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United Nations (UN)
New Agenda Draft UNGA Resolution
Note: the New Agenda Coalition (NAC), launched in June
1998, consists of seven states, Brazil, Egypt, Ireland, New
Zealand, Mexico, South Africa, and Sweden. At the 54th Session of
the UN General Assembly in 1999, a resolution put forward by the
NAC, Towards a Nuclear-Weapon-Free World: the Need for a New
Agenda (54/54G), was adopted by 111 votes to 13 with 39
abstentions (see Disarmament Diplomacy No. 41, November 1999.)
Resolution
'Towards a Nuclear-Weapon-Free World: the Need for a New
Agenda,' Draft Resolution, released September 28, 2000.
"The General Assembly,
Recalling its resolutions 53/77Y of 4 December 1998 and
54/54G of 1 December 1999,
Expressing its deep concern at the continued risk for
humanity represented by the possibility that nuclear weapons could
be used,
Concerned that negotiations on nuclear arms reductions
are currently stalled,
Recalling the International Court of Justice advisory
opinion on the Legality of the threat or use of nuclear weapons
issued at The Hague on July 8, 1996,
Concerned at the continued retention of the nuclear
weapons option by those three states that operate unsafeguarded
nuclear facilities and that have not acceded to the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, and concerned at their
failure to renounce that option,
Declaring that nuclear test explosions carried out in
1998 by two of the states that have not renounced the nuclear
weapons option do not in any way confer a nuclear-weapon state
status or any special status whatsoever,
Noting that despite achievements in bilateral and
unilateral arms reductions, the total number of nuclear weapons
deployed and in stockpile still amount to many thousands,
Welcoming the significant progress achieved in nuclear
weapons reductions made unilaterally or bilaterally under the
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty process, as steps towards nuclear
disarmament,
Welcoming the ratification of START II by the Russian
Federation as an important step in the efforts to reduce strategic
offensive weapons, and stressing that completion of ratification of
START II by the United States remains a priority,
Welcoming the significant unilateral reduction measures
taken by the nuclear-weapon states, including the close-down and
dismantling of nuclear weapon-related facilities,
Welcoming the efforts of several states to cooperate in
making nuclear disarmament measures irreversible in particular,
through initiatives on the verification, management and disposition
of fissile material declared excess to military purposes,
Noting the nuclear-weapon states' declaration that none
of their nuclear weapons are targeted at any state,
Underlining the necessity of strict compliance by all
parties with their obligations under the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,
Recalling the United Nations Millennium Declaration, in
which the Heads of State and Government resolved to strive for the
elimination of weapons of mass destruction, particularly nuclear
weapons and to keep all options open for achieving this aim,
including the possibility of convening an international conference
to identify ways of eliminating nuclear dangers,
Welcoming the Final Document of the Sixth Review
Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of
Nuclear Weapons, and underlining the need for urgent action to
achieve a world free from nuclear weapons,
Underlining the fundamental significance of the
unequivocal undertaking by the nuclear-weapon states to accomplish
the total elimination of their nuclear arsenals leading to nuclear
disarmament, to which all States Parties to the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty are committed under Article VI of the
Treaty,
Determined to pursue practical steps for the systematic
and progressive efforts to implement Article VI of the Treaty on
the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons and paragraphs 3 and 4 (c)
of the 1995 Decision on 'Principles and Objectives for Nuclear
Non-Proliferation and Disarmament',
- Agrees on the importance and urgency of signatures and
ratifications, without delay and without conditions and in
accordance with constitutional processes, to achieve the early
entry into force of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty;
- Calls for the upholding of a moratorium on nuclear-weapon-test
explosions or any other nuclear explosions pending entry into force
of that Treaty;
- Agrees on the necessity of negotiations in the Conference on
Disarmament on a non-discriminatory, multilateral and
internationally and effectively verifiable treaty banning the
production of fissile material for nuclear weapons or other nuclear
explosive devices in accordance with the statement of the Special
Coordinator in 1995 and the mandate contained therein, taking into
consideration both nuclear disarmament and nuclear
non-proliferation objectives. The Conference on Disarmament is
urged to agree on a program of work which includes the immediate
commencement of negotiations on such a treaty with a view to their
conclusion within five years;
- Agrees on the necessity of establishing in the Conference on
Disarmament an appropriate subsidiary body with a mandate to deal
with nuclear disarmament. The Conference on Disarmament is urged to
agree on a program of work which includes the immediate
establishment of such a body;
- Calls for the principle of irreversibility to apply to nuclear
disarmament, nuclear and others related arms control and reduction
measures;
- Calls for the early entry into force and full implementation of
START II and the conclusion of START III as soon possible while
preserving and strengthening the Treaty on the Limitation of
Anti-Ballistic Missile Systems as a cornerstone of strategic
stability and as a basis for further reductions of strategic
offensive weapons, in accordance with its provisions;
- Calls for the completion and implementation of the Trilateral
Initiative between the United States of America, the Russian
Federation and the International Atomic Energy Agency;
- Calls for steps by all the nuclear-weapon states leading to
nuclear disarmament in a way that promotes international stability,
and based on the principle of undiminished security for all:
-
- Further efforts by the nuclear-weapon states to reduce their
nuclear arsenals unilaterally;
- Increased transparency by the nuclear-weapon states with regard
to the nuclear weapons capabilities and the implementation of
agreements pursuant to article VI of the NPT and as a voluntary
confidence-building measure to support further progress on nuclear
disarmament;
- The further reduction of non-strategic nuclear weapons, based
on unilateral initiatives and as an integral part of the nuclear
arms reduction and disarmament process;
- Concrete agreed measures to further reduce the operational
status of nuclear weapons systems;
- A diminishing role for nuclear weapons in security policies to
minimize the risk that these weapons will ever be used and to
facilitate the process of their total elimination;
- The engagement as soon as appropriate of all the nuclear-weapon
states in the process leading to the total elimination of their
nuclear weapons;
- Calls for arrangements by all nuclear-weapon states place as
soon as practicable, fissile material designated by each of them as
no longer required for military purposes under IAEA or other
relevant international verification and arrangements for the
disposition of such materials for peaceful purposes, to ensure that
such material remains permanently outside military programmes;
- Reaffirms that the ultimate objective of the efforts of states
in the disarmament process is general and complete disarmament
under effective international control;
- Calls for regular reports, within the framework of the
strengthened review process for the Non-Proliferation Treaty, by
all States Parties on the implementation of article VI of the NPT
and paragraph 4 (c) of the 1995 Decision on 'Principles and
Objectives for Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament', and
recalling the advisory opinion of the International Court of
Justice of 8 July 1996;
- Agrees to pursue the further development of the verification
capabilities that will be required to provide assurance of
compliance with nuclear disarmament agreements for the achievement
and maintenance of a nuclear-weapon-free world;
- Calls on all states not yet party to the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons to accede to the Treaty as non
nuclear-weapon states, promptly and without condition, particularly
those states that operate unsafeguarded nuclear facilities, and
calls upon those states to bring into force the required
comprehensive safeguards agreements, together with additional
Protocols consistent with the Model contained in INFCIR/540, and to
reverse clearly and urgently any policies to pursue any
nuclear-weapon development or deployment and to refrain from any
action which could undermine regional and international peace and
security and the efforts of the international community towards
nuclear disarmament and the prevention of nuclear weapons
proliferation;
- Calls upon those states that have not yet done so to conclude
full-scope safeguards agreements with the International Atomic
Energy Agency and to conclude additional protocols to their
safeguards agreement on the basis of the Model Protocol approved by
the Board of Governors of the Agency on 15 May 1997;
- Notes the paramount importance of effective physical protection
of all nuclear material, and calls upon all states to maintain the
highest possible standards of security and physical protection of
nuclear materials;
- Notes that the Sixth Review Conference of the States Parties to
the NPT called upon its Preparatory Committee to make
recommendations to the 2005 Review Conference on legally binding
security assurances by the five nuclear-weapon states to the
non-nuclear weapon States Parties to the Treaty;
- Reaffirms the conviction that the establishment of
internationally recognized nuclear-weapon-free zones on the basis
of arrangements freely arrived at among the states of the region
concerned enhances global and regional peace and security,
strengthens the nuclear non-proliferation regime and contributes
towards realizing the objective of nuclear disarmament, and
supports proposals for the establishment of nuclear weapon free
zones where they do not yet exist, such as in the Middle East and
South Asia;
- Affirms that a nuclear-weapon-free world will ultimately
require the underpinnings of a universal and multilaterally
negotiated legally binding instrument or a framework encompassing a
mutually reinforcing set of instruments;
- Acknowledges the Report of the Secretary General on the
implementation of General Assembly resolution 54/54G (A/55/217) and
requests him within existing resources, to compile a report on the
implementation of the present resolution;
- Decides to include in the provisional agenda of its 56th
Session the item entitled 'Towards a Nuclear-Weapon-Free World: the
Need for a New Agenda' and to review the implementation of the
present resolution."
© 2001 The Acronym Institute.