The 2000 NPT Review Conference
14 April - 19 May 2000, New York
STATEMENT
by H.E. Mr. Igor S. Ivanov
Minister of Foreign Affairs of
the Russian Federation
At the Review Conference of the Parties to
the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons
New York, April 25, 2000
Mr. President,
I would
like to congratulate you on your election to this high post and to wish jots
very success in your endeavours at the helm of such an important
international forum. You can count on our support and active assistance.
Now let
me read out the message of greetings by the President of the Russian
Federation Vladimir V. Putin to the participants of the Review Conference of
the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.
"I
send my heartfelt greetings to the participants in the VI Review Conference
of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons
(NPT), the first Conference since the adoption of a historic decision on the
indefinite extension of the Treaty.
The Non‑Proliferation
Treaty has withstood the test of the tithe and in the course of its thirty-year
history has confirmed its role as the most important instrument of containing
the threat of nuclear proliferation. Its implementation has contributed to
strengthened regional and global stability. The Treaty has laid the
foundations for an irreversible progress towards nuclear disarmament and has
reduced the risk of an outbreak of nuclear war.
Russia
is committed to its obligations in the held of nuclear disarmament and
intends to continue to abide by them in the conditions of maintaining strategic
stability and of the system, established over recent decades, of disarmament
Treaties as a basis for further reduction and limitation of strategic
offensive anus.
As a
Party to the Non-Proliferation Treaty and as one of its Depositories, Russia
considers the NPT to be one of the mainstays of the interrogational security
system. It is the NPT that constitutes the basic mechanism for preventing
proliferation of nuclear weapons, while ensuring further international
cooperation in the peaceful uses of atomic energy.
We
attach great importance to this Conference, which is called upon to further
strengthen the Treaty and the International Non-Proliferation Regime as a
whole.
I wish
every success and constructive work to the participants in the Conference.
Acting
President of the Russian
Federation
V.
Putin.”
Mr. President.
The Non-Proliferation
Treaty is one of the pillars of the global system of the arms control and
disarmament agreements. It is thanks to this system that the international
community has succeeded over the last decade to resolve the core issue of the
international security - to bring to naught the threat of universal nuclear
catastrophe.
It is
symbolic that we hold this review of the Non-Proliferation Treaty at the hint
of the century - at the very moment when the foundations for a new system of
international relations are being laid-down. I he future of the nuclear non-proliferation
regime established by the Treaty depends to a treat extent on what this
system would be. That is why it is necessary to assess the efficiency of this
instrument in a wide context of contemporary challenges to security and
strategic stability in the world.
In the
Concept of National Security of the Russian Federation adopted recently by
President Vladimir Putin, strengthening of the non-proliferation regimes is
considered a major priority We have come to this Conference with a strong
conviction that the preservation and strengthening of the Treaty would serve
the interests of the entire world community.
today this
task has to be addressed in a difficult situation It has to do primarily with
the emergence of new serious threats to international security and stability.
Local conflicts, international terrorism and militant separatism offer a
nutrient for the proliferation of nuclear and other types of weapons of mass
destruction and their delivery means.
A
tendency to undermine the existing system of strategic stability and the
attempts to build national stability at the expense of the interests of other
states, not to mention misappropriation of the right to use force in
violation of the fundamental principles of the UN Charter and the
international law, is equally dangerous. This is, in fact, a direct
invitation to a new anus race on the planet.
In
short, the world ha, come to a major crossroads: either through joint
efforts, we will manage to preserve and multiply the positive results
accumulated in the field of non-proliferation and limitation of nuclear
weapons, or we shall face a real prosper of chaos and uncontrollable
international processes with the military power diktat being the only "regulator". I do not believe
such a prospect serves anybody's interests.
It is
extremely important, therefore, that our efforts to strengthen the non-proliferation
regime fit organically in the construction of a fair and democratic world
order based on mutual trust and equal security for all states and regions it
is in the framework of such a system that the objectives and the potential of
the Non-Proliferation Treaty can be really effectively realized.
Russia
is fully committed to its obligations under Article Vl of the Non-Proliferation
Treaty. We are resolved to pursue a stage by stage and integral progress of
all five Nuclear Powers towards nuclear disarmament without any artificial
delays or undue hurry.
A few
days ago the Russian Federation ratified the most important group of
agreements in this field and, first and foremost, the Russian-American START
2 Treaty and the 1997 package of ABM agreements. The implementation of these
instruments would constitute a major step towards nuclear disarmament.
Suffice it to note that as a result the overall level of strategic offensive
weapons of Russia and the USA would be reduced by approximately two thirds as
compared to the 1990 levels.
Last
week the State Duma of Russia also ratified the Comprehensive
Nuclear-Test-BanTreaty designed to reliably block the way to qualitative
improvement of nuclear arsenals We once again express our hope that all the
states possessing the relevant capability whose decision to ratify it is of
crucial importance for entry into force of this instrument will become
parties to the Treaty.
We are
often asked: how would the Russian foreign policy develop after the recent
presidential elections and what would be the role of the nuclear factor in
our military doctrine? The decisions I have just outlined, I believer send a
clear signal to the international community in this regard.
Russia
also continues to implement other previously signed agreements on the reduction
of strategic nuclear arsenals. Thus, under the START 1 Treaty, we have
already eliminated more than 2000 ballistic missiles and over 950 land- and
sea-based launchers, some 30 nuclear submarines and more than 80 heavy
bombers. Total reductions under the START 1, when completed, will amount to
some 40 per cent of the strategic nuclear forces of Russia and the United
States.
The
statement by the President of Russia of 27 May 1997 on de-targeting o
strategic nuclear weapons was another major step towards the reduction of the
nuclear threat. Currently, all Russian ballistic missiles are assigned the so-called
"zero” flight mission That provides an additional reliable safeguard
against unauthorized launches of Russian missiles.
Russia
also continues to consistently implement its unilateral initiatives related
ten tactical nuclear weapons. Such weapons have been completely removed from
surface ships and multipurpose submarines, as well as from the land-based
naval aircraft, and are stored at centralized storage facilities. One third
of all nuclear munitions for the sea-based tactical missiles and naval
aircraft has been eliminated We are about to complete the destruction of
nuclear warheads from tactical missiles, artillery shells and nuclear mines
We have destroyed half of the nuclear warheads for anti-aircraft missiles and
for nuclear gravity bombs.
Moreover,
we are prepared to go further, towards deeper cuts in nuclear arsenals In
March 1997, the Presidents of Russia and the United States agreed on lowering
their levels by the end of 2007 to 2000-2500 warheads. And we do not think
this is as far as we could go Russia is prepared to consider reducing nuclear
arsenals of the Parties to the level of 1500 warheads.
Thus, it
is quite possible not only to fully implement those agreements and
initiatives in the field of nuclear disarmament that represent now one of the
assets of the world community, but also to make a new breakthrough, both in
qualitative and quantitative terms. I declare with all responsibility that
Russia intends to work exactly towards this end.
At the
same time, it should be admitted that this historic chance could be missed if
the foundation of the strategic stability in the world, indeed, its
cornerstone - the ABM Treaty of 1972 - were to be destroyed Unfortunately,
such a possibility has become now quite realistic given plans declared by the
United States to deploy a National ABM system prohibited by the Treaty.
We must
be perfectly clear on this. Further reductions in strategic offensive weapons
can only be considered in the context of preservation of the ABM Treaty. The
historic role of that
instrument lies in the fact that it opened the way towards deep reductions in
strategic offensive arms on a stable and transparent basis.
One has to
be fully aware of the fact that the current system of arms control agreements
is a complex and quite fragile structure. Once one of its key elements has
been weakened, the entire system is destabilized. And in the context of
globalization the interdependence of these elements has drastically
increased. The collapse of the ABM Treaty would, therefore, undermine the
entirety of disarmement agreements concluded over the last 30 years. The
threat of the erosion of the non-proliferation regimes related to nuclear and
other weapons of mass destruction and their delivery means would, therefore,
grow.
That is
why the compliance with the ABM Treaty in its present form without any
modifications is a prerequisite for further negotiations on nuclear
disarmament in accordance with Article Vl of the Non-Proliferation Treaty.
That is why it affects national security interests of every state and of the
international community as a whole Incidentally, understanding of this
important fact was convincingly demonstrated by the outcome of the vote on
the relevant UN General Assembly resolution.
We are
profoundly convinced that missile threats and missile proliferation can and
should be dealt with without breaking the ABM Treaty Russia is prepared to
engage in the broadest consultations on this issue both with the United
States and multilaterally too.
The Russian initiative to
establish a Global Missile and Missile Technologies Non-Proliferation Control
System serves this very purpose. It was launched at the Moscow international
Expert Meeting on the GCS held on March 16, 2000. A phased approach to the
development of this system on a broad voluntary basis, I am convinced will be
a step in the right direction.
Thus, a
real alternative to the destruction of the ABM Treaty exists and is taking
tip clear shape. It is based on
further drastic reduction of nuclear weapons and common action against the
threat of proliferation of missiles and missile technologies. The choice in
favor of precisely such an option is of crucial importance not only for the
fate of the non-proliferation regimes, but also the preservation of positive
prospects for the development of international affairs.
Fully
aware of its responsibility to further strengthen the Non-Proliferation
Treaty, Russia proceeds on the assumption that the scope of this task goes
beyond the efforts of the nuclear powers alone. This is a task for all its
participants.
The task
of ensuring universality of the Treaty remains very urgent. It is necessary
to actively continue promoting involvement into the nuclear non-proliferation
regime of the States, which have not signed it yet.
We
welcome the process of establishing nuclear-free zones in various regions of
the world. We see in it a meaningful contribution to the development and consolidation
of the nuclear non-proliferation regime. In the course of more than 30 years
after the signature of the Tlatelolco Treaty establishing the first such zone
the number of the States-Parties increased many-fold to exceed now one
hundred.
By
creating a nuclear-free zone the States-Parties contribute, in fact, to
strengthening regional and international security and increasing mutual trust
and concord.
Russia
is a Party to the majority of international agreements on such zones. The
fact that our country has no nuclear weapons beyond its national territory
also illustrates our meaningful contribution to the consolidation of the
nuclear-free zones regime. We urge again other Nuclear Powers who have not
done it yet to follow our example.
There is
another urgent issue - to ban the production of fissionable materials for
nuclear weapons. Russia implements a program aimed at decommissioning of the
last remaining facilities producing weapons-grade plutonium and refrains from
using the plutonium still produced for these purposes. Production of the
weapons-grade uranium has been stopped a few years ago. We will work actively
towards initiation as soon as possible of the deliberations of the Ad hoc Committee of the Conference on
Disarmament established to conduct negotiations on the issue.
At the
same time, there is a need to improve the mechanism of the Conference oil
Disarmament itself. Frankly, we are seriously concerned over the future of
the Conference. The atmosphere of compromise that used to prevail at this
forum has given way to a desire by a number of states to establish linkages
between various issues. There’s
no coincidence, therefore, that for the second year in a row now the
Conference have not in fact been moving anywhere. Here again we have to choose
between political egotism and the renunciation of immediate advantages for
the common cause. I hope that common sense will prevail and the Conference on
Disarmament would resume its smooth and constructive work.
The Non‑Proliferation
Treaty also plays a vital role in the creation of a favorable climate for
constantly expanding international cooperation for decades to come in the
field of peaceful uses of atomic energy, including in the energy sector,
medicine, scientific research, etc. Russia stands ready for further expansion
of such cooperation, including in the interests of developing countries, be
it through the IAEA, or on a bilateral basis in particular, we have got
specific proposals concerning the joint development of peaceful nuclear cycle
technologies that fully meet the objectives of nuclear non-proliferation.
Russia
consistently supports the IAEA safeguards as an effective instrument of
control strengthening confidence that the Non-Proliferation Treaty is
observed by all its participants and that no unauthorized activity goes
undetected or unchecked The IAEA safeguards supplemented by technological
measures are both a control mechanism for nuclear non-proliferation and a
very powerful confidence-building measure.
Mr. President,
Thirty
years ago, by concluding the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons, the international community, according to an outstanding humanist
Martin Luther King, rejected "the cynical notion that one nation after
another should climb the ladder of the nuclear arms race leading to the
nuclear hell." I am deeply convinced that confirmation of the indefinite
duration of the Treaty by this Conference could vividly demonstrate our
commitment to making non-proliferation one of the inviolable principles of
the international security in the 21st century.
Thank
you.
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