The second NPT Review Conference started on May 2. If no one in India has taken notice, the reason is that while the Non-Proliferation Treaty may be alive in letter, in spirit it is quite dead. |
Ever since the NPT was wheeled out by the nuclear powers 37 years ago as a means of maintaining their oligopoly over nuclear weapons, the haves have expressed their worries over proliferation and the have-nots have asked for disarmament. |
The unvarnished truth is that neither has got what it wanted. Far from disarming, countries have acquired more nuclear weapons and there has not been a single decade when more countries did not acquire nuclear capabilities. |
The nuclear club of five that the NPT created looks as out-dated as the British monarchy, and the rules it creates are no better""as becomes evident when the Articles of the NPT are examined. |
Articles 1 and 2, for example, say that members should neither provide nor receive assistance for making bombs. Article 3 prohibits transfer of nuclear technology, except under IAEA safeguards. |
Article 5 envisions a happy sharing between members of the benefits of the peaceful applications of nuclear technology. And then there is Article 6, which the US has itself disowned under President Bush. |
This requires disarmament by all. The US says nuclear weapons are essential to its security. And it has turned a blind eye to blatant violations by China and France. |
On the other hand, the strict observance of provisions by India, even without being a signatory to the treaty, has been ignored. Under the circumstances, it serves little purpose to pretend that the NPT is alive and well. The time has come to consider a new framework. |
Such a new framework must start from the opposite premise of the old one, namely, that it is possible to prevent proliferation. |
The assumption today must be in tune with reality, which is that lots of people have got a bomb and more will acquire it""and all of them need not be state players. |
Many countries have drawn their own conclusions from the respective experiences of Saddam Hussein and Kim Il Jong""namely, that nuclear power is a currency that the US understands and which therefore buys you security from attack. |
A new framework must therefore look for establishing universally applicable multilateral obligations that minimise (elimination is impossible) the risk of accidents when many players are assumed to have a nuclear weapon, and not just a handful. |
The need for this becomes evident when one sees the disadvantages of contiguity or proximity. India-Pakistan-China, North Korea-China-South Korea-Japan, Iran-Iraq-Israel, the UK-France-Russia""all illustrate this and more pairs, triplets, quadruplets and quintets will spring up. |
The US-USSR non-contiguity or proximity was an exception. But even if all this happens, the problem of non-state threats (the idea of a rogue state is self-serving, considering that only the US has so far used the bomb) will remain. |
But that is not something which a treaty can provide for; it needs other measures to be taken and those cannot and need not be the subject of treaty discussions. |