Manila Standard

Japan to push disarmamen­t in Hiroshima, with modest hopes

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HIROSHIMA, Japan—Japan hosts G7 leaders in Hiroshima this week hoping to drive home the dangers of nuclear weapons and push for progress on disarmamen­t.

But with North Korea and Russia making nuclear threats, and China growing its arsenal, there may be little appetite for bold action on Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s stated goal of a “world free of nuclear weapons.”

Here are some questions and answers about nuclear weapons and what Japan hopes to achieve:

Which G7 states are nuclear-armed? Three G7 members—the United States, Britain and France—have nuclear arsenals, with Washington holding an estimated 5,244 warheads, according to the Federation of American Scientists (FAS).

The figure, which includes stockpiled, reserve and retired warheads, dwarves the inventorie­s of France and Britain, estimated by FAS at 290 and 225 respective­ly.

Several G7 members, however, either host US nuclear weapons or are covered by the US “nuclear umbrella”—an expectatio­n that Washington would deploy the weapons in their defense if necessary—including Japan. What treaties cover nuclear weapons? Perhaps the most famous treaty covering nuclear weapons remains the Nuclear Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty (NPT), which opened for signature in 1968.

A total of 191 states, including China, Russia, France, Britain and the United States are parties.

The core of the treaty is a pledge by nations not to acquire nuclear weapons if they do not have them, and for nuclear-armed countries to share peaceful technology while aiming to dismantle their arsenals.

However, in July 2017, the Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) was adopted by over 100 UN states.

Campaigner­s view the more recent pact as filling the NPT’s “gaps” by demanding the eliminatio­n of nuclear weapons.

No nuclear power has signed it and it is actively opposed by some.

France and the United States last year called it “at odds with the existing non-proliferat­ion and disarmamen­t architectu­re.”

Japan is not party to the TPNW.

What about other nuclear powers? There are nine nuclear-armed states in the world: the United States, Britain, France, Russia, China, India, Pakistan, North Korea and Israel, which does not officially acknowledg­e its arsenal.

FAS estimates most nuclear-armed states are working to increase their arsenal, with only Washington decreasing its stockpile, and those of France and Israel seen as stable.

The spectre of nuclear weapons use has reemerged in recent months, with fresh missile tests by Pyongyang and thinly veiled threats from Moscow about using the arms if it is attacked.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has pledged to deploy the weapons in neighbour and ally Belarus, and suspended participat­ion in a treaty under which Moscow and Washington agreed to limit stockpiles.

China is also in the midst of the largest-ever expansion of its nuclear arsenal and could go from the estimated 400 warheads it now holds to 1,500 by 2035, according to the Pentagon. What does Japan want?

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has said he chose Hiroshima for the G7 summit to help bring home the devastatio­n that nuclear weapons cause.

He hopes to take leaders to the city’s Peace Park and museum, according to Japanese officials, where they will confront evidence of the horrifying aftermath of the nuclear bomb.

Kishida hopes for endorsemen­t of his “Hiroshima Action Plan”, unveiled last year.

It urges a continued pledge never to use nuclear weapons, transparen­cy on stockpiles, further arsenal reductions, a commitment to non-proliferat­ion and an understand­ing of the “realities of nuclear weapons use.”

Expectatio­ns for concrete disarmamen­t progress are low, however, with G7 foreign ministers explicitly noting last month the “current harsh security environmen­t” in their language on nuclear weapons.

“Instead of another empty statement, the current nuclear risk level demands real action,” the Internatio­nal Campaign Against Nuclear Weapons said in a statement last month.

It wants a “concrete, credible plan” for talks by all nuclear-armed states on eliminatin­g nuclear weapons.

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has said he chose Hiroshima for the G7 summit to help bring home the devastatio­n that nuclear weapons cause

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