Disarmament Diplomacy
Issue No. 89, Winter 2008
2008 First Committee Resolutions
Outer Space (Disarmament Aspects)
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Resolutions
63/40 (L.4)
Prevention of an arms race in outer space.
Introduced by Egypt.
This annual resolution, unchanged in previous years,
reaffirms existing political and legal agreements including the
Outer Space Treaty and the Final Document of the Tenth Special
Session of the General Assembly. The preamble asserts that
preventing an arms race in space "would avert a grave danger for
international peace and security". It also recognizes that the
conclusion of an international agreement to prevent an arms race in
outer space "remains a priority task" of the ad hoc committee in
the CD. The key provisions of the resolution 1. call upon states to
not take any action contrary to preventing an arms race in space
and 2. urge the CD to complete examining and updating its 1992
mandate and re-establish an ad hoc committee in its upcoming
session.
First Committee: 167-1-1
General Assembly: 177-1-1
Following the tradition of previous years, the United States
cast the sole vote against this resolution and Israel abstained.
The European Union continued to fault the resolution for failing to
take into account recent developments on the issue, including
constructive discussions on the issue within the CD and progress
toward achieving a compromise programme of work. The EU noted this
year that it was working on drafting a non-binding code of conduct
on space activities intended to "promote the security of space
activities [through] voluntary confidence-building and transparency
measures". The Japanese delegation also repeated its annual
declaration that the work of the CD on this issue should progress
without prejudice to any other issue.
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63/68 (L.44/Rev.1)
Transparency and confidence-building measures in outer space
activities.
Introduced by Russia.
Virtually unchanged from resolution 62/43, like the annual
resolution on PAROS this resolution reaffirms that prevention of an
arms race in space "would avert a grave danger for international
peace and security". It asserts measures should be explored to
prevent an arms race in space, including weaponization. The only
substantive modification notes the introduction in the CD by China
and Russia of a draft treaty on the prevention of the placement of
weapons in space. The key provisions of the resolution continue to
1. invite states to submit concrete proposals on international
outer space transparency and confidence-building measures and 2.
request the Secretary-General to submit a report containing these
proposals to the next session of the General Assembly.
First Committee: 167-1-1
General Assembly: 180-1-1
Following the tradition of previous years, the United States
cast the sole vote against this resolution and Israel abstained.
The US delegation clarified that its vote should not be construed
as detracting its support for transparency and confidence-building
measures in outer space that focus pragmatically on space security.
The US delegation again attributed its negative vote to the
resolution's reference to PAROS, as well as to the Chinese-Russian
draft treaty on the prevention of placement of weapons in outer
space, both of which it opposes.
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Resolutions
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