A nuclear war cannot be won
China, US, UK, France and Russia pledge to avoid nuclear war
Hong Kong
(CNN)Five of the world's largest nuclear powers pledged on Monday to work
together toward "a world without nuclear weapons" in a rare statement
of unity amid rising East-West tensions.
"A nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought," said the joint statement, which was issued simultaneously by the United States, Russia, China, the United Kingdom and France. "As nuclear use would have far-reaching consequences, we also affirm that nuclear weapons -- for as long as they continue to exist -- should serve defensive purposes, deter aggression, and prevent war."
The
statement also stressed the importance of preventing conflict between
nuclear-weapon states from escalating, describing it as a "foremost
responsibility."
The
statement comes as tensions between the world powers have risen to heights
rarely seen in recent decades. In Europe, Russia is massing troops along its
border with Ukraine, raising alarms in Washington, London and Paris. And in
Asia, increased Chinese military activity around the self-governed island of
Taiwan has spiked tensions between Beijing and Washington and its Pacific
allies.
The statement released by the five powers, also known as the P5, as permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, called on all states to create a security environment "more conducive to progress on disarmament with the ultimate goal of a world without nuclear weapons with undiminished security for all."
The five
pledged to adhere to the 1970 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) which
obligates them "to pursue negotiations in good faith on effective measures
relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear
disarmament."
Russian
Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said Monday the five-nation
statement was initiated by Moscow with the intention of it being released in
coordination with a review of the NPT that was to begin on Tuesday in New York
but has been pushed by the coronavirus epidemic in the US.
"Given
the importance and self-sufficiency of this joint statement, the nuclear powers
decided not to delay its publication," Zakharova said, according to the
official TASS news agency.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told TASS the statement "was negotiated through diplomatic channels" and "comprehensively reflects the positions of the parties and the leaders."
Some of the
text of the statement, including the pledges to work toward a world free of
nuclear weapons, echoes a statement issued by the five nations after a December
conference in Paris that laid the groundwork for the since delayed review of
the treaty.
And the
statement that a nuclear war cannot be won was identical to language that the
US and Russian Presidents, Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin, used after their June
summit in Switzerland.
It was also
the same language used by then-US President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev after their 1985 summit in Geneva.
Russia is
believed to have the world's biggest stockpile of nuclear warheads, with 6,255,
followed closely by the United States at 5,550, according to the Arms Control
Association (ACA). China (350), France (290) and the UK (225) round out the top
five.
Pakistan
(165), India (156), Israel (90) and North Korea (40-50) also have nuclear
weapons, according to the ACA, but are not party to the Nonproliferation
Treaty.
The
director-general of the Chinese Foreign Ministry's arms control department, Fu
Cong, said that Beijing remained committed to a policy of no first use and
deterrence, despite modernizing its nuclear capabilities.
"Nuclear
weapons are the ultimate deterrence. They are not for war fighting. By saying
that nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought shows that this is an
understanding shared by all the P5. So it is important that we have this in
mind while we talk about the tension," said Fu when asked about tensions
over Taiwan.
"This applies everywhere and it applies with our bad relations with the US ... This is something that we hope could reduce tension, and it would help clarify certain misunderstandings," he added.
In November
2021, the US Pentagon warned that China was rapidly expanding its nuclear
arsenal, and may have 1,000 nuclear warheads by the end of the decade. The
estimate, based on the rapid modernization of China's nuclear strike options
and its construction of missile silos, marked a dramatic increase from the last
projection in 2020 -- which estimated China would double their stockpile of 200
warheads within a decade.
That same
month, the Federation of American Scientists (FAS), a nonpartisan national security
research and advocacy organization, found that China had made significant
progress on suspected silo fields -- which could eventually be capable of
launching long-range nuclear missiles -- in the western part of the country.
"For
China, this is an unprecedented nuclear buildup," wrote the authors of the
FAS report.
For its
part, the United States holds a policy of "calculated ambiguity" when
it comes to nuclear weapons use, according to an October 2021 report from the
Congressional Research Service.
"The
United States has pledged to refrain from using nuclear weapons against most
non-nuclear weapon states, but has neither ruled out their first use in all
cases nor specified the circumstances under which it would use them," the
report says.
Beatrice
Fihn, executive director of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear
Weapons (ICAN), said the words of the five countries do not match their
actions.
"They write this 'nice' statement but doing exactly the opposite in reality. They're in a nuclear arms race, expanding nuclear arsenals, spending billions on modernizing and constantly prepared to start a nuclear war," Fihn said in a statement posted on social media.
Source: CNN
- Betsy Klein –Reuters
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