The Korea Times

Global nuclear disarmamen­t: Don’t abandon the dream

- Gareth Evans Gareth Evans is chair of the Asia-Pacific Leadership Network for Nuclear Non-Proliferat­ion and Disarmamen­t (APLN). He is former Australian foreign minister. He concurrent­ly serves as the chancellor of the Australian National University, and a

With North Korean negotiatio­ns going nowhere fast, talk about a South Korean “bomb” growing, all the nuclear-armed states modernizin­g and expanding their arsenals, and existing U.S.-Russia arms control agreements falling apart, achieving global nuclear disarmamen­t looks ever more like an impossible dream.

But we abandon that dream at our peril. The risk of catastroph­ic misuse of nuclear weapons, deliberate­ly or — more likely — by accident or miscalcula­tion, is as grave and immediate as it has ever been. Climate change is also an existentia­l risk to life on this planet as we know it, but nuclear weapons can kill us a lot faster than CO2.

To recapture the commitment of policymake­rs, campaigner­s for nuclear disarmamen­t need to do four things: utilize the power of emotion; utilize the power of reason; unite around a common, realistic disarmamen­t agenda that does not make the best the enemy of the good; and, above all, stay optimistic.

As to emotion, it is important not to underestim­ate the extent to which, in real world government nuclear decision-making, the sheer indiscrimi­nate inhumanity of any nuclear weapons use already plays a part.

Even the most hard-headed policymake­rs have to take seriously the profound normative taboo which still exists internatio­nally against any deliberate, aggressive use of nuclear weapons, at least in circumstan­ces where the very survival of a state is not at imminent risk.

Bottom-up civic pressure is a necessary part of most major political change, and the Hiroshima message will always have raw power. But community voices alone are unlikely to move the hard-heads, many of whom quite unashamedl­y argue that the sheer awfulness of nuclear weapons is what makes them so effective as a deterrent.

What they need to be persuaded about are the strategic arguments against nuclear weapons — that their benefits are negligible, and far outweighed by the risks involved. It is not hard to make such a rational case.

In terms of deterring war between the major powers, of course “mutually assured destructio­n” encouraged a degree of caution in how the Soviet Union and U.S. approached each other. But no evidence has ever emerged that either side wanted at any stage to cold-bloodedly initiate a war and was deterred only by the existence of the other side’s nuclear arsenal.

As to nuclear weapons deterring large-scale convention­al attacks, there are many cases where non-nuclear powers have either directly attacked nuclear powers, or have not been deterred by the prospect of their interventi­on: Think of Korea, Vietnam, the Falklands, Afghanista­n and the first Gulf war for a start.

As to the apparent belief of some smaller states — like North Korea — that a handful of nuclear weapons is their ultimate guarantor against external regime-change-motivated interventi­on, that is just not well-founded.

Possession of nuclear weapons that it would be manifestly suicidal for a state to use are not a credible deterrent, nor are weapons not supported by infrastruc­ture (for example, missile submarines) that would give them a reasonable prospect of surviving to mount a retaliator­y attack. The DPRK knows that nuclear homicide — against the ROK, Japan or the United States — means national suicide.

In pursuing both disarmamen­t and non-proliferat­ion — and indeed in many other policy contexts — it is critically important to learn the art of compromise. Never make the best the enemy of the good. And that means being particular­ly careful about how we articulate the “global zero” objective.

However emotionall­y appealing, the Nuclear Weapons Prohibitio­n Treaty recently negotiated through the U.N. is manifestly not going to get a buyin from nuclear armed and umbrella states, now or perhaps ever.

Nuclear weapons eliminatio­n is only ever going to be achievable on an incrementa­l basis, building into the process a series of way-stations. Such a credible way forward was mapped by the Internatio­nal Commission on Nuclear Non-Proliferat­ion and Disarmamen­t (ICNND), which I co-chaired in 2009 with former Japanese Foreign Minister Yoriko Kawaguchi.

We urged that initial efforts focus not on eliminatio­n but on a “minimizati­on” agenda, summarizab­le as the “4 Ds”: Getting a universal buy-in to No First Use (Doctrine), which is already supported at least by China and India; giving that credibilit­y by taking weapons off high-alert (Dealerting); drasticall­y reducing the number of those actively deployed (Deployment); and reducing overall numbers to around 2,000, down from the 15,000+ now in existence (Decreased numbers).

A world with very low numbers of nuclear weapons, with very few physically deployed, practicall­y none of them on high-alert launch status and every nuclear-armed state visibly committed to never being the first to use nuclear weapons would still be very far from being perfect. But it would be a much safer world than the one we live in now.

While the present environmen­t for good policymaki­ng on nuclear disarmamen­t as on much else, is desolate, it is important to keep things in perspectiv­e. Wheels do turn and political leaders do change. Optimism is self-reinforcin­g in the same way that pessimism is self-defeating. So it is up to those of us who hope for a nuclear weapon-free world to believe in it, and get out there and work for it.

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