[Click
here to read 1994 article "Nuclear Disarmament: How Much
Have the Five Nuclear Powers Promised in the
Non-Proliferation Treaty?" by George Bunn and Roland M.
Timerbaev (PDF).
Referenced by the article, but absent from this PDF
version, are appendices setting out the text of the NPT
and its parties.
Click here to read the
NPT text provided by the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) (PDF)
and
click here to read a
current list of NPT parties (broken up across multiple
web pages) provided by the UN Office for Disarmament
Affairs.]
The Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) is regarded by many as
the centerpiece of world security. It entered into force
in 1970, and its success these past 37 years is rooted
in a carefully crafted bargain. In exchange for a
commitment from the non-nuclear weapon states (today
some 180 nations) not to acquire nuclear weapons and to
submit to international safeguards to verify compliance
with this commitment, the five NPT nuclear weapon states
(the US, Russia, Britain, France and China) pledged
unfettered access to peaceful nuclear technologies and
undertook to engage in nuclear disarmament negotiations
aimed at the ultimate elimination of their nuclear
arsenals. This bargain has formed the central
underpinnings of the international nonproliferation
regime for over three decades.
A major problem today,
however, is that the five nuclear weapon states have
never really delivered on the nuclear disarmament part
of this bargain, and it appears that the US has largely
abandoned it, despite lip service to the contrary. And,
today India, Pakistan and Israel maintain sizable
unregulated nuclear weapon arsenals outside of the NPT,
and North Korea withdrew from the NPT in 2003 and may
have built several nuclear weapons by now.
Understanding the
dimensions of the grand bargain that is central to the
NPT is critical to a reasoned understanding of just what
the nuclear weapon states agreed to undertake in Article
VI of the NPT. A very helpful analysis of the NPT
Article VI is contained in a paper by George Bunn and
Roland M. Timerbaev entitled "Nuclear Disarmament: How
Much Have the Five Nuclear Powers Promised in the
Non-Proliferation Treaty," published in 1994 by "The
Lawyers Alliance for World Security, the Committee for
National Security and the Washington Council on
Non-Proliferation." James F. Leonard, then the Director
of the Washington Council on Non-Proliferation (which no
longer exists), put together a helpful Appendix A for
the pamphlet. A "Summary and Preface" by Gerard C. Smith
(former ACDA Director) and Paul C. Warnke (former ACDA
Director) appears before the Bunn-Timerbaev article.
(ISBN No. 1-884179-01-0)
The negotiation of the
NPT took from 1964 to 1968, and involved many
participants. George Bunn was a member of the American
delegation to the NPT negotiations and Roland Timerbaev
was a member of the Soviet delegation. They got to know
each other well and played an important role in the
negotiations. Other members from both delegations also
participated, and officials at home in the American and
Soviet governments participated through drafting
instructions to the two delegations. Periodically, these
two governments made treaty drafts they had tentatively
agreed upon available to representatives from other
governments and asked for their support. The drafts were
of course discussed at the Geneva Disarmament Conference
and at the UN General Assembly. Thus, officials from
many governments were involved in shaping the text."
The initial
U.S.-Soviet draft of NPT language given to other
governments after U.S.-Soviet negotiations did not
contain language such as article VI calling for
negotiations that would one day lead to nuclear
disarmament. But both the Soviet Union and the United
States had submitted to the Geneva Disarmament
Conference (where much of the NPT was negotiated)
separate plans for "general and complete disarmament"
including staged reductions of nuclear weapons. As a
result, non-nuclear-weapon-country representative at the
Geneva Disarmament Conference insisted that, if the NPT
was to contain a provision prohibiting them from
acquiring nuclear weapons, it must also contain a
provision calling for reduction and eventual elimination
of nuclear weapons by the five countries that then had
nuclear weapons. Britain, China, France, the Soviet
Union and the United States. Eventually, the Soviet
Union and the United States (and their allies) agreed to
Article VI which called for arms reductions and
disarmament, including nuclear disarmament. This
provision was welcomed by non-aligned representatives
who had urged that the treaty contain such a provision."
[Click
here to read a 19-page PDF of the 1994 article "Nuclear
Disarmament: How Much Have the Five Nuclear Powers
Promised in the Non-Proliferation Treaty?" by George
Bunn and Roland M. Timerbaev (PDF)
Referenced by the article, but absent from this PDF
version, are appendices setting out the text of the NPT
and its parties.
Click here to read the
NPT text provided by the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) (PDF)
and
click here to read a
current list of NPT parties (broken up across multiple
web pages) provided by the UN Office for Disarmament
Affairs.]
[Please note that
the views expressed in these articles represent the
views of the individual authors and that the World
Security Institute does not take institutional positions
as a matter of policy.
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purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal
advice. Use of this site does not create an
attorney-client relationship.]
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