Calling for the creation of a nuclear-weapons-free zone in the Arctic is not alarmist, says an academic report, as foreign ministers of the worlds Arctic nations prepare for a summit in Canada later this month, reports CanWest News Service and Nunatsiaq News.
The ground should be prepared for potential future confrontations over competing claims for sovereignty, power and resources in the region, say co-authors Michael Wallace and Steven Staples.
They also say the move would be a prudent step to safeguard the Arctic environment against nuclear accidents.
By acting now we can probably save ourselves a lot of angst down the road, Staples told CanWest. As countries try to stake their claims in the Arctic and on the resources, lets do this in a blueprint way in a coordinated way and avoid a mad scramble that could lead to an accident.
Wallace, a professor emeritus at the University of British Columbia, and Steven Staples, president of the Ottawa-based Rideau Institute, are executive members of the Canadian Pugwash Group a think-tank dedicated to the prevention and resolution of armed conflict.
The authors endorse an approach that would start with a unilateral declaration by Canada that the Northwest Passage is a nuclear-weapons-free zone, which could be expanded as others are invited to join.
The authors say creation of the worlds seventh official nuclear-free zone would be daunting as military competition is on the rise in the Arctic, deepening a Cold War legacy of cat and mouse games by Russian and American nuclear-powered submarines capable of carrying nuclear missiles.
Another major obstacle is the core military doctrine of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which regards the potential use of nuclear weapons as a deterrent that is essential to preserve peace.
All Arctic states except Russia are members of NATO. And the other Arctic states Canada, Denmark, Iceland and Norway are all close allies of the United States.
Also, the U.S. will not sign any treaty creating a nuclear-free zone if it disturbs existing security arrangements or interferes with self-defence guarantees in the United Nations charter.
But despite all of these daunting obstacles, we should not give up before even getting started, says the report, entitled Ridding the Arctic of Nuclear Weapons, A Task Long Overdue.
Nuclear free Arctic!
The authors of a new report, Ridding the Arctic of Nuclear Weapons, A Task Long Overdue,' say creation of the worlds seventh official nuclear-free zone would be daunting as military competition is on the rise in the Arctic.
Published: 11.03.2010 14:32
