MADRID – Twenty-five years ago, at a summit in Rejkjavik, Iceland, US President Ronald Reagan stunned the world and his Soviet counterpart, Mikhail Gorbachev, by proposing global and comprehensive elimination of all nuclear weapons.
MADRID – Twenty-five years ago, at a summit in Rejkjavik, Iceland, US President Ronald Reagan stunned the world and his Soviet counterpart, Mikhail Gorbachev, by proposing global and comprehensive elimination of all nuclear weapons.
Unfortunately, the skepticism of the United States’ defense establishment, together with Reagan’s adamant refusal to abandon his Strategic Defense Initiative nipped this bold move in the bud.
That was a tragic missed opportunity, for a US-Soviet agreement, reached in what was still an essentially binary international system, might have had truly global meaning.
Although US and Russian stockpiles still account for more than 90% of the world’s nuclear warheads, US President Barack Obama’s disarmament goal, Global Zero, is proving far harder to accomplish now, given how much the world has changed since the Cold War’s end.
Not only has the number of nuclear states increased, but the so-called "nuclear renaissance” – the revival of nuclear power, owing to rising oil prices and environmental concerns – has put nuclear technologies into growing use. This revival holds important implications for nuclear proliferation.
More importantly, China, India, Pakistan, Iran, and Israel might not be particularly impressed by Russian and American assumptions that they can meet their defense needs with far smaller nuclear arsenals.
Nuclear disarmament must therefore focus not only on a truly total elimination of stockpiles by the major powers, but also on regional powers’ concerns.
Global Zero must go hand in hand with a robust strategy of conflict resolution and confidence-building in trouble spots such as Southeast Asia and the Middle East.
All the nuclear-weapon-free zones that were created in the last decades – for example, by the Tlatelolco Treaty for Latin America or the Treaty of Rarotonga for the South Pacific – were made possible by understandings that were reached freely by regional powers in an atmosphere of multilateral confidence.
Conspicuously, the 1992 Declaration on the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula remains to this day a dead letter simply because of the latent state of war between the two Koreas.
Another case in point is the Middle East. Unless conditions in the region change dramatically for the better, the creation of a WMD-free zone (WMDFZ) in the Middle East – an idea launched at the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference in 2010 – might prove a stillborn initiative.
How can a meeting be convened in 2012, as stipulated by the 2010 NPT conference’s final document, "on the basis of arrangements freely arrived at by the states of the region,” when many of those states are in turmoil, inter-state relations are strained, and the threat of conflict is mounting?
The Middle East has already had its own missed opportunity, the 1992-1995 Arms Control and Regional Security multilateral working group, which was launched within the Madrid peace process.
Conceived as a confidence-building endeavor and accompanied by a robust peacemaking track, ACRS was interrupted by the difficulties in the peace process, by Arab states’ insistence that Israel’s nuclear capabilities be addressed before anything else, and by the underlying struggle for mastery in the region.
If the 2012 conference is conceived as yet one more opportunity to pressure Israel to join the NPT – possibly in exchange for the Arabs joining the Chemical Weapons Convention and the Biological Weapons Convention – the conference might soon reach an impasse.
But the same outcome is assured if the US and Israel conceive the conference solely as a way to isolate and force NPT compliance on Iran and Syria.
The nuclear deadlock in the Middle East can be resolved only if all of the regional players are ready to change old patterns of behavior.
The Arab position has traditionally been that Israel cannot be offered the fruits of peace, such as recognition and normal relations, before it has paid its full territorial price – that is, a complete withdrawal from occupied Arab lands and the creation of a Palestinian state.
But the Arab states nonetheless insist that, even before the end of conflict, Israel unilaterally must give up its (undeclared) nuclear capabilities.
This is a futile exercise, not only because Israel would never disarm unilaterally, but also because without normal inter-state relations in the region it is impossible to engage seriously in an effective dialogue on such vital issues.
Indeed, Israel’s concept of "peace first and denuclearization last” was vindicated in the 1994 Israeli-Jordanian peace treaty, which speaks of a WMDFZ as a goal "to be achieved in the context of a comprehensive, lasting and stable peace.”
Nor can Israel expect to have the best of all worlds – making nuclear disarmament conditional on a comprehensive peace, while simultaneously conducting a policy aimed at stalling the peace process.
There might be no better formula for progress towards a WMDFZ in the Middle East than a return to the ACRS concept, whereby two parallel tracks move toward a comprehensive Israeli-Arab peace along the lines of the Arab Peace Initiative, and to the establishment of a WMDFZ in the region.
To work, the Arabs must accord to Israel key benefits of peace before peace has been formally achieved.
Israel, for its part, must recommit itself to the late Yitzak Rabin’s doctrine that only a comprehensive regional peace agreement can prevent the Middle East from declining into nuclear chaos.
Shlomo Ben Ami is a former Israeli foreign minister who now serves as the vice-president of the Toledo international Centre for Peace. He is the author of Scars of war, Wounds of Peace: The Israeli-Arab Tragedy.
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2011.