WHY BAN NUCLEAR WEAPONS: ABOLISH THEM!
To roll back
the rising waves of military nuclearization (nuclear weaponization) and nuclear
proliferation, five nuclear-weapon-free zones (NWFZs) have been established:
(1) The Treaty of
Tlatelolco, also known as the Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in
Latin America and the Caribbean, effective since 22 April 1968, for blocking
military nuclearization in the region and binding all 33 nations in the world’s
fourth largest continent.
(2) The Treaty of
Rarotonga for the South Pacific NWFZ, effective from 11 December 1986, for 13
states (not all) in Australasia, including Australia, Cook Islands, Fiji,
Kiribati, Nauru, New Zealand, Niue, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands,
Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu.
(3) The Treaty of
Bangkok for the Southeast Asia NWFZ, in force since 28 March 1997, for the 10
ASEAN countries.
(4) The Treaty on
a Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone (NWFZ) in Central Asia (CANWFZ), effective on 21
March 2009 for five states, including Kazakhstan once in possession of a
formidable nuclear arsenal.
(5) The Pelindaba
Treaty for Africa NWFZ, in force since 15 July 2009, for all the 53 African
nations in the world’s second largest continent after Asia.
Of yet
greater significance for global nuclear disarmament, military denuclearization
(destruction of nuclear weapons) has so far been completed in four countries:
South Africa in 1990, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and Belarus following the
dissolution of the Soviet Union at the end of 1991.
Marking the
closure of the Cold War, South Africa’s President Frederick Willem de Klerk
ordered in February 1990 the dismantling of the country’s incipient nuclear
arsenal, and destruction of its handful of small atomic bombs.
In 1991
Ukraine had the world’s third largest nuclear arsenal, with 176
intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) and 1,240 nuclear warheads.
In 1991
Kazakhstan had the world’s fourth largest nuclear arsenal, which was equivalent
to the combined nuclear forces of Britain, France, and China. Kazakhstan had
104 of the world’s most powerful ICBM, known as the SS-18 (Satan), each of
which armed with 10 x 550 kiloton nuclear warheads.
Way back in
1978 (when there were more than 50,000 nuclear warheads in the world, three
times the number of nukes in 2018), the United Nations stated at the first
special session of the UN General Assembly on disarmament:
“... Mankind
today is confronted with an unprecedented threat of self-extinction arising
from the massive and competitive accumulation of the most destructive weapons
ever produced… we must halt the arms race and proceed to disarmament or face
annihilation.”
On 3 March
2016 the five Pacific island states of Fiji, Nauru, Palau, Samoa, and Tuvalu
submitted a working paper “Elements for
a treaty banning nuclear weapons”, for consideration by the UN General
Assembly.
The High-5
stated in Introduction: “Nuclear weapons pose a unique existential threat to
all humanity. No nation is invulnerable to their catastrophic, far-reaching and
long-lasting effects. Thus, every nation, whether nuclear-free or
nuclear-armed, small or large, has a direct interest in realizing a world
without these indiscriminate, inhumane weapons…”
They
concluded: “… As States in a region that has suffered greatly from devastating
humanitarian consequences of nuclear testing (some 300 nuclear test explosions
from 1946 to 1996), we are firmly committed to a global ban on nuclear
weapons.”
Led by the
nine vanguard nations of Austria, Brazil, Indonesia, Ireland, Mexico, New
Zealand, Nigeria, South Africa, and Thailand, 122 nations (63%, or nearly
two-thirds, of the UN membership) voted on 7 July 2017 for the landmark Treaty
on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) aka the Nuclear Weapon Ban
Treaty. Only the Netherlands voted against, and Singapore abstained.
The TPNW
is the first legally binding international agreement to comprehensively
prohibit nuclear weapons and to eventually eliminate all of them. 50 signatory
nations have to ratify it into force.
As many as 51
states signed the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons on 20
September 2017, the first day of signing at the 72nd UN General
Assembly in New York.
When
Malaysia’s Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Anifah Aman signed the treaty, Wisma
Putra in Kuala Lumpur issued a statement, saying: “… It is hoped that the
political and legal import of this treaty will provide the much needed
direction for further initiatives aimed at the elimination of nuclear weapons
and the maintenance of a world free of nuclear weapons.”
So far 57
states have signed the TPNW, the latest being Kazakhstan on 2 March
2018.
Seven
signatories have ratified the treaty: Guyana (South America), the Holy See, and
Thailand on the very first day of signing on 20 September 2017, Mexico (16
January 2018), Cuba (30 January 2018), Palestine (22 March 2018), and Venezuela
(27 March 2018).
Of the
signatory countries in the designated NWFZs, 17 (with 3 ratifications) are from
Latin America and the Caribbean, 16 from Africa, 7 Pacific, 6 ASEAN (including
1 ratification), and 1 Central Asia.
Five from
Europe: the Holy See (ratified on the first day of signing), Austria, Ireland,
Liechlenstein, and San Marino.
About half of
the signatories have small populations, particularly those in the Pacific,
Central America and the Caribbean, and a sprinkling over Africa. Small but
spunky states, with a strong passion for total nuclear disarmament.
Banning all
nuclear weapons must, moreover, lead to their complete abolition -- essentially
to denuclearize the world’s militaries as well as to free humanity and
civilization from the threat of nuclear annihilation.