instead, into programmes of nuclear weapons ‘modernisation’. In the United States, this modernisation – which is projected to cost $1 trillion over the next 30 years – will include everything from ballistic missiles to bombers, warheads to naval vessels, cruise missiles to nuclear weapons factories.
In Russia, the government is in the process of replacing all of its Soviet era nuclear weapons systems with new, upgraded versions. As for Britain, the government has committed itself to building a new nuclear-armed submarine fleet called Successor, thereby continuing the nation’s nuclear status into the second half of the twenty-first century. Meanwhile, as the Arms Control Association recently reported, China, India, and Pakistan “are all pursuing new ballistic missile, cruise missile, and sea-based delivery systems.”
Thus, despite the insistence of the nuclear powers that Iran comply with the NPT, it is pretty clear that these nuclear-armed countries do not consider themselves bound to comply with this landmark agreement, signed by 189 nations. Some of the nuclear powers, in fact, have been quite brazen in rejecting it. Israel, India, and Pakistan have long defied the NPT – first by refusing to sign it and, later, by going ahead and building their own nuclear weapons. North Korea, once a signatory to the treaty, has withdrawn from it.
In the aftermath of the Iranian government’s agreement to comply with the treaty, would it not be an appropriate time to demand that the nuclear-armed nations do so?
At the least, the nuclear nations should agree to halt nuclear weapons ‘modernisation’ and to begin negotiating the long-delayed treaty to scrap the 16,000 nuclear weapons remaining in their arsenals. Having arranged for strict verification procedures to ensure that Iran does not develop nuclear weapons, they should be familiar with procedures for verification of their own nuclear disarmament.
After all, isn’t sauce for the goose also sauce for the gander?
This article originally appeared as: ‘After the Iran nuclear agreement: will the nuclear powers also play by the rules?’
Courtesy: Counterpunch.org
MPAs ask for their salaries and benefits to be at par with high court judges and exempt from tax
This system fosters and places premium on VIPs, facilitating VIP culture, which is alive and kicking
Imagine this waste covering over 15,500 cricket stadiums, piled three meters deep every year
If there is one thing that can be gleaned from politics today, it is that we no longer speak same language
Postman argues that “typographic mind” was yielding to “televisual mind”
Pakistan is well poised to meet opportunities that Artificial Intelligence will offer for developments in industries