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POLITICS: Security Council Called Hypocritical on Nukes By Thalif Deen UNITED NATIONS, May 31 (IPS) - The political and moral authority of the five veto-wielding members of the United Nations
Security Council (UNSC) to sit in judgment over nuclear non-proliferation is being challenged
in a new report released Thursday.
By virtue of the U.N. charter, says the study, the Security Council has broad powers to
enforce disarmament and nuclear non-proliferation requirements, including the
imposition of economic sanctions and authorisation of military action.
But the five permanent member states (P-5), the United States, Britain, France, China and
Russia, all with huge nuclear arsenals, "are showing no operational signs of intending to
eliminate" the deadly weapons.
"This means that UNSC decisions regarding compliance with nuclear non-proliferation
requirements are automatically suspect in the eyes of much of the world," says the study
titled "Nuclear Disorder or Cooperative Security? U.S. Weapons of Terror, the Global
Proliferation Crisis and Paths to Peace."
The joint study was conducted by three public interest groups: the Lawyers' Committee on
Nuclear Policy (LCNP) of New York, the Western States Legal Foundation of California and
the New York-based Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
Dr John Burroughs, executive director of LCNP, said the failure of the P-5 members to take
seriously their nuclear disarmament obligations "have sapped their moral and political
authority to address non-proliferation situations."
This is especially so beginning with the nuclear tests by India and Pakistan in 1998, and
continuing on to the current confrontation with Iran, he added.
"It is also the case, however, that countries around the world want an effective political
body at the top of the international political structure, to play a role in solving problems
that undermine international peace and security," Burroughs told IPS.
So there is still a lot of support for the Security Council, despite its defects, he argued.
"The P-5 could do a lot to build the authority of the UNSC, by reforming the Council to
make it more representative, accountable, and transparent."
Dr. Natalie J. Goldring, a senior fellow with the Centre for Peace and Security Studies and
an Adjunct Full Professor in the Security Studies Programme at the Edmund A. Walsh
School of Foreign Service in Georgetown University, said the UNSC has the legal authority
to deal with nuclear weapons and proliferation issues.
Unfortunately, the P-5, who are also the five original nuclear powers, have failed to live up
to their commitments under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), she added.
"This has severely undermined their credibility with respect to would-be nuclear powers,"
Goldring told IPS.
In particular, she said, the pursuit of new nuclear weapons by the administration of U.S.
President George W. Bush virtually guarantees that other countries will choose similar
paths.
Michael Spies, programme associate at the LCNP, argued that since the end of the Cold
War, the United States' hyper-militarism has increasingly allowed it to exercise its
authority unilaterally through the Security Council, and also in other ways.
"If intimidation of other countries is the main mode of exerting influence, the conduct of
the UNSC becomes more about the raw exercise of power, rather than the rule of law," he
told IPS.
In recent months, the Security Council has adopted resolutions enforcing its nuclear non-
proliferation strategy against two member states: North Korea and Iran. But both countries
have challenged the double standards of the five nuclear powers whose policy, they say, is
based on the principle "do as we say, not as we do".
Currently, the possession of nuclear weapons is prohibited by the NPT, and their use is at
least generally prohibited by international law as set forth by the International Court of
Justice in The Hague.
As of now, 188 countries are members of the NPT, with four countries, India, Pakistan,
Israel and North Korea, outside the regime, but all with nuclear weapons.
The study points out that serious efforts to acquire nuclear weapons in violation of the
NPT are known to have occurred only in a handful of cases: Iraq, Libya, and North Korea.
The study says that since the Security Council is dominated by the five World War II victors,
it is conspicuously not representative of today's world. Further, the Council by design is a
political body that acts on an ad hoc and sometimes inconsistent basis.
It argues that the Council should strive to develop less confrontational and more flexible
techniques for authoritatively addressing compliance issues, avoiding when possible, any
implication of resort to military action.
In the past, Iran violated safeguards reporting requirements and is pursuing a uranium
enrichment capability that would enable it to fuel nuclear reactors or, if it so chose, to
produce materials for nuclear weapons.
But, according to the study, the vast majority of states have complied with the obligation
of non-acquisition.
However, if North Korea becomes a permanent nuclear weapon-possessing state, or if Iran
acquires nuclear weapons, "their respective regions may experience additional
proliferation," the report warns.
Asked about the proposal for a world summit on disarmament, Jennifer Nordstrom, project
manager of "Reaching Critical Will" of the Women's International League for Peace and
Freedom, told IPS such an international conference or even a U.N. special session on
disarmament is feasible if heads of state become involved.
She said the proposed summit could be a package deal to the P-5 that would address both
nuclear disarmament and other issues that are of particular concern to the P5, including
nuclear proliferation and terrorist acquisition.
"A 2009 U.S. administration friendlier to multilateralism would also help," Nordstrom
added. Developing nations should work for this through like-minded, cross-regional
groups because the old Cold War groupings may not suffice for this purpose, she added.
The study also points out that human security cannot be brought about through nuclear
weapons and military might.
"It can only be ensured through the equitable distribution of adequate food, shelter, clean
water and air, health care, education, and even the arts," it says.
Jacqueline Cabasso, executive director of the California-based Western States Legal
Foundation, told IPS the staggering disparity between military spending and spending on
human needs will be addressed when ordinary citizens in every country identify with the
basic human security requirements, instead of their governments' distorted view of
"national" security based on militarism.
"This process will be self-reinforcing: as resources are redirected to meet human needs,
some of the root causes of conflict - poverty and injustice - will be reduced," she
added.
Goldring of Georgetown University said the study also proposes several dozen options for
improving the current situation. Although few of these recommendations are new,
together, they represent an extremely useful guide to moving away from doomsday.
"Unfortunately, in recent years it has been extremely difficult to gather the political capital
necessary to implement these sorts of recommendations," she noted.
She said that political change, especially in the United States, will be necessary "if we are
to make significant progress on the ambitious and useful agenda the authors have
constructed."
That said, this group has also presented some proposals that can be implemented without
U.S. cooperation.
Goldring pointed out that the authors have highlighted the insufficient levels of foundation
support currently available for groups and individuals working on these issues.
Those who understand the dangers of continued possession and dispersal of nuclear
weapons must support these efforts, she added.
Albert Einstein identified the costs of the current approach - a "drift toward unparalleled
catastrophe," Goldring declared.
(END/2007)
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