APLN STATEMENT ON COVID-19 AND NUCLEAR SECURITY
The COVID-19 global health and economic crises have exposed fundamental
flaws and weaknesses in the institutions dealing with international peace and
security – and the absence of effective political leadership to correct them.
The world faces heightened tensions between the United States and China,
increasing prospects for protectionism and rivalry rather than international
cooperation, and a turn away from multilateralism toward nationalism and unilateralism.
All
this has alarming implications for nuclear security, already at risk from
discord over arms control between the United States and Russia, and adverse
developments in North East Asia and the Middle East. The INF and Open Skies treaties, Iran nuclear
deal, and the New START treaty are dead or on life-support. The United States,
Russia and China are developing hypersonic and other advanced weapons, and the Trump administration
is reportedly considering resuming nuclear weapons testing. The Review Conference of the Treaty
on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) scheduled for April 2020 has
been postponed, with minimal prospects for consensus if and when it does meet.
Worsened
China-US bilateral ties, fueled by COVID tensions, coupled with the erosion of
global nuclear governance, have stirred a nuclear populism in China that
rejects the country’s long tradition of restraint and commitment to minimal
deterrence and calls for a dramatic increase in its nuclear
stockpile. In South Asia, three nuclear-armed states are at each
other’s throats over disputed territories and borders. Dialogue with
North Korea has broken down.
Overall,
the prospects in both our Asia-Pacific region and the world at large for
containing nuclear proliferation and moving toward disarmament are very bleak.
And the chances of present tensions leading to a catastrophic nuclear weapons
exchange – by aggressive design, or more likely human error, system error,
miscalculation or misjudgment – are greater now than at any time since the
height of the Cold War.
COVID-19
is a grim reminder that the world continues to face existential threats that
know no borders – from climate change over time, and from pandemics or nuclear
weapons at any time. Addressing these complex threats requires,
above all, concerted global and multilateral efforts, based on trust and
cooperation.
Our
hope must be that the longer-term impact of COVID-19 will be not to reinforce
inward looking distrust of global institutions and processes, but in fact serve
as a wake-up call as to their absolute necessity if the world’s most dangerous
human security challenges are to be met.
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”.
Gareth Evans, Chair
Chung-in Moon, Vice Chair and Executive Director
June 16, 2020










