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Israel, UK, France, Russia also voted no to ban

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UNITED NATIONS: More than 100 countries on Monday launched the first UN talks aimed at achieving a legally binding ban on nuclear weapons, as Washington led an internatio­nal boycott of a process it deems unrealisti­c.

Before the conference had even begun, US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley spoke out to reject the proposal in the light of current global security threats.

“As a mom and a daughter there is nothing I want more for my family than a world with no nuclear weapons,” Haley, who represents the world’s largest nuclear power, said on the sidelines of the meeting.

“But we have to be realistic,” she added. “Is there anyone that believes that North Korea would agree to a ban on nuclear weapons?“

Haley spoke in a group of some 20 ambassador­s from US allies which are boycotting the negotiatio­ns, including Britain, France, South Korea, Turkey and a number of countries from eastern Europe.

The ambassador­s of Russia and China were notably absent, but both major nuclear powers are also sitting out the General Assembly talks.

Haley estimated that “almost 40 countries” were not participat­ing.

The push for a ban was announced in October by 123 UN members who say the threat of atomic disaster is growing thanks to tensions fanned by North Korea’s nuclear weapons program and an unpredicta­ble new administra­tion in Washington.

Leaders of the effort include Austria, Ireland, Mexico, Brazil, South Africa and Sweden, sup- ported by hundreds of nonprofit organizati­ons.

But Britain, France, Israel, Russia and the US all voted no, while China, India and Pakistan abstained — together accounting for most of the world’s declared and undeclared nuclear powers.

Even Japan — the only country to have suffered atomic attacks, in 1945 — voted against the talks, saying a lack of consensus over the negotiatio­ns could undermine progress on effective nuclear disarmamen­t.

Japan’s ambassador, Nobushige Takamizawa, addressed the General Assembly to explain why.

“Efforts to make such a treaty without the involvemen­t of nucle- ar weapon states will only deepen the schism and division” in the internatio­nal community, he said.

Haley, while acknowledg­ing the promoters of the treaty were acting in “good faith,” said: “You have to ask yourselves: Do they really understand the threats that we have?“

Britain’s ambassador Matthew Rycroft asserted that his country “is completely committed to the long-term goal of a world without nuclear weapons” but does “not believe that those negotiatio­ns will lead to effective progress on global nuclear disarmamen­t.”

“The best way to achieve the goal of global nuclear disarmamen­t is through gradual multilat- eral disarmamen­t, negotiated using a step-by-step approach and within existing internatio­nal frameworks,” Rycroft added.

Haley noted that the US had reduced its nuclear arsenal by 85 percent since the 1968 Treaty on the Non- Proliferat­ion of Nuclear Weapons ( NPT) took effect, and added “we are going to continue to do that.”

But supporters of the UN process argue that little progress has been made in recent years despite commitment­s by the major nuclear powers under the NPT.

“We have been waiting for progress on nuclear disarmamen­t since 1997,” Austrian ambassador Alexander Marschik said at the launch of the negotiatio­ns in the General Assembly.

“Whenever we asked, we were told that the time was not right.”

In 2009, then-president Barack Obama announced a drive to reduce the role of nuclear weapons and eventually eliminate them.

But his administra­tion strongly encouraged NATO allies to vote against this year’s UN negotiatio­ns, saying a ban would obstruct cooperatio­n to respond to nuclear threats from adversarie­s.

“There was disappoint­ment with the Obama administra­tion, which made some pledges, but then ignored most of them,” said Beatrice Fihn, director of the Internatio­nal Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, an internatio­nal coalition of NGOs. “And now there are raised worries with the new US president.”

President Donald Trump threatened a nuclear arms race in a tweet shortly before he took office in January, saying “we will outmatch them at every pass and outlast them all.”

Ban supporters point to successful grassroots movements that led to the prohibitio­n of land mines in 1997 and cluster munitions in 2008 as a model for the future of nuclear disarmamen­t.

Drawing on experience from those campaigns, Fihn believes there is a “good chance” a treaty will be adopted, though perhaps not necessaril­y after the first phase of negotiatio­ns ends in July.

 ??  ?? Flanked by the French Deputy Representa­tive to the UN Alexis Lamek, left, and British Representa­tive to the UN Matthew Rycroft, right, US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley speaks to reporters at the UN headquarte­rs, on Monday in New York City. (AFP)
Flanked by the French Deputy Representa­tive to the UN Alexis Lamek, left, and British Representa­tive to the UN Matthew Rycroft, right, US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley speaks to reporters at the UN headquarte­rs, on Monday in New York City. (AFP)

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