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Nobel Prize recipient Pugwash holds 50th anniversary workshop
July 5-7, 2007 -- From 5-7 July
2007, a distinguished group of 25 international scientists and specialists on
nuclear weapons issues met in the fishing village of Pugwash, Nova Scotia on the
50th anniversary of the first Pugwash Conference, to discuss the urgency of revitalizing
nuclear disarmament in order to free the world from the ever-present threat posed
by nuclear weapons. The workshop was co-sponsored by the Pugwash Conferences on
Science and World Affairs and the Middle Powers Initiative.
A press release
and recommendations issued at the conclusion of the workshop are appended below.
A complete workshop report will be published at www.pugwash.org.
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Revitalizing
Nuclear Disarmament: Policy Recommendations of the Pugwash 50th Anniversary
Workshop
Co-Sponsored by the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs
and the Middle Powers Initiative
Pugwash, Nova Scotia, 5-7 July 2007
As long as nuclear weapons exist, they will one day be used.
This sober,
inescapable truth continues to haunt the international community. Every minute
of every day, more than 26,000 nuclear weapons many thousands of them on hair-trigger
alert - are poised to bring monumental destruction if they are ever used. Nuclear
weapons have spread to more countries, and the international non-proliferation
regime is perilously close to collapse. Poorly guarded stockpiles of highly enriched
uranium and plutonium around the world could fall into the hands of terrorists
who would think nothing of exploding a nuclear device in a major city.
Momentum is growing in the international community, however, from many different
political quarters, to re-energize the campaign to declare nuclear weapons illegal
and immoral, and to reduce and eliminate them. But the time is now for decisive
leadership and action to mount a global political campaign to eliminate these
weapons of mass destruction, before it is too late.
Great changes in history
the end of slavery, the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War have
come about through concerted political action, often suddenly and with little
warning. The international community has the opportunity to achieve yet another
epochal event: ending the reliance on nuclear weapons and the total elimination
of these genocidal weapons.
We ask all governments, nuclear and non-nuclear
alike, a simple question. What are you doing to fulfill the basic obligation of
every government the responsibility to protect the lives and human
rights of its citizens that would be obliterated by nuclear devastation?
Given political leadership and political will, implementation of the following
steps could greatly reduce the risk of nuclear weapons use:
Immediate
de-alerting of the thousands of nuclear weapons, on quick reaction alert, that
could be launched by accident, miscalculation, or unauthorized computer hacking
of command and control systems; Official declarations by all nuclear
weapons-states of a No First Use policy, and adoption of Negative Security Assurances
that nuclear weapons will never be used against countries who have legally bound
themselves not to acquire nuclear weapons; Immediate resumption of
US-Russian nuclear negotiations to reduce their nuclear forces to 1,000 or fewer
nuclear weapons; to accelerate the dismantlement and destruction of all excess
nuclear forces and fissile material; and to jointly develop early warning systems
to reduce the risk of accidental or unauthorized launch of nuclear weapons.
Political agreement by NATO to withdraw all US nuclear weapons from Europe,
and to conclude a global agreement that nuclear weapons of any country not be
deployed on foreign territory; Full funding and implementation of the
International Monitoring System of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty to ensure
the continued moratorium on nuclear testing, prior to the entry into force of
the CTBT; An early start to negotiations of a global Fissile Material
Cut-off Treaty and a complete prohibition on the deployment and use of space weapons;
Finally, all States should affirm the goal of the complete abolition and
elimination of nuclear weapons through a multilaterally-verified instrument a
Nuclear Weapons Convention and work towards making such a convention a reality.
We hope that the Government of Canada especially will play an active role in the
achievement of these objectives.
The goal of all these initiatives should
be the strengthening of an equitable non-proliferation regime that emphasizes
the obligations of non-nuclear states not to acquire nuclear weapons, and of nuclear
weapons-states to reduce and eliminate their nuclear arsenals as soon as practicable.
Only by concerted political will and public pressure can we avoid the inevitable
catastrophe that will surely come if nuclear weapons continue to exist.
[Photo
from www.pugwash.org: President of Pugwash, M.S. Swaminathan on far left at Thinker's
Lodge] Close window
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