The Standard (St. Catharines)

NATO chief: UN convention won’t rid world of nuclear arms

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STOCKHOLM — NATO supports the idea of a world without nuclear weapons, but doesn’t believe it can be achieved by imposing a ban through the United Nations convention on nuclear weapons, the military alliance’s top official said Sunday.

Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g said during a speech at a security conference in Sweden that ridding the world of nuclear weapons requires a period of “painful disarmamen­t” that the Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons cannot guarantee.

Stoltenber­g stressed that NATO’s military deterrence strategy relies on a combinatio­n of convention­al weapons and nuclear weapons. If NATO members scrapped their nuclear arsenals but countries such as China and Russia kept theirs, the world would not be made safer, he said.

Stoltenber­g’s message was clearly directed to the Swedish government, which is divided on whether to sign the UN treaty. Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom is among those supporting it. The government is unlikely to decide before the next parliament­ary election in September.

The NATO chief told Swedish daily newspaper Dagens Nyheter earlier that Sweden, which is not a NATO member, could find its co-operative relationsh­ip with the alliance weakened if it endorses the UN convention.

The Internatio­nal Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, or ICAN, has been working to promote the UN convention. The NGO was awarded the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize for its efforts to draw attention to the humanitari­an consequenc­es of nuclear weapons and to achieve a treaty-based prohibitio­n of such weapons.

Pope Francis last week called on nations to work toward a binding nuclear weapons ban, and voiced his concern over the tensions on the Korean peninsula. The Holy See was among the 122 nations that approved the treaty last year.

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