U.S. nuclear shield casts shadow over treaty talks
By Richard Norton-Taylor and Ewen MacAskill
LONDON: The commitment of nuclear powers to disarmament faces a severe test at a crucial international conference beginning in New York on Monday to review the 30-year-old non-proliferation treaty.
Five years ago, at the last treaty review conference, the nuclear powers including Britain committed themselves to "the determined pursuit ... of systematic and progressive efforts to reduce nuclear weapons globally, with the ultimate goal of eliminating those weapons".
That high-minded objective received a setback when India and Pakistan conducted nuclear tests.
The mood in New York as ministers gather is not optimistic. The United States has not helped by threatening to go off in pursuit of a new missile program. The talks are also being held against a background of indifference in the post-cold war age.
The mood is beginning to change, however. The first stirrings of unease began four years ago when India and Pakistan, neither of whom have signed the NPT treaty, tested nuclear weapons.
Just as worrying is the attitude of the United States. Last year, Congress voted against the comprehensive test ban treaty, with the Republicans insisting that America should not permit any international constraints on its ability to test and modernize its nuclear forces.
The prospects for a meaningful conclusion of the NPT discussions in four weeks' time look remote. Those in the nuclear club, while urging other countries not to join, show little sign of being flexible.
NATO's "strategic concept", announced at its 50th anniversary summit in Washington last year, stated that "the circumstances in which any use of nuclear weapons might have to be contemplated (by the allies) are ... extremely remote". However, it added that "nuclear weapons make a unique contribution ... They demonstrate (to enemies) that aggression of any kind is not a rational option."
NATO continues to reject a "no first use" commitment, but one of Russian president-elect Vladimir Putin's first initiatives was to abandon Russia's "no first use" policy. Against the background of deteriorating conventional forces, Putin also suggested that Russia would in future rely on a lower nuclear threshold.
The Russian parliament's recent ratification of the Start 2 arms reduction treaty, which commits each of the two powers to cut its nuclear warheads from 6,000 to 3,500 by 2007, will put further pressure on the U.S. Congress to follow suit.
"The Russians will go into the non-proliferation treaty review conference looking like good guys. The spotlight will be on us," an American diplomat said.
The United States and Russia are preparing to begin talks on Start 3. The Russians want to cut the number of each side's long range nuclear warheads to 1,500. The United States does not want to go below 2,000 or 2,500.
But the New York conference also takes place under the shadow of American plans for a national missile defense system (NMD). The project will be "the ghost at the wedding", said Rebecca Johnson, director of the Acronym Institute, a respected London disarmament thinktank.
A decision to go ahead with NMD would require an amendment to the anti-ballistic missile treaty signed by Washington and Moscow in 1972, which enshrines the traditional concept of deterrence and "mutual assured destruction".
Moscow opposes any change to the ABM treaty, despite Washington's insistence that its anti-ballistic missile project is designed to protect the United States from "rogue" states such as North Korea, Iran, Iraq and Libya.
Analysts, however, suggest that the United States is seeking "absolute security". They argue that the project reflects a dangerous shift from long-held assumptions about deterrence towards a belief in the "limited use" of nuclear weapons, shared by other countries, not least Pakistan.
"There is a move towards the concept of a `normalization' of nuclear weapons, towards reintegrating them into general weapons arsenals," Johnson warned.
Some observers believe that NATO's strategic concept opens the way to it using nuclear weapons against biological and chemical weapons -- in violation of the "negative security assurances" given by the nuclear powers in 1995.
The British American Security Information Council argues that NATO's existing "nuclear sharing" arrangements in time of war -- whereby European non-nuclear states could be given access to U.S. nuclear bombs -- are in clear breach of the NPT.
The nuclear powers will come under pressure from two groups which are fed up with what they regard as hypocritical preaching.
They are the "New Agenda" countries, including Japan, Canada, Egypt, Brazil and South Africa, and the Non-Aligned Movement.
But those at the opening meeting are not preparing for some huge step forward. At best they hope for consensus over a form of words. The nuclear risk is huge but ambitions in New York are small.
-- Guardian News Service