PRESS RELEASE
2 May 2000
NATO
Council Could Adopt Nuclear Strategy Today
Spokesman
Confirms Role for Nukes to
Counter Chemical and Biological Attacks
WASHINGTON,
DC – NATO is moving forward with a controversial plan to expand
its strategic doctrine to, for the first time, threaten the use of
nuclear weapons in retaliation for a chemical or biological attack,
according to Zurich-based newspaper Tagesanzeiger. In an April 25 interview, Col. Frank Salis, NATO Military
Committee spokesman, confirms BITS-BASIC’s contention, detailed in
Questions of Command and Control: NATO, Nuclear Sharing and the
NPT, that the 19 NATO allies are bent on widening the role for
nuclear weapons in alliance strategy.
Col.
Salis reportedly said the alliance needs “equivalent means of
deterrence as well as defense against all forms of possible attacks.
Since the alliance does not have biological weapons or
chemical weapons, it can only threaten by nuclear weapons.”
In the Tagesanzeiger report, Mr. Salis also confirms
that NATO ambassadors intend to give political approval to NATO’s
news strategic doctrine (MC400/2) before May 9.
This
contradicts written assurances made to BASIC by the British Foreign
Office on April 17.
At that time Minister for Europe Keith Vaz said, “NATO has not
widened the role of nuclear weapons, either in the new Strategic
Concept, or through any language in MC400/2.
And I can assure you we remain fully committed to the
Negative Security Assurances we give in the context of the NPT
[Non-Proliferation Treaty], and through the protocols of the Nuclear
Weapons Free Zones, to non-nuclear weapons states not in material
breach of their nuclear non-proliferation obligations.
We have no intention of seeing them diluted.”
The apparent
plan to move forward on expanding NATO’s nuclear options under MC
400/2 also contradicts a strongly worded statement made yesterday by
the five nuclear weapon states at the ongoing New York conference on
the nuclear NPT. Among other things, the statement reaffirmed the nuclear
states’ commitment to the ultimate elimination of nuclear weapons.
“How can the
world consider the U.S. commitment to disarmament seriously when the
United States and its NATO allies are finding new uses for nuclear
weapons? The more roles
NATO finds for nuclear weapons, the more it provokes proliferation
by other countries,” said Daniel Plesch, director of
BASIC.
“Widening
the role NATO has for nuclear weapons will undermine the nuclear
arms policy review that NATO is currently undertaking,” said
Otfried Nassauer, director of the Berlin Information Center for
Transatlantic Security (BITS).
“At a minimum NATO should delay political approval of
MC400/2 until after the NATO arms control disarmament and
non-proliferation policy review has come to a conclusion, now slated
for the end of the year. The
new strategy, under no circumstances, should be allowed to constrain
the arms control policy review.”
The NATO arms
control policy review was initiated following pressure from Canada
and Germany at last year’s NATO summit.
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