With the Conference on Disarmament still gripped by
paralysis, members are taking careful stock of the CD’s future. Its role as “a single multilateral negotiating forum”, the mandate given it in
1978 by the UN General Assembly during its first Special Session on Disarmament
(UNSSOD-1), has never been more in question.
Given the Conference’s weighty agenda, what are the consequences
for international security of this prolonged breakdown in multilateral
disarmament diplomacy?
It is tempting to think that the answer to that question
depends on whether or not one has a nuclear arsenal. This is because the
deadlock in the CD is preventing non-nuclear
weapon states from:
- pursuing nuclear disarmament in the CD;
- securing legally-binding assurances through the CD that nuclear weapons will not be used against them;
- negotiating in the CD a prohibition of the production of fissile material used in nuclear weapons, a goal also shared by most of the nuclear weapon states;
- developing through the CD the means to reduce existing stocks of weapons-grade fissile material; and
- legislating to keep outer space free from nuclear and other weapons by concerted efforts in the CD before it is too late to do so.
And what about the perspective of states that possess
nuclear weapons in their arsenals or which aspire to do so? How does the impasse in the CD serve
their interests?
Let’s look again at the five bullet points above. Deadlock in the CD means that nuclear
weapon states are not being held fully to account on any of these issues. The Economist recently observed that the
“reality is that the big nuclear powers
prefer stagnation in the disarmament conference to surrendering the consensus
rule. It allows them to stall any initiative they oppose.”
In other words, for the nuclear weapons-possessing states,
deadlock in the CD preserves the status
quo. Sure, amongst other
things the US and Russia are making valuable contributions towards nuclear
disarmament on a bilateral basis, and
those two states along with France and the UK have long since unilaterally declared voluntary moratoria on the production of fissile material for use in nuclear weapons. But the driving consideration of the
non-aligned countries in pushing for UNSSOD-1 was that disarmament should be
placed on a multilateral footing in
which they – and other non-nuclear states – would participate and have their
say.
For that reason, it is understandable that some non-nuclear
weapons states continue to attach importance to the CD as a multilateral
channel for strengthening international security. But as other non-nuclear weapon states keep pointing out,
the CD is not an end in itself but merely an instrument – a means to an end. If the Conference can no longer carry
out its role as a negotiating body, members wishing to pursue the issues
identified earlier will have little option but to use other multilateral
avenues. These might include the CD’s creator - the UN General Assembly itself,
or diplomatic conferences or other ad hoc processes in which decision-making is not so hidebound as it has become in the
CD.
With each failure of the Conference to agree its work
programme (whether of a comprehensive or a streamlined kind),
the harder it will be for the CD to live up to the hopes of so many of its
non-aligned founding members that it would provide a multilateral negotiating channel in which to seek security in
disarmament.
This situation is compounded by the reality that the CD is
deadlocked not by a breakdown in negotiations but by an inability to agree even
on the basis on which negotiations should proceed. This is a dismal and
bankrupt state of affairs, the more so because the last occasion on which the
CD fulfilled its negotiating role was 16 years ago in 1996 when the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) emerged from an intensive three-year process.
The time has come to move on from the tired recycling of
discussions into a new dimension for the pressing issues languishing on the
CD’s agenda. In the absence of more
enlightened applications of the rules on decision-making and on the content of the
programme of work, enduring attachment to the CD - whether sentimental or
cynical - needs to be seen for what it is – a serious obstacle to multilateral
progress on nuclear disarmament and associated issues and to international security.
This
is a guest post by Tim Caughley. Tim is a Resident Senior Fellow at UNIDIR. For
other comments on the CD in this series see particularly postings dated 21
February 2012, 4 January 2012, 29 November 2011 and 16 March 2011.
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