Dear Friends,
The Abolition Global Council has sent a letter to members of the
Security Council and other representatives to the UN about a
"non-proliferation" resolution proposed by the United States to stop
the spread of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons which utterly fails to
mention any obligation for the nuclear weapons states to get rid of their own
nuclear weapons, let alone stop their illegal proliferation of new weapons.
The resolution is based on an unlawful assumption of authority by the Security
Council to act as a "global legislature". It also lends
support to interdict of ships on the high seas without setting up any
mechanism to insure that the interceptions are justified or lawful. Our letter
is attached
below.
There have been secret negotiations on a draft for several months among the
five permanent members of the Security Council (US, UK, France, Russia,
China). The US released a draft agreed to by the permanent five members
on March 24 and seeks to have it adopted by the end of March--the middle of
next week! You can see the draft at
www.reachingcriticalwill.org/political/WMD_SCRes.pdf
Three action points concerning Occupied
Palestine are listed below
WRITE TO YOUR HEAD OF STATE AND FOREIGN MINISTER and ask them to oppose
any hypocritical Security Council Resolution that calls only for
non-proliferation measures while failing to call for disarmament by the
nuclear weapons states. Ask them to support an open session of the Security
Council at which all states can speak, and an informal briefing of the
Security Council by civil society representatives. There is already
support for an open session among some elected members of the Council and it
is important that they be supported, especially by the Non-Aligned Movement
led by Malaysia which includes Indonesia which is chairing the NPT meeting in
April. You can find contact information for your government leaders at
http://www.reachingcriticalwill.org/resources/govcontacts/govindex.html
If you live in a country that serves on the Security Council, which includes
Chile, China, France, Germany, Pakistan, Phillipines, Romania, Russia, Spain,
UK, US, Algeria, Angola, Benin, and Brazil, it's particularly important that
you write to your government and urge that disarmament be included in any
resolution adopted and that the proceedings be open and transparent. If
your country is not currently serving on the Security Council it's still
important that you contact your government leaders as they will may use their
influence with other members on the Council to block a one-sided resolution
that only seeks to keep others from acquiring nuclear weapons while giving the
nuclear weapons states a "free pass".
Thank you for your participation.
Abolition Global Council
*************************************************************************
March 25, 2004
Dear members of the Security Council and other interested states,
On behalf
of the Global Council of the Abolition 2000 Global Network to Eliminate
Nuclear Weapons, we write to express our opposition to the current form of the
proposed resolution on "non-proliferation" released to the elected
members of the Security Council on March 24, 2004 by the United States on
behalf of the permanent five members.* Abolition 2000 was founded in 1995 at
the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) Review and Extension Conference and
the nuclear weapons hearings before the International Court of Justice and now
comprises more than 2000 civil society groups and municipalities in 95
countries.
The draft resolution mandates that all states bolster efforts to prevent
terrorist and other non-state actor trafficking in and acquisition of nuclear,
biological, and chemical (NBC) weapons, related materials, and missiles and
other unmanned systems of delivery. We affirm the need for collective action
to eliminate all NBC weapons and weapons programs including measures to
prevent their spread. However, we believe the resolution is deeply flawed due
to the failure to address the disarmament of existing arsenals and programs.
We also oppose the assumption of a political or legal basis for the Security
Council to act as a global legislature. We additionally are concerned about
the potential for abuse of cooperation in prevention of NBC weapon-related
trafficking recommended by the resolution. We urge that the Security Council
engage in comprehensive consultations with all interested states and with
civil society concerning the resolution, notably by holding an open session at
which all member states can speak and by holding an informal session for a
briefing by civil society representatives. The resolution must not be fast
tracked; the issues are too complex and important.
Disarmament:
While the proposed resolution affirms support for multilateral treaties on NBC
weapons, it refers only to prevention of proliferation, and is silent,
rhetorically or substantively, on ending deployment of existing weapons and on
the imperative of disarmament - the aim of the NPT, Chemical Weapons
Convention (CWC), and the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BWC). The
resolution thus ignores that the problem of the spread of NBC weapons, and
their potential acquisition by terrorists, will never be effectively addressed
absent effective compliance with disarmament obligations.
It will not suffice simply to add a reference to disarmament in the preamble.
Measures the resolution calls for, e.g. to account for and physically secure
NBC weapons and related materials, should be identified as implementing
disarmament as well as non-proliferation obligations. Beyond that, the
resolution should make clear that states should prohibit both non-state and
state actors from acquiring and trafficking in NBC weapons, related materials,
and means of delivery. The resolution should also make clear that
nuclear-armed states, both within and without the NPT, should take effective
measures including the 2000 NPT 13 steps - to comply with the general
obligation, unanimously set forth by the International Court of Justice in its
1996 advisory opinion, to pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion
negotiations on nuclear disarmament in all its aspects under strict and
effective international control, and to fulfill the NPT unequivocal
undertaking to eliminate nuclear arsenals. It is positive that the draft calls
upon states not yet party to the BWC and CWC should join those regimes.
Security Council "lawmaking": The proposed resolution
purports to require states to prohibit non-state actors from acquiring NBC
weapons and their means of delivery and to take measures to account for,
secure, and prevent unlawful trafficking in the weapons, related materials,
and means of delivery. If adopted, this would represent a far-reaching
assumption of authority by the Security Council to enact global legislation
requiring each state to modify its national legal system and policies. Such
legislation is usually the subject of painstakingly negotiated multilateral
treaties, like the NPT, CWC, and BWC. There is nothing in the UN Charter that
confers such authority on the Security Council. Rather the Charter
contemplates multilateral agreements entered into by states as the primary
mode of global lawmaking, with the General Assembly promoting this process by
making recommendations (Art. 13).
It is true that Security Council resolution 1373 requires all states to take
measures to suppress terrorism. But it was adopted in the special circumstance
of responding to the September 11 attacks, and deals with simpler and less
controversial topics than the present resolution, which strongly impinges upon
state to state relations and issues of security. For example, the resolution
would impose obligations upon states with regard to NBC-weapon "related
materials", missiles and other unmanned systemsof delivery, and non-state
actors,yet provides no full and precise definition of those terms. In this and
other respects, a rational and legitimate lawmaking process would require
in-depth negotiation with the participation of affected states.
A resolution also requires political acceptance if it is to be effectively
implemented. The highly unrepresentative Security Council, dominated by the
nuclear-armed P5, is not the best institution to elicit such acceptance,
especially with respect to NBC-weapon measures as to which hypocrisy and
double standards will rightly be charged.
The proposed resolution does address real dangers, illustrated by the recent
public revelations regarding the Pakistan-based nuclear proliferation network.
Moreover, negotiation of multilateral agreements is inevitably difficult and
time-consuming and does not reach (in the near term) non-participating states.
Rather than a Chapter VII mandatory resolution, the best approach would be for
the Security Council to adopt a resolution that sets forth guidelines and
requests. That would lay the foundation for later Security Council mandatory
action as needed with respect to particular acts or practices involving
particular states. It could also spur the negotiation of needed additional
multilateral agreements, which the resolution should recommend. It further,
importantly, would remove the basis for any claim of enforcementnot explicitly
approved by the Security Council of the kind made by the United States and
Britain with respect to the invasion of Iraq. In Security Council
deliberations, any open session, and consultations, states should make
absolutely clear that the resolution does not in any way support
enforcementnot explicitly approved by the Security Council.
Other steps that would contribute to more acceptable Security Council
intervention would be 1) full consultation with all interested states, and
with civil society, including through an open session and an informal (Arria
formula) civil society briefing; and 2) establishment of a implementation body
that involves the Secretary-General, the Department for Disarmament Affairs,
IAEA, OPCW, UNMOVIC, representatives of the governing bodies of the NPT, CWC,
and BWC, and civil society, to ensure among other things a common and sound
understanding of what states should do to implement the resolution.
Statesreports on implementation should go to the Secretary-General and the
implementation body.
By contrast, the present draft makes a mockery of follow-up. It establishes a
Security Council committee on implementation to last only six months, while
requiring states to adopt complex national legislation and measures that will
clearly take longer than six months fully to put in place. It is crucial to
avoid leaving follow-up on the resolution to individual states, above all the
United States. However, that is the course President Bush signaled the United
States intends, stating in his February 11, 2004 speech that after the
resolution is adopted, the United States "stands ready to help other
governments to draft and enforce the new laws that will help us deal with
proliferation."
Prevention of trafficking: The proposed resolution calls upon states,
consistent with international law,to cooperate in the prevention of illicit
traffickingin NBC weapons, means of delivery, and related materials (para. 8).
Especially given the extremely elastic understanding of international law
displayed by the United States and Britain with respect to the invasion of
Iraq, as well as the national intelligence failures/deceptions regarding NBC-weapon
programs in Iraq, the mere invocation of international law is not enough.
Clarity and international consensus needs to be developed on the types of
shipments prohibited and the nature of interdictions permissible under
international law. There should be provision for Security Council or other
multilateral, treaty-based decision-making and dispute resolution (as by the
International Law of the Sea Tribunal) as to interdiction of specific
shipments that otherwise would appear to be protected by the customary freedom
of navigation on the high seas, the right of innocent passage, and other
existing international law. Alternatively, the provision should be dropped.
Please do
not hesitate to contact us. We have suggestions for alternative language, as
well as more in-depth analysis of the issues outlined above. We also would
assist with an Arria formula meeting. We aim to promote global civil society
participation in decision-making about the resolution as well as media
coverage. The resolution will affect all of our futures, not only regarding
the dangers posed by NBC weapons, but also the shape of international law and
institutions.
Sincerely,
John Burroughs
Susi Snyder
Executive Director
Director, UN Office
Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy
Rhianna Tyson,
Project Associate 211 E. 43d St., Suite 1204
Reaching Critical Will
New York, NY 10017
Women’s International
212 818 1861
League for Peace and Freedom
777 UN Plaza, 6 Floor,
New York, NY 10017
212 682 1265
Admiral Ramu Ramdas
India
Zia Mian
Program on Science and Global Security
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs
Princeton University
Pamela Meidell and Janet Bloomfield
Atomic Mirror
California and Britain
Alice Slater
Global Resource Action Center for the Environment
New York City
Jean-Marie Matagne
Action des Citoyens pour le Désarmement Nucléaire
France
Alyn Ware
International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms
New Zealand
David Krieger
Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
California
Alice Slater
Global Resource Action Center for the Environment (GRACE)
215 Lexington Ave., Room 1001
New York, NY 10016
tel: (212) 726-9161
fax: (212) 726-9160
email:
aslater@gracelinks.org
http://
www.gracelinks.org
GRACE is a member of Abolition 2000, a global network for the elimination of
nuclear weapons.
European Network
for Peace and Human Rights
We are a small group, but no
less robust for that.
Three action points:
1.
Network members should be invited to add the names of their organisations
to the list of signatories at the foot of the letter protesting about the wall
construction. The latter is due to
go to the European Council via the Coordinating Committee on Palestine in May.
2.
Network members should take the communiqué regarding the nuclear weapons
free zone in the Middle East (page 5 of the Conference’s information pack) to
their existing Vanunu support groups, with
particular regard to a forthcoming
inspection visit to Dimona (item 3
in the communiqué).
3.
Most ambitiously, our Network should actively enable a European
diplomatic response along the lines of the letter to Tony Blair (page 11 of the
information pack), but with more emphasis on Palestine.
This, by way of preparation for an International Conference on
Palestine, which should be held in Europe six months after the European
elections and during the Dutch presidency of the Council, following Ireland’s
imaginative leads.
In short, its time for George W. Bush, Tony Blair and Ariel Sharon to move over.
Lets hear it from Europe (no less robust for its enlargement).
David Partridge, Movement for
the Abolition of War