Interviews. Illuminating Global Interests: The UN and Arms Control

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Interviews. Illuminating Global Interests: The UN and Arms Control"

Transcription

1 Interviews In January 1998, Jayantha Dhanapala was appointed United Nations undersecretary-general for disarmament affairs. A career diplomat with extensive arms control experience, Dhanapala is perhaps best known for his skillful handling of the 1995 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) review and extension conference, at which he was able to secure unanimous support for indefinite extension of the treaty. Dhanapala joined the Sri Lankan foreign service in 1965 after spending several years in the private sector. He held diplomatic posts in London, Beijing, Washington and New Delhi until 1984, when he was appointed ambassador and permanent representative of Sri Lanka to the United Nations. In 1987 Javier Perez de Cuellar named him director of the Geneva-based United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research (UNIDIR). Dhanapala returned to Sri Lanka in 1992, where he served as additional foreign secretary and then as ambassador to the United States. When he retired from the foreign service in 1997, Dhanapala joined the Center for Non-Proliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute of International Studies as diplomat-in-residence, a post he held until his current appointment. He attended the University of Peradeniya in Sri Lanka and received a master's degree in international studies from American University in Washington, D.C. On September 28, Arms Control Today editor J. Peter Scoblic met with Dhanapala at UN headquarters in New York to discuss the United Nations' involvement in a wide range of arms control issues, including the future of the Conference on Disarmament, the prospects for the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, the disarming of Iraq and the regulation of the conventional arms trade. The following is an edited version of their conversation. Readers should note that this interview was conducted before both the October 6 8 Vienna conference on the CTBT's entry into force and the U.S. Senate's October 13 rejection of the test ban. However, following the Senate vote, Dhanapala submitted a brief statement to Arms Control Today (see Statement). ACT: How broad is the scope of current UN arms control activities? Dhanapala: The United Nations has been involved in disarmament from its very inception. The first General Assembly resolution adopted by the UN was on disarmament, and since 1945 the UN has covered the entire gamut of disarmament issues weapons of mass destruction, conventional arms, confidence-building measures, regional disarmament. In doing so, it has attempted to develop a consensus among its membership so that there could be commonly agreed goals and action toward the achievement of those goals. The three special sessions of the General Assembly that have been convened have been able to achieve this consensus, and following the first special session on disarmament in 1978, we have developed a machinery for the UN to work on disarmament that is divided basically into two arms: the deliberative machinery, which consists of the First Committee of the General Assembly and the Disarmament Commission; and the negotiating machinery, which consists of the Conference on Disarmament [CD], which has recently been expanded to 66 members. In addition, there is the Department of Disarmament Affairs, recently re-established as part of Kofi Annan's reforms; the Advisory Board on Disarmament Matters, a group of eminent persons in the field of disarmament that advises the secretary-general; and the UN Institute for Disarmament Page 1 of 9

2 Research. All these elements in the UN system contribute toward not only advising the secretarygeneral himself on disarmament issues, but also providing assistance to member states on disarmament issues in terms of information and objective data. We also work in the area of outreach activities with the general public through our regional centers in Katmandu, in Lima, and in Lome, as well as through our headquarters here in New York. We organize conferences; we have public lectures, seminars and symposia; and we produce and disseminate a large number of publications. All this is part of our advocacy of disarmament. We are a norm-based organization, and therefore the propagation of those norms to the general public and to member states is part of our mission. ACT: The Conference on Disarmament is one of the UN's major arms control institutions, but for the past three years there have been no substantive negotiations, and for two of those years members have not even been able to agree on a working program. Do you think there is a future for the CD? Dhanapala: I share the concern of the international community over the fact that for three years the Conference on Disarmament has not adopted a program of work nor made any meaningful progress in negotiating disarmament agreements after it negotiated the Chemical Weapons Convention and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty [CTBT]. But we must, at the same time, recall that during the Cold War, there were many years many more than three years when the CD was inactive and unable to make any progress. At that time, I did not hear the same clamor for the abolition of the CD or, as the Tokyo Forum Report calls for, the suspension of the CD. I think those are very extreme and drastic views. I believe that when there is a forum that has been established for the discussion of multilateral issues and disarmament, we should preserve that forum as far as possible. And we should try to examine why the CD has been allowed to be inactive in these three years. I believe it is a symptom of the international situation, that the deep disagreements among the great powers, the permanent five members of the Security Council [P-5], intensified in It is no secret that the bilateral nuclear talks between Russia and the United States have made no progress since 1995 we have had agreements, but we have not had treaties signed. START II remains to be ratified, and the CTBT is still unratified by the U.S. There are clearly problems, and in such a situation, the fact that the CD has not been able to make any progress is not a surprise really. I believe that the key to the CD beginning to work successfully lies in the general improvement of the international situation. ACT: On a more specific level, would it be desirable, or even possible, to amend the consensus rule and move to a different procedure for agreeing? Dhanapala: That would be difficult to achieve at this point in time. Disarmament touches on the security of sovereign nation-states, and it would be extremely difficult to have disarmament treaties with a few countries being outvoted. It certainly does not augur well for international peace and security if you isolate a minority in a general majority vote in favor of specific treaties. I think the objective should be to try to be as inclusive as possible, and the original purpose of the consensus rule was that it would bring a convergence of views of all states-parties. Unfortunately, the actual operation of the consensus rule has worked differently. The views on the question of consensus have been very subjective. If countries are in the majority, they would be in favor of abolishing the consensus rule. If you are in a minority, you would be very wary of making such a recommendation. So, I believe that we must still move toward consensus, and decisions that have been arrived at through consensus are more likely to ensure the universality of global treaties on disarmament, and they will also be more likely to ensure their durability and that is an important factor. I would therefore advocate caution in rushing to abolish the consensus rule because it might lead to a steamroller majority, which would be counterproductive and which could lead to polarization and a very fractious minority acting against the interests of international peace and security out of frustration that the system is iniquitous or not sufficiently cognizant of its security interests. What we have to do internationally and the UN provides a forum for doing this is to try to draw all these different national interests into a global common security interest. Page 2 of 9

3 ACT: What are the prospects for the CTBT's entry into force and what do you anticipate in the upcoming conference in Vienna? Dhanapala: First we must recognize that the CTBT is unique in having an entry-into-force provision in Article XIV that is unprecedented. Article XIV requires 44 specified countries to sign and ratify the treaty before its entry into force. That requirement is not in any other disarmament treaty. So there is an built-in handicap against the entry into force of the CTBT. Having said that, I think it is most unfortunate that we have today only 154 signatories of the treaty and 45 that have ratified it [as of September 28]. And of those 45, many of the countries specified in Annex 2 of the CTBT are missing, including three of the nuclear-weapon states: the United States, Russia and China. I will be present at the October 6-8 meeting of the states-parties to the CTBT to which the secretarygeneral as depositary has invited signatory states as well as non-signatory states at the request of the ratifying states. I can see that the meeting will, after three days, end with a declaration, which cannot do very much more than exhort the international community to enable the treaty to enter into force as soon as possible. [See Final Declaration.] We have very important countries, including three nuclear-weapon states, who have not ratified the treaty, and I do not think that their non-ratification is a function of the international situation that we were talking about, which has led to the general pause in the whole progress of disarmament. I think in certain cases it is domestic issues. In the case of India and Pakistan, we have of course seen the tests in South Asia, but we also have promises of both countries to sign the treaty, and I'm confident that those promises will be fulfilled sooner rather than later. I think, therefore, in the short term, the prospects for entry into force of the CTBT are not very rosy, but I remain optimistic that if the ratification of the CTBT takes place in the United States, this itself would be a catalyst for others to follow suit. ACT: If the CTBT does not enter into force in the short term, what effect will that have on the fiveyear review conference of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty [NPT] to be held next April? Dhanapala: Well, clearly it will have a negative effect on the 2000 NPT review conference, but it is more than the non-entry into force of the CTBT that acts as a unfortunate preparation for this important conference, which will be the first review conference since the treaty was indefinitely extended. I believe the fact that there has been inadequate progress in the implementation of Article VI of the NPT, in which the P-5 agreed to work toward disarmament, will be cited by many nonnuclear-weapon states as indeed they already have in the preparatory process as being an indication that the promises of the 1995 conference have not been completely fulfilled. The Statement of Principles and Objectives is one aspect of it. The resolution on the Middle East is another aspect. And so there are a number of factors in addition to the non-ratification of the CTBT that will place a great strain on the NPT regime unless something dramatic happens between now and April. ACT: What besides the entry into force of the CTBT would serve that purpose? Dhanapala: I think a demonstration of the political will of the nuclear-weapon states toward making deep cuts in their nuclear arsenals either through a statement or through actual negotiations would greatly help to allay the concerns of the non-nuclear-weapon states. As you know, there is an ongoing review of NATO's nuclear doctrine as a result of the efforts of Germany and Canada. There is also the public opinion pressure built up through the New Agenda Coalition of seven countries who had a resolution in the UN General Assembly last year and who will repeat that resolution in the General Assembly this year. There is also the Tokyo Forum Report, a report of a group of international nuclear disarmament experts that has had a considerable international impact and that will, no doubt, also be the subject of discussion when the First Committee of the General Assembly meets. So all these developments could help to avert what I see as a very serious debate in April 2000 on the nuclear non-proliferation regime, of which the NPT is the crucial element. ACT: What is the future of UNSCOM? Page 3 of 9

4 Dhanapala: UNSCOM in its present form is clearly not going to survive for very much longer, and I would think that the draft resolutions that are now being circulated in the Security Council, which alone is empowered to act on this matter, make it very clear that a successor organization to UNSCOM is already being contemplated. Precisely what form it will take and what the details of that organization will be are not clear, but at its center it will have the implementation of the Security Council resolutions, beginning with Resolution 687 to disarm Iraq of its weapons of mass destruction and missiles with a range over 150 kilometers. The panels that were organized at the beginning of this year under the chairmanship of Ambassador [Celso] Amorim of Brazil, who was president of the Security Council earlier this year, did produce a great deal of very useful material. I was a member of the disarmament panel, but there were also two other panels on the humanitarian aspects and on the question of prisoners of war and Kuwaiti property. In the disarmament panel alone there were a number of recommendations that were agreed upon, but the political decision on what should be done had to be taken by the Security Council, and we know that for several months the Security Council has been locked in disagreement on this issue. Last week, P-5 foreign ministers held discussions and decided that the permanent representatives here will continue with the negotiations on this issue. So clearly UNSCOM is no longer operational; it is unable to go back to Iraq to fulfill the Security Council resolutions. That is also the case with the International Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA], which helped UNSCOM in the implementation of the Security Council resolutions. But at the same time, it must not be forgotten that both organizations destroyed more weapons of mass destruction in Iraq than were destroyed during the Gulf War. In the process, they also acquired a great deal of expertise on the subject of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction program. The Amorim panel felt that a reinforced monitoring and verification work plan could take into account the remaining disarmament obligations of Iraq. The ongoing monitoring and verification plan already envisaged in Resolution 715 is a basis on which one could build a successor organization to UNSCOM that, together with IAEA, would be able to fulfill those obligations. So it is now a matter for the Security Council to take up this issue. ACT: Given the recent developments in U.S. negotiations with North Korea, what are the prospects for resolving the North Korean nuclear and missile issue? Dhanapala: Well, on the nuclear issue, I think, as the director-general of the IAEA said in Vienna yesterday, the DPRK [Democratic People's Republic of Korea] must come into full compliance with its safeguards agreement with the IAEA and restore its good status in the NPT regime. I remain hopeful that the agreements that were worked out under the Agreed Framework will be fulfilled, and I think it's also a beneficial development that the United States has reached an agreement with the DPRK on the subject of its missile program and that, for the moment, the DPRK has agreed to desist from any missile tests. We are aware that in conducting missile tests, the DPRK was not violating any norms unlike in the case of the nuclear issue because there are in fact no internationally negotiated agreements on missile issues, which is perhaps a lacuna in disarmament agreements that should be addressed by the international community. But the tests did create a great deal of tension, particularly in Northeast Asia, and the fact that the tests will be suspended is certainly something to be welcomed. It is difficult to predict what will happen hereafter, but I think the way in which diplomacy can be used to check proliferation has been demonstrated by these recent bilateral discussions between the United States and the DPRK. The UN can only applaud political solutions to problems instead of the use of force, and so we also welcome this bilateral agreement for that reason and hope very much that it will endure. ACT: It has been over a year since India and Pakistan conducted their nuclear tests. What has been the damage to the non-proliferation regime? Dhanapala: Again, as the secretary-general stated at the time of the South Asian nuclear tests in May 1998, neither India nor Pakistan violated a treaty or any convention when they tested because Page 4 of 9

5 they did not belong either to the NPT or to the CTBT. But there is no question that both countries caused a very serious setback to the momentum that had been generated, particularly after the Cold War, toward nuclear disarmament and nuclear non-proliferation. With 187 countries today being members of the NPT, the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons is very much customary international law, so a norm has been practically established. In addition to that, when we all of us, including India and Pakistan are advocating nuclear disarmament, that cause is not advanced by two more countries crossing the threshold, whatever the security compulsions of those countries may be. So, my conclusion, therefore, is that it has been a setback, but that that setback could be mitigated to some extent by both countries joining the CTBT, and with the statements made in the fall of 1998 here in New York by the prime ministers of both countries that they will do so, we remain optimistic. But beyond the signing of the CTBT by these two countries, restraint is absolutely necessary in terms of the weaponization programs, in terms of the development and deployment of delivery systems, in terms of command and control systems. That is why the secretary-general supports the continuation of the Lahore process between these two countries. It would be a way forward for two neighboring countries that have demonstrated their nuclear capability to solve the bilateral issues between them. ACT: Is there any hope of rolling back the nuclear programs of those two countries? Dhanapala: In the short term I see no prospect of that. The elections that are ongoing in India are likely to see the BJP [Bharatiya Janata Party], the party that launched India on the nuclear road, return to power, and there is already a draft nuclear doctrine that has been published. [See ACT, July/August 1999.] It does not appear from this evidence that there is going to be rollback of India's nuclear weapons program. And it follows because the Pakistani nuclear program was a reaction to the Indian program that Pakistan's program will remain. My hope is that the solution of the political problems, together with general progress on the international nuclear disarmament front, will persuade these countries to rollback. But it has to be linked to progress in international nuclear disarmament. ACT: So you see the draft doctrine that India issued as a serious document as opposed to a political document released to influence the elections? Dhanapala: Well, the timing of the publication may have been related to the election campaign to indicate the incumbent government's seriousness in following through with its nuclear plans after the May 1998 tests. But I think that it also is consistent with the statements that were made in the Indian parliament, in the United Nations and in other international forums about India's plans. For example, the concept of "no first use" was always mentioned by India as being an essential element of its nuclear doctrine, and that has been reflected in the draft nuclear doctrine. It has been stated that the doctrine as published is a discussion document, and the intention is to have as widespread a discussion as possible within India and for the new government, when it is firmly in the saddle, to then decide on making the draft a permanent document. So I think there are serious elements in it that have to be considered, but the timing of its publication was probably dictated by electoral considerations. ACT: What is the UN doing in the field of conventional arms, including small arms and light weapons? Dhanapala: We have an entire branch devoted to the subject of conventional arms. While we recognize that the greatest threat to humankind remains weapons of mass destruction, and in particular nuclear weapons, the wars that have been fought since 1945 have been fought with conventional weapons and have caused an enormous number of deaths and an enormous amount of destruction. Most recently, the use of small arms and light weapons during conflicts within countries has resulted in an appalling cost in terms of civilian lives. Small arms and light weapons have thus emerged as a major item on the disarmament agenda. The UN took the lead in recognizing this issue in 1997 by commissioning a group of government experts, who issued a report with recommendations to arrest the proliferation and the accumulation of small arms and light weapons. That report was followed by another that was issued this year. There have Page 5 of 9

6 also been several resolutions in the General Assembly four last year together with the consideration of the issue at the Security Council level. Last week, the secretary-general spoke at a special session of the Security Council, presided over by the minister of foreign affairs of the Netherlands, that was devoted entirely to the subject of small arms. We also had the secretary-general designate the Department for Disarmament Affairs as the focal point in the UN system for action on small arms and light weapons, and we have established a mechanism called the Coordinating Action for Small Arms [CASA] to serve as a clearinghouse for information on the activities of the entire UN system in this area, together with forging new initiatives in a multifaceted way. The small arms issue embraces a wide variety of aspects the security aspect, the humanitarian and human rights aspect, the developmental aspect, and the environmental aspect all of which have to be addressed holistically when we look at this problem. ACT: What is the UN doing to control exports and imports of conventional weapons? Dhanapala: We have developed a number of initiatives that build on the initiatives of member states, such as those of ECOWAS [Economic Community of West African States], which has established a moratorium on the import, export and manufacture of small arms and light weapons; the OAS [Organization of American States] convention on firearms; and the Joint Action of the European Union regarding arms exports. All these are building blocks toward a growing international consensus on what should be done. Right now, we are planning an international conference on the illicit trafficking of small arms in all these aspects, which is likely to be held in 2001 in Geneva. We are also assisting member states in collecting and destroying weapons, particularly in postconflict situations. The failure to destroy surplus weapons after a conflict can pose a grave risk in terms of recurrence of that conflict, but that risk can be eliminated by collecting the weapons and by finding employment for the demobilized combatants. In addition, we have to look into the protection of civilians in conflict, where easy availability of weapons tends to increase criminality. Now this means, of course, that exporters have got to be very responsible. We recognize that small arms and light weapons are legitimately used by established governments of sovereign states in the normal defense of their security. But we are talking about surplus arms and the proliferation of small arms well beyond these legitimate security needs. The supply of such weapons has to be arrested if we are to make any impact on current conflicts and on terrorist groups, criminal gangs and drug cartels. So the conference in 2001 will be crucial. ACT: What is the role of the UN Register of Conventional Arms? Dhanapala: The Register of Conventional Arms, which was established in 1992, increases transparency in the export, import and national production of conventional arms, and as such serves as an important confidence-building measure. It embraces seven categories of conventional weapons major weapons, not small arms but, unfortunately, only 90 countries participate in this registry, approximately. I hope we can expand the number of countries in the registry and also widen its scope to include more categories. We also have a standardized instrument for the reporting of military expenditure, which again is inadequately used by member states, and we need to also universalize that. Our regional centers in Katmandu, Lima and Lome also assist in our task with the Conventional Arms Register, in organizing seminars with regard to small arms and light weapons, and in developing regional registers. ACT: What specifically can the UN do to get a handle on the illicit trafficking of weapons? Dhanapala: A number of proposals are being made. First, I think governments need to agree on measures that will allow more accurate tracing of the journey between exporter and end user through more rigorous customs cooperation. Very often there is a gray market through which some of these exports enter, and their end user is very different from the original destination of these weapons. Therefore if customs, intelligence agencies, Interpol and the entire machinery of both national governments and international organizations work together, we would be able to trace these links much better and prevent the diversion of these exports to undesirable destinations. Page 6 of 9

7 Second, some have proposed international markings that would enable tracing of firearms or guns and other small arms. There are also suggestions regarding regional registers and subregional registers of small arms. We are also looking into a study on the feasibility of restricting trade of such weapons to authorized dealers so that it would be possible to locate responsibility more clearly. I think the extent to which governments can agree on these proposals will determine the success of the 2001 meeting I mentioned. ACT: In recent months, a number of observers have noted that there has been a slowdown in arms control. Some have even referred to the "death of arms control." What is your comment on those observations and what can be done to reverse that perception? Dhanapala: Well, I'm not ready to deliver an autopsy because I don't think that there has been a death of arms control and disarmament. I think it is not surprising, as I said earlier, that given the post-cold War euphoria and the international consensus that existed then for disarmament, we had a number of disarmament agreements in quick succession, culminating in the CTBT of We have seen a change in the international situation since then, and the plateau that we are now on as far as disarmament is concerned is, in my opinion, a temporary lull. As soon as the international situation improves and the conditions are ripe for us to move forward, I believe there will once again be a progressive movement as far as disarmament is concerned. Now, the elements that will go into this new situation will have to, of course, be generated by the international community, and we cannot allow the lull to last too long because that itself would be a failure and would be self-perpetuating. Therefore, I must urge the international community to look into this. I am particularly concerned about the question of military expenditure. Global military expenditure fell very sharply after the Cold War. In 1998 it was $745 billion, according to one estimate. Projections for global military expenditure next year indicate a rise from that figure, and I fear that unless we reach disarmament agreements quickly, we are going to see once again a rise of this figure to Cold War levels. That would be a major setback to the global community because of the fundamental relationship between disarmament and development and the many other needs that have been unmet internationally many people living below the poverty line, many people without safe water and many other global problems that have to be addressed with these resources. ACT: You have mentioned the relationship between disarmament and the international situation several times. What aspect of the international situation needs to be changed so that disarmament may begin to move forward once again? Dhanapala: Well, first, I think that with the end of the Cold War and the bipolar structure of international relations that it entailed, it is no longer a situation between the Russian Federation and the United States alone. There are clearly more actors today more actors than the five permanent members of the Security Council. We have a number of important countries internationally. We are becoming increasingly a multipolar society, although we do have some countries that are clearly more powerful than others. Second, we face a great need today to strengthen the United Nations and the primacy of international law. We need to ensure that the rule of law prevails in the dealings that states have with each other and that the implementation of disarmament agreements and the forging of new disarmament norms is part and parcel of that body of international law. Finally, I think that we need to work together more cooperatively with regard to the global interest. In today's globalized society there is a greater integration of the international economy and the political systems of countries. Therefore, in the pursuit of their national interests, states must recognize that there is a fundamental correlation between national interests and global interests, whether it is the political, military, economic or trade aspects. This global perspective has to be increasingly borne in mind. ACT: Is part of the problem a sense of unease with the overwhelming relative power of the United States? Page 7 of 9

8 Dhanapala: I think inevitably after the end of the Cold War, which left the United States as the sole surviving superpower, a period of adjustment has become necessary between this overwhelmingly superior power and the rest of the world, including the United Nations. I believe there have been areas in which the United States has worked very well with the international community in achieving global norms and implementing global norms, but clearly there are areas where some elements within the United States have perceived the U.S. national interest to be at variance with the global interest. I think that the degree to which we can harmonize the U.S. national interest with the global interest will be the measure of success of U.S. leadership in the international community leadership it is called upon to assume by virtue of its superior power. ACT: What would be your vision of an expanded or refocused role for the UN in arms control and disarmament? Dhanapala: I think our primary objective at this point is to reassess the global objectives in disarmament and reforge a global consensus on what the world community must set as its targets. This can be done, in my opinion, through a fourth special session of the General Assembly, which we call SSOD IV in the shorthand that we adopt here. My hope is that the member-states of the UN can agree on having that meeting in order to address the roles of multilateral disarmament in the immediate future and agree on a program of action to achieve those goals. Without that, I think we are groping and making piecemeal arrangements, whether in the area of weapons of mass destruction or the in the area of conventional arms. It is useful to have these benchmarks, and the final document of the first special session SSOD I is already 21 years old. We have had several achievements, including the CTBT, and therefore we need to look at a fresh set of goals that should be achieved in the changed situation since the Cold War ended. And unless we do that, I think we do not have a compass for the future. SSOD IV will also help us to forge that vision, upon which the UN would very much like to see the international community agree. We must move toward an international society that places less emphasis on weaponry to solve issues that should be solved through nonviolent political means, through diplomacy. Having a common security at lower levels of arms is the vision that the UN would have. A general and complete disarmament under international control has been the motto that has been adopted from the earliest times, but it translates really into possession of the minimum level of armaments of conventional weaponry, that is, because I do think weapons of mass destruction should be abolished as we have abolished chemical and biological weapons and that the minimum level required for national security would therefore pose no security threat to other countries. The realization of these goals would enable us to achieve a more peaceful and a more prosperous world. Dhanapala Reacts to the U.S. Senate's Rejection of the CTBT The decision to join a major international security treaty is, of course, a decision that is left exclusively to individual nation-states in the exercise of their sovereignty. The secretary-general has already expressed his regret over the U.S. Senate's recent vote against the ratification of the CTBT, reaffirming the importance of a universal and internationally and effectively verifiable comprehensive nuclear test ban treaty in maintaining the nuclear non-proliferation regime and progress towards nuclear disarmament. The vote was all the more regrettable given the efforts of U.S. leaders over several decades to achieve such a treaty and the strong public support this goal continues to enjoy. The fate of the CTBT will shape significantly the future of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) a treaty whose indefinite extension in 1995 was closely tied to the conclusion of a CTBT. In April of next year, the states-parties to the NPT will assemble in New York for the treaty's next five-year review conference. I fully expect that participants will assess closely the progress made in achieving this comprehensive ban on all nuclear tests, which had been promised in The good news is that the fundamental norm against testing remains strong worldwide and that no nuclear-weapon state has indicated any intention of ending its current moratorium on conducting Page 8 of 9

9 such tests. The challenge ahead is to persist in a collective international effort to make this norm binding under international law and to reinforce this basic obligation with a highly reliable system of verification that is being established in terms of the treaty's process. The sooner the CTBT enters into force, the sooner both of these goals will be achieved. Jayantha Dhanapala Posted: September 1, 1999 Source URL: Page 9 of 9

Preparatory Committee for the 2020 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) - EU Statement

Preparatory Committee for the 2020 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) - EU Statement 23/04/2018-00:00 STATEMENTS ON BEHALF OF THE EU Preparatory Committee for the 2020 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) - EU Statement Preparatory

More information

Ontario Model United Nations II. Disarmament and Security Council

Ontario Model United Nations II. Disarmament and Security Council Ontario Model United Nations II Disarmament and Security Council Committee Summary The First Committee of the United Nations General Assembly deals with disarmament, global challenges and threats to peace

More information

United Nations General Assembly 60 th Session First Committee. New York, 3 October 3 November 2005

United Nations General Assembly 60 th Session First Committee. New York, 3 October 3 November 2005 United Nations General Assembly 60 th Session First Committee New York, 3 October 3 November 2005 Statement by Ambassador John Freeman United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, on behalf of

More information

NPT/CONF.2005/PC.II/25

NPT/CONF.2005/PC.II/25 Preparatory Committee for the 2005 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 1 May 2003 ORIGINAL: English Second Session Geneva, 28 April 9 May 2003 1.

More information

Adopted by the Security Council at its 6141st meeting, on 12 June 2009

Adopted by the Security Council at its 6141st meeting, on 12 June 2009 United Nations S/RES/1874 (2009) Security Council Distr.: General 12 June 2009 Resolution 1874 (2009) Adopted by the Security Council at its 6141st meeting, on 12 June 2009 The Security Council, Recalling

More information

The Non- Aligned Movement (NAM) Database

The Non- Aligned Movement (NAM) Database The Non- Aligned Movement (NAM) Database 64 th United Nation First Committee Submitted by the NAM Thematic Summaries Statement by Indonesia on Behalf of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) at the General Debate

More information

Statement by. H.E. Muhammad Anshor. Deputy Permanent Representative. Permanent Mission of the Republic of Indonesia. to the United Nations

Statement by. H.E. Muhammad Anshor. Deputy Permanent Representative. Permanent Mission of the Republic of Indonesia. to the United Nations (Please check against delivery) Statement by H.E. Muhammad Anshor Deputy Permanent Representative Permanent Mission of the Republic of Indonesia to the United Nations at the General Debate of the First

More information

Draft Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects

Draft Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects United Nations General Assembly A/CONF.192/PC/L.4/Rev.1 Distr.: General 12 February 2001 Original: English Preparatory Committee for the United Nations Conference on the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and

More information

NPT/CONF.2015/PC.III/WP.29

NPT/CONF.2015/PC.III/WP.29 Preparatory Committee for the 2015 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons NPT/CONF.2015/PC.III/WP.29 23 April 2014 Original: English Third session New

More information

Summary of Policy Recommendations

Summary of Policy Recommendations Summary of Policy Recommendations 192 Summary of Policy Recommendations Chapter Three: Strengthening Enforcement New International Law E Develop model national laws to criminalize, deter, and detect nuclear

More information

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.33

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.33 Preparatory Committee for the 2020 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.33 19 April 2018 Original: English Second session Geneva,

More information

Remarks on the Role of the United Nations in Advancing Global Disarmament Objectives

Remarks on the Role of the United Nations in Advancing Global Disarmament Objectives Remarks on the Role of the United Nations in Advancing Global Disarmament Objectives By Angela Kane High Representative for Disarmament Affairs Briefing to officers of the Saudi Command and Staff College

More information

Brazil, Egypt, Ireland, Mexico, New Zealand and South Africa: draft resolution

Brazil, Egypt, Ireland, Mexico, New Zealand and South Africa: draft resolution United Nations A/C.1/68/L.18 General Assembly Distr.: Limited 17 October 2013 Original: English Sixty-eighth session First Committee Agenda item 99 (l) General and complete disarmament: towards a nuclear-weapon-free

More information

ON BEHALF OF THE AFRICAN GROUP AMBASSADOR SAMSON S. [TEGBOJE DEPUTY PERMANENT REPRESENTATIVE PERN[ANENT MISSION OF NIGERIA TO THE UNITED NATIONS

ON BEHALF OF THE AFRICAN GROUP AMBASSADOR SAMSON S. [TEGBOJE DEPUTY PERMANENT REPRESENTATIVE PERN[ANENT MISSION OF NIGERIA TO THE UNITED NATIONS PERMANENT MISSION OF NIGERIA TO THE UNITED NATIONS 828 SECOND AVENUE ÿ NEW YORK, N.Y. 10017 o TEL. (2!2) 953-9130 o FAX (212) 697-1970 STATEMENT ON BEHALF OF THE AFRICAN GROUP BY AMBASSADOR SAMSON S. [TEGBOJE

More information

and note with satisfaction that stocks of nuclear weapons are now at far lower levels than at anytime in the past half-century. Our individual contrib

and note with satisfaction that stocks of nuclear weapons are now at far lower levels than at anytime in the past half-century. Our individual contrib STATEMENT BY THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA, FRANCE,THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION, THE UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND, AND THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA TO THE 2010 NON-PROLIFERATION TREATY

More information

Implementing the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Non-proliferation and regional security

Implementing the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Non-proliferation and regional security 2015 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 29 April 2015 Original: English New York, 27 April-22 May 2015 Implementing the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation

More information

DECISIONS AND RESOLUTION ADOPTED AT THE 1995 NPT REVIEW AND EXTENSION CONFERENCE

DECISIONS AND RESOLUTION ADOPTED AT THE 1995 NPT REVIEW AND EXTENSION CONFERENCE DECISIONS AND RESOLUTION ADOPTED AT THE 1995 NPT REVIEW AND EXTENSION CONFERENCE Decision 1 STRENGTHENING THE REVIEW PROCESS FOR THE TREATY 1. The Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation

More information

'I ~ ... 'I ALGERIA )-J~ Statement by H. E. Mr. Mohammed BESSEDlK Ambassador, Deputy Permanent Representative

'I ~ ... 'I ALGERIA )-J~ Statement by H. E. Mr. Mohammed BESSEDlK Ambassador, Deputy Permanent Representative ALGERIA 'I ~... 'I )-J~ Permanent Mission of Algeria to the United Nations New York ~\.1l1.>-i'j-~.II ~ ;~1 r"'il cj,u.!i.).jj~ Check against delivery Statement by H. E. Mr. Mohammed BESSEDlK Ambassador,

More information

The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Database

The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Database The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Database Summary of the 16 th Ministerial Conference Bali, Indonesia (2011) General Views on Disarmament and NAM Involvement DISARMAMENT (Declaration, Page 2) [The Ministers

More information

STATEMENT. H.E. Ms. Laila Freivalds Minister for Foreign Affairs of Sweden

STATEMENT. H.E. Ms. Laila Freivalds Minister for Foreign Affairs of Sweden STATEMENT by H.E. Ms. Laila Freivalds Minister for Foreign Affairs of Sweden 2005 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons United Nations New York 3 May

More information

Adopted by the Security Council at its 6191st meeting, on 24 September 2009

Adopted by the Security Council at its 6191st meeting, on 24 September 2009 United Nations S/RES/1887 (2009) Security Council Distr.: General 24 September 2009 (E) *0952374* Resolution 1887 (2009) Adopted by the Security Council at its 6191st meeting, on 24 September 2009 The

More information

High-level action needed to promote CTBT s entry into force. Interview with Carl Bildt, the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Sweden

High-level action needed to promote CTBT s entry into force. Interview with Carl Bildt, the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Sweden In the spotlight High-level action needed to promote CTBT s entry into force Interview with Carl Bildt, the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Sweden Q: Sweden has always been one of the strongest proponents

More information

Permanent Mission of Japan to the United Nations

Permanent Mission of Japan to the United Nations Permanent Mission of Japan to the United Nations 866 United Nations Plaza, New York, N.Y. 10017 Phone: (212) 223-4300. www.un.int/japan/ (Please check against delivery) STATEMENT BY TOSHIO SANO AMBASSADOR

More information

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly. [on the report of the First Committee (A/58/462)]

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly. [on the report of the First Committee (A/58/462)] United Nations A/RES/58/51 General Assembly Distr.: General 17 December 2003 Fifty-eighth session Agenda item 73 (d) Resolution adopted by the General Assembly [on the report of the First Committee (A/58/462)]

More information

Small Arms. Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects

Small Arms. Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects Small Arms REVIEW CONFERENCE 2006 United Nations A/CONF.192/15 Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects I. Preamble 1. We,

More information

on behalf of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) New York, April 2015

on behalf of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) New York, April 2015 Statement by Ambassador Desra Percaya, Permanent Representative of the Republic of Indonesia to the United Nations on behalf of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) at the 2015 Substantive Session of the United

More information

Second Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Science Diplomacy Symposium. High Level Session. [Keynote Speech]

Second Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Science Diplomacy Symposium. High Level Session. [Keynote Speech] Second Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Science Diplomacy Symposium High Level Session [Keynote Speech] Ms Izumi Nakamitsu High Representative for Disarmament Affairs United Nations Vienna 25 May

More information

Nuclear doctrine. Civil Society Presentations 2010 NPT Review Conference NAC

Nuclear doctrine. Civil Society Presentations 2010 NPT Review Conference NAC Statement on behalf of the Group of non-governmental experts from countries belonging to the New Agenda Coalition delivered by Ms. Amelia Broodryk (South Africa), Institute for Security Studies Drafted

More information

PHILIPPINES STATEMENT

PHILIPPINES STATEMENT Please check against delivery PHILIPPINES STATEMENT Ambassador IRENE SUSAN NATIVIDAD Deputy Permanent Representative Permanent Mission of the Philippines to the United Nations at the General Debate of

More information

Vienna, 2-12 May Check against delivery - PERMANENT MISSION OF PORTUGAL VIENNA

Vienna, 2-12 May Check against delivery - PERMANENT MISSION OF PORTUGAL VIENNA PERMANENT MISSION OF PORTUGAL VIENNA Statement by the Head of Delegation of Portugal to the First Preparatory Committee for the 2020 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation

More information

Letter dated 5 October 2010 from the Secretary-General addressed to the President of the General Assembly

Letter dated 5 October 2010 from the Secretary-General addressed to the President of the General Assembly United Nations A/65/496 General Assembly Distr.: General 14 October 2010 Original: English Sixty-fifth session Agenda item 162 Follow-up to the high-level meeting held on 24 September 2010: revitalizing

More information

Group of Eight Declaration on Nonproliferation and Disarmament for 2012

Group of Eight Declaration on Nonproliferation and Disarmament for 2012 Group of Eight Declaration on Nonproliferation and Disarmament for 2012 This Declaration is issued in conjunction with the Camp David Summit. 1. Preventing the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction

More information

THE 2017 SUBSTANTIVE SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS DISARMAMENT COMMISSION

THE 2017 SUBSTANTIVE SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS DISARMAMENT COMMISSION PERMANENT MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS 8 EAST 65th STREET - NEW YORK, NY 10065 - (212) 879-8600 7" Please check aÿainst delivery STATEMENT BY AMBASSADOR DR. MALEEHA LODHI PERMANENT REPRESENTATIVE OF PAKISTAN

More information

A GOOD FRAMEWORK FOR A GOOD FUTURE by Jonathan Granoff, President of the Global Security Institute

A GOOD FRAMEWORK FOR A GOOD FUTURE by Jonathan Granoff, President of the Global Security Institute A GOOD FRAMEWORK FOR A GOOD FUTURE by Jonathan Granoff, President of the Global Security Institute I buy gasoline for my car from a Russian concession in my neighborhood in the suburbs of Philadelphia;

More information

The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Database

The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Database Summary of the 8 th Heads of State Summit, Harare, Zimbabwe (1986) General Views on Disarmament and NAM Involvement (Final Document, Political Declaration, Page 21, Para 25) The Heads of State or Government

More information

Dr. Sameh Aboul-Enein Minister Plenipotentiary and Deputy Head of Mission of Egypt to the UK

Dr. Sameh Aboul-Enein Minister Plenipotentiary and Deputy Head of Mission of Egypt to the UK Dr. Sameh Aboul-Enein Minister Plenipotentiary and Deputy Head of Mission of Egypt to the UK Centre for Energy and Security Studies 2010 Moscow Nonproliferation Conference March 4 th - 6 th, 2010 Please

More information

DISARMAMENT. Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Disarmament Database

DISARMAMENT. Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Disarmament Database Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Disarmament Database Summary of the 10 th Heads of State Summit, Jakarta, 1992 General Views on Disarmament and NAM Involvement DISARMAMENT (The Jakarta Message, Page 7, Para

More information

The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Database

The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Database The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Database Summary of the 15 th Heads of State Summit, Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt (2009) General Views on Disarmament and NAM Involvement DISARMAMENT (Summit Declaration, Page

More information

Keynote Address. Jayantha Dhanapala, Under-Secretary-General UN Department of Disarmament Affairs

Keynote Address. Jayantha Dhanapala, Under-Secretary-General UN Department of Disarmament Affairs Keynote Address By Jayantha Dhanapala, Under-Secretary-General UN Department of Disarmament Affairs Regional Preparatory Meeting for the 2001 United Nations Conference on the Illicit Trade in Small Arms

More information

Nuclear Disarmament: The Road Ahead International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms (IALANA) April 2015

Nuclear Disarmament: The Road Ahead International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms (IALANA) April 2015 Nuclear Disarmament: The Road Ahead International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms (IALANA) April 2015 Introduction Forty five working papers by individual governments and governmental coalitions

More information

Statement. by Jayantha Dhanapala Under-Secretary-General for Disarmament Affairs. United Nations Disarmament Commission

Statement. by Jayantha Dhanapala Under-Secretary-General for Disarmament Affairs. United Nations Disarmament Commission Statement by Jayantha Dhanapala Under-Secretary-General for Disarmament Affairs United Nations Disarmament Commission United Nations Headquarters, New York 31 March 2003 Mr. Chairman, distinguished delegates,

More information

2010 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non- Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 3 May 2010

2010 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non- Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 3 May 2010 AUSTRALIAN MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS E-maii austraiia@un.int 150 East 42nd Street, New York NY 10017-5612 Ph 212-351 6600 Fax 212-351 6610 www.australiaun.org 2010 Review Conference of the Parties

More information

A/55/189. General Assembly. United Nations. Small arms. Contents. Report of the Secretary-General**

A/55/189. General Assembly. United Nations. Small arms. Contents. Report of the Secretary-General** United Nations General Assembly A/55/189 Distr.: General 28 July 2000 English Original: Arabic/Chinese/English/ Spanish Fifty-fifth session Item 74 (w) of the provisional agenda* General and complete disarmament

More information

Iran Resolution Elements

Iran Resolution Elements Iran Resolution Elements PP 1: Recalling the Statement of its President, S/PRST/2006/15, its resolutions 1696 (2006), 1737 (2006), 1747 (2007), 1803 (2008), 1835 (2008), and 1887 (2009) and reaffirming

More information

The Final United Nations Conference on the Arms Trade Treaty, Adopts the text of the Arms Trade Treaty which is annexed to the present decision.

The Final United Nations Conference on the Arms Trade Treaty, Adopts the text of the Arms Trade Treaty which is annexed to the present decision. United Nations A/CONF.217/2013/L.3 General Assembly Distr.: Limited 27 March 2013 Original: English Final United Nations Conference on the Arms Trade Treaty New York, 18-28 March 2013 Draft decision Submitted

More information

Luncheon Address. Toward a Nuclear-Weapon-Free World: A United Nations Perspective

Luncheon Address. Toward a Nuclear-Weapon-Free World: A United Nations Perspective Luncheon Address Toward a Nuclear-Weapon-Free World: A United Nations Perspective By Angela Kane High Representative for Disarmament Affairs Parliamentary Conference and PNND Annual Assembly Climbing the

More information

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.30

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.30 Preparatory Committee for the 2020 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.30 18 April 2018 Original: English Second session Geneva,

More information

in regular dialogue on a range of issues covering bilateral, regional and global political and economic issues.

in regular dialogue on a range of issues covering bilateral, regional and global political and economic issues. Arms Control Today An Interview With Indian Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh On August 17, 1999, India's National Security Advisory Board released its draft report on Indian nuclear doctrine. Though the

More information

United States Statement to the NPT Review Conference, 3 May 2010 US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton

United States Statement to the NPT Review Conference, 3 May 2010 US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton United States Statement to the NPT Review Conference, 3 May 2010 US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton SECRETARY CLINTON: I want to thank the Secretary General, Director General Amano, Ambassador Cabactulan,

More information

PERMANENT MISSION OF THAILAND TO THE UNITED NATIONS 351 EAST 52 nd STREET NEW YORK, NY TEL (212) FAX (212)

PERMANENT MISSION OF THAILAND TO THE UNITED NATIONS 351 EAST 52 nd STREET NEW YORK, NY TEL (212) FAX (212) First Committee 4th Meeting PERMANENT MISSION OF THAILAND TO THE UNITED NATIONS 351 EAST 52 nd STREET NEW YORK, NY 10022 TEL (212) 754-2230 FAX (212) 688-3029 Statement by H.E. Mr. Nontawat Chandrtri Ambassador

More information

Address by Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov at Plenary Meeting of Conference on Disarmament, Geneva, March 7, 2009

Address by Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov at Plenary Meeting of Conference on Disarmament, Geneva, March 7, 2009 Page 1 of 6 MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION INFORMATION AND PRESS DEPARTMENT 32/34 Smolenskaya-Sennaya pl., 119200, Moscow G-200; tel.: (499) 244 4119, fax: (499) 244 4112 e-mail:

More information

"Status and prospects of arms control, disarmament and non-proliferation from a German perspective"

Status and prospects of arms control, disarmament and non-proliferation from a German perspective "Status and prospects of arms control, disarmament and non-proliferation from a German perspective" Keynote address by Gernot Erler, Minister of State at the Federal Foreign Office, at the Conference on

More information

A/CONF.192/2006/RC/WP.4

A/CONF.192/2006/RC/WP.4 29 June 2006 Original: English United Nations Conference to Review Progress Made in the Implementation of the Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light

More information

THE NPT, NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT, AND TERRORISM

THE NPT, NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT, AND TERRORISM THE NPT, NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT, AND TERRORISM by Jayantha Dhanapala Under-Secretary-General for Disarmament Affairs United Nations Conference on Nuclear Dangers and the State of Security Treaties Hosted

More information

EXISTING AND EMERGING LEGAL APPROACHES TO NUCLEAR COUNTER-PROLIFERATION IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY*

EXISTING AND EMERGING LEGAL APPROACHES TO NUCLEAR COUNTER-PROLIFERATION IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY* \\server05\productn\n\nyi\39-4\nyi403.txt unknown Seq: 1 26-SEP-07 13:38 EXISTING AND EMERGING LEGAL APPROACHES TO NUCLEAR COUNTER-PROLIFERATION IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY* NOBUYASU ABE** There are three

More information

ARMS TRADE TREATY Procedural History

ARMS TRADE TREATY Procedural History ARMS TRADE TREATY Procedural History At the Tenth Special Session of the General Assembly devoted to disarmament, held from 25 May to 30 June 1978, the Assembly, in the Final Document (resolution S- 10/2),

More information

Dr. Sameh Aboul-Enein Budapest, June, 2012

Dr. Sameh Aboul-Enein Budapest, June, 2012 Annual NATO Conference on WMD Arms Control, Disarmament, and Non-Proliferation 2012 Conference on the Establishment of Zone Free of Nuclear Weapons and all Other Weapons of Mass Destruction: the Way Forward

More information

MODEL DRAFT RESOLUTION

MODEL DRAFT RESOLUTION MODEL DRAFT RESOLUTION MiMUN-UCJC Madrid 1 ANNEX VI SEKMUN MEETING 17 April 2012 S/12/01 Security Council Resolution First Period of Sessions Non-proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction. Main submitters:

More information

Facilitating the. Treaty s Entry into Force. CONDITIONS FOR ENTRy INTO FORCE. ExPRESSIONS OF STRONG SuPPORT. NEw york, 2009.

Facilitating the. Treaty s Entry into Force. CONDITIONS FOR ENTRy INTO FORCE. ExPRESSIONS OF STRONG SuPPORT. NEw york, 2009. Facilitating the Treaty s Entry into Force Article XIV of the CTBT concerns the Treaty s entry into force. The article foresees a mechanism of regular conferences to facilitate entry into force (commonly

More information

SIXTY-SIXTH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY FIRST COMMITTEE (DISARMAMENT AND INTERNATIONAL SECURITY)

SIXTY-SIXTH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY FIRST COMMITTEE (DISARMAMENT AND INTERNATIONAL SECURITY) ORGANISATION FOR THE PROHIBITION OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS Please check against delivery SIXTY-SIXTH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY FIRST COMMITTEE (DISARMAMENT AND INTERNATIONAL SECURITY) STATEMENT

More information

Interviews. Interview With Ambasssador Gregory L. Schulte, U.S. Permanent Representative to the In. Agency

Interviews. Interview With Ambasssador Gregory L. Schulte, U.S. Permanent Representative to the In. Agency Interview With Ambasssador Gregory L. Schulte, U.S. Permanent Representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency Interviews Interviewed by Miles A. Pomper As U.S permanent representative to the International

More information

France, Germany, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and United States of America: draft resolution

France, Germany, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and United States of America: draft resolution United Nations S/2010/283 Security Council Provisional 4 June 2010 Original: English France, Germany, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and United States of America: draft resolution

More information

KAZAKHSTAN. Mr. Chairman, We congratulate you on your election as Chair of the First Committee and assure you of our full support and cooperation.

KAZAKHSTAN. Mr. Chairman, We congratulate you on your election as Chair of the First Committee and assure you of our full support and cooperation. KAZAKHSTAN STATEMENT by H.E. Mr. Barlybay Sadykov, Am bassador-at-large, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Kazakhstan, at the General Debate of the First Committee 70th session of the United

More information

Statement. His Excellency LIBRAN N. CABACTULAN Permanent Representative Permanent Mission of the Philippines to the United Nations

Statement. His Excellency LIBRAN N. CABACTULAN Permanent Representative Permanent Mission of the Philippines to the United Nations Please check against delivery Statement His Excellency LIBRAN N. CABACTULAN Permanent Representative Permanent Mission of the Philippines to the United Nations on behalf of ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHEAST ASIAN

More information

AGENCY FOR THE PROHIBITION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN

AGENCY FOR THE PROHIBITION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN AGENCY FOR THE PROHIBITION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN Inf.18/2016 26 September 2016 Original: English/Portuguese/Spanish Declaration of the Member States of OPANAL on the International

More information

Tuesday, 4 May 2010 in New York

Tuesday, 4 May 2010 in New York Permanent Mission of the Federal Republic of Germany to the United Nations New York Germany 201112012 Candidate for the United Nations Security Council Speech by Dr Werner Hoyer, Minister of State at the

More information

MONGOLIA PERMANENT MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS

MONGOLIA PERMANENT MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS MONGOLIA PERMANENT MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS 6 East 77 h Street, New York, N.Y. 10021 Tel: (212) 861-9460, (212) 472-6517 Fax: (212) 861-9464 e-mail: mongolia(&un.int /check against delivery/ STATEMENT

More information

16. Emphasizing that regulation of the international trade in conventional arms should not

16. Emphasizing that regulation of the international trade in conventional arms should not PREAMBLE The States Parties to this Treaty. 1. Guided by the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations. 2. Recalling that the charter of the UN promotes the establishment and maintenance

More information

Building Bridges to Effective Nuclear Disarmament. Group of Eminent Persons on the Substantive Advancement of Nuclear Disarmament

Building Bridges to Effective Nuclear Disarmament. Group of Eminent Persons on the Substantive Advancement of Nuclear Disarmament Building Bridges to Effective Nuclear Disarmament Recommendations for the 2020 Review Process for the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) Group of Eminent Persons on the Substantive

More information

Mr. President, On behalf of the Nigerian delegation, I wish to congratulate you on your election as President of the first Review Conference of the UN

Mr. President, On behalf of the Nigerian delegation, I wish to congratulate you on your election as President of the first Review Conference of the UN PERMANENT MISSION OF NIGERIA TO THE UNITED NATIONS 828 SECOND AVENUE NEW YORK, N.Y. 10017» TEL. (212) 953-9130 -FAX (212) 69'7-1970 Please check against delivery STATEMENT BY AMBASSADOR SIMEON A. ADEKANYE

More information

AS DELIVERED. EU Statement by

AS DELIVERED. EU Statement by AS DELIVERED EU Statement by H.E. Ms. Federica Mogherini High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Vice-President of the European Commission General Debate 2015

More information

Bureau of Export Administration

Bureau of Export Administration U. S. Department of Commerce Bureau of Export Administration Statement of R. Roger Majak Assistant Secretary for Export Administration U.S. Department of Commerce Before the Subcommittee on International

More information

It is today widely recognized that an international arms control treaty can be successfully

It is today widely recognized that an international arms control treaty can be successfully Maintaining the moratorium a de facto CTBT Arundhati GHOSE It is today widely recognized that an international arms control treaty can be successfully concluded only if and when the strong and powerful

More information

Statement. Thematic Debate "Nuclear Weapons" First Committee 71 st United Nations General Assembly. New York, 13 October 2016

Statement. Thematic Debate Nuclear Weapons First Committee 71 st United Nations General Assembly. New York, 13 October 2016 Check against delivery Statement H.E. Mr. Dian Triansyah Djani Ambassador / Permanent Representative Permanent Mission of the Republic of Indonesia To the United Nations in New York on behalf of the Non-Aligned

More information

Statement on the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty for

Statement on the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty for Statement on the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty for the Fourth Article XIV Conference on Accelerating Entry-IntoForce Events by Daryl G. Kimball of the Arms Control Association on behalf of the

More information

Regional Dialogue and Consultations on Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty: Towards the PrepCom Panel I: The NPT State of Play

Regional Dialogue and Consultations on Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty: Towards the PrepCom Panel I: The NPT State of Play Regional Dialogue and Consultations on Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty: Towards the PrepCom 2017 Panel I: The NPT State of Play Mr. KIM Won-soo High Representative for Disarmament Affairs 13 March 2017,

More information

The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Database

The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Database The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Database Summit Summary of the 16 th Heads of State Summit, Tehran, Iran (2012) Disarmament Para 151. The Heads of State or Government underscored the need for the NWS to

More information

G8 MIYAZAKI INITIATIVES FOR CONFLICT PREVENTION I. EFFORTS FOR CONFLICT PREVENTION -- A BASIC CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK --

G8 MIYAZAKI INITIATIVES FOR CONFLICT PREVENTION I. EFFORTS FOR CONFLICT PREVENTION -- A BASIC CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK -- G8 MIYAZAKI INITIATIVES FOR CONFLICT PREVENTION I. EFFORTS FOR CONFLICT PREVENTION -- A BASIC CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK -- The G8 Heads of State and Government announced last June in Cologne, and we, Foreign

More information

June 4 - blue. Iran Resolution

June 4 - blue. Iran Resolution June 4 - blue Iran Resolution PP 1: Recalling the Statement of its President, S/PRST/2006/15, and its resolutions 1696 (2006), 1737 (2006), 1747 (2007), 1803 (2008), 1835 (2008), and 1887 (2009) and reaffirming

More information

STATEMENT. by Mikhail I. Uliyanov

STATEMENT. by Mikhail I. Uliyanov Постоянное Представительство Российской Федерации при Организации Объединенных Наций в Нью-Йорке Permanent Mission of the Russian Federation to the United Nations in New York Unofficial translation Check

More information

UNIDIR RESOURCES IDEAS FOR PEACE AND SECURITY. The CD and PAROS A Short History April 2011

UNIDIR RESOURCES IDEAS FOR PEACE AND SECURITY. The CD and PAROS A Short History April 2011 IDEAS FOR PEACE AND SECURITY UNIDIR RESOURCES The CD Discussion Series The CD and PAROS A Short History April 2011 Between December 2010 and July 2011, the UNIDIR project The Conference on Disarmament:

More information

United Nations General Assembly 1st

United Nations General Assembly 1st ASMUN CONFERENCE 2018 "New problems create new opportunities: 7.6 billion people together towards a better future" United Nations General Assembly 1st "Paving the way to a world without a nuclear threat"!

More information

THE CHALLENGES OF NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT VERIFICATION: DEFINING A GROUP OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERTS FOR DISARMAMENT VERIFICATION

THE CHALLENGES OF NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT VERIFICATION: DEFINING A GROUP OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERTS FOR DISARMAMENT VERIFICATION THE CHALLENGES OF NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT VERIFICATION: DEFINING A GROUP OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERTS FOR DISARMAMENT VERIFICATION 39th ESARDA Symposium on Safeguards and Nuclear Non-Proliferation, Meliá Düsseldorf,

More information

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 7 December [on the report of the First Committee (A/70/460)]

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 7 December [on the report of the First Committee (A/70/460)] United Nations A/RES/70/40 General Assembly Distr.: General 11 December 2015 Seventieth session Agenda item 97 (aa) Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 7 December 2015 [on the report of the First

More information

Treaty on the Northeast Asia Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone (tentative translation) (The Democratic Party of Japan Nuclear Disarmament Group) Preamble

Treaty on the Northeast Asia Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone (tentative translation) (The Democratic Party of Japan Nuclear Disarmament Group) Preamble Treaty on the Northeast Asia Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone (tentative translation) (The Democratic Party of Japan Nuclear Disarmament Group) Preamble The States Parties to this Treaty, 1. Recalling that Northeast

More information

H.E. Mr. Miroslav LAJČÁK

H.E. Mr. Miroslav LAJČÁK Statement by H.E. Mr. Miroslav LAJČÁK Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign and European Affairs of the Slovak Republic Head of Delegation The 2015 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty

More information

Annex 1. Outcome document Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects

Annex 1. Outcome document Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects Annex 1 Outcome document Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects I. 2012 Declaration A renewed commitment to prevent, combat

More information

A/CONF.217/CRP.1. Draft of the Arms Trade Treaty. United Nations Conference on the Arms Trade Treaty New York, 2-27 July 2012

A/CONF.217/CRP.1. Draft of the Arms Trade Treaty. United Nations Conference on the Arms Trade Treaty New York, 2-27 July 2012 1 August 2012 Original: English United Nations Conference on the Arms Trade Treaty New York, 2-27 July 2012 (E) *1244896* Draft of the Arms Trade Treaty Submitted by the President of the Conference Preamble

More information

General Statement of the G-21 (2017) delivered by Nigeria At the Conference on Disarmament Plenary Meeting on Friday 17 March, 2017

General Statement of the G-21 (2017) delivered by Nigeria At the Conference on Disarmament Plenary Meeting on Friday 17 March, 2017 General Statement of the G-21 (2017) delivered by Nigeria At the Conference on Disarmament Plenary Meeting on Friday 17 March, 2017 Mr. President, I have the honor to deliver the following statement on

More information

ACT: Are you speaking of getting a consensus document as was done at the last Review Conference?

ACT: Are you speaking of getting a consensus document as was done at the last Review Conference? Interview With Brazilian Ambassador and NPT Review Conference President Sérgio de Queiroz Duarte Interviews The nearly 190 states-parties to the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) will gather next May

More information

Joint Press Release Issued at the Conclusion of the First SAARC Summit in Dhaka on 7-8 December 1985

Joint Press Release Issued at the Conclusion of the First SAARC Summit in Dhaka on 7-8 December 1985 Dhaka Declaration The Dhaka Declaration of The Heads of State or Government of the Member States of South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation, 7-8 December 1985. The President of Bangladesh, the

More information

Eighth United Nations-Republic of Korea Joint Conference on Disarmament and Non-Proliferation Issues

Eighth United Nations-Republic of Korea Joint Conference on Disarmament and Non-Proliferation Issues Keynote Address Eighth United Nations-Republic of Korea Joint Conference on Disarmament and Non-Proliferation Issues By Sergio Duarte High Representative for Disarmament Affairs United Nations Joint Conference

More information

COMMEMORATION OF THE 5OTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE CONCLUSION OF THE TREATY ON THE NON-PROLIFERATION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS (NPT)

COMMEMORATION OF THE 5OTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE CONCLUSION OF THE TREATY ON THE NON-PROLIFERATION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS (NPT) 1 COMMEMORATION OF THE 5OTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE CONCLUSION OF THE TREATY ON THE NON-PROLIFERATION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS (NPT) DEPARTMENT OF STATE Washington, D.C., June 28 2018 SERGIO DUARTE Ambassador, Former

More information

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.I/WP.9

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.I/WP.9 Preparatory Committee for the 2020 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons NPT/CONF.2020/PC.I/WP.9 21 March 2017 Original: English First session Vienna,

More information

Lesson Title: Working for Nuclear Disarmament- Understanding the Present Status

Lesson Title: Working for Nuclear Disarmament- Understanding the Present Status Lesson Title: Working for Nuclear Disarmament- Understanding the Present Status Grade Level: 11 12 Unit of Study: Contemporary American Society Standards - History Social Science U.S. History 11.9.3 Students

More information

General Assembly First Committee. Topic B: Compliance with Non-Proliferation, Arms Limitations, and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments

General Assembly First Committee. Topic B: Compliance with Non-Proliferation, Arms Limitations, and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments General Assembly First Committee Topic B: Compliance with Non-Proliferation, Arms Limitations, and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments Some might complain that nuclear disarmament is little more than

More information

23/06/05 1 KAMEN 8.05D

23/06/05 1 KAMEN 8.05D 23/06/05 1 KAMEN [Translated from Chinese] People's Republic of China Report on the implementation of the United Nations Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small

More information

ACP-EU JOINT PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY. Committee on Political Affairs. on small arms and light weapons and sustainable development

ACP-EU JOINT PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY. Committee on Political Affairs. on small arms and light weapons and sustainable development ACP-EU JOINT PARLIAMTARY ASSEMBLY Committee on Political Affairs 1.8.2006 DRAFT REPORT on small arms and light weapons and sustainable development Co-Rapporteurs: Ana Maria Gomes and Youssouf Moussa Dawaleh

More information

Mission of China to the UN, at the General Debate of the

Mission of China to the UN, at the General Debate of the Statement by Mr. Sun Lei, Counsellor of the Permanent Mission of China to the UN, at the General Debate of the United Nations Disarmament Commission 2017 Substantive Session (2017/4/3, New York) Madame

More information

2 May Mr. Chairman,

2 May Mr. Chairman, Statement by Mr. Kazuyuki Hamada, Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs of Japan at the First Preparatory Committee for the 2015 Review Conference for the Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear

More information