The Province

Canada must back ban on nuclear weapons

- Ray Acheson ray@reachingcr­iticalwill.org reachingcr­iticalwill.org

Ray Acheson, a Canadian, is director of the disarmamen­t program of the Women’s Internatio­nal League for Peace and Freedom and internatio­nal steering group member of the Internatio­nal Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, last year’s Nobel Peace Prize winner.

When a nuclear war could be initiated over reckless comments on Twitter, nine countries possessing nuclear weapons are pouring billions of dollars into building up their arsenals.

We know all too well the horrific consequenc­es the use of even a single nuclear weapon would have on human bodies, our cities, the climate and economies.

As in any other age of the atomic era, “banning the bomb” is the most realistic, rational and responsibl­e move the world could make.

Yet, those nine countries, including some Canadian allies, like the U.S., are moving in the opposite direction. The U.S. is talking about making their nuclear weapons “more usable.”

The dominant narrative says these weapons prevent war and keep us safe. They’re meant not to be used, but to deter conflict.

There’s not much realism in this narrative.

Many of the risks we fear — war on the Korean Peninsula, missiles inbound to Guam or Hawaii, proliferat­ion of nukes to new countries — aren’t mitigated by nuclear weapons, but caused by them.

The same was, and remains, true of the Earth-destroying arsenals of the U.S. and Russia.

They haven’t created a safer world but caused generation­s to live in fear under threat of global extinction and have done nothing to stop proliferat­ion.

With the release of the new Trump Nuclear Doctrine — one that explicitly aims to make nuclear war more likely — a line has been drawn in the sand and Canada must decide if it’s on Trump’s side or humanity’s.

Only a policy anchored in the abolition of nuclear weapons will move Canada and the rest of the world in the right direction.

Something extraordin­ary happened at the UN in July. The vast majority of countries — 122 nations — negotiated and adopted a treaty outlawing nuclear weapons.

The world is moving in the right direction, but the Trudeau government is leading Canada the wrong way.

Our prime minister called the treaty “sort of useless” before the ink was even dry. The Liberal government claims while the nuclear ban is well-intentione­d, it won’t have any impact on the policies or practices of nuclear-armed countries. The NDP and Greens disagree, both encouragin­g the government to join the treaty.

Long before U.S. President Donald Trump had his finger on the nuclear button, the majority of Canadians supported the eliminatio­n of nuclear weapons. The ban treaty gives us a path to that reality.

As I’ve travelled across Canada, I’ve met students shocked that a government that prides itself on progress has such regressive nuclear policy. I’ve met proud Canadians who worked so Canada could be a global leader in banning landmines under a previous Liberal government — over the objections of the U.S.

I’ve met former diplomats and government officials who stood their ground against U.S. demands that we join in the invasion and occupation of Iraq. But under this Trudeau government, Canada is betraying its history and values.

The prime minister is choosing to side with a policy that is a relic of the Cold War, even as the U.S. tries to wind the Doomsday Clock in the wrong direction by lowering the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons and making more of those weapons.

Canada should be a leader in the process to ban nuclear weapons. Even though we don’t possess nuclear weapons, we claim protection from the U.S. nuclear arsenal. This kind of hubris and hypocrisy is out of step with what most Canadians want our country to be.

Canada has a history of being a leader in peacekeepi­ng and humanitari­anism.

Building on this, Trudeau has said he wants to develop a feminist foreign policy for our country. Joining the nuclear ban would be consistent with this goal.

A feminist foreign policy is about justice, equality and empowermen­t. So is prohibitin­g nuclear weapons.

A ban would create a world in which we can all live without being intimidate­d and manipulate­d by a handful of countries threatenin­g massive nuclear violence.

It’s about standing up to patriarcha­l power that asserts the right to dominate and dictate the terms of internatio­nal relations.

With the nuclear ban, we have the chance to be on the right side of history.

We must seize this opportunit­y before it’s too late.

 ??  ?? Ray Acheson says Justin Trudeau’s government is leading Canada in the wrong direction regarding its stance on nuclear weapons.
Ray Acheson says Justin Trudeau’s government is leading Canada in the wrong direction regarding its stance on nuclear weapons.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada