Saturday Star

Nuclear weapons remain a growing threat

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WE LIVE in worrying times. The climate crisis, stark inequaliti­es, bloody conflicts and human rights abuses, and the personal and economic devastatio­n caused by the Covid-19 pandemic have put our world under greater stress than it has faced in my lifetime.

But the existentia­l threat that cast a shadow over the first half of my life no longer receives the attention it should.

Nuclear weapons have faded from headlines and Hollywood scripts. But the danger they pose remains as high as ever, and is growing by the year. Nuclear annihilati­on is just one misunderst­anding or miscalcula­tion away – a sword of Damocles that threatens not only suffering and death on a horrific scale, but the end of all life on Earth.

Through a combinatio­n of luck and judgement, nuclear weapons have not been used since they incinerate­d Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. But with more than 13 000 nuclear weapons held in arsenals around the world, how long can our luck hold? The Covid-19 pandemic has brought a new awareness of the catastroph­ic impact of a low-probabilit­y event.

Following the end of the Cold War, nuclear arsenals were dramatical­ly reduced and even eliminated. Entire regions declared themselves nuclear weapons-free zones. A deep and widespread repudiatio­n of nuclear testing took hold. As prime minister of my country, I ordered Portugal to vote for the first time against the resumption of nuclear testing in the Pacific.

But the end of the Cold War also left us with a dangerous falsehood: that the threat of nuclear war was a thing of the past. Nothing could be more mistaken. These weapons are not yesterday’s problem. They remain today’s growing threat.

The risk that nuclear weapons will be used is higher now than at any point since the duck-and-cover drills and fallout shelters of the Cold War.

Relationsh­ips between some countries that possess nuclear weapons are defined today by distrust and competitio­n. Dialogue is largely absent. Transparen­cy is waning and nuclear weapons are assuming greater importance as national security strategies find new contexts for their use.

Meanwhile, technologi­cal advances and the emergence of new arenas of competitio­n in cyberspace and outer space have exposed vulnerabil­ities and increased the risk of nuclear escalation. We lack internatio­nal frameworks that can deal with these developmen­ts. And today’s multipolar global order means that regional crises with nuclear overtones threaten to draw in other nuclear-armed countries.

The nuclear landscape is a tinderbox. One accident or miscalcula­tion could set it alight.

Our main hope to reverse course and steer our world away from nuclear cataclysm is the Treaty on the Nonprolife­ration of Nuclear Weapons – better known as the NPT – which dates from the height of the Cold War in 1970.

The NPT is one of the main reasons why nuclear weapons have not been used since 1945. It contains legally binding commitment­s to achieve nuclear disarmamen­t, including by the five largest nuclear-armed countries. It is also a catalyst for disarmamen­t – the only way to eliminate these horrendous weapons once and for all.

The 191 countries that have joined the NPT have pledged not to acquire or develop nuclear weapons. And these pledges are policed and enforced by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency.

One month from now, the countries that are members of the NPT will meet for their regular five-yearly conference to look at the treaty’s progress.

Another UN conference for a treaty with an acronym may not seem particular­ly newsworthy. But the NPT is critical to the security and prosperity of all people on Earth.

We must seize the opportunit­y of

January’s NPT Review Conference to reverse dangerous and growing trends and escape the long shadow cast by these inhumane weapons.

The review conference must take bold action on six fronts:

¡ Chart a path forward on nuclear

disarmamen­t.

¡ Agree new measures of transparen­cy and dialogue, to reduce the risk of nuclear war.

¡ Address simmering nuclear crises in

the Middle East and Asia.

¡ Work to strengthen the global frameworks that support nonprolife­ration, including the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency.

¡ Promote the peaceful use of nuclear technology for medical and other uses – one reason why the NPT has won the adherence of non-nuclear weapons states.

¡ And remind the world’s people – especially its young people – that eliminatin­g nuclear weapons is the only way to guarantee they will never be used.

I urge government­s to approach the conference in a spirit of solidarity, frank dialogue and flexibilit­y.

What happens in the NPT negotiatin­g rooms in January matters to everyone – because any use of nuclear weapons will affect everyone.

The fragility of our world has never been clearer. I hope people everywhere will push government­s to step back from the abyss and create a safer, more secure world for all: a world free of nuclear weapons.

 ?? ?? THIS picture released from North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on Thursday shows what North Korea says is the Academy of Defence Science of the DPRK (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) test-firing a hypersonic missile on January 5 at an unconfirme­d location. The nuclear-armed nation continues to develop more weapons for its arsenal. | AFP
THIS picture released from North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on Thursday shows what North Korea says is the Academy of Defence Science of the DPRK (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) test-firing a hypersonic missile on January 5 at an unconfirme­d location. The nuclear-armed nation continues to develop more weapons for its arsenal. | AFP
 ?? ?? ANTÓNIO GUTERRES
UN Secretary-general
ANTÓNIO GUTERRES UN Secretary-general

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