We can鈥檛 give up on a world free from nuclear weapons

February 4, 2021
Issue 
A nuclear explosion in the Pacific. Image: Pixabay

The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) became international law on January 22, for the 122 states who signed the agreement in July 2017.

The is summed up in one sentence (article 1a): 鈥淓ach State Party undertakes never under any circumstances to 鈥 Develop, test, produce, manufacture, otherwise acquire, possess or stockpile nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices.鈥 There is no complexity here. This is a treaty to ban nuclear weapons.

Hideous weapons

Wilfred Burchett was the first non-Japanese journalist to visit Hiroshima. His first for London鈥檚 the Daily Express (September 5, 1945) was 鈥淭he Atomic Plague鈥.

鈥淚n Hiroshima, 30 days after the first atomic bomb destroyed the city and shook the world,鈥 he wrote, 鈥減eople are still dying, mysteriously and horribly 鈥 Hiroshima does not look like a bombed city. It looks as if a monster steamroller had passed over it and squashed it out of existence.

鈥淚 write these facts as dispassionately as I can in the hope that they will act as a warning to the world 鈥 The damage is far greater than photographs can show 鈥 It gives you an empty feeling in the stomach to see such man-made devastation.鈥

In 1952, Sakamoto Hatsumi 鈥 a primary school student who had experienced the terror of the bombing 鈥 wrote a short : 鈥淲hen the atomic bomb drops/day turns into night/people turn into ghosts.鈥 It is simple and elegant, a plea from the darkness to abolish nuclear weapons. This is what the hibakusha, the survivors of the atomic nightmare of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, have been demanding since 1945. Their pleas have been heard around the world, but not in the capitals that have developed these hideous weapons.

Nuclear weapons today

Nine countries of the 193 member states of the United Nations possess nuclear weapons. Two of them 鈥 the United States and Russia 鈥 have more than 90% of all the 13,410 . Four countries 鈥 the US, Russia, Britain and France 鈥 have at least 1800 on high alert, which means that they can be fired at very short notice.

To compare the warheads currently deployed with the atom bomb dropped on Hiroshima is enough to make the heart stop: the yield from the 鈥淟ittle Boy鈥 used on Hiroshima is at 15 kilotons, whereas the yield from one W88 warhead deployed on a Trident II submarine is at 475 kilotons. It is not just the number of nuclear weapons that are available; the current nuclear weapons, many of them deployed on submarines and ships, are far more lethal.

None of the nine nuclear weapons states have joined the TPNW; they boycotted the negotiations and the vote in the UN General Assembly.

The US government a letter in October, asking those governments who signed the treaty to withdraw from it. The US ambassador to the UN in 2017 鈥 Nikki Haley 鈥 the TPNW threatens the security of the US; she condescended to the 122 governments that joined the TPNW, saying, 鈥渄o they really understand the threats that we have?鈥 Iran, incidentally, voted with 121 other countries for the TPNW.

Over the past few years, the US administration has the three core treaties for disarmament: 鈥渢he Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty, the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, and the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty, which has now metamorphosed into the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START),鈥 as activist and founding editor of Newsclick.In Prabir Purkayastha wrote in January.

Appetite for serious nuclear disarmament has simply not been evident. In fact, the Congressional Budget Office in the US that the government will spend US$1.2 trillion between 2017 and 2046 to modernise the US nuclear arsenal. The other eight nuclear weapons states will follow suit, but far behind, since in these matters the US drives this terrifying agenda.

Threats against China

While 122 countries voted to ban nuclear weapons, the US pursued a project to threaten China with a nuclear attack. In August 2019, the US from the INF treaty, tested two intermediate-range missiles, and then posted an order for a variety of cruise and ballistic missiles.

When the US government sought bases for these missiles around China, its Asian allies . They do not want to inflame the already tense situation between the US and China.

Former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo last year that the US 鈥淒epartment of Defense has ramped up its efforts鈥 against China. These threats grew more and more explicit later that year. Joe Biden鈥檚 new US Secretary of State Antony Blinken that Donald Trump鈥檚 administration was right to be tough on China.

The presence of these missiles on US naval vessels and the development of hypersonic cruise missiles as well as open threats against China simply make it impossible for Beijing to dismantle its nuclear arsenal. To do so would be tantamount to surrender before a US attack. China鈥檚 government, meanwhile, has that it welcomes the establishment of nuclear-free zones, including the .

At a press briefing in July 2020, Fu Cong, China鈥檚 director-general of the Department of Arms Control and Disarmament in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, his country would be willing to enter into disarmament negotiations if the US arsenal (at 5800 nuclear missiles) drops down to the Chinese level (300 nuclear missiles).

鈥淭he US knows full well the huge gap between the Chinese and American nuclear arsenals, both in terms of quantity and sophistication,鈥 said Fu Cong. 鈥淔or the US, hyping up the China factor is nothing but a ploy to divert world attention, and to create a pretext, under which they could walk away from the New START, as they have done on so many other arms control treaties. The real purpose is to get rid of all possible restrictions and have a free hand in seeking overwhelming military superiority over any adversary, real or imagined.鈥

Nuclear ban

Public opinion, in many NATO states, favours a total ban on nuclear weapons. After the treaty went into force on January 22, Beatrice Fihn of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) nuclear weapons states, 鈥淵our weapons are now banned. Permanently. You are on the wrong side of international law, the wrong side of history, and the wrong side of humanity.鈥 In 2017, ICAN the Nobel Peace Prize.

Nuclear disarmament has a long history. In 1961, the US and the USSR signed the McCloy-Zorin Accords or the Agreed Principles for General and Complete Disarmament, which called for 鈥済eneral and complete disarmament鈥 but also that war should 鈥渘o longer [be] an instrument for settling international problems.鈥 Gone is that spirit. It needs to be revived.

[This article was produced by . Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, author, editor and journalist. He is a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter and the director of . His latest book is , with an introduction by former Bolivian president Evo Morales Ayma.]

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