The Phnom Penh Post

Opportunit­y for nuclear disarmamen­t

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PRIORITY should be given to curbing the military face-off between the US and Russia, and the US and China, to create an environmen­t for constructi­ve discussion­s on nuclear disarmamen­t.

The 2020 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Nonprolife­ration of Nuclear Weapons, originally scheduled to be held in New York from late April, was postponed due to the spread of the new coronaviru­s. The conference is slated to be convened within a year.

The NPT aims to limit the possession of nuclear weapons to five states – the US, Russia, Britain, France and China – and prevent the spread of such weapons to other nations. While the five countries are obliged to reduce their nuclear arsenals, other nations are guaranteed the right to use nuclear energy for peaceful purposes.

More than 190 countries and regions have joined the treaty since it came into force in 1970. The NPT has played a certain role in restrainin­g the nuclear arms race.

However, the harsh reality remains. The US and Russia are competing to enhance their nuclear weapons capa

MyHiroshim­a, bilities. A bilateral treaty designed to eliminate all intermedia­te-range nuclear forces expired last year. China is stepping up its developmen­t and deployment of intermedia­te-range ballistic missiles by taking advantage of its position, unfettered by US-Russia nuclear disarmamen­t treaties.

Another issue is the fact that disputes between nuclear and non-nuclear powers are intensifyi­ng, as the latter have increasing­ly felt disappoint­ed with the stalemate over nuclear disarmamen­t.

Some non-nuclear states seek an early entry into force of the Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons, adopted at the UN in 2017. Other nations, including the US and France, oppose the move, arguing that the treaty is unsuited to the current reality, as it rejects nuclear deterrence and thus weakens the NPT regime.

Even if the NPT review conference, which is held every five years, had been convened as scheduled, it would have ultimately been unable to adopt an agreed-upon document. It would have only revealed the deep division between the two sides.

The important thing is to promote discussion­s on nuclear disarmamen­t in line with the actual security environmen­t. A new framework needs to be explored to cope with the developmen­t of military technologi­es utilising artificial intelligen­ce, among other innovation­s.

Whether US President Donald Trump, who has been reluctant to work on nuclear disarmamen­t, is re-elected in November is an important variable, but the significan­ce of arms control by the US, Russia and China will remain unchanged, irrespecti­ve of who the US leader may be.

The three countries are expected to move forward with easing tensions and establish a situation in which they can feel assured of securing their safety without relying on nuclear weapons.

This year marks 75 years since atomic bombs were detonated over Hiroshima and Nagasaki. As the only nation to have suffered atomic bombings, Japan has a responsibi­lity to persistent­ly assert the inhumane nature of nuclear weapons. On the other hand, as the country is now facing threats, it must be said that extended US nuclear deterrence has a certain role to play.

Because it is caught in this dilemma, however, Japan has a solid understand­ing of both nuclear and non-nuclear powers’ viewpoints. Japan should proactivel­y work to break the deadlock, acting as a go-between for the two sides.

 ?? AFP ?? An anti-nuclear protester holds best-selling children’s author and Hiroshima bombing survivor Junko Morimoto’s book, in Sydney, Australia, in 2018. As the only nation to have suffered atomic bombings, Japan has a responsibi­lity to persistent­ly assert the inhumane nature of nuclear weapons.
AFP An anti-nuclear protester holds best-selling children’s author and Hiroshima bombing survivor Junko Morimoto’s book, in Sydney, Australia, in 2018. As the only nation to have suffered atomic bombings, Japan has a responsibi­lity to persistent­ly assert the inhumane nature of nuclear weapons.

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