APLN Statement on 75th Anniversary of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki
Seventy-five years after the bombing of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki put beyond argument that nuclear weapons are the most indiscriminately
inhumane ever devised, the distressing reality is that the risk of nuclear
catastrophe is as great as it has ever been, and the goal – shared by all APLN
members – of achieving their elimination from the face of the earth is as far
from achievement as it has ever been.
Existing nuclear arms control agreements are dead or
dying. There is no prospect whatever of any nuclear armed state joining the
Nuclear Ban Treaty. There has been no progress on moderating the salience of
nuclear weapons in strategic doctrines. There have been no advances on ‘no
first use’, ‘negative security assurances’, ‘de-alerting’ or serious stockpile
reduction – all long-standing goals of APLN. Hopes of progress on
denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula have stalled, and all six nuclear-armed
states in the Asia-Pacific region are increasing their nuclear profile.
No action on disarmament by the nuclear weapons states
means that commitment to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty remains fragile,
and efforts to strengthen it impossible.
The reality remains, as stated over the decades by successive
international commissions, that so long as any state has nuclear weapons,
others will want them; so long as any nuclear weapons remain they are bound one
day to be used, by accident or misadventure if not design; and any such use
would be catastrophic for life on this planet as we know it.
Making progress on nuclear disarmament is a slow,
grinding, frustrating, unrewarding process, but it is an effort that must
continue, for the survival of humanity depends on it. The nuclear threat, like
the two other existential threats to life as we know it the world faces –
climate change and global pandemics –, can only be overcome through serious,
sustained, intelligent international cooperation.
The indispensable ingredient in meeting all these
existential challenges is effective, principled political leadership. On the
nuclear threat, that leadership could most immediately be shown by the heads of
the three major nuclear powers – the United States, Russia and China – each
committing themselves to a serious resumption of nuclear arms control
negotiations at all relevant bilateral and multilateral levels, and restating
what Presidents Reagan and Gorbachev so profoundly and relevantly articulated
35 years ago: ‘A nuclear war can never be won and must never be fought’.
While the immediate environment for such commitment is
desolate, it is important to stay optimistic, and work for change – however
incremental – as we at APLN continue to do. Lessons are sometimes learned,
pendulums do swing, wheels do turn and Presidents and Prime Ministers do
change.
President Obama spoke in Hiroshima in 2016 of us choosing ‘a
future in which Hiroshima and Nagasaki are known not as the dawn of atomic warfare,
but as the start of our own moral awakening’. It is crucial to keep the memory
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki alive, and to keep alive the idea that out of their
ashes 75 years ago a better and more humane world can indeed grow.
Gareth Evans, Chair
Chung-in Moon, Vice Chair and
Executive Director
5 August 2020










