commenting on this post.

The urgent need to begin negotiating a Nuclear Weapons Convention

September 24, 2008

IPPNW and the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) have called on the United Nations General Assembly to “take up the Nuclear Weapons Convention as its highest disarmament and non-proliferation priority” during its 63rd session, which opened on September 16. Despite dozens of resolutions adopted by the General Assembly each year, progress toward a nuclear-weapons-free world has been stalled for decades. In a statement sent to the General Assembly President and to the chairs of the UN First Committee and the Conference on Disarmament, IPPNW warned that “This ongoing unprecedented threat [of nuclear war] to all people and the survival and sustainability of our planet is not only continuing but escalating.” IPPNW affiliates are sending copies of the statement to their UN missions and Conference on Disarmament delegations throughout the months of September and October.

IPPNW’s Submission to the 63rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly

For more than 45 years, physicians have documented and described the horrifying medical and humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons explosions. We have informed political and military leaders that doctors, hospitals, and other medical infrastructure would be so completely overwhelmed in the event of a nuclear war that we would be unable to respond in any meaningful way to relieve the suffering of survivors or to restore health to a devastated world. We have warned that the unique nature of nuclear weapons — their unprecedented destructive power and the radiation they release, causing cancers, birth defects, and genetic disorders across generations — removes any moral justification for their use as weapons of war and requires their abolition.

This ongoing unprecedented threat to all people and the survival and sustainability of our planet is not only continuing but escalating. The Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission chaired by Dr Hans Blix noted:

“Over the past decade, there has been a serious and dangerous, loss of momentum and direction in disarmament and non-proliferation efforts.”[1]

Numerous authoritative assessments conclude that the risk use of nuclear weapons is growing. One of the most authoritative is the Board of The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, including 18 Nobel Laureates. In moving the hands of the Doomsday Clock from 7 to 5 minutes to midnight in January 2007 they stated:

“Not since the first atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki has the world faced such perilous choices. North Korea’s recent test of a nuclear weapon, Iran’s nuclear ambitions, a renewed US emphasis on the military utility of nuclear weapons, the failure to adequately secure nuclear materials, and the continued presence of some 26,000 nuclear weapons in the United States and Russia are symptomatic of a larger failure to solve the problems posed by the most destructive technology on Earth.”[2]

International lawyers, physicians, scientists, and other civil society experts have offered a roadmap toward a nuclear-weapons-free world in the Model Nuclear Weapons Convention. The model NWC—a comprehensive framework for global nuclear disarmament in all its aspects—has been a working document of the General Assembly since 1997. Support for a convention has been voiced repeatedly by majorities of UN Member States. A First Committee resolution (A/C.1/62/L.36) adopted last year and supported by 127 Member States called for the commencement of “multilateral negotiations leading to an early conclusion of a nuclear weapons convention prohibiting the development, production, testing, deployment, stockpiling, transfer, threat or use of nuclear weapons and providing for their elimination.”[3]

We urge the General Assembly to put this resolution into action by engaging in substantive discussion of the Nuclear Weapons Convention during the 63rd session, and by instructing the Conference on Disarmament and the participants in the 2010 Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference to place the Convention at the center of their deliberations from this point on. Such direction from the General Assembly would recall its first resolution, adopted in 1946 and calling for “the elimination from national armaments of atomic weapons and of all other major weapons adaptable to mass destruction.” This 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 are used as stalling tactics. For every step forward we seem to take two steps back. The Conference on Disarmament, the world’s sole multilateral disarmament negotiating body, has not undertaken any substantive negotiations for well over a decade. The 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 are dominated by debates about whether disarmament or non-proliferation should come first, when the Treaty obligates Member States to pursue both simultaneously. Former Secretary-General Kofi Annan made this point eloquently 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.”[4]

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.”[5] Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the Conference on Disarmament this January that “To get back on the path to success, the Conference must rekindle the ambition and sense of common purpose that produced its past accomplishments.”[6] The Nuclear Weapons Convention, while its precise terms remain to be negotiated, embodies that common purpose.

Reinforcing and building on the NPT

The NWC cuts through the widely held perception that nuclear disarmament is an improbable dream. It offers a vision of what a nuclear-weapons-free world might look like, showing the steps that could practically lead to nuclear weapons being safely and securely eliminated. The model NWC contains detailed provisions for national implementation and guidelines for verification; establishes an international agency responsible for enforcement and dispute settlement; and indicates procedures for reporting and addressing violations. It is comparable, in these respects, to other treaties banning entire categories of weapons, such as the Chemical Weapons Convention, the Biological Weapons Convention and the Mine Ban Treaty. The model NWC simply applies the lessons of successes in nuclear disarmament with the comprehensive, universal treaty-based approach which has been the logical approach for all the successes towards abolishing other major classes of weapons to date. To assert that a similar approach to nuclear weapons is impractical or counterproductive is inconsistent and disingenuous. A nuclear weapons convention will enable nuclear weapons states to fulfil their legal obligations under the NPT, will bridge the divide between non-proliferation and disarmament, and will address the issue of universality, which has plagued the NPT from the beginning.

The NPT is already under serious strain. The exception recently granted nuclear trade with India essentially rewards India despite its development of nuclear weapons as a non-party to the NPT, and provides for nuclear cooperation previously restricted to NPT signatories. This adds to the failure of the nuclear weapon states to disarm, and instead to enhance their nuclear arsenals, to erode the incentives for the vast majority of non-nuclear weapons to continue to fulfill their obligations under the Treaty. Other nuclear weapons states outside the NPT can be expected to seek similar exemptions. The only prospect which stands a serious chance of breaking this negative spiral towards nuclear anarchy is serious, widespread commitment to eradication of nuclear weapons, made credible by tangible progress towards this goal.

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. 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 Convention, which organizes the many aspects of nuclear disarmament into a coherent whole.

States parties to the Convention would be required to declare all nuclear weapons, nuclear material, nuclear facilities and nuclear weapons delivery vehicles they possess or control, and their locations. The model Convention outlines a series of five phases for elimination: taking nuclear weapons off alert; removing weapons from deployment; removing nuclear warheads from their delivery vehicles; disabling the warheads, removing and disfiguring the “pits” where the weapons are stored; and placing the fissile material under international control. Compliance and verification would be assured through declarations and reports from States, routine and unannounced inspections, and a full range of technical monitoring systems.

The NWC does not undermine existing nuclear non-proliferation and disarmament regimes—a concern sometimes raised by governments and diplomats. It would complement, enhance and build on all of these. In short, there is no reason not to make this historic transition from a fragmented approach to a comprehensive approach, and there is every reason to do so. In fact the recent history of nuclear proliferation demonstrates unequivocally that any approach which perpetuates a double standard—that nuclear weapons are essential instruments of security in the hands of some nations, and intolerable threats to security in the hands of others, a threat so great as to warrant pre-emptive war—is doomed to failure. Widespread access to nuclear technology and materials ensures that. The only sustainable, practical approach which could gain the support of all nations is one consistent goal—zero nuclear weapons—for all.

New science and the stark consequences of failure

T

he 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 ban the bomb and banish it from the arsenals of the world, make the use of nuclear weapons inevitable if we do not act decisively.

As physicians, we are obliged to remind you what that would mean.

The 12.5-kiloton bomb detonated in the air over Hiroshima decimated the city and created ground temperatures that reached about 7,000 degrees Celsius. Of the 76,000 buildings in the city, 92% were destroyed or damaged. There were more than 100,000 deaths and approximately 75,000 injuries among a population of nearly 250,000. Of the 298 physicians in the city, 270 were dead or injured and 1,564 of 1,780 nurses died or were injured.

The 21-kiloton bomb detonated in the air over Nagasaki three days later leveled 6.7 square kilometers (2.6 square miles). There were 75,000 immediate deaths and 75,000 injuries, with destruction of medical facilities and personnel and health consequences for the population of the city that were similar to those of Hiroshima.

A 2002 study published in the British Medical Journal estimated the casualties from a 12.5 kiloton nuclear explosion at ground level near the port area of New York City. The model projected 262,000 people would be killed, including 52,000 immediately and the remainder succumbing to radiation injuries. Caring for survivors would also be difficult, if not impossible, with the loss of 1,000 hospital beds in the blast and another 8,700 available beds in areas of high radiation exposure.[7]

A regional nuclear war in South Asia involving only 100 Hiroshima-sized (15-kt) weapons targeted on megacities would kill 20 million people outright, a number equal to half of all those killed worldwide during the six years of World War II. A nuclear war between the US and Russia, whose leaders persist in maintaining the world’s largest nuclear arsenals and have thousands of weapons ready to be launched in a matter of minutes, would kill hundreds of millions and could trigger a nuclear winter. As physicians, we are not comforted by assertions that these weapons are in responsible hands and that such possibilities are not to be feared. It is not the character of their owners but the nature of the weapons which is at issue.

In December 2006, climate scientists who had worked with the late Carl Sagan in the 1980s to document the threat of nuclear winter produced disturbing new research about the climate effects of low-yield, regional nuclear war.[8] Using South Asia as an example, these experts found that even a limited regional nuclear war on the order of 100 Hiroshima-sized nuclear weapons would result in tens of millions of immediate deaths and unprecedented global climate disruption. Smoke from urban firestorms caused by multiple nuclear explosions would rise into the upper troposphere and, due to atmospheric heating, would subsequently be boosted deep into the stratosphere. The resulting soot cloud would block the sun, leading to significant cooling and reductions in precipitation lasting for more than a decade. Within 10 days following the explosions, there would be a drop in average surface temperature of 1.25° C. Over the following year, a 10% decline in average global rainfall and a large reduction in the Asian summer monsoon would have a significant impact on agricultural production. These effects would persist over many years. The growing season would be shortened by 10 to 20 days in many of the most important grain producing areas in the world, which might completely eliminate crops that have insufficient time to reach maturity.

To make matters even worse, such amounts of smoke injected into the stratosphere would cause a huge reduction in the Earth’s protective ozone. A study published in April by the National Academy of Sciences, using a similar nuclear war scenario involving 100 Hiroshima-size bombs, shows ozone losses in excess of 20% globally, 25–45% at midlatitudes, and 50–70% at northern high latitudes persisting for five years, with substantial losses continuing for five additional years.[9] The resulting increases in UV radiation would have serious consequences for human health.

There are currently more than 800 million people in the world who are chronically malnourished. Several hundred million more live in countries that depend on imported grain. Even a modest, sudden decline in agricultural production could trigger significant increases in the prices for basic foods, as well as hoarding on a global scale, making food inaccessible to poor people in much of the world. While it is not possible to estimate the precise extent of the global famine that would follow a regional nuclear war, it seems reasonable to anticipate a total global death toll in the range of one billion from starvation alone. Famine on this scale would also lead to major epidemics of infectious diseases, and would create immense potential for mass population movement, civil conflict, and war.

These findings have significant implications for nuclear weapons policy. They are powerful evidence in the case against the proliferation of nuclear weapons and against the modernization of arsenals in the existing nuclear weapon states. Even more important, they argue for a fundamental reassessment of the role of nuclear weapons in the world. If even a relatively small nuclear war, by Cold War standards—within the capacity of 8 nuclear-armed states—could trigger a global catastrophe, the only viable response is the complete abolition of nuclear weapons.

Conclusion: an urgent need for action beyond rhetoric

T

he 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 timebound schedule. Mayors for Peace, under the leadership of Hiroshima Mayor Tadatoshi 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 is achievable if negotiations on a Nuclear Weapons Convention commence no later than the conclusion of the 2010 NPT Review. The General Assembly has an opportunity and a responsibility to provide its disarmament bodies with the Convention roadmap, and to set a timeline for results. Every day of inaction further risks the chance that our collective luck will run out.

We respectfully request the President of the 63rd session and the General Assembly as a whole to take up the Nuclear Weapons Convention as its highest disarmament and non-proliferation priority.


[1] Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission. The WMDC report: weapons of terror — freeing the world of nuclear, biological and chemical arms. Stockholm. 2006.

[2] Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. “Doomsday clock” moves two minutes closer to midnight. Press release. 17 January 2007. [www.thebulletin.org].

[3] UNGA. Follow-up to the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice on the legality of the threat or use of nuclear weapons. Document A/C.1/62/L.36. 17 October 2007.

[4] Annan, K. Lecture. Princeton University. 28 November 2006. [http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2006/sgsm10767.doc.htm%5D

[5] International Court of Justice. Legality of the threat or use of nuclear weapons. Advisory opinion of 8 July 1996. [http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/index.php?p1=3&p2=4&k=e1&p3=4&case=95%5D

[6] Secretary-General’s statement to the Conference on Disarmament. Geneva, Switzerland. 23 January 2008. [www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=2962]

[7] Helfand I, Forrow L, Tiwari J. Nuclear terrorism. BMJ 2002;324:356-359.

[8] Robock A, et.al. Climatic consequences of regional nuclear conflicts, Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussion 2006;6:11817-11843.

[9] Mills MJ et al. Massive global ozone loss predicted following regional nuclear conflict. PNAS, 2008;105(14):5307-5312.

Dr. John describes choice between dominance and cooperation at peace summit

September 24, 2008

IPPNW Co-President Ime John was a featured speaker at the Point of Peace summit on September 11 in Stavanger, Norway. The summit is an annual gathering of Nobel Peace Prize laureates, conflict resolution experts, and NGOs. Dr. John told the conference that “the choice between…two paradigms—one based on unilateralism, force, ideology, and narrowly defined national interests; the other based on diplomacy, a search for consensus, and a respect for international law—has rarely been so manifest or so urgent.”

Full Text of Speach [Download PDF]

The nuclear paradox –threat to global security and peace.

Mr. Chairman/Moderator,

Esteemed Colleagues,

Gentlemen of the Press,

Distinguished Ladies and gentlemen.

It gives me pleasure to address you at this august gathering of experts, activists, and peacemakers in a Country renowned for honoring and supporting global peace. Our topic — REDEFINING SECURITY: FROM DOMINANCE TO COOPERATION — is not only timely, but essential. The choice between these two paradigms — one based on unilateralism, force, ideology, and narrowly defined national interests; the other based on diplomacy, a search for consensus, and a respect for international law — has rarely been so manifest or so urgent.

As a Physician, and as the Co-President of a federation of physicians that sees peace and care for the human race as one and the same project, I would like to briefly address some of our challenges and opportunities at this crossroads.

The world breathed a sigh of relief at the end of the Cold War, hoping that the annihilation of mankind in an all-out nuclear war between the US and the former Soviet Union was a fear that we could put to rest. Today, however, we find ourselves once again on the brink of nuclear catastrophe, and we will remain there if we do not take significant steps now toward a world without nuclear weapons.

Despite welcome reductions in their arsenals, the US and Russia still possess more than 20,000 nuclear weapons between them — more than 95% of the world total. There are seven other nuclear weapon states, some in volatile regions of the world. Two of those states — India and Pakistan — have done serious damage to the non-proliferation regime by introducing new arsenals into the world, along with new incentives for others to acquire nuclear weapons. The possibility that terrorist groups may obtain nuclear weapons and use them wantonly is a frightening concern that cannot be addressed effectively without comprehensive ban on the weapons themselves and the materials with which to make them.

We would be making a serious mistake, however, if we accepted the claim of the nuclear weapon states that this is only a proliferation problem, and that the solution is keeping nuclear weapons out of irresponsible hands, through coercive means if necessary. The nuclear weapon states themselves have moved beyond strictly defined concepts of deterrence against other nuclear-armed adversaries. Some of them openly contemplate preemptive attacks —possibly even nuclear attacks — against countries they believe to be developing nuclear weapons or the capacity to build them.

The US, the UK, and a handful of allies embarked on an unending misadventure in Iraq, based on unwarranted claims that Iraq was on the verge of acquiring nuclear arsenal. No nuclear weapons were found in Iraq because none existed. The cost of this mistake in human lives has been staggering: hundreds of thousands — perhaps more than a million — Iraqi deaths; almost 4 million refugees and displaced persons; and more than 100,000 casualties (deaths and injuries) among American soldiers. The five-year occupation has only resulted in a heightened capacity for terrorism and political instability in the region, at a cost of anywhere between one and four trillion dollars. As though these lessons had gone completely unlearned, the outgoing Bush administration has raised global anxiety by sending signals that it might take military action to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons — a possibility that cannot be discounted given Iran’s advanced state of nuclear technology, although the country’s leaders have denied that they are turning those resources towards weapons development.

Recently, a region with a tragic history of conflict and political instability —dating back to the Ottoman Empire and continuing through the Bolshevik revolution and the radical changes brought about by perestroika and glasnost in the 1990s — has erupted in violence again. Without going into a discussion hereabout the causes and claims on either side of the conflict between Russia and Georgia, I only want to point out that in a nuclear-armed world, hostilities that draw nuclear weapons states into confrontations with each other have the potential to escalate into something catastrophic. Peaceful negotiations leading to mutual agreements are urgently needed within this region.

For the past 38 years, since the entry into force of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), the nuclear weapon states have avoided their nuclear disarmament obligations under Article VI. Rather, they have striven to maintain a kind of nuclear apartheid — a global security system in which nuclear weapons guarantee the power and status of a few countries, while the vast majority of states must settle for second class citizenship. Israel, India, and Pakistan refused to join the NPT for this very reason, to the detriment of global security.

Just this week, the Nuclear Suppliers Group approved a special waiver that will allow the US to transfer nuclear technology to India, despite the fact that the NSG was created in the aftermath of the 1974 Indian nuclear test to prevent nuclear assistance to countries that were not subject to the safeguards, inspections, and compliance regimes mandated by the NPT.

The dominance paradigm produces the kind of world in which we find ourselves, and offers no solutions for getting out of it — no exit strategy, to use the language of military planners.

IPPNW is a federation of like-minded, non-partisan physicians and health care workers that was formed at the height of the Cold War to address an earlier manifestation of the nuclear threat. Our humble contribution to educating an earlier generation of leaders about the medical consequences of nuclear war was recognized by the UNESCO Peace Education Prize in 1984 and by the Nobel Peace Prize in 1985. Since then we’ve grown in both size and mission, with affiliate organizations in 62 countries addressing a range of issues related to peace, security, and health.

Yet our fundamental message — that doctor can offer no meaningful medical response to a nuclear war and that prevention is the only responsible option —has not changed. We know that what happened to the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki as a result of the US atomic bombings is only a foreshadowing of the consequences of a nuclear war using today’s arsenals.

Twenty years ago, we learned that a nuclear war between the US and the former Soviet Union, involving a thousand or more nuclear weapons, would result in nuclear winter and the end of human civilization. During the past year or so, scientists have informed us that even the use of 100 Hiroshima-sized weapons could result in tens of millions of immediate deaths and unprecedented climate disruption, including the precipitation of a global famine.

Mounting concern over the nuclear threat and frustration with gridlocked disarmament discussions in UN committees and other arms control forums, prompted IPPNW to launch the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) in 2007. The goal of ICAN is to reawaken public concern about the growing threat posed by nuclear weapons, and to mobilize civil society to demand a nuclear-weapon-free world through the negotiation and adoption of a Nuclear Weapons Convention. We reached such agreements on chemical and biological weapons, on landmines, and, most recently, on cluster munitions. There is no reason, other than political resistance, why we cannot come to agreement around prohibition of nuclear weapons as well.

To do so, however, we must adopt the cooperation paradigm. In the case of the nuclear threat, cooperation must take the form of a courageous and sustained diplomatic effort to create a nuclear-weapons-free world under a Nuclear Weapons Convention. The agreement must be accompanied by good faith actions to implement the Convention and to abide by its terms.

IPPNW launched ICAN at the Non-Proliferation Treaty Preparatory Committee meeting in Vienna, and worked with a coalition of NGOs to bring the Nuclear Weapons Convention to the attention of delegations at the 2008 PrepCom in Geneva. In 2008 and 2009, ICAN activists will make the case that, along with global warming, nuclear war is the greatest preventable danger facing humankind. IPPNW will promote the Nuclear Weapons Convention both inside and outside the UN, and will focus on specific medical issues, including the climate effects of regional nuclear war, the use of highly enriched uranium in radiopharmaceutical production, and the health impacts of an expanding uranium mining industry.

We believe that together with you — our distinguished Colleagues — and with the voices of civil society around the world, we can influence our governments to make the call for abolition their highest security priority, and work with us to make a world without nuclear weapons a reality.

Thank you for your attention.

Dr. Ime A.John

Co-President, IPPNW