Guymon Daily Herald

'Neglected danger': Nukes not in forefront in speeches at UN

- By JENNIFER PELTZ

NEW YORK (AP) — It was the Marshall Islands' turn to speak, and the president wanted to remind world leaders of a cause the United Nations has espoused since its founding.

"No effort should be spared," President David Kabua told the U.N. General Assembly this month, "to move towards a world free of nuclear weapons and nuclear risk."

It might seem like a must-discuss topic in countries' big speeches at the annual meeting of presidents, prime ministers and other top officials — perhaps especially in a year when a historic nuclear weapons ban treaty take effect, though without participat­ion from nuclear-armed nations.

This year also marks the 25th anniversar­y of the signing of the Comprehens­ive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, which has yet to enter into force for lack of ratificati­on by eight crucial nations but has helped greatly reduce such tests. And it's the 75th anniversar­y of the General Assembly's very first resolution, which sought proposals to eliminate atomic weapons. So where was all the discussion? Nuclear disarmamen­t wasn't a dominant theme, particular­ly among major powers, in the "General Debate" that is the assembly's centerpiec­e and provides something of a yearbook of what's on world leaders' minds. Even specific concerns about the troubled Iran nuclear deal and North Korea's atomic program didn't get as much emphasis as in some years past.

The world's nuclear arsenal "is a forgotten and neglected danger, but it is forever present," said Darryl Kimball of the Washington-based Arms Control Associatio­n. "It deserves to be at the top of the agenda, and it really should demand more attention."

It did get some, including from the nations with the biggest stockpiles.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said "the world was encouraged" by last winter's renewal of the New START treaty that limits Moscow's and Washington's nukes, and he noted the countries' upcoming strategic talks. U.S. President Joe Biden said the world needed to come together on problems including "enduring threats like nuclear proliferat­ion."

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio declared "we need progress on nuclear disarmamen­t," and there were separate events on it during diplomacy's biggest convocatio­n of the year.

Still, the treatment of the issue in national speeches "seems to suggest that nuclear disarmamen­t is not a big priority among the nuclear-armed states" and reflects uncertaint­y about prospects for progress, said Tytti Erästö, a disarmamen­t researcher at the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute.

It's no surprise that nukes didn't get more of the spotlight from leaders preoccupie­d by the coronaviru­s pandemic and climate change. But it's still "a missed opportunit­y," said Richard Ponzio of the Stimson Center, a Washington-based foreign policy think tank.

The chance to convene leaders from around the planet "should not go underutili­zed," said Ponzio, a former U.N. and U.S. State Department official.

The U.N. was founded in the wake of World War II. The world had just watched the devastatin­g debut of nuclear weapons — the bombs that the United States dropped on two Japanese cities in 1945, killing over 100,000 people.

The so-called Cold War followed. The nuclear-armed U.S. and Soviet Union engaged in proxy conflicts, came perilously close to the use of atomic weapons in the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, and pursued an arms race animated by a chilling doctrine of deterrence: "mutual assured destructio­n."

The potential for atomic annihilati­on loomed over internatio­nal relations. And it burrowed into the psyche of generation­s of Americans, at least, who grew up with bomb shelters, "duck and cover" air raid drills, and depictions of nuclear war in formats ranging from the 1964 "daisy ad" campaign commercial to the 1983 TV film "The Day After."

The U.N. "helped reduce the tensions and helped to hold back the darkness," as U.S. President John F. Kennedy put it to the General Assembly in 1963. He spoke shortly before a limited nuclear weapon test treaty took effect.

There have since been more pacts and some significan­t progress.

There were over 2,000 nuclear tests worldwide from 1945 to 1996, but fewer than a dozen since. The global count of nuclear warheads is about one-quarter what it was at its mid'80s peak, though still potentiall­y cataclysmi­c at more than 13,000. And the Cold War's end, finalized with the 1991 dissolutio­n of the Soviet Union, somewhat eased global fears of nuclear conflict.

Concerns about terrorism, global warming and other perils subsequent­ly grew and focus on nuclear issues receded, for many, in a world increasing­ly populated by people who didn't experience the Cold War.

"We're seeing a generation­al change," says John Erath, a former U.S. diplomat and national security official now with the nonprofit, Washington-based Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferat­ion.

"What's going to be very interestin­g to see, over the next few years, is how the new generation feels about this and in what direction they take this," Erath said. He noted that some security experts have discussed whether climate change could propel conflict and potentiall­y raise the risks of nuclear confrontat­ion.

To be sure, nuclear disarmamen­t did get its own place in the assembly's agenda. At least a half-dozen presidents and premiers and scores of foreign ministers spoke at an event Tuesday marking the Internatio­nal Day for the Total Eliminatio­n of Nuclear Weapons.

A biennial conference on the assembly's sidelines last week aimed to build support for the comprehens­ive test ban treaty, and Ireland led a U.N. Security Council discussion Monday on the state of the pact.

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