<http://www.thebulletin.org/columns/hugh-gusterson/20070109.html>
Finding Article VI

By Hugh Gusterson

The anti-nuclear movement has discovered Article VI of the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

In December, I attended a public hearing at the Energy Department on
the Bush administration's plan for a revitalized nuclear weapons
complex. Energy is planning to upgrade and consolidate its weapons
manufacturing and experimental facilities and, most controversially,
to build a new plutonium pit manufacturing facility. Every one of the
speakers who testified that afternoon opposed the government's plan,
dubbed Complex 2030. But what was striking was that so many gave
Article VI as a reason for opposing it.

The NPT, ratified by the United States in 1970, embodied a bargain
between states with and without nuclear weapons. The latter were
guaranteed free access to nuclear energy technology as long as they
promised to forswear nuclear weapons. In exchange, the official
nuclear powers agreed to get serious about arms control and
disarmament. This commitment was formalized in Article VI, which
obligated the existing nuclear powers to "pursue negotiations in good
faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the arms race at
an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a treaty on general
and complete disarmament under strict and effective international
control."

Since 1970 the United States and the other nuclear weapons states have
largely treated Article VI as if it were decorative language with no
force. I vividly remember interviewing one of the leading nuclear
weapons designers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in 1988 (a
man now a top manager at the lab) and asking him about the U.S.
commitment to end the arms race under the NPT. I was a graduate
student at the time. He scoffed at me, saying that the NPT contained
no such language. (I was so annoyed by this, that I xeroxed the text
of the treaty and mailed it to him immediately after the interview. I
never heard back from him.)

Article VI did not enjoy much more visibility in American anti-nuclear
circles at this time. In the Reagan years, the rhetoric of the
movement focused on the danger that the arms race would trigger a
catastrophic war between the superpowers. It was not part of the
movement's ensemble of arguments--as it is now--to point out that the
superpowers were reneging on their treaty commitments by not ending
the arms race. Insofar as this argument was made in the 1980s, it was
made in the nonaligned world by officials and pundits whose views were
not reported by the U.S. press.

So, what changed between then and now?

For one thing, even if the nuclear weapons complex remains active and
strong, the Cold War arms race and nuclear testing did end in the
1990s. In a world where there is no superpower arms race and stockpile
numbers are (albeit too modestly) declining, anti-nuclear activists
can no longer oppose the complex on the grounds that it is engaged in
a headlong race to oblivion. In the meantime, nuclear tests in India
and Pakistan helped draw attention to arguments by South Asians that
the nonproliferation regime discriminates against emergent powers in
the developing world, and the mingling of anti-nuclear activists with
developing world diplomats at the U.N. NPT Review Conferences of 1995,
2000, and 2005 exposed American activists to these diplomats'
grievances around Article VI.

The Indian and Pakistani tests have also--together with revelations
about concealed nuclear programs in Iran and North Korea--made many
realize that, if the danger of the first nuclear age was an
incineration of the planet by two reckless superpowers, then the
second nuclear age opens a new horizon of danger: proliferation and
the ignition of new regional nuclear arms races. For activists seeking
both to forestall these emergent arms races and to apply further
pressure on the U.S. nuclear weapons complex, Article VI offers the
obvious point of connection.

Seen from one angle, this is progress. In the 1980s even the
anti-nuclear movement treated Article VI as if it was irrelevant. Now,
finally, the complaints of the rest of the planet have broken through
into formerly insular nuclear debates in the United States where
mainstream media coverage of the 2005 NPT Review Conference (such as
there was) did reference foreign diplomats' sense of grievance around
Article VI. On the other hand, the new visibility of Article VI in
American activist discourse surely bespeaks a strategic weakness in
the movement's rhetoric. Given that the United States was able to
withdraw from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, the International
Criminal Court, and the Kyoto accords without exciting domestic
opposition, a movement that opposes a revamped nuclear weapons complex
on the grounds that it violates the spirit of a 40-year-old arms
control treaty is going nowhere fast.

If the anti-nuclear movement is to gain traction, as well as talking
about Article VI, it will need to give Americans more reasons of their
own to oppose Complex 2030.


--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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