Papers written by John Burroughs, LCNP, NYC
Dear IALANA colleagues - The below MPI paper, which I wrote, surveys the
current landscape for nuclear arms control and disarmament in the wake of
the September 24 Security Council Summit. The Hoodbhoy presentation, at an
event organized by LCNP, is a comprehensive and detailed examination of the
Pakistani nuclear weapons program. It was quoted in Hersh's Nation article.
Best regards, John Burroughs
Making Good on the <http://www.gsinstitute.org/mpi/pubs/Making_Good.pdf>
Promises: From the Security Council Summit to the 2010 NPT Review, Middle
Powers Initiative Briefing Paper, October 2009
Pervez Hoodbhoy, The <http://lcnp.org/pubs/Pervez%20Hoodbhoy%20final2.pdf>
Pakistani Nuclear Weapons Program, July 14, 2009 presentation co-sponsored
by LCNP and The Nation
Seymour Hersh, Defending
<http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/11/16/091116fa_fact_hersh> the
Arsenal: In an unstable Pakistan, can nuclear weapons be kept safe?, The New
Yorker, November 16, 2009
1. und 2. Mai 2010: Abolition 2000 und IALANA: Konferenz zur NPT-Überprüfungskonferenz.
The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) was one of the three most important treaties of the 20th century. In exchange for non-nuclear nations promising not to become nuclear powers, the nuclear weapons states, led by the U.S., pledged to negotiate the complete elimination of their nuclear arsenals. Forty years later the nuclear powers have more genocidal nuclear weapons than they did when the treaty was signed. This double standard and terrorizing threats to initiate nuclear war made by the U.S. and other
nuclear weapons states increase the dangers of nuclear war and of nuclear weapons proliferation. The NPT Review Conference, held every five years, provides an opportunity for the world?s nations to hold the nuclear powers accountable to their abolition commitment. Alongwith the vast majority of the world?s people: We call for the nuclear powers to begin negotiating a nuclear weapons abolition treaty without further delay. We also call for the world?s powers to start negotiating demilitarization and to spend resources saved to meet the needs of people and the environment.
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