Disarmament Is a Two-Way Street
by
Lawrence S. Wittner
by Lawrence S. Wittner
DIGG THIS
The
Bush administrations current confrontation with Iran over
what it claims is that nations nuclear weapons development
program raises the question: Can the disarmament of one country
occur in isolation from the disarmament of others?
That question
seemed to be answered by the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)
of 1968. Signed by almost all countries of the world, including
the United States, it provided that the non-nuclear nations would
forgo building nuclear weapons, while the nuclear nations would
divest themselves of their own nuclear weapons.
But, upon taking
office, the Bush administration quickly abandoned the U.S. commitment
to the NPT. It withdrew the United States from the Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty, moved forward with the deployment of a national
missile defense system (a revised version of the Reagan administrations
Star Wars program), and opposed ratification of the
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (negotiated and signed by President
Clinton). Furthermore, it dropped negotiations for nuclear arms
control and disarmament and, instead, pressed Congress to authorize
the building of new U.S. nuclear weapons for example, the
nuclear bunker buster and mini-nukes.
Nor are the
Bush administrations more recent actions in line with the
U.S. governments alleged commitment to nuclear disarmament.
This past
March, President Bush traveled to India, where he cemented a nuclear
deal with the Indian government. India, of course, recently became
a nuclear weapons nation, having spurned the NPT, conducted nuclear
tests in 1998, and developed its own nuclear arsenal. Yet the agreement
rewards India for its defiance of international norms. By supplying
U.S. nuclear fuel and technology to India, the agreement facilitates
a substantial expansion of that nations nuclear weapons complex.
At the same time, it does not require India to stop producing nuclear
material for weapons or to place Indian nuclear reactors under international
inspection. As this U.S.-India agreement flies in the face of U.S.
legislation that bans nuclear exports to nations that have not signed
the NPT, the Bush administration is now pressing Congress to revoke
such legislation. The Republican-led Congress seems likely to do
so.
In addition,
the Bush administration is promoting legislation in Congress that
will fund the development of what is called the Reliable Replacement
Warhead (RRW), as well as a sweeping modernization of U.S. nuclear
weapons labs and factories. Although the RRW is billed as an item
that would merely update existing U.S. nuclear weapons and ensure
their reliability, it seems more likely to serve as a means of designing
new nuclear weapons. And the quest for new nuclear weapons seems
likely to lead to the resumption of U.S. nuclear testing and the
final breakdown of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.
Furthermore,
the Bush administration has come out in opposition to a pathbreaking
treaty to create a nuclear weapons-free zone in Central Asia. Signed
earlier this month by Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan,
and Turkmenistan, the agreement commits the signatory countries
not to produce, buy, or allow the deployment of nuclear weapons
on their soil. According to Daryl Kimball, executive director of
the Arms Control Association, the U.S. governments opposition
to the Central Asia treaty is based upon its reluctance to
give up the option of deploying nuclear weapons in this region.
Another sign
of the Bush administrations double standard when it comes
nuclear weapons is its unwillingness to consider the idea of a nuclear
weapons-free zone for the Middle East. Israel, after all, has developed
a substantial nuclear arsenal, but the Bush administration has studiously
ignored it. The contrast with the administrations reaction
to Iraqs possible development of nuclear weapons is quite
striking.
In a letter
published in the Washington Post on September 7, Kevin Martin,
executive director of Peace Action the largest peace organization
in the United States observed that the Bush administrations
nuclear nonproliferation policies were incoherent and contradictory.
The administration, he charged, is rewarding Indias
nuclear weapons program with a deal to share technology; doing next
to nothing about Pakistans veritable nuclear Wal-Mart; winking
at Israels nuclear arsenal; unilaterally dropping out of arms
control treaties . . . ; and ignoring our own obligations to pursue
nuclear disarmament under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Certainly,
the Bush administration has been quite selective about which nations
should have nuclear weapons and which should not. And most nations
including Iran know it.
The U.S. government
would be far more convincing and perhaps more effective with
respect to diplomacy for creating a nuclear-free Iran if
it recognized that nuclear disarmament is a two-way street.
September
26, 2006
Lawrence
S. Wittner [send him mail]
is Professor of History at the State University of New York/Albany.
His latest book is Toward
Nuclear Abolition: A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement,
1971 to the Present (Stanford University Press).
This
article originally appeared on the History
News Network.
Copyright
© 2006 History News Network. Reprinted
with author's permission.
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