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EU - US Summit, Washington, June 25, 2003
'Joint Statement by European Council President
Konstandinos Simitis, European Commission President Romano Prodi
and U.S. President George W. Bush on the Proliferation of Weapons
of Mass Destruction', June 25, 2003.
Proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and their delivery
systems constitutes a major threat to international peace and
security. The threat is compounded by the interest of terrorists in
acquiring WMD. This would undermine the foundations of
international order. We pledge to use all means available to avert
WMD proliferation and the calamities that would follow.
- We will work together to strengthen the international system of
treaties and regimes against the spread of WMD. This implies the
development of new regimes, as appropriate, and reinforcement of
existing regimes. We will pursue the goal of universal membership
of relevant multilateral treaties and agreements.
- We will seek to ensure strict implementation and compliance. We
are willing to work with all those who respect international
non-proliferation norms; we are committed to dealing effectively
with those who ignore them or cheat.
- We will support, when necessary, non-routine inspections.
- We recognise that, if necessary, other measures in accordance
with international law may be needed to combat proliferation.
- We will work together to deploy our combined political and
diplomatic influence most effectively in support of our
non-proliferation objectives.
- We will work together to develop further a common assessment of
global proliferation threats.
We welcome the statement on non-proliferation by European Union
Heads of State and Government at Thessaloniki and the G8
Declaration of the Non-Proliferation of Weapons of Mass
Destruction. We reaffirm our joint commitment to relevant treaties
and agreements, in particular the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
We will work together in all areas to stop and reverse
proliferation.
In particular:
- We will explore ways to make the International Atomic Energy
Agency's Safeguards Agreements and Additional Protocols a standard
for nuclear cooperation and non-proliferation. We urge all States
with nuclear facilities or activities to ratify and implement these
Agreements and Protocols without delay. Furthermore, on an urgent
and exceptional basis, taking account of the increase in the
Agency's workload in this area, we will support an adequate
increase in the IAEA safeguards budget to ensure the credibility of
the IAEA's verification system.
- We will strengthen both export controls on materials and
technologies related to WMD and their delivery systems as well as
their enforcement and implementation. We believe that national
controls should include criminal penalties for the illegal export,
transhipment or brokering of weapons of mass destruction, missile
delivery systems, and materials or technology for use in WMD or
missile programmes. We will work together with like-minded partners
to tighten export controls, where necessary providing assistance to
create and improve effective, enforceable national export control
systems. We agree to introduce catch-all provisions, where
appropriate. We will share information so as to identify new
patterns of procurement by State and non-State actors. We will seek
new methods to stop the proliferation trade to and from countries
and entities of proliferation concern.
- We will work together in the framework of the BTWC to
strengthen national control over pathogenic micro-organisms and
toxins and, in the framework of the CWC, to foster the elimination
of all chemical weapons.
- We will strengthen identification, control and interdiction of
illegal shipments, including national criminal sanctions against
those who contribute to illicit procurement efforts.
- We emphasise the importance of cooperative threat reduction
programmes with third countries.
We will cooperate actively to address specific proliferation
challenges. In particular:
- We condemn North Korea's nuclear weapons programme and its
failure to comply with the IAEA safeguards agreement, which
undermine the non-proliferation regime. We call on North Korea to
refrain from any action that would further aggravate the problem.
We strongly urge North Korea to visibly, verifiably and
irreversibly dismantle that programme and to come into full
compliance with international non-proliferation obligations, as a
fundamental step to facilitate a comprehensive and peaceful
solution.
- We express our continuing serious concern at Iran's nuclear
programme in particular as regards the pursuit of a full nuclear
fuel cycle, as announced by President Khatami. We are
troubled by the information in the IAEA's report detailing Iran's
failures to meet its safeguards obligations and we fully support
ongoing investigation by the IAEA to answer the unresolved
questions and concerns identified in that report. Iran must
cooperate fully with the IAEA, remedy all failures and answer all
questions. It must also sign and implement an Additional Protocol,
without delay or conditions, as a significant first step towards
addressing those concerns.
- We remain concerned at the pursuit of nuclear, biological and
chemical weapons, and missiles for their delivery by a number of
other States. We will continue to monitor these closely and to
exchange information, including with other concerned States.
Proliferation is a threat not only to our security, but also to
the wider international system. We call for a halt to proliferation
activities in a way that is demonstrable and verifiable.
Non-proliferation is a global challenge which requires a
multifaceted solution. We need to tackle it individually and
collectively - working together and with other partners, including
through relevant international institutions, in particular those of
the United Nations system.
Source: the European Union website, http://europa.eu.int/index_en.htm.
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