Current
Challenges
he
NPT currently faces unprecedented challenges
in its nearly 40-year
history, including new proliferation threats and long-standing concerns.
Following the successful outcome of the 2000 Review Conference, very
little progress was made during the review process for the 2005
Conference. The 2005 Review Conference failed to agree on any
substantive issues in its final document. The states parties perceive
security challenges differently, including issues of non-compliance,
concerns about the acquisition of nuclear material by terrorist groups,
clandestine nuclear networks, and lack of progress on disarmament.
Despite the fact that
the NPT has more parties than any other arms control or disarmament
treaty, there are continuing concerns regarding the three states that
have not signed the treaty—India,
Israel, and Pakistan—and the one state
that withdrew from the treaty—North
Korea—which conducted an underground
nuclear weapon test in October 2006. Many now believe that Iran’s
opaque nuclear program is for military purposes. As a result, access to
the peaceful uses of nuclear energy may be restricted further even at
the expense of states that remain in good standing with their NPT
obligations. Others argue that the civilian
nuclear cooperation deal between India and the United States will ruin
the treaty since it would essentially reward India for staying outside
the regime. In the
past, Iraq was determined to have violated its NPT inspection
obligations by its actions prior to the 1991 Gulf War, and it refused to
cooperate fully with UN-mandated inspection requirements between 1991
and 2003. However, according to a September 2004 Iraq Survey Report,
Iraq's nuclear weapons program was dismantled in 1991 and no longer
poses a challenge to the NPT.
Given the diminishing
confidence in the NPT, some states parties may rely on mechanisms
outside the regime. Divisions between the
NWS and NNWS have also widened. NNWS believe that NWS have not met their
legal Article VI obligations to disarm, obligations that were further
emphasized by the decisions and agreements reached in 1995 and 2000.
The 2005 Review Conference represented
a missed opportunity for states parties. Instead of building bridges
between each other in order to collectively respond to these
proliferation challenges, and to consolidate efforts to address
long-standing disarmament efforts, the Review Conference magnified the
divergence and division between NWS and NNWS with regard to treaty
obligations. Looking toward the 2010 NPT Review Conference, the
political will of states parties will be essential in order to restore
the credibility of the NPT regime.
Countries posing continuing concerns:
Country that posed concerns in the past
Nuclear
Disarmament (link to disarmament project)
Nuclear Terrorism (link
to
nuclear terrorism tutorial)
Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone (link to
NWFZ tutorial)
Safeguards
Security Assurances
|