Disarmament Diplomacy
Issue No. 46, May 2000
The 2000 NPT Review Conference: A Delicate, Hard-Won
Compromise
By Rebecca Johnson
NPT Report
Introduction
See also: NPT 2000: Implementing the Disarmament
Pledges
By Rebecca Johnson
Bringing the gavel down on more than 25 pages of an agreed final document,
Ambassador Abdallah Baali of Algeria, President of the Sixth Review Conference
of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), called
the successful outcome "the product of a delicate, hard-won compromise
between divergent and sometimes conflicting positions". Congratulating
President Baali, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan hailed the "historic
consensus" as marking "a significant step forward in humanity's pursuit
of a more peaceful world".
For the first time since 1985, the NPT parties were able to
reach substantive agreements in their review of the implementation
of nuclear disarmament objectives. Ambassador Antonio de Icaza of
Mexico, speaking on behalf of the seven non-nuclear 'New Agenda
Coalition' (NAC) states that had played a central role in achieving
the breakthrough on nuclear disarmament (Brazil, Egypt, Ireland,
Mexico, New Zealand, South Africa and Sweden) said that the
agreements, particularly the unequivocal undertaking by the weapon
states to eliminate their nuclear arsenals, meant that "what has
always been implicit has now become explicit and this act both
reinforces and revitalises the Treaty".
The conference almost closed on failure, due to deadlock between
the United States and iraq over referring to Iraqi non-compliance
with the Treaty. Calling on both countries to find agreed langauge,
some 17 hours after the meeting had been scheduled to close,
Ambassador Yuri Kapralov said that Russia had contributed "to the
maximum" in order that the conference would be a success. After
finally adopting the agreements, US Ambassador Robert Grey noted
that the conference had come a long way in the past month but
warned that there would be "different evaluations of what has been
achieved". For the group of 109 Non-Aligned States Parties (NAM),
Indonesia's Ambassador Makmur Widodo considered that
notwithstanding the "conditionalities and stipulations" the
highlight of the conference was the adoption of practical steps for
nuclear disarmament.
Much was riding on this conference, the first since the NPT was
indefinitely extended in 1995. In particular, the nuclear test
explosions by India and Pakistan in May 1998 had sent shivers
through the non-proliferation regime. During 1999, relations
between the major powers deteriorated, becoming worse than at any
time since the end of the Cold War. Russia and China were
increasingly anxious about US missile defence plans and the role of
NATO following expansion and the air strikes against Yugoslavia.
The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) was in limbo and the
Conference on Disarmament (CD) remained deadlocked. Moreover, the
three 'preparatory committee' (PrepCom) meetings of the enhanced
review process had disappointed expectations and failed to produce
recommendations. Frustration among the non-nuclear-weapon states
(NNWS) was high, with deep concern that indefinite extension had
indeed lost them leverage on the weapon states and that the 1995
agreements on Principles and Objectives on Non-Proliferation and
Disarmament and the strengthened review process had failed to
deliver.
Paradoxically, the success of the Sixth Review Conference may
have been due in part to the fact that even the weapon states
feared that a shambles (or worse still, an acrimonious failure)
would seriously weaken the credibility of the Treaty and play into
the hands of proliferators, including India and Pakistan. There was
a widely shared sense that the non-proliferation regime needed to
be seen to be strong enough to withstand the challenges from the
South Asian tests and US rejection of the CTBT. Many also wanted to
show that treaty violations such as Iraq and the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) had committed were able to be
dealt with. They also saw the need to demonstrate the vigour of
this multilateral non-proliferation regime in the face of creeping
unilateralism, especially US national missile defence plans.
In view of the unpropitious political environment, however,
States Parties went into the meeting with low expectations. To
compound the pessimistic forecasts, there had been a late change to
a new and - in the eyes of non-proliferation specialists -
inexperienced Chair from Algeria, following South Africa's
withdrawal from the nomination in November 1999.
So what turned the meeting round? How did the conference manage
to adopt a substantive final document, with significant pledges on
nuclear disarmament and stronger language on India, Pakistan and
Israel than expected? This was not merely a
lowest-common-denominator fudge, as might have been produced for
the sake of adopting something.
How Baali and the 155 States Parties (out of 187) that attended
the conference managed to confound the gloomy predictions and pull
off a notable diplomatic success deserves a more considered
analysis than would be possible so soon after the meeting ended.
This report aims to describe the main developments and substantive
debates and to offer a preliminary analysis of the conduct and
outcome of the 2000 Review Conference.1
Preparing for the Conference
The decisions taken in 1995 mandated at least three PrepComs
prior to the 2000 Review Conference. A total of 158 States Parties
participated in the PrepComs which met in 1997, 1998 and 1999. In
1999, the States Parties were able to take the necessary procedural
decisions for the review conference, but they failed to agree on
any recommendations, as stipulated in Decision 1 on Strengthening
the Review Process. In addition to a number of standard decisions
regarding participation, languages, financing and so on, the
Committee was able to adopt the provisional agenda and draft rules
of procedure for the review conference. The rules were agreed after
the weapon states accepted the proposal from South Africa, Egypt,
the Arab Group and a number of non-aligned countries for an
amendment to be made to rule 34 providing for 'subsidiary bodies'
in accordance with Decision 1 (1995). At the time, Russia and the
United States had objected, preferring to retain rule 34's existing
reference to 'working group'.
The second PrepCom had also failed to agree on what background
documentation should be provided for the Sixth Review Conference,
principally because the United States opposed Egypt's insistence
that there should be official information relating to the 1995
Resolution on the Middle East. Late in the third PrepCom, it was
finally agreed that in addition to the usual documentation provided
by the IAEA and the various Secretariats overseeing the various
nuclear-weapon-free zone treaties, the United Nations Secretariat
would prepare documents on the various NPT articles, the CTBT and
the implementation of the Resolution on the Middle East "reflecting
developments since 1995 with a view to realising fully the
objectives of the resolution". Discussions at the third PrepCom on
the question of 'products' for the review conference, particularly
the number and type of documents that the review conference should
seek to adopt, were inconclusive, despite majority support for
negotiating a '2000 Principles and Objectives' in addition to a
review document.
After being accepted as President-designate in December 1999,
Baali held a series of consultations with key diplomatic players in
New York and Geneva, and also with officials and NGOs in a number
of countries, including the United States, Britain, Russia, China,
France and Japan. The New Agenda Coalition and the Group of Arab
States had served notice that they intended to push for subsidiary
bodies on practical steps for nuclear disarmament and on the 1995
Middle East resolution. When South Africa and Egypt first proposed
such subsidiary bodies at the 1998 PrepCom, and then again in 1999,
some of the weapon states, notably the United States, France and
Russia, had been opposed. During the weekend before the conference
Baali held intensive consultations with all relevant parties,
enabling him to get early agreement on the establishment and
mandate of the two subsidiary bodies. In so doing, he averted a
threatened procedural crisis that could have bogged the conference
down from the very beginning.
A number of States Parties had also been preparing for the
conference. In terms of effect on the outcome, four should be
particularly highlighted. Russia ratified the CTBT and START II
just weeks before the NPT opened, giving an important political
boost to the non-proliferation regime and intentionally putting the
United States under pressure. Russia particularly wanted to
wrong-foot the United States at the NPT because of US plans to
weaken the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty and deploy
national missile defences. The Clinton Administration, in a weak
position following Senate rejection of the CTBT in October 1999,
had undertaken a public relations blitz in the months leading up to
the review conference, giving exhibitions and illustrated talks to
groups of states and parliamentarians on US commitment and efforts
to comply with the Treaty, particularly Article VI.
The head of the US delegation, Norman Wulf, was also keenly
aware that as in past years, Egypt and other Arab states would
demand that special attention be given to Israel's nuclear weapon
capabilities. The United States needed to prepare the ground
carefully beforehand, with both Egypt and Israel, to prevent this
highly contentious issue blowing out of control at the conference.
How to handle Israel and the Middle East in an NPT context was part
of the agenda for discussions at the highest governmental levels
during a visit to Washington by Egypt's President Mubarak early in
the year.
Britain had also changed its position over the two years since
the disastrous second PrepCom in 1998. High level discussions
within the Labour government, combined with civil society pressure
and more attention in Parliament, resulted in a markedly more
constructive British approach on nuclear disarmament issues. During
the conference Britain played a vital role in bridging differences
between nuclear and non-nuclear positions.
The New Agenda Coalition, which was launched in June 1998 after
the failure of the second PrepCom and the nuclear test explosions
conducted by India and Pakistan, had gained increasing support in
two UN General Assembly resolutions for its multi-stranded,
pragmatic approach to getting more effective progress on nuclear
disarmament. Despite some internal disagreements, due to inevitable
differences in approach and national interests among such a
regionally and politically diverse coalition, the NAC approached
the Conference with a challenging but do-able bottom line calling
for an unequivocal undertaking to eliminate nuclear arsenals, a
carefully negotiated working paper of pragmatic, realisable steps,
and a strategy involving the establishment of a nuclear disarmament
subsidiary body, but with enough flexibility to manoeuvre.
Two years earlier, South Africa had proposed to the second
PrepCom the establishment of a subsidiary body as a mechanism for
focussed discussions aimed at identifying specific disarmament
steps to be undertaken by the nuclear-weapon states. Based on ideas
from the Acronym Institute in early 1998, the intention was to
build on the programme of action contained in the 1995 Principles
and Objectives by pushing for entry into force of the CTBT,
conclusion of the fissile materials production ban, and practical
steps to fulfil the third part of the programme (paragraph 4 c),
which called in general terms for the nuclear-weapon states to
pursue "systematic and progressive efforts" on nuclear disarmament.
The call for an unequivocal undertaking derived from the 1996
advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice (ICJ), which
unanimously agreed that there was a legal obligation to bring
nuclear disarmament negotiations to conclusion, severing the
apparent condition in Article VI relating this to complete and
general disarmament. The steps identified were based largely on the
1996 Report of the Canberra Commission.2
There were of course other delegations and groups which had
prepared strategies and ideas in advance. The group of 109
Non-Aligned States Parties, chaired by Indonesia, had negotiated a
comprehensive working paper putting forward text on all aspects of
the Treaty. The 15-member European Union (EU), presided over by
Portugal, provided a general statement and joint working papers on
the three major themes of the review. A group of five NATO
countries put together a proposal on nuclear disarmament that went
beyond the EU common position. Dubbed the 'NATO-5', Belgium,
Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Norway had begun coordinating
joint proposals in the CD two years ago, but this was the first
time they had acted together within the NPT context.
The Vienna delegations of a group of 10 countries (Australia,
Austria, Canada, Denmark, Hungary, Ireland, the Netherlands, New
Zealand, Norway and Sweden, also known as the G-10) had negotiated
papers covering Main Committee II and III issues, including
safeguards, nuclear energy, nuclear safety, physical protection,
and waste management. China prepared several working papers. Japan
had put together an eight-point plan on disarmament, uniting with
Australia on this and ideas for the strengthened review process.
Likewise, Canada had worked out ideas for a programme of action on
the NPT and the review process. Many more papers and ideas emerged
during the Conference, including from Malaysia and Costa Rica on a
nuclear weapon convention, Iran on safeguards and export controls,
and a group of island and maritime countries concerned about
nuclear shipments, safety and liability.
The Review Conference
The 2000 Review Conference opened on April 24 and unanimously
elected Abdallah Baali as President. Hannelore Hoppe, Chief of the
Department for Disarmament Affairs Branch on Weapons of Mass
Destruction, was confirmed as Secretary-General. In quick
succession, the Conference elected the Chairs of the three Main
Committees and then accepted Baali's proposal for the establishment
of two subsidiary bodies, pursuant to the 1995 decision on
Strengthening the Review Process.
Subsidiary body 1, chaired by Ambassador Clive Pearson (New
Zealand) was convened under Main Committee I to "discuss and
consider the practical steps for systematic and progressive efforts
to implement article VI [of the NPT] and paragraphs 3 and 4 (c) of
the 1995 decision on Principles and Objectives for Nuclear
Non-Proliferation and Disarmament". Subsidiary body 2, chaired by
Ambassador Christopher Westdal (Canada), was convened under Main
Committee II and would address "regional issues, including with
respect to the Middle East and implementation of the 1995 Middle
East resolution". The decision also ensured that the subsidiary
bodies would be open to all States Parties, and would hold four
scheduled meetings in private, reporting to their respective main
committees.
Principal Appointments
President of the 2000 Review Conference - Abdallah Baali
(Algeria)
Secretary-General of the 2000 Review Conference - Hannelore Hoppe
(UN-DDA)
MC. I (disarmament, including security assurances) - Camilo Reyes
(Colombia)
MC. II (safeguards and nuclear-weapon-free zones) - Adam Kobieracki
(Poland)
MC. III (peaceful uses) - Markku Reimaa (Finland)
Drafting Committee - André Erdös (Hungary)
Credentials Committee - Makmur Widodo (Indonesia)
Subsidiary Body 1 (practical disarmament) - Clive Pearson (New
Zealand)
Subsidiary Body 2 (regional issues) - Christopher Westdal
(Canada)
General Debate
The opening session was addressed by the United Nations
Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, who reminded Conference participants
that "the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, including
nuclear weapons, remains a major threat to peace". The
Secretary-General made reference to some of the regime's major
challenges and said that the challenge for the NPT Parties was to
"embark on a process that will ensure the full implementation of
all of the provisions of the treaty by all of the
States Parties". The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Director General, Mohamed ElBaradei, also spoke at the opening
session, stressing the importance of safeguards and verification
and summarising some of the problems, challenges and developments
in the IAEA's work.
Over the course of six days, 93 States Parties participated in
the general debate. Around 20 countries were represented at
ministerial level, including several foreign ministers: from the
Russian Federation, the United States (Secretary of State), Mexico,
Ireland, Norway, Sweden and a number of Eastern European countries.
Like the UN Secretary-General, many statements referred to the
regime's challenges, such as: the nuclear tests by India and
Pakistan; the thousands of nuclear weapons still on hair-trigger
alert; tactical nuclear forces; the re-affirmation of nuclear
doctrines, including retention of first use by some of the
nuclear-weapon states; and concern that US national missile defence
would jeopardise the ABM Treaty and lead to a new arms race.
Several raised concerns about failures by Iraq and the DPRK to
comply fully with their Treaty obligations, while others,
particularly from the Middle East region, castigated Israel's
unsafeguarded nuclear programme as a threat to regional peace and
security. There was strong endorsement for the objective of early
entry into force of the CTBT and for prompt negotiations and
conclusion by the CD of a ban on the production of fissile
materials for nuclear weapons (FMCT/fissban). Many referred with
disappointment to the rejection of CTBT ratification by the United
States.
Halfway through the first week and in parallel with the general
debate, the three main committees began their review of the
operation of the Treaty. The two subsidiary bodies held their four
open-ended meetings during the second and third weeks, in time
allocated to Main Committees I and II. In view of the subsidiary
body mandate, it was decided that MC.I would focus on the review of
the Treaty and that subsidiary body 1 would look forward.
Nuclear-Weapon States
In MC.I, the nuclear-weapon states (NWS) each presented a
national report on their actions and activities in compliance with
Article VI. Emerging discussion on some contentious issues,
including missile defence, was effectively cut short when the NWS
issued a joint statement at the beginning of the second week. In 23
paragraphs, the N-53 welcomed indefinite extension of
the NPT and reaffirmed commitment to all the decisions adopted in
1995, including the resolution on the Middle East. In calling for
India and Pakistan to undertake the measures in UN Security Council
resolution (UNSCR) 1172, adopted shortly after the May 1998 nuclear
tests, the N-5 underlined that those countries did not have the
status of nuclear-weapon states under the NPT. The statement
stressed the importance of securing the early entry into force of
the CTBT and urged the CD to agree on a programme of work that
would include the commencement and early conclusion of FMCT
negotiations. For the first time the five declared that none of
their nuclear weapons were targetted at any state.
In welcoming the ratification of START II by the Russian
Federation, the N-5 finally agreed language that looked forward to
the conclusion of START III while "preserving and strengthening the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty as a cornerstone of strategic
stability and as a basis for further reductions of strategic
offensive weapons". There were further paragraphs which supported
the IAEA, including the additional protocol; reaffirmed UNSCR 984
on security assurances; and supported nuclear-weapon-free zones
(NWFZ), including the proposed NWFZ in Central Asia, transparency
in nuclear-related export controls, peaceful uses and nuclear
safety.
Nuclear Disarmament
In addition to national statements, a large number of working
papers laid the basis for discussions in both MC.I and subsidiary
body 1, notably from: the New Agenda Coalition; the European Union;
the NATO-5, which gathered support as the conference proceeded from
Finland, Spain, Denmark and (in a first-time joint statement with
Finland) by Sweden; the NAM; Myanmar (Burma); Malaysia and Costa
Rica; and a joint Japanese-Australia paper.
Arising from the national statements and early discussions,
Ambassador Camilo Reyes, Chair of MC.I, produced a first draft. As
the contentious issues were further discussed, the draft underwent
several revisions. In keeping with the Bureau decision that
committee chairs should avoid developing square bracketed 'rolling
text', Reyes sought to reflect a balance of views in developing
drafts. By the end of the third week, however, there were still
widely divergent positions from the weapon states and various
non-nuclear representatives regarding what should be left out and
what should be included, as well as contested text on issues that
all sides agreed needed to be addressed in some way.
With regard to articles I and II, MC.I discussions emphasised
the importance of full implementation. Nuclear sharing, however,
was among the dogs that didn't bark. Discussion on this was much
less contentious than might have been expected from the focus given
to NATO nuclear sharing by some non-aligned delegations during the
PrepComs. The NAM working paper called for the nuclear-weapon
states to refrain from nuclear sharing for military purposes "under
any kind of security arrangements", but no delegations pursued the
issue with any degree of determination.
MC.I developed stronger language on India and Pakistan than the
N-5 statement or subsidiary body 2. This was in part because some
delegations that had been expected to water down the criticisms
because of their regional or commercial relations with one or both
countries barely contested the language in MC.I, thinking the issue
was being addressed elsewhere. France and Russia, for example,
argued against addressing the South Asian nuclear tests in the
context of 'non-proliferation' in MC.I, as they would be covered in
subsidiary body 2 on regional issues. Nevertheless, with Japan,
Australia, Canada and others pushing the issue, the tests were
condemned. To belie the assumption of status attached to being a
nuclear-weapon state in the N-5 statement, MC.I declared that the
nuclear tests did not confer "any special status whatsoever". Not
only were both South Asian countries called on to undertake the
measures contained in UN Security Council 1172, but all States
Parties were enjoined to refrain from any action that may
contravene or undermine UNSCR 1172 or the NPT.
As in all past review conferences, there were deep divisions on
Article VI. The weapon states wanted much more positive language
welcoming their efforts and actions in reducing arsenals or closing
facilities since the end of the Cold War. While most were happy to
acknowledge such efforts, the New Agenda Coalition and other
non-nuclear countries wanted also to reflect how much remains to be
done. There were, for example, proposals to quote the concerns
raised by the UN Secretary-General, including reference to nuclear
reliance and more than 35,000 nuclear weapons remaining in the
arsenals. Many also wanted the 1996 advisory opinion of the ICJ on
the use or threat of use of nuclear weapons to be endorsed,
particularly the unanimous opinion regarding the legal obligation
to disarm. Such proposals, resisted by some of the weapon states,
were inevitably watered down in the end.
Another very contentious issue in MC.I centred on concerns about
the continuing modernisation of nuclear weapons systems. There were
several mentions of sub-critical tests and laboratory testing,
described by Switzerland as "incompatible with the preamble of the
CTBT". The weapon states' rejection of NAM calls to refrain from
conducting all such tests and to "comply with the letter and spirit
of the CTBT" prompted South Africa to table a paper that
reproduced, with dates, various statements made during the CTBT
negotiations in the CD in which four of the nuclear powers
indicated that they would not use technological alternatives to
testing to build new types of nuclear weapons. South Africa wanted
a paragraph which recalled these undertakings and called on the NWS
not to conduct tests "for the further development and modernisation
of nuclear weapons". This was rejected by Britain, France, Russia
and the United States, who accused South Africa of taking the
quotes out of context. They were prepared to see a paragraph in the
review reproducing text from the CTBT preamble on constraining the
development and qualitative improvement of nuclear weapons, but
that was all.
There were also sharp disagreements over the fissban/FMCT, as
most delegations wanted to reaffirm and strengthen the commitment
to negotiate made in 1995. China insisted that the CD should agree
its programme of work, incorporating FMCT negotiations, but also
addressing outer space issues and nuclear disarmament. Having
achieved text linking the FMCT to a CD programme of work in the N-5
statement, China refused to consider the calls by the EU states,
NATO-5 and others for the unconditional resumption and conclusion
of fissban negotiations.
To address practical steps on nuclear disarmament, Pearson
divided subsidiary body 1's work into two clusters: cluster 1
considered 'unfinished business', such as the START process, CTBT,
FMCT and further efforts by the nuclear-weapon states to reduce
nuclear arsenals unilaterally; cluster 2 took elements from various
working papers, and addressed transparency, non-strategic nuclear
weapons, measures to de-target, de-alert and de-activate nuclear
weapons systems, and a diminishing role for nuclear weapons in
security policies, as well as the engagement of all the
nuclear-weapon states in the process of nuclear disarmament.
Pearson also reproduced the central demand from the New Agenda
Coalition, for "an unequivocal undertaking by the nuclear-weapon
states to accomplish the total elimination of their nuclear
arsenals and, in the forthcoming NPT review period 2000-2005, to
engage in an accelerated process of negotiations..."
After some discussion on both clusters, he integrated them into
a combined working paper, which was discussed and revised a number
of times. The weapon states objected to much of the first draft. In
an interesting reversal, the NATO-5 countries and Japan and
Australia objected that the next draft leant too far towards the
N-5 positions, especially on fissban, which was linked with
agreement on a CD programme of work, as China had demanded. They
had wanted target dates for entry into force of the CTBT and
conclusion of an FMCT, and considered that the language on
transparency and non-strategic nuclear weapons had been
unnecessarily weakened. The paper underwent a further revision
before being presented by its Chair as a "compact and finely
balanced package" for incorporation into the MC.I report.
Neither Pearson nor Reyes had wanted to dissect individual
paragraphs, considering that it was important to construct a
balance between competing interests and demands rather than to seek
consensus based on turning every paragraph into something so weak
and innocuous that it would offend no-one (and be practically
meaningless). Both MC.I and the disarmament subsidiary body had
reached impasse by the President's deadline for receiving the
reports at the end of the third week.
The combined paper from MC.I was accepted as reflecting the
state of progress in negotiations on disarmament, but as so many
issues were linked or potentially subject to being traded off
against others, the entire text remained in contention. China
complained that many of its concerns had not been reflected, while
Mexico underlined some of the areas where the New Agenda Coalition
and NAM states would not be able to accept the language as it
stood. Baali accepted the paper; requesting Pearson to continue
consultations aimed at finding areas of agreement on practical
disarmament steps, he reminded the conference that to develop
consensus on the outstanding issues they must "move away from known
positions towards greater concurrence". As the conference adjourned
for the final weekend, things were not looking hopeful.
The breakthrough came as a result of private discussions between
the New Agenda Coalition and the NWS. Though there is some dispute
over who first approached whom, it is understood that the United
States, seeking to avoid the conference deadlocking over nuclear
disarmament, as it had on three previous occasions, initiated the
talks. The first meeting took place on Saturday morning. Steffen
Kongstad of Norway was requested by both sides to act as moderator.
As Pearson was continuing his consultations on the forward-looking
plan of action, the first N-5/NAC meeting scoped out whether they
could find areas of mutual agreement in Reyes' MC.I paper. The
meeting was sufficiently constructive to encourage them to do it
again. Convening outside the United Nations, the group next
undertook intensive negotiations based on Pearson's latest draft
from subsidiary body 1.
When Baali returned from an unrelated trip to London on Monday
May 15, he convened consultations among a group of some 30
'representative countries' and sought to identify areas of common
ground for inclusion in the disarmament document. His attempts to
identify two categories (A and B) of more and less difficult,
disputed text met with little success. Some states objected to
being excluded from the negotiating group. In an interesting
example of diplomatic direct action, a few excluded delegates from
European countries, including Norway, the Netherlands and Ireland,
were invited to sit with NAM delegations. Baali decided not to
force the issue, and by the second meeting, the consultations were
regarded as open-ended, although still held in a small room to
restrict numbers. Altogether, some 45 delegations participated.
There was, however, confusion regarding the President's process of
categorising different levels of contended text, so that the talks
were inconclusive and frustrating. Again, seeing that this
initiative was not working, Baali quickly let it drop. He turned to
the N-5/NAC group, which by then had had several negotiating
sessions.
By Wednesday May 17, the N-5 and New Agenda had reached
substantial agreement on paragraphs covering the CTBT, START
process and ABM Treaty (using the language agreed by the N-5,
though none of the NAC was enthusiastic). They had watered down and
substantially agreed paragraphs on irreversibility, unilateral
reductions, diminishing the role of nuclear weapons and reducing
their operational status. They appeared to have reached an impasse
over four crucial issues: giving an "unequivocal undertaking" to
eliminate nuclear weapons - a bottom line demand for the New Agenda
Coalition, which Britain, China and the United States were prepared
to accept after much debate and some watering down of the original
NAC language, but France and Russia balked at; tactical nuclear
weapons, which Russia did not want to address, except in the
context of strategic stability, a catch-all term that the New
Agenda states were reluctant to see attached to anything except the
ABM Treaty; transparency, which China wanted deleted or paralleled
by an equivalent commitment to the no-first-use of nuclear weapons;
and the inclusion of all the nuclear-weapon states in the process
leading to nuclear disarmament, which France was unhappy with.
Baali's attempts to convene President's Consultations having
failed to develop into an effective negotiating forum, he judged
that it was time to bring the N-5/NAC consultations to the other
States Parties for wider consideration. By this time it appeared
that Russia was the main obstacle, still demanding that the
practical steps as well as the ABM/START process should be put in
the context of preserving strategic stability.
When the deadlock was brought into the open, some delegations,
particularly Germany and Japan, reacted with hostility. They
appeared angry that the weapon states had negotiated directly with
the New Agenda Coalition, excluding their own allies. Belgium's
ambassador, Jean Lint, complained that all the States Parties
risked becoming hostage to the failure of twelve. The NAC were by
then prepared to let the larger group take over, but Russia wanted
to continue the N-5/NAC negotiations in private. Late on Wednesday
evening, however, Baali insisted that the N-5 and NAC circulate
their deadlocked draft among the other States Parties and then go
back into private negotiations. They were warned that they would be
expected to explain their positions to the conference the next day
if they were unable to resolve the remaining differences. Russia
continued to insist that the practical steps must be explicitly
placed in the context of strategic stability. France was still
trying to weaken the language of the unequivocal undertaking to
relate to the ultimate goal of nuclear disarmament. By 1.30 pm, the
N-5/NAC meeting broke up, exhausted and seemingly defeated. The
United States had managed to shift from its acute defensiveness at
the beginning of the Conference to a more comfortable position
where the heat was mostly on Russia.
The next morning in an informal meeting of over 50 delegations,
de Icaza outlined the compromises the New Agenda representatives
had made and said that they had entered into the small-group
negotiations at the request of the NWS in order to help them. They
had made concessions and were being criticised for conceding too
much. He agreed that the draft was too weak and said he did not
much like it himself; nevertheless, it offered a practical way
forward. He stressed, however, that the NAC had gone as far as they
could in diluting their own positions or watering down the package
originally negotiated in subsidiary body 1.
Russia, having been applauded at the start of the review
conference for bearing the gifts of its ratification of the CTBT
and START II, did not want to be left carrying the blame for the
conference's failure. Following de Icaza's statement on the morning
of Thursday May 18, Kapralov announced that Russia would accept the
negotiated package "in the spirit of compromise". But he emphasised
that although he was agreeing to do without the words, the
conference should understand that strategic stability was vitally
necessary: without it, Russia could not take risks in arms control
and disarmament. In a curious twist, the text which had been
circulated to the wider group of States Parties the night before
had by mistake been typed up incorrectly. Russia's final proposal
that the 'chapeau' paragraph introducing the practical steps should
include strategic stability with peace and security and
undiminished security for all had been agreed by the New Agenda
Coalition and the other weapon states. Because of the drafting
error late the previous evening, however, Russia accepted the
unamended text, which did not mention strategic stability except in
the context of the ABM Treaty. The text as adopted put the
practical steps in the context of promoting international stability
and undiminished security for all.
Once Russia had agreed, France fell into line, though still
expressing its preference for making an unequivocal commitment to
the ultimate goal of nuclear disarmament rather than to the
achievement of the elimination of nuclear arsenals. France was also
unhappy with the implications of referring to the "ultimate
objective" of general and complete disarmament, as this reflected
the ICJ's delinking of general disarmament from nuclear
disarmament. China took another day, attempting to dislodge or
neutralise the language on transparency before it too announced
that it would accept the paper. After the final document was
adopted, Ambassador Hu Xiaodi registered an informal reservation,
saying that without unconditional pledges of no first use, the
withdrawal of all nuclear weapons deployed outside the borders of
NWS, and the abolition of nuclear sharing, transparency and similar
confidence-building measures would remain "empty talk".
Achieving agreement on forward-looking commitments and
objectives on nuclear disarmament brought the prospect of a final
document within reach, thereby providing the incentive for renewed
efforts to resolve other outstanding issues.
Throughout Thursday, a slightly expanded group comprising the
P-5, NAC, Indonesia on behalf of the NAM, Norway, Canada and the
Netherlands, conducted intensive negotiations on the basis of
Reyes' report from MC.I. They broke up late on Thursday, deadlocked
over issues such as laboratory testing and the modernisation of
nuclear weapon systems, the ICJ advisory opinion, criticisms of
nuclear doctrines and deterrence, characterising the number of
weapons still in nuclear arsenals, the UN Secretary-General's
proposed international conference on eliminating nuclear dangers,
and welcoming the steps already taken by the weapon states. A
night's sleep brought those of the weapon states and New Agenda
Coalition who had appeared most obdurate to the table with more
constructive approaches, enabling agreement on the review of
nuclear disarmament progress to be achieved by late morning on the
final Friday.
Security Assurances
The question of security guarantees from the NWS to the NNWS was
discussed in MC.I and also in the context of nuclear-weapon-free
zones, but was not the focus of significant political attention,
unlike in 1995. More than 25 States Parties spoke on the issue,
mostly expressing disappointment that the CD had not started
negotiations on a legally binding treaty to assure NNWS against the
use or threat of use of nuclear weapons. Saying that UNSCR 984
(1995) was not sufficient, many called on the CD to address the
issue. Several countries including Indonesia, on behalf of the NAM,
called for negotiations on a legal instrument to be annexed to the
NPT.
China, the only NWS with a no-first-use policy, urged the other
weapon states to give unconditional negative security assurances,
renounce their deterrence doctrines based on the first-use option,
and conclude an international legal instrument on no-first-use.
Switzerland, in its proposal for "elements for a new action plan",
opposed any linkage with biological or chemical weapons and called
for unconditional, legally binding global security assurances as a
practical measure towards the implementation of Article VI. The
NATO-5 was divided between those that wanted security assurances to
be addressed and those which did not regard the issue as a
priority, so they merely noted that legally binding security
assurances by the NWS "would strengthen the nuclear
non-proliferation regime".
Egypt put forward a comprehensive working paper with seven
principles: the recognition of the threat nuclear weapons pose; a
trigger mechanism to ensure Security Council response to threats or
attacks; commitment by the Security Council to take effective
collective measures to prevent such threats and suppress aggression
involving nuclear weapons; the renunciation by the P-5 of their
Security Council veto with regard to security assurances; the
commencement of negotiations in the CD on a legally binding treaty;
an unconditional commitment by the NWS not to use or threaten to
use nuclear weapons against those NNWS parties to the NPT that do
not possess or place nuclear weapons in their territories; and an
undertaking in a joint statement by the NWS not to use or threaten
to use nuclear weapons against NNWS parties to the NPT or NWFZ "at
any time or under any circumstances" pending negotiation and
adoption of a legally binding treaty. In response, the United
States told NPT parties not to "spend time trying to accomplish the
unachievable".
Though France and the United States seemed to regard their
security assurances as entirely adequate, Britain attempted to
bridge the chasm between them and the NNWS by suggesting that the
review conference recognise the reaffirmation of UNSCR 984 by the
NWS in their statement and that the issue remains "of continuing
concern" to the Security Council. In the end, the conference
reaffirmed that the only absolute security guarantee against the
use or threat of use is the total elimination of nuclear weapons.
It noted the N-5 reaffirmation of UNSCR 984, and agreed that
"legally binding security assurances by the five nuclear-weapon
states to the non-nuclear-weapon states Parties to the [NPT]
strengthen the nuclear non-proliferation regime", and called for
the PrepComs to make recommendations to the 2005 review conference.
This is interesting chiefly because omission of a conditional
'would' implies that the existing security assurances are already
legally binding.
Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zones
Many states referred to the importance of NWFZ in their general
debate and MC.II statements and there were working papers from
Belarus, China, the EU, Mongolia, and the Central Asian countries
of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.
It was also acknowledged by many that countries that are party to
NWFZ treaties can acquire security assurances through the treaties,
although few agreed with France that this was sufficient. Support
was expressed by a number of delegations, including China, for the
establishment of a NWFZ in Central Asia, which Japan noted would be
the first NWFZ in the northern hemisphere. The five countries
tabled together a working paper asking the conference to recognise
and welcome the steps they have taken towards a draft treaty and
expressing their firm commitment to conclude the process.
One issue, however, that was not resolved until the very end of
the conference concerned Belarus' proposal for a
nuclear-weapon-free 'space' in Central and Eastern Europe. Belarus
wanted the final document to note its proposal, which was opposed
by 15 countries from the region and the European Union. Belarus
held out until the last moment, and then settled for a paragraph
based on UN Disarmament Commission (UNDC) language, which noted all
initiatives to promote new NWFZ and "welcomes the efforts and
proposals" put forward since 1995 "in various regions of the
world".
The importance of signing and ratifying the existing NWFZ
treaties was underlined, including the protocols relevant to the
NWS. With regard to the Bangkok Treaty, Thailand urged the NWS to
ratify the protocols and the conference noted that consultations
were underway to facilitate adherence by the NWS to the relevant
protocols.
Safeguards and Export Controls
In his opening address, the Director General of the IAEA,
Mohamed ElBaradei, spoke of the importance of safeguards and
verification and summarised some of the problems, challenges and
developments in the IAEA's work. In particular, he urged all states
to conclude their Article III safeguards obligations and also to
sign up to the Model Protocol developed from Programme 93+2 after
the problems with Iraq and North Korea, as this would enhance the
effectiveness of inspections and the enforcement of the NPT.
Main Committee II reflected strong support for the IAEA,
including the strengthened safeguards, which Ireland characterised
as an important achievement that showed the non-nuclear countries'
political will to enhance the non-proliferation regime. There was,
however, much disappointment over the sluggish pace at which states
have signed and/or ratified their additional protocols. In their
N-5 statement, the NWS urged all NNWS to sign the additional
protocol and said that they were in the process of seeking
ratification for their own agreements. A working paper from the
G-10 proposed that the next review conference should consider
making the additional protocol an element of full-scope safeguards
and thus, under the 1995 Principles and Objectives decision, also a
requirement for the supply of nuclear material and equipment.
The NAM working paper endorsed the IAEA safeguards regime and
supported full-scope safeguards as a "necessary precondition" for
new supply arrangements, but no mention was made of the additional
protocols of the strengthened safeguards regime. Much was made of
the "inalienable right" to develop nuclear energy, and the paper
called for the removal of "unilaterally enforced restrictive
measures" - by which they meant the export controls operated
through the Zangger List and Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) - saying
that no NPT party should be denied technology, equipment or
assistance on the basis of "allegations of non-compliance not
verified by the IAEA".
The sharpest differences in approach were demonstrated in the
working papers on export controls from the G-10 and Iran. The G-10
wanted the conference to recognise the role of the Zangger
Committee and existing national export control mechanisms in the
prevention of proliferation. Perceptions differed as to whether the
goal of increased transparency regarding export controls, called
for in the 1995 Principles and Objectives, had been met. Italy,
which presently chairs the NSG, gave examples of the ongoing
measures the NSG had taken to increase transparency. The EU joined
the G-10 in encouraging further efforts and dialogue to increase
export control transparency, but Iran, Egypt and others complained
that as long as the arrangements were limited in participation and
transparency and the non-nuclear countries outside the arrangements
could not take part in the decision-making process, they could not
feel confident that their concerns were being taken into account.
Iran argued that "unilaterally enforced export controls" hampered
the developing countries' access to nuclear materials, equipment
and technology for peaceful purposes. Joined by others from the
floor, Iran pushed for multilateral negotiations on effective
transfer guidelines and, pending the negotiations, wanted the NSG
to take practical steps to practise greater transparency in its
proceedings and decision-making process and to allow all interested
States Parties to take part.
During the debates, there were disagreements over allegations of
non-compliance and the relation between the responsibilities of the
IAEA and the UN Security Council and General Assembly in upholding
compliance. Some countries wanted stronger or more binding
obligations than the proposed references to the voluntary offer
safeguards agreements undertaken by the nuclear-weapon states and
the voluntary measures to place fissile materials designated by
them as no longer required for military purposes under IAEA
safeguards. Brazil and others objected strongly to France's
argument that the verification costs for monitoring fissile
material transferred from nuclear weapon use should come out of the
IAEA's regular budget and be shared, because "cuts in nuclear
armaments serve the common interest". In the view of the
non-aligned countries, verification costs should be borne by the
possessors of such material - the nuclear-weapon states.
Export controls were raised in both MC.II and MC.III, but
addressed primarily in MC.II. Among the contentious issues were
language on dual use items, the Zangger Committee, attempts by the
NSG to be more transparent, concerns about transfers to states not
party to the Treaty and proposals requiring the weapon states not
to enter into any kind of nuclear technical cooperation and
assistance with such states. To the disappointment of many, China
opposed a paragraph reaffirming the 1995 Principles and Objectives
decision (paragraph 12) to require full-scope safeguards and
internationally legally binding commitments not to acquire nuclear
weapons as a condition for the supply of nuclear materials and
equipment. China, which had expressed reservations about this
paragraph in 1995, takes the position that since the Treaty itself
speaks of 'safeguards' and not 'full-scope safeguards' the Treaty
text "overrides" the language of the 1995 Principles and
Objectives.
Despite the best efforts of the Chair, Adam Kobieracki, it had
proved impossible to resolve the remaining disputed paragraphs in
MC.II's report by midday on the last Friday. During the long night,
when most of the delegates were sitting round waiting for news from
the US and Iraqi delegations, many were surprised that Baali did
not get MC.II to resolve its differences. Given the deep-seated
positions on the remaining issues and the determination by Belarus,
Iran, Egypt and the G-10 not to surrender their positions before
they had to, perhaps the extra time would not have been productive.
The committee was hastily reconvened on Saturday afternoon only
when it became clear that the United States and Iraq were close to
agreement. At that point, Belarus gave in and accepted a
non-specific paragraph that did not mention its proposal by name.
In hurried negotiations on the outstanding issues relating to
export controls and safeguards, Iran suggested that the remaining
disputed paragraphs be simply deleted. The G-10 and EU countries
participating in that meeting were dismayed at the prospect of
losing their language on the NSG, Zangger Committee and efforts at
transparency, but were under immense pressure to agree so that the
conference could adopt its final document before any State changed
its mind. On the understanding that in the absence of new language
in 2000 the default obligation would rest with the 1995 Principles
and Objectives, they gave in.
Regional Issues
Subsidiary body 2, chaired by Canada's Chris Westdal,
principally covered the Middle East and South Asia, but with
consideration also of DPRK and Iraq. Egypt and the Group of Arab
States were determined that Israel be named as the only state in
the region not to have acceded to the NPT. In agreeing to this, the
United States insisted on a parallel paragraph naming Iraq as
non-compliant with the Treaty.
In one of several papers and statements on the Middle East
Resolution, Egypt proposed follow up work for the period 2000-2005,
suggesting appointing a special representative/envoy or committee
or having the three depositary states pursue discussions with
Israel regarding accession to the NPT. Although there was initial
interest in some of these ideas, Egypt's proposals were opposed by
the United States, France and others, who did not want the review
conference to establish precedents for intersessional work.
Some states opposed references to the Middle East Peace Process,
and Arab states wanted to avoid mentioning that states from the
region had not yet concluded their safeguards agreements or
additional protocols with the IAEA. They also supported deletion of
the US-sponsored paragraph quoting the IAEA Director General's
letter to the UN Security Council on the status of Iraq's
compliance with the NPT and Security Council resolutions.
With regard to South Asia, the language was weaker than in MC.1.
There was some disagreement within the subsidiary body over whether
and how to express international concern about the nuclear tests,
but this was dropped in favour of reiterating the points made in
the N-5 statement, which called on India and Pakistan to implement
UNSCR 1172 and emphasised that the nuclear tests did not confer
nuclear-weapon state status. There was little controversy over
proposals urging both countries to accede to the NPT and CTBT,
maintain the testing moratorium, undertake a moratorium on fissile
material production for weapons, and strengthen their
non-proliferation export control measures with regard to
technologies, material and equipment capable of use for the
production of nuclear weapons and their delivery systems. In the
absence of the DPRK from the review conference, there was little
opposition to a paragraph expressing concern that the IAEA was
unable to verify that no nuclear material had been diverted for
weapons purposes.
The major conflict, which came to a head on the last day and
risked the Conference outcome, concerned bitter disagreement
between Iraq and the United States over how to characterise Iraq's
status with regard to compliance with the Treaty. In addition to
the United States, a number of countries had raised concerns about
non-compliance by Iraq, including Canada, Italy, Germany, Britain,
Netherlands, Austria, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, and Australia,
although many would have preferred the issue to be dealt with in
relation to safeguards in Main Committee II rather than as a
regional issue. Iraq, arguing that it was in compliance with its
IAEA safeguards agreements, had initially resisted any mention of
non-compliance and then tried to turn the tables on the US
delegation by accusing the United States of non-compliance, citing
a US-Israeli agreement dated February 22, 2000. In addition to a
number of Arab States, Russia also questioned whether Iraq could
still be said to be non-compliant. China argued that there was "no
evidence" of present non-compliance, and that where nuclear weapons
were concerned, the Iraqi file should be closed. The United States,
however, insisted that since the Resolution on the Middle East
concerned all aspects of non-proliferation in the region, Israel's
non-adherence to the NPT could not be criticised without also
addressing Iraq's non-compliance.
On May 9, a letter written by the IAEA Director General to the
President of the UN Security Council on April 10, 2000 was
delivered to subsidiary body 2 by an IAEA
representative.4 Iraq subsequently accepted the
principle of including a paragraph based on this statement in the
NPT final report. An early draft of the subsidiary body 2 report
from Westdal quoted a large section of the Director General's
letter and called on Iraq to comply with its obligations under UN
Security Council resolutions 687, 707, 715, and 1284. For a long
time Iraq held out against any reference to the Security Council,
arguing that the NPT review document should contain only references
to NPT compliance. The United States agreed to drop the references
to resolutions other than 687, but refused to move beyond that.
Westdal's difficulties were compounded by the fact that the US
delegation was forbidden to meet directly with Iraq's
representatives, and so he had to conduct shuttle diplomacy between
the two groups of diplomats in different rooms.
Believing that agreement between the United States and Iraq was
possible, the President stopped the clock at 11.50 pm on Friday,
May 19 to allow more time for negotiations. At around 2.00 am
things looked bleak and a number of delegations began encouraging
Baali to call a halt. Some wanted him to declare a failure. Others
suggested finding a different decision-making formula to salvage
what was possible from the agreements already obtained, especially
on nuclear disarmament. Among the suggestions, Baali was urged to
incorporate the language acceptable to the United States and find a
way for the conference to adopt the final document on the basis of
'consensus minus one', effectively excluding Iraq from the
decision.
Others suggested he consider taking a vote, as provided for in
the rules of procedure; but without careful management, voting
could have unravelled the fragile consensus achieved on other
issues, besides setting a precedent that many States Parties did
not want to establish. Some wondered if the forward looking 'plan
of action' on nuclear disarmament could be adopted alone, but that
would have been difficult for some delegations which had won
acceptance of other issues of importance for their national
positions. The nuclear powers were canvassed about whether they
would be willing to issue the nuclear disarmament agreement as a
further N-5 statement to give it political authority in the event
of the conference failing to adopt its final document. Neither
France, Russia nor China would entertain the idea, arguing that
such a move would take those agreements out of the political
conditions governing the delicate balance they had sought to
establish.
Baali was not ready to give up. Encouraged by Westdal's
conviction that the distance between Iraq and the United States was
diminishing and that agreement was possible with enough time and
pressure, he suspended the session at 5.00 am and resumed six hours
later. Several delegations, including Indonesia on behalf of the
NAM, Britain on behalf of the Group of Western European and Other
States, Portugal on behalf of the EU, Mexico on behalf of the New
Agenda Coalition, Russia, Japan, Poland and the Netherlands,
appealed to both the United States and Iraq to bridge the remaining
gap. At 3.00 pm Westdal announced that the paragraph was
settled.
Following intervention from senior Administration officials
Robert Einhorn and John Holum, the United States agreed to a form
of wording that Iraq was also prepared to accept, noting the recent
IAEA inspections and recognising that since the "cessation of IAEA
inspections in Iraq on 16 December 1998", the IAEA "has not been in
a position to provide any assurance of Iraq's compliance under UN
Security Council Resolution 687". When the final document was
adopted, Ambassador Saeed Hassan registered Iraq's formal
reservations, arguing that his country had fully complied with the
NPT's requirements. He complained that the United States had
imposed its formula and drafting language on the paragraph dealing
with Iraq, which "had nothing to do with the NPT or the mandate of
the conference" but which could be used "in aggressive American
foreign policy directed against Iraq".
Nuclear Energy
Main Committee III, chaired by Ambassador Markku Reimaa, heard
many statements reaffirming the right to research, produce and use
nuclear energy for non-military purposes. Mauritius, for example,
argued that the transfer of nuclear materials and technology for
the 'peaceful' uses of nuclear energy was "the only tangible
benefit that the developing countries expect out of the NPT".
Headed by China and Iran, a number of non-aligned countries
stressed the need for unrestricted transfers of technology and
better cooperation and technical assistance in accordance with
Article IV of the Treaty. Egypt, wanting to restrict Israel's
access to technical exchange, proposed that technical cooperation
be restricted to NPT parties, but this was not accepted.
Attempts to link nuclear energy with sustainable development,
however, almost resulted in deadlock. A number of countries,
particularly Germany, Austria, Denmark, Ireland, New Zealand and
Samoa on behalf of Pacific Island states, rejected an
Iranian-sponsored paragraph claiming a role for nuclear energy in
contributing to sustainable development and in mitigating
greenhouse gas emissions. They argued that nuclear power (as
opposed to the non-power uses of nuclear energy, in medicine, for
example) was not compatible with sustainable development. In the
end the concept of sustainable development appeared in two
paragraphs. One required that sustainable development should be a
guiding principle for nuclear energy use, and that the IAEA should
assist states to meet "the objectives of protecting the global
environment by applying sustainable development approaches". A
further paragraph recognised the IAEA's contribution to achieving
sustainable development. The ambiguity between the two allows for
different interpretations by proponents and opponents of nuclear
power.
Australia and Canada for a time opposed a proposal by five
Central Asian states (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan) to include language from the agreed
but unadopted Main Committee III report to the 1995 NPT Review and
Extension Conference covering the "serious environmental
consequences" resulting from "uranium mining and associated nuclear
fuel-cycle activities in the production and testing of nuclear
weapons". The Central Asian proposal called for governments and
international organisations with expertise in the field of clean-up
and disposal of radioactive contaminants to consider giving
assistance. France initially stalled, but came on board when it
realised it had participated in negotiating the text in 1995.
Canada and Australia, which had joined consensus on this in 1995,
were reportedly worried that environmental activists might use this
to focus attention on disputed uranium mining back home, but
towards the end of the final week they withdrew their objections,
so the references to assistance for environmental clean-up went
into the final document.
Another important dispute focussed on the transshipment of
radioactive materials and waste. A large group of states including
Ireland, New Zealand, the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), the South
Pacific Islands (SOPAC), and many Latin American countries were at
loggerheads with Japan, Britain and France over demands for prior
notification, better safety requirements, and more comprehensive
liability and compensation arrangements in the event of a nuclear
accident, including loss of tourist and fisheries income due to the
fear of contamination. New Zealand, at the forefront of the
negotiations to get stronger commitments on safety, prior
notification and liability, expressed disappointment that Britain,
France and Japan had suspended their dialogue on compensation and
liability with countries adjacent to the route taken by their
nuclear shipments. France offered to inform countries concerned
about its shipments of radioactive materials and waste, but, like
Japan and Britain, insisted that the rights of navigation and
freedom of the seas must not be infringed. These issues were
eventually resolved with the help of a group of 'Friends of the
President', who offered compromise text stressing national and
international regulations and standards for nuclear safety,
security and environmental protection, without prejudice to the
freedom, rights and obligations of navigation under international
law. The importance of national and international liability
mechanisms were also stressed.
Strengthening the Review Process
On May 5, Baali held a special, closed plenary to discuss
strengthening the review process, at which 22 delegations spoke.
There was general agreement that the 1995 decisions needed to be
built on and revitalised, but not dropped or replaced, and strong
endorsement that the meetings between review conferences should
focus primarily on substantive issues, leaving procedural
preparations towards the end. While most argued in favour of
holding four meetings, this was resisted by Britain, France and the
United States, which preferred to keep the 1995 decision on this
intact. There was interest among some of the non-nuclear-weapon
states in Ireland's proposal for four-day annual conferences of
States Parties serviced by a small secretariat to replace the
provision for three 10-day preparatory committee meetings. Nigeria
also proposed the establishment of an NPT 'Management Board'. Such
ideas were regarded as ahead of their time, however. Opposition
from some of the major powers ensured that proposals for a more
permanent secretariat would be deemed premature.
There was disagreement about whether the preparatory committee
meetings should comment on contemporaneous international and
regional events, as proposed by Canada, Japan and others, but
opposed most strongly by the United States. However, there were
also many similarities among the proposed mechanisms for addressing
substance in the review process and reporting on the outcome of
individual meetings. Among the major proposals, both Canada and
Japan preferred that the preparatory committee meetings reflect
their discussions in a Chair's summary. Norway and the Netherlands
wanted the preparatory meetings to implement a programme of action
as determined by the previous review conference, and suggested
dividing consideration of the substantive issues among four
meetings, each of which would also deal with new developments and
review the operation of the Treaty, including regional issues,
compliance, accountability and universality.
Myanmar (Burma) wanted subsidiary bodies to be established in
the preparatory meetings as well as review conferences. The United
States suggested that the first two preparatory committee meetings
could consider specific issues, exchange information and receive
proposals, and the third meeting could seek to elaborate consensus
recommendations to be transmitted to the review conference. There
was also a range of proposals for regularising and increasing
participation by civil society, particularly non-governmental
organisations. Canada wanted to enhance participation and access to
meetings for NGOs deemed by the UN Department for Disarmament
Affairs to have a track record of work in non-proliferation and
disarmament. Mexico wanted to go further, proposing that NGOs be
invited to participate in the meetings as full observers.
Baali took note of the proposals and early in the third week
produced his own paper on 'Improving the effectiveness of the
strengthened review process for the NPT'. Some delegations at first
expressed concern that Baali's proposal did not improve
sufficiently on the 1995 decisions to warrant a further decision in
2000. Some also feared that the text could even be used to restrict
States Parties' options for utilising the PrepComs more flexibly
and effectively in the future. Nevertheless, as attention moved to
finalising the substantive issues in the final review document, few
were prepared to risk the outcome by arguing about the review
process. Discussions between the President and four countries
(reportedly Canada, Japan, Norway and the Netherlands) resulted in
some slight amendments, following which the review decision was
attached to the final document with almost no further
discussion.
The finalised review document reaffirmed the 1995 decisions with
regard to the number of preparatory committee meetings. The
President took on board the US proposal for the first two sessions
of the PrepCom to consider substance, with the third (or fourth, if
necessary) session producing a consensus report containing
recommendations for the review conference and making procedural
arrangements. To ensure some continuity between the various
sessions, the early meetings would provide a factual summary for
the next session, the form of which was unspecified, as some States
had opposed any reference to Chair's summaries. Baali did not widen
NGO participation, as some had wanted, but formalised the ad hoc
arrangement begun in 1997 of allocating a meeting for NGOs to
address each preparatory meeting and review conference.
Outcome and Assessment
The conference eventually closed around 7.00 pm on Saturday May
20, some 24 hours late. Applause and relief greeted Baali's gavel
as the final document was adopted. There was also intense
speculation about whether or not the weapon states - and especially
the United States - had expected a final agreement when they
accepted the disarmament document.
The outcome was much more than anyone had expected, and took
disarmament watchers especially by surprise. Newspaper headlines
proclaimed "5 Atom Powers Agree to Scrap Arsenals"
(International Herald Tribune). Even the generally reserved
Financial Times of London noted that "Pressure grows on
nuclear powers to disarm".5 As disarmament coverage
goes, this was strong stuff. Even allowing for hyperbole, the
message went out that the NPT conference had accomplished something
significant for nuclear disarmament.
In some of the same articles, however, officials moved swiftly
to dampen the expectations. The New York Times quoted an
unnamed Clinton Administration official saying that the agreement
"did not represent a significant shift in United States policy". On
Sunday morning's BBC 'Breakfast with Frost' programme, David Frost
asked Britain's Secretary of State for Defence, Geoff Hoon, about
the "exciting" news from the UN: "Is this a mega-step towards
global disarmament, do you think?" Hoon's response hardly inspired
confidence, despite the very constructive role Britain had played
in helping to broker the solutions: "Well what we've agreed there,
together with the United States, is that in principle we would like
to see the end of nuclear weapons. I think every sensible person
around the world agrees to that but there's no specific timetable
agreed and obviously it is dependent on every other nuclear weapons
state agreeing the same and taking appropriate action."
Therein lies the problem. In diplomatic terms, the outcome was
far more substantive and a much greater success than even the
optimists would have predicted before the conference. But the gains
should not be exaggerated. The NPT review conference gives
political underpinning to the ICJ advisory opinion and provides a
much stronger tool for the non-nuclear-weapon states and civil
society to use, if they can continue to employ effective strategies
and tactics. But, like Article VI for much of the 1970s and 1980s,
the words adopted in 2000 will mean nothing without political will
and pressure to get the steps implemented.
Agreement on Disarmament
Of greatest importance, the States Parties gave consensus to the
"unequivocal undertaking by the nuclear-weapon states to accomplish
the total elimination of their nuclear arsenals", together with
several 'practical steps' in fulfilment of the 1995 pledge for
systematic and progressive efforts to implement Article VI. In the
agreement brokered first by Pearson in subsidiary body 1 and then
in intense negotiations between the N-5 and the NAC, the NPT
parties underscored the necessity of achieving the early entry into
force of the CTBT and prompt negotiations on a fissile material
production ban, presently deadlocked in Geneva. While supporting
the full implementation of START II, recently ratified by the
Russian Duma, they urged the United States and Russia to conclude
START III. Raising concerns that the nuclear powers had not been
taking their disarmament obligations seriously enough and that
progress had stalled since the end of the Cold War, the NPT parties
identified several important steps which must be pursued over the
next five years in addition to the bilateral strategic arms
reductions currently underway. According to the plan of action
contained in the agreement on next steps, the nuclear powers have
promised:
- further unilateral efforts to reduce their nuclear
arsenals - Since 1991, Britain, France and the United States
have taken important steps in unilateral nuclear disarmament,
cutting tactical and obsolete nuclear systems. Unilateral efforts
can be very important when bilateral or multilateral negotiations
are stalled, and act as a useful complement to disarmament
agreements.
- to provide more information on their nuclear capabilities and
the implementation of disarmament agreements - This was hard-fought
by China, which resisted language calling for transparency
regarding nuclear arsenals. Britain, Russia and the United States
have already moved some way towards greater transparency, but
France and particularly China have not wanted to reveal
nuclear-related information, the first step towards accountability
and effective verification.
- to reduce their non-strategic nuclear weapons - Russia
continues to deploy tactical nuclear weapons in large numbers, and
the United States retains them in its arsenals, including some
100-150 tactical bombs based in seven NATO countries in
Europe.
- concrete measures to further reduce the operational status of
nuclear weapon systems - The non-aligned and New Agenda Coalition
had been pressing for nuclear weapons to be taken off alert,
de-activated, and for the warheads to be separated from their
delivery vehicles. In their statement of May 1, the five nuclear
powers had for the first time stated that none of their nuclear
weapons remain targetted. They have now promised to go
further.
- a diminishing role for nuclear weapons in security policies - A
concern raised over and over again by the non-nuclear countries
during this Conference has been the retention by NATO and Russia of
deterrence policies based on the potential first use of nuclear
weapons and an extended role linking the use of nuclear weapons to
the threat or use of biological or chemical weapons.
- involvement by all five nuclear powers in nuclear reduction and
disarmament negotiations - At present Britain, China and France are
on the sidelines waiting for the United States and Russia to make
much deeper cuts in the numbers of their nuclear weapons before
they get involved in strategic arms reduction and elimination.
Britain and France weakened this provision by inserting "as soon as
appropriate", a qualitative judgment that should not be left solely
up to the weapon powers to determine.
The plan of action for nuclear disarmament also called for a
moratorium on nuclear testing pending entry into force of the CTBT,
and emphasised the 'principle of irreversibility' in nuclear arms
control. This is important because of the current tendency among
some of the nuclear states to recycle the plutonium, highly
enriched uranium or other components from dismantled nuclear
weapons so that they can be used again to make new or refurbished
nuclear warheads.
The Middle East
Agreements made in advance in Washington and Cairo and squared
with Tel Aviv enabled the United States to accept language
underlining the validity of the goals and objectives of the 1995
Resolution on the Middle East and reaffirming "the importance of
Israel's accession to the NPT and the placement of all its nuclear
facilities under comprehensive IAEA safeguards". Speaking after the
final document had been adopted, Egypt's Ambassador Ahmed Aboul
Gheit said the outcome sent a "clear and unequivocal message to
Israel". Most other Arab states seemed satisfied, though Syria and
Iraq complained when the final document was adopted. Israel, which
had observed the conference, appeared satisfied that Iraq had been
criticised and that, despite the additional unwelcome focus, the
United States had largely fulfilled its promises "to protect the
Israeli deterrent", as formalised in the 1998 Memorandum of
Agreement between the two countries.6
The issue that nearly wrecked the Conference in the final 48
hours was US insistence that if Israel's non-adherence was to be
named in the section on the Middle East, then Iraqi non-compliance
with the NPT and relevant UN Security Council resolutions should
also be described there. As the stand-off between the two countries
dragged on, opinion among other States Parties wavered. Most
Western and even many NAM countries believed that Iraq's violation
of its NPT obligations in the 1980s and early 1990s should be
addressed and condemned. But they had doubts about the way in which
the United States sought to do this. Although US representatives
have strenuously denied that non-compliance was being coupled with
non-adherence, that is how most delegations viewed the US linkage
asserted in the subsidiary body on regional issues. Moreover, once
Iraq had agreed to being named in the context of the IAEA letter,
few delegations could understand why the United States continued to
haggle over minor linguistic detail. US obstinacy appeared to give
Iraq, which had little to lose, publicity, attention and the de
facto power to veto the whole package of hard-won agreements in
the draft final document. Because this seemed so irrational and
unnecessary, observers and participants began to speculate that the
United States would not be too distressed to lose the disarmament
agreements as the consequence of a failure to adopt the final
document - providing Iraq took the blame.
Although there were reservations about how the US handled the
situation, an important procedural question is raised concerning
non-compliance, which may need to be addressed in the future. At
present, the weight of precedent in favour of consensus means that
if NPT parties wish to criticise a state party for non-compliance,
the non-compliant party has the ability to prevent or weaken the
criticisms.
South Asia
Perhaps the major losers were India and Pakistan, which had been
banking on disarray at the NPT conference - or at least a failure
to address significantly the nuclear-weapon states' obligations to
disarm or their own nuclear tests. Another failed review conference
would have suited their arguments that the NPT was an outdated and
discriminatory mechanism that gave the weapon states carte blanche
to do as they wished.
While most would accept that Treaty has some way to go before
full implementation, the 2000 agreements took the 1995 decisions a
positive step forward. The substantial plan of action on
disarmament belied the view expressed by India's Foreign Minister,
Jaswant Singh, that statements from the NPT about India "rolling
back its nuclear programme are mere diversions to prevent focussed
attention on the basic goals of the NPT".7 Nor did the
conference accept the concept of a 'responsible nuclear-weapon
state', as India asserts itself to be, in part because the
implication of the NAC position adopted in the final document was
that the principal responsibility of the nuclear-weapon states was
to eliminate their arsenals, and India is moving in the wrong
direction for that.
Contrary to expectation, there were only half-hearted attempts
by a few neighbouring States to prevent the conference from
criticising India and Pakistan for conducting their nuclear test
explosions in 1998. As a consequence, the NPT parties' deploring of
the nuclear explosions and declaration that such actions did not
"in any way confer a nuclear-weapon state status or any special
status whatsoever" were stronger than anticipated. India and
Pakistan were also enjoined to implement the measures called for in
UN Security Council 1172, passed unanimously just after the nuclear
tests.
Speaking after the conference closed, Pakistan's Foreign
Minister objected that the NPT conference had treated Pakistan like
India, without making a distinction "between the nuclear ambitions
of India and the compulsions of Pakistan". He argued, however that
"Pakistan's nuclear deterrent now forms an indispensable part of
its defence doctrine".8 Pakistan and India have also
complained that where they are urged to accept a moratorium on the
production of fissile materials for weapons purposes, Israel has
not explicitly been called on to do the same. Attempts by a number
of European countries to link the demand for fissban negotiations
with an injunction on all nuclear weapon and nuclear weapon capable
states to halt their production of plutonium and highly enriched
uranium and accede to a moratorium were frustrated by China, which
rejected any mention of such a moratorium.
Safeguards and Export Controls
Although the final document has reaffirmed the decisions adopted
in 1995, including the Principles and Objectives, a number of
paragraphs backing strengthened export controls and safeguards were
dropped. There had been worrying indications during the conference
that Russia, China and France wanted to back down from the 1995
commitment that acceptance of IAEA full-scope safeguards should be
a condition of new supply. At the time Russia denied reports that a
new decree signed by President Putin meant a relaxing of export
control agreements. The waters seem to have been muddied, and it
will be interesting to see what occurs at the next meeting of the
NSG, scheduled for June.
Nuclear Energy
Although nuclear energy was not a major area of contention, two
important aspects must be noted. Opposition to nuclear power is
increasing in importance. For the first time, several European
countries - notably, Germany, Denmark and Austria - have joined
those objecting to statements linking nuclear power with
sustainable development. Nuclear safety and the transshipment of
nuclear materials and waste have also become the focus of bitter
exchanges between a growing number of Latin American and Pacific
countries on one side, now backed by some European and African
delegations, and Japan, Britain and France on the other side.
Factors in Success
The consensus adoption of more than lowest-common-denominator
agreements surprised many because political conditions leading up
to the review conference had seemed so inauspicious. The low
expectations and fear of failure appear to have contributed to the
outcome by strengthening the hand of those pushing for a
substantive outcome. Whatever the disagreements amongst the N-5,
none of them wanted to be held responsible for the failure of a
conference at a time when the non-proliferation regime needed to
show itself to be alive, relevant and strong. This common desire
led to the N-5 statement, which indicated the lowest common
denominator agreements the NWS were prepared to accept. Though
frustrating for those who had wished to see the conference discuss
missile defence more fully and issue an unconditional call for
fissban negotiations, the N-5 statement made the prospect of a
final agreement seem less remote. It indicated that the weapon
states wanted an outcome and simultaneously spurred others to push
for a substantive and significant level of agreement.
The outcome was viewed as a triumph for the New Agenda
Coalition, whose cohesion at times before the conference had looked
in danger. De Icaza's coordination kept the NAC on track through
some difficult decisions, Pearson's role as subsidiary body chair
was masterfully executed, and the others developed tactics,
connections and pressure where needed. Inevitably Egypt was more
focussed on the Middle East issues. Sweden was noticeably torn at
times between the NAC and its European neighbours, even joining
Finland for a statement endorsing the NATO-5 positions in MC.I.
Although this was viewed by some as a distancing from the NAC,
Sweden emphasised that it did not regard the positions as
incompatible or mutually exclusive.
One of the interesting features of this review conference was
how Western countries which did not ally themselves with the NAC
put forward programmes which were more concrete than they had
previously been associated with. Was this because the NAC set the
standard for others to try to emulate or because the NAC had
moderated its positions so much that they were brought close to
those of the middle-ground Europeans? A bit of both. The pressure
was on the NAC to put forward a practical programme that had some
chance of being achieved. At the same time, civil society and
parliamentary pressure was on a number of NATO countries and Japan
to challenge the weapon states on disarmament and show that the NPT
did not reify the status quo. Even the EU went into the NPT
with a common position on nuclear disarmament that went far beyond
previous positions and included calls for transparency,
irreversibility, addressing tactical nuclear weapons, and a CD
working group on nuclear disarmament.
The NATO-5, which had its own internal tensions to deal with,
went further than the NAC in seeking target dates for CTBT entry
into force and (like Japan and Australia) for the conclusion of an
FMCT. Despite Germany almost pulling away from the NATO-5 during
the conference, reportedly because it was afraid the group would
undermine EU positions and isolate France, the group put forward
steps on tactical nuclear weapons, transparency and accountability,
and fissile materials that went beyond the broader NAC positions on
those issues, though the NAC were stronger elsewhere. Canada's
proposals and the 8-point plan from Japan and Australia covered
some of the same ground in very moderate language.
While many of these countries have expressed support for the
outcome, some are still angry that the weapon states chose to
negotiate with the NAC, particularly after such heavy pressure had
been exerted by the United States and France to prevent their
allies supporting the New Agenda resolutions in the UN First
Committee. The US overture to the NAC demonstrated that it viewed
the seven nation coalition as the major political player among the
non-nuclear countries, more pragmatic and coherent than the
non-aligned and more comprehensive and determined than the various
different kinds of proposals being put forward by allies such as
Japan, Australia, Canada and the NATO-5. This is in part due to the
cross-group composition of the NAC, with non-aligned, Europeans,
Africans, Latin Americans and a western Pacific nation; in part it
is due to the NAC strategy and positioning of its proposals.
The outcome was naturally viewed also as a triumph for the
President, Abdallah Baali. What had appeared to be negative
indicators beforehand came to be judged factors in his success.
Baali's lack of experience in the non-proliferation field was more
than made up for by his diplomatic skills, careful preparations and
wide consultations in the months before the meeting, and his
refusal to be intimidated by the dominant players. Moreover, it
made it more possible for him not to become bogged down in
conflicts over substance and to exercise the flexibility to ditch
ideas that did not fly and try something else. His shrewd decision
to push for early agreement on the two subsidiary bodies and,
conversely, not to push for an early decision on conference
products paid off. The first provided a highly successful mechanism
for focussed debate on the more contentious issues, while the
latter was not the pivotal issue that it had appeared to be in
1999.
Baali was enormously fortunate in having a strong team of
Chairs, including the two subsidiary body Chairs, Clive Pearson and
Christopher Westdal, on whose shoulders a large part of the most
difficult issues fell. Many remembers (and wanted to avoid) the
destructive acrimony generated by weeks of partisan and egotistical
chairing by the MC.I Chair in 1995. Baali's insistence on receiving
the Chair's reports by the end of the third week was also an
important factor, giving him the whole of the final week to lock
the different sections into place one by one.
Conclusion
A clear success in diplomatic terms, time will show whether the
commitments agreed by the Sixth Review Conference can be translated
into concrete progress towards the full implementation of the
Treaty. This was no bland, minimal consensus, but the outcome of
difficult compromises, with the pressure kept on the weapon states
right up to the end. Important progress was made in recognising the
need for greater transparency, accountability and irreversibility
in nuclear disarmament. For the first time, steps were identified
for addressing tactical nuclear systems and reducing reliance on
nuclear weapons. Nevertheless, there are no target dates or
timetables, so the weapon states and proliferators still have too
much wiggle room.
The treaty's commitment to nuclear power has been questioned
more than ever before. While important gains were made in some
areas, others, including security assurances and NATO nuclear
sharing, were less significant than many had anticipated. Problems
with sustaining the strengthened safeguards system and fullscope
safeguards as a condition of supply have been flagged up, which are
worrying, but may act as a wake-up call.
The conduct and success of the 2000 review conference may also
be regarded as having gone some way to vindicating the difficult
compromises made by non-nuclear parties in 1995. Although the
review process had disappointed, the outcome of the conference
derived from some of the issues most hotly debated during the three
PrepComs, including establishment of the subsidiary bodies.
Especially on nuclear disarmament, there were overt strategies to
use the 1995 programme of action as a yardstick and to take it
further. Although it proved difficult to get stronger commitments
on the CTBT and fissban, the NAC based its proposals for practical
steps on the language from the 1995 Principles and Objectives in 4
(c), successfully achieving a 2000 plan of action with some
explicit markers for the next five years. Despite flaws in the five
year process, the outcome of the 2000 review conference makes it
possible to say that overall the review process has provided
greater accountability and more leverage on the weapon states than
in the past.
A historic consensus may have been achieved at the NPT, but the
first few weeks back in Geneva indicate little shift in the
positions of most of the weapon states. National missile defence
was swept under the political carpet, making the final agreements
possible, but the dust has re-emerged with a vengeance the minute
the review conference closed. Russia and China are adamant that NMD
and preventing the weaponisation of outer space are of primary
importance, above the fissban; Britain, France and the United
States want the fissban first and foremost, but the United States
is contributing to the impasse by refusing to allow outer space
issues to be addressed in any substantive way at the CD. Where
Britain (at least) appears to accept CD discussion of the nuclear
disarmament plan of action agreed by NPT parties, France and Russia
are making it clear that they don't see the point. Russia and the
United States insist that their bilateral negotiations on strategic
nuclear weapons are the important practical agenda to pursue, and
France questions how the CD could usefully address the kinds of
issues identified in the plan of action.
The conference is over. The important question now is how to use
the tools it has provided to translate the words into action.
Perhaps it is now time to set a date for nuclear disarmament.
Notes and References
1. Rebecca Johnson, together with and Jenni Rissanen, attended
the whole of the NPT review conference. The 18 reports they
produced over the four weeks can be found at the Acronym Institute
website on http://www.acronym.org.uk/index.htm.
For greater detail of the substantive issues, statements and
working papers issued at the NPT, see also R. Johnson and J.
Rissanen, 'The Review Conference Opens: Dominant Views and
Contested Claims', in Disarmament
Diplomacy No. 45, April 2000.
2. Statement by the Republic of South Africa to Cluster 1
(Nuclear Disarmament, Non-Proliferation, General and Complete
Disarmament Issues), Second Session of the Preparatory Committee of
the 2000 NPT Conference, April 29,1998. See also R. Johnson, "Using
the Review Process to Address Nuclear Disarmament", UNIDIR
Newsletter No. 37, Geneva, March 1998 and R. Johnson, Reviewing
the Non-Proliferation Treaty: Preparing for the Future, ACRONYM 11,
London, April 1998.
3. Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States
emphasised that the statement was made in their capacity as
nuclear-weapon states, not as permanent members of the UN Security
Council, in which role they are usually designated the P-5. In
keeping with this distinction, they will be referred to as the N-5
when acting as NWS and as the P-5 when acting in their Security
Council role.
4. S/2000/300.
5. "5 Atom Powers Agree to Scrap Arsenals", International
Herald Tribune, May 22, 2000. "Pressure grows on nuclear powers
to disarm", Financial Times, May 23, 2000. "5 Nuclear Powers
Agree on Stronger Pledge to Scrap Arsenals", New York Times,
May 22, 2000.
6. See Gerald M Steinberg, "Israeli Interests Protected at NPT
Conference", Jerusalem Post, May 24, 2000.
7. Suo Motu statement on the NPT Review Conference by the
Minister of External Affairs in the Parliament of India, May 9,
2000.
8. Statement by the Foreign Minister of Pakistan on the Sixth
Review Conference on the NPT, Islamabad, May 23, 2000, issued to
the CD as CD/1615 (May 25, 2000).
Rebecca Johnson is Executive Director of the Acronym
Institute and a close observer of multilateral disarmament
negotiations. There are many diplomats and NGOs the author would
like to thank for sharing information and insights. Especial thanks
go to Jenni Rissanen for her work at the NPT Review Conference.
This report has benefitted from her close monitoring of the
safeguards and nuclear energy debates.
Disarmament Diplomacy plans future articles on aspects
relating to the NPT Review Conference, including the role of NGOs.
We would also like to solicit articles from any readers over the
next few months with ideas and strategies for how best to put the
words into action.
Appendix: Nuclear Disarmament Plan of Action, Final
Document
15. The Conference agrees on the following practical steps for
the systematic and progressive efforts to implement Article VI of
the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons and
paragraphs 3 and 4 (c) of the 1995 Decision on 'Principles and
Objectives for Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament':
1. The importance and urgency of signatures and ratifications,
without delay and without conditions and in accordance with
constitutional processes, to achieve the early entry into force of
the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.
2. A moratorium on nuclear weapon test explosions or any other
nuclear explosions pending entry into force of that Treaty.
3. The necessity of negotiations in the Conference on
Disarmament on a non-discriminatory, multilateral and
internationally and effectively verifiable treaty banning the
production of fissile material for nuclear weapons or other nuclear
explosive devices in accordance with the statement of the Special
Coordinator in 1995 and the mandate contained therein, taking into
consideration both nuclear disarmament and nuclear
non-proliferation objectives. The Conference on Disarmament is
urged to agree on a programme of work which includes the immediate
commencement of negotiations on such a treaty with a view to their
conclusion within five years.
4. The necessity of establishing in the Conference on
Disarmament an appropriate subsidiary body with a mandate to deal
with nuclear disarmament. The Conference on Disarmament is urged to
agree on a programme of work which includes the immediate
establishment of such a body.
5. The principle of irreversibility to apply to nuclear
disarmament, nuclear and other related arms control and reduction
measures.
6. An unequivocal undertaking by the nuclear-weapon states to
accomplish the total elimination of their nuclear arsenals leading
to nuclear disarmament to which all States Parties are committed
under Article VI.
7. The early entry into force and full implementation of START
II and the conclusion of START III as soon as possible while
preserving and strengthening the ABM Treaty as a cornerstone of
strategic stability and as a basis for further reductions of
strategic offensive weapons, in accordance with its provisions.
8. The completion and implementation of the Trilateral
Initiative between the United States of America, the Russian
Federation and the International Atomic Energy Agency.
9. Steps by all the nuclear-weapon states leading to nuclear
disarmament in a way that promotes international stability, and
based on the principle of undiminished security for all:
- Further efforts by the nuclear-weapon states to reduce their
nuclear arsenals unilaterally.
- Increased transparency by the nuclear-weapon states with regard
to their nuclear weapons capabilities and the implementation of
agreements pursuant to Article VI and as a voluntary
confidence-building measure to support further progress on nuclear
disarmament.
- The further reduction of non-strategic nuclear weapons, based
on unilateral initiatives and as an integral part of the nuclear
arms reduction and disarmament process.
- Concrete agreed measures to further reduce the operational
status of nuclear weapons systems.
- A diminishing role for nuclear weapons in security policies to
minimise the risk that these weapons ever be used and to facilitate
the process of their total elimination.
- The engagement as soon as appropriate of all the nuclear-weapon
states in the process leading to the total elimination of their
nuclear weapons.
10. Arrangements by all nuclear-weapon states to place, as soon as
practicable, fissile material designated by each of them as no
longer required for military purposes under IAEA or other relevant
international verification and arrangements for the disposition of
such material for peaceful purposes, to ensure that such material
remains permanently outside of military programmes.
11. Reaffirmation that the ultimate objective of the efforts of
States in the disarmament process is general and complete
disarmament under effective international control.
12. Regular reports, within the framework of the NPT
strengthened review process, by all States parties on the
implementation of Article VI and paragraph 4 (c) of the 1995
Decision on 'Principles and Objectives for Nuclear
Non-Proliferation and Disarmament', and recalling the Advisory
Opinion of the International Court of Justice of 8 July 1996.
13. The further development of the verification capabilities
that will be required to provide assurance of compliance with
nuclear disarmament agreements for the achievement and maintenance
of a nuclear-weapon-free world.
© 2000 The Acronym Institute.
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