The content of the issue is now available at <
http://www.cndpindia.org/download.php?view.65>.

Reproduced below are the Index and the Editorial.

For copies write to <[email protected]>.

Sukla

Index

*Editorial *





*A. Indian Scenario in Regional and Global Contexts *

**I. The Strange Alliance of South Asia's Nuclear Savages / J. Sri Raman

II. Think Globally, Act Regionally? South Asia, China and the United States
/ Zia Mian and M. V. Ramana





*B. The Global Perspective *

I. New Momentum for Nuclear Abolition: Opportunities and Obstacles / Alice
Slater

II. Only the End of the World: Reporting from the United Nations General
Assembly First Committee, October 2010 / John Hallam

III. Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament: Where Next? / Gareth Evans

IV. On the Issue of Nuclear Terrorism / Achin Vanaik

V. The Hiroshima Declaration on the Abolition of Nuclear Weapons / Nobel
Peace Laureates



*C. Book Review *

**I. On Nuclear Power / Sukla Sen

* *



*Editorial*

* *

This November the Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace (CNDP) has
attained a significant milestone; it has completed a decade of its
existence. A decade which had begun in response to the Indian state going
openly nuclear with five nuclear test explosions in May 1998. Deeply
appalled and stirred by the disturbing development anti-nuclear peace
activists from various corners of India sat together to give an effective
voice to their protests. And through a national convention in Delhi in
November 2000 that followed the organisation was brought into being. Since
then the CNDP is constantly engaged in raising the demands for a nuclear
weapon free India, South Asia and the world and conscientising the wider
public. The fight against the Indian nuclear establishment, its utterly
non-transparent ways and regrettable disregard for public safety, in the
sector of power production has in the process emerged as an important
component of the overall struggle. Of late this has assumed even greater
salience. This journal, Peace Now, had started its journey in the summer of
2003 as a part of that engagement.

The inaugural national convention has since been followed by another two
national conventions – one in Jaipur in November 2004 and the other in
Nagpur in February 2008. This time, from this December 9-12 in Delhi, the
Tenth Anniversary National Convention is being held to renew the commitment
to a nuclear weapon free world and re-energise the campaign.



If ten years back, India still remained largely stigmatised and isolated in
the world as a consequence of the nuclear blasts, about two and a half year
back in May 1998, and the tensions between India and Pakistan reached a peak
during that period; today India stands substantively, even if not
completely, integrated in the global nuclear order as a *de facto* nuclear
power despite being a non-signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
(NPT) like Pakistan and Israel. The latest offer of the US President on his
recent trip to India in early November to support India’s claim for a
permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) and its entry
into the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), which ironically had come up in 1975
to tackle the consequences of India’s first nuclear explosion on May 18 1974
in flagrant violation of the global norms of the day, as a full member are
just two most recent markers of this continuing reversal process. While the
heat between India and Pakistan has somewhat abated, both remain feuding
neighbours nevertheless and locked in a nuclear and non-nuclear arms race.
And the relation between India and China has attained greater importance
over this period.



On the world stage, the election of Barack Obama and his call for a “world
without nuclear weapons” on April 5 2009 from Prague soon after assuming
office as the President of the US brought in new hopes for global nuclear
disarmament. This was in stark contrast with the preceding years of Bush
regime. The modestly positive outcome of the NPT Review Conference in May
2010 also stands in sharp contrast with failure of the previous NPT RevCon
in 2005 to come up with any resolution at all. But more recent developments
have quite a bit dampened the optimism in the air. But the peace activists
all the world over remain nonetheless determined in their bid to attain a
world without nuclear weapons in a foreseeable future. The demand for a
global Nuclear Weapons [Abolition] Convention has emerged as the focal
demand in the process.



In this issue we carry a number of articles dealing with and explicating
both the Indian and global scenarios.

And Peace Now conveys its best wishes to the forthcoming Tenth Anniversary
National Convention.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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