[Yesterday the UN Secretary-General António Guterres opened the 2017 Treaty
on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) in New York. Heads of state
and senior officials from over 40 countries lined up to sign the
ground-breaking treaty on its first day. They represent billions of people
from across the world, from Europe, Africa, Latin America and Asia-Pacific,
including large countries that have given up nuclear weapons programmes,
such as Brazil and South Africa.
...
The 2017 Nuclear Prohibition Treaty is the product of years of campaigning
by thousands of civil society activists, scientists, doctors, diplomats,
parliamentarians, and most of all from the courageous Hibakusha who
survived the use and testing of nuclear weapons and have spent their lives
raising awareness of the horrors and dangers.
This was not an arms control measure with counting rules, but a disarmament
treaty driven by the imperative to prohibit and eliminate nuclear weapons
because they are inhumane, abhorrent and unacceptable.
This treaty is the collective – and effective – revolt of nuclear
have-nots, who overturned diplomatic assumptions and brought it to
conclusion despite boycotts and opposition from nine heavily armed nuclear
haves.]

https://www.opendemocracy.net/uk/new-hope-for-nuclear-free-
world-but-where-is-uk

A new hope for a nuclear free world - but where is the UK?

REBECCA JOHNSON 21 September 2017

A new UN treaty could make nuclear sabre-rattling and boasts of a
willingness to incinerate cities, as unacceptable as threats to use
chemical and biological weapons.

https://cdn.opendemocracy.net/files/imagecache/article_
xlarge/wysiwyg_imageupload/549093/doves.jpgImage: United Nations/Flickr,
Creative Commons.

Yesterday the UN Secretary-General António Guterres opened the 2017 Treaty
on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) in New York.  Heads of state
and senior officials from over 40 countries lined up to sign the
ground-breaking treaty on its first day.  They represent billions of people
from across the world, from Europe, Africa, Latin America and Asia-Pacific,
including large countries that have given up nuclear weapons programmes,
such as Brazil and South Africa.

More are listed to sign in the coming days.  But not the UK – at least not
yet!

The 2017 Nuclear Prohibition Treaty is the product of years of campaigning
by thousands of civil society activists, scientists, doctors, diplomats,
parliamentarians, and most of all from the courageous Hibakusha who
survived the use and testing of nuclear weapons and have spent their lives
raising awareness of the horrors and dangers.

This was not an arms control measure with counting rules, but a disarmament
treaty driven by the imperative to prohibit and eliminate nuclear weapons
because they are inhumane, abhorrent and unacceptable.

This treaty is the collective – and effective – revolt of nuclear
have-nots, who overturned diplomatic assumptions and brought it to
conclusion despite boycotts and opposition from nine heavily armed nuclear
haves.

With nuclear free governments in the driving seat, this was also a treaty
dreamed up and significantly led by women, including  Setsuko Thurlow, a
survivor of the Hiroshima bomb, and Costa Rica's Ambassador Elayne Whyte
Gomez, who steered the negotiations to fruition on 7 July.

As the governments began signing in New York, campaigners around the world
organised celebrations of their own and called on their elected
representatives to sign the Parliamentary Pledge for the Treaty, promoted
by the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), comprising
over 460 organisations in 101 countries.

Theresa May didn't put her name on the Treaty, but  campaigners, MPs and
MSPs in Edinburgh, London and Leeds met and read and put their own names
and commitments to bring this UN disarmament Treaty into force.

Never say never

Every new disarmament treaty has been initially greeted with reluctance and
opposition by the UK and others who possess, deploy and profit from the
weapons that the majority of UN members have decided to ban.

Why? A combination of vested military-commercial interests and their
tentacles in parliament and certain ministries, and – even more so –
‘business as usual’ establishment inertia.

Unsurprisingly, then, as soon as UN Member States concluded and adopted the
treaty text on 7 July, the UK, France, and USA issued a joint declaration
that they did "not intend to sign, ratify or ever become party" to it.

Once upon a time, such opposition from three permanent members of the UN
Security Council might have deterred others from signing, but those days
are gone.  UN diplomats  - who asked not to be named – called the "P-3"
statement "pathetic", pointing out that declaring a lifelong rejection of
the UN's multilateral nuclear disarmament treaty violates the legal
commitment these three have made to pursue nuclear disarmament "in good
faith", as contained in Article 6 of the 1968 Non-Proliferation Treaty
(NPT).

To date no other nuclear-armed state has issued this kind of public
rejection of the 2017 Treaty. Moreover, history teaches that most if not
all the states that oppose negotiations at the start will sign once a
treaty is on the books.

Britain is a case in point, having opposed and then backed the 1993
Chemical Weapons Convention, the 1996 Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, the
1997 Mine Ban Treaty and the 2008 Cluster Munitions Convention.

Treaties like this stigmatise previously accepted weapons, removing any
kind of legitimacy.  Few nations want the pariah status that attaches to
illegal and inhumane weapons and those who wield them.

So never say never in politics and diplomacy.   Getting this treaty is the
first step towards abolishing nuclear weapons.  The challenge now is to
make it work.

Time to stop holding the world to nuclear ransom

The treaty's legitimacy is already established by the fact that it was
multilaterally negotiated under UN rules that ensured equal rights of
participation for all 193 Member states.  It was the choice of Britain and
a handful of nuclear armed states and their allies to boycott the process.
Having wilfully stayed away, they haven't got a leg to stand on now if they
complain about the outcome.

The negotiating process was carefully considered. As with any treaty, this
is a product of compromise, give and take.  Overall, it has the potential
to change the world and lift the nuclear sword of damocles from our heads.

This is a strong treaty, overwhelmingly adopted by 122 of those who
negotiated, with only NATO member The Netherlands voting against. Singapore
abstained.  Judging from the list of leaders who have signed their
countries up to the treaty his week, it should have no difficulty entering
into force in the next few years.

It will carry on working for our security long after the UK, France and US
have replaced their current leaders, signed the Treaty, and set themselves
on the path to eliminating the dangerous and morally abhorrent arsenals of
the nine remaining states holding the world to nuclear ransom.

What the 2017 Treaty says

The TPNW establishes prohibitions and obligations that are applicable to
all. It outlaws the use, threat of use and possession of nuclear weapons.
And it goes further, making it illegal for states parties to develop, test,
manufacture, produce, stockpile and deploy nuclear weapons.

Member states are not permitted to station or install nuclear weapons on
their territory, or to "assist, encourage or induce in any way, anyone to
engage in any activity prohibited to a state party under this treaty".

Other provisions lay out basic principles and pathways for how states that
currently possess nuclear weapons or engage in nuclear alliances, policies
and practices can join and implement the treaty.  Essentially there are two
routes: join and then implement, or implement first and then join.  The UK
and most of NATO would probably take route (a), in which they can sign or
indicate their intention to join and then get agreement from the Treaty
parties on the steps and timetable for complying fully, including
eliminating existing weapons and programmes.   By contrast, Israel is
likely to prefer Route (b) when the time comes, as this is what South
Africa did before it signed the NPT in 1992.

The TPNW establishes obligations to help victims of weapons use or testing
and to carry out environmental remediation.  It breaks new ground in arms
control and disarmament by recognising the disproportionate harm nuclear
weapons and testing have caused to indigenous people, especially women and
girls.

Concerns about costs meant that the negotiators left many aspects of
implementing the treaty to be decided at future meetings once the treaty
has been ratified by at least 50 states and has therefore entered into full
legal force.

Why the TPNW makes us safer

Nuclear threats and sabre rattling by Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and Kim
Jong-un continue to drive fear, instability and proliferation. This
reversion to cold war ‘deterrence’ doctrines is reviving fears that nuclear
weapons could be used again.  Nuclear deterrence is not some magical
property attached to nuclear weapons.  It is an inherently dangerous and
unstable theory that requires the military capability, political will and
overt "signalling" (threats) of a readiness to use nuclear weapons.

If exercises or signals that are meant to ramp up the message "I'm
prepared, so don't mess with me" go wrong, the consequences could be
devastating. History shows us the risks - from the 1962 Cuban Missile
Crisis to the 1983 Able Archer miscalculation, with at least 13 such
incidents exposed in a recent Chatham House report.

These dangers are inherent in nuclear deterrence, and exacerbated by weak
or unstable leaders.   The idea that someone could incinerate a whole city
is terrifying. But as long as we legitimise the use of nuclear weapons for
deterrence, we sustain the production, possession, deployment, threats and
boasts that could far too easily lead to nuclear bombs being detonated
again.

No-one is suggesting that the TPNW will bring about nuclear disarmament
overnight.  But the Treaty's clear prohibitions on both the use and threat
of use of nuclear weapons, as well as production, deployment, testing, and
assisting in such acts will, however, consign these to pariah status,
robbing them of status, funding and legitimacy in the world.

Last year, during the 18 July parliamentary debate on Trident, Theresa May
felt it necessary to present herself as the kind of leader who is willing
to launch nuclear missiles in the knowledge that hundreds of thousands of
innocent civilians would be killed.  In a few years, thanks to our Treaty,
that kind of declaration would be as unthinkable as a British leader
threatening or using chemical or biological weapons.

For most of the rest of the world, deterrence is incorporated into defence
policies without requiring the capability or pathology to incinerate cities
full of people.  By making such threats illegal as well as morally
abhorrent, the Treaty will reinforce a long-standing taboo that seems to
have weakened in recent years.

For many years Britain and others have got away with proclaiming their
commitment to multilateral disarmament and a world free of nuclear weapons
while unilaterally modernising weapons in their arsenals.  This treaty has
called their bluff.

As many in the defence services already know, Trident is an expensive
vanity project that has no credible role in British security or
deterrence.  But the politicians wanted it, so they went along with this
expensive charade.

The Treaty makes nuclear weapons illegal.  Even for states that don't sign,
this changes the legal and normative status of nuclear weapons and will
make it harder for any government to get political and financial backing
for their continued production, possession and deployment.

Lawyers will no doubt pore over every word, but it was clear from the
negotiating record that relevant prohibitions in the treaty were intended
to cover activities by people and institutions as well as governments.
These will not only affect governments that give support through nuclear
sharing and hosting arrangements among allies, but also companies that
manufacture components for nuclear weapons. These prohibitions will
undoubtedly make manufacturers and banks more nervous about continuing to
invest in any aspect of nuclear weapons for fear of commercial and legal
repercussions.

The 2017 Nuclear Prohibition Treaty now exists. Ignoring it won't make it
go away.  Whether the UK likes it or not, its impact on UK nuclear and
defence policy is likely to be profound.

Cancelling Trident is now question of when, not if.  The sooner our
politicians recognise this reality the sooner they can stop squandering
billions of our money on four unnecessary "Dreadnought" submarines.

Donald Trump told the UN General Assembly on Tuesday: “If the righteous
many don’t confront the wicked few, then evil will triumph.”

This was an unintended truth perhaps, but his words summed up how the 2017
Nuclear Prohibition Treaty was achieved – by the many nuclear free nations
who confronted the nine governments that still want to retain the ability
to threaten nuclear annihilation, and with this Treaty took responsibility
to stop evil from triumphing.

About the author

Rebecca Johnson is director of the Acronym Institute for Disarmament
Diplomacy, and a feminist peace activist. She is the Green Party
spokesperson on security, peace and defence and serves with various nuclear
and humanitarian organisations.

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Peace Is Doable

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