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#15 - RW 275
RIA Novosti
November 24, 2003
WHAT IS NON-PROLIFERATION REGIME CONTINGENT ON?
MOSCOW, September 23, 2003 (RIA Novosti political analyst Marianna Belenkaya)
The second Moscow Conference on the Non-proliferation of Weapons of Mass
Destruction (WMD) took place on September 19-20. The conference was organised by
two non-government organisations, the Moscow Carnegie Centre and PIR-Centre for
Political Studies, and involved some 300 leading experts on non-proliferation
and arms control from 36 countries of the world.
The non-proliferation regime has been subjected to increasing criticism
lately, Andrew Cuchins, Director of the Carnegie Moscow Centre, said in his
opening remarks. Meetings like this are, therefore, a perfect opportunity for
representatives of the global community to exchange ideas and to try to find new
solutions to the problems facing humanity.
The two-day conference discussed such problems as the terrorist threat and
the possible use of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons by terrorists, the
arms race and co-operation in outer space. Issues related to the future of the
Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) topped the conference
agenda.
The next NPT review conference is due to take place in 2005. The wisdom of
the NPT's further implementation has been questioned lately, above all, in the
wake of North Korea's withdrawal from the Treaty. Moreover, Iran is still
refusing to sign safeguard agreements designed to make the NPT-stipulated
monitoring arrangements more effective.
The fact that India, Pakistan and Israel, de-facto nuclear powers, have not
signed the Treaty causes serious concern among members of the global community.
It should be recalled that the three countries can only join the NPT after
destroying their nuclear arsenals. There are five "legitimate" nuclear
powers as stipulated in the NPT - the USA, Russia, Great Britain, France and
China - Dr Mohammed Ibrahim Shaker, Chairman of the Egyptian Council for Foreign
Affairs, said in his speech to the Moscow conference. This provision of the
Treaty must not be amended for India, Pakistan and Israel, as this may set a
precedent for other countries. India and Pakistan do not seem to have any
intention of scrapping their nuclear weapons, while Israel has not even admitted
its nuclear status.
The conferees suggested establishing nuclear-free zones on the basis of
regional treaties, both in South Asia and the Middle East, as a possible
solution to the problem. However, this calls for a comprehensive settlement to
all the problems facing this or that region without focusing solely on the
non-proliferation problem.
Dr Shaker recalled that the project to set up nuclear free zones in the
Middle East had been drawn up a long time ago. However, Iran's and Israel's
involvement in the project is crucial for its implementation. Until peace has
been brought to the Middle East, Arab countries will hardly sit down at the
negotiating table with Iran and Israel, added Dr Shaker.
Yet, representatives of Iran, Egypt and Israel did meet at the negotiating
table in Moscow, although they failed to reach any consensus whatsoever.
When addressing a plenary meeting devoted to WMD in the Middle East, Ali
Soltani, Deputy Director General for Political and International Affairs at the
Iranian Foreign Ministry, assured delegates that Iran's nuclear programme was
being developed for purely peaceful purposes, and the country did not plan to
pull out of the NPT. He also accused Israel of building up its nuclear
potential, thereby leading to an imbalance of forces in the region.
Yair Evron, Ph.D, a professor at Tel Aviv University, for his part, said
Israel had never resorted to its nuclear arsenal as a means of political
pressure. Even in most dramatic periods of history, like the war in 1973,
Israel's top brass did not even hint that the country had nuclear weapons,
something that could have changed the balance of forces in the region. Moreover,
the US will not allow Israel to recklessly use nuclear arms or even refer to
them, according to the professor.
The fact that Israel possesses nuclear weapons has no influence whatsoever on
regional developments and on the Arab-Israeli settlement effort, added Dr Evron.
Unlike Israel, Iran is seeking to build up its nuclear arsenals, according to
the professor. He said it is not ruled out that Iran may use WMD as a tool of
political pressure. If Iran is successful in developing nuclear weapons, other
Arab countries, Saudi Arabia for example, will try to do the same, triggering an
arms race in the region, said the Israeli professor.
When Dr Fawzi Hammad, the former chief of Egypt's Atomic Energy Authority,
addressed the plenary meeting, he said that an arms race could not be allowed to
happen. The international community understands Israel's security concerns only
too well, he said. However, it is many of Israeli actions that prompt Iran, and
previously Iraq, to seek possession of nuclear weapons, noted Dr Hammad.
Dr Hammad called on the Middle Eastern countries to break the vicious circle
of armed conflicts, which are so destructive to the regional economies and which
foster the spread of terrorism.
Dr Hammad set out the principles of establishing a WMD-free zone in the
Middle East. Egypt and Iran came up with the idea to create a zone at the UN
General Assembly in 1974, while a treaty establishing a WMD-free zone in North
Africa was signed in 1996, he recalled. Dr Fawzi Hammad motioned that the Arms
Control and Regional Security Working Group, which was set up at the Middle East
Peace Conference in Madrid in 1991, should resume operation. However, Dr Hammad
and his colleagues then acknowledged that that was impossible until peace
guarantees had been ensured in the region.
The international community cannot thus far break the vicious circle. Trying
to ensure national security, countries seek to possess weapons of mass
destruction. On the other hand, peace and security are unachievable until all
countries stop seeking or eliminate nuclear weapons. This is the case with the
Middle East, the Korean peninsula and South Asia.
Yet, the global community's non-proliferation efforts are not completely
ineffective. If not for the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, far more countries
would have deployed nuclear weapons by now, stated the participants in the
Moscow conference.
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