A Strategic Plan for Nuclear Disarmament: Engineering a Perfect Political Storm

Rydell surveys two contrasting trends in nuclear disarmament: the lack of progress in eliminating nuclear arsenals and the growth of support for a treaty banning such weapons on humanitarian grounds. Both are guided by “political will.” He describes the uses of this term in General Assembly and NPT...

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Main Author: Randy Rydell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-01-01
Series:Journal for Peace and Nuclear Disarmament
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/25751654.2017.1410386
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spelling doaj-4f7a1ba7658942cb952c208d458e41362020-11-24T21:51:20ZengTaylor & Francis GroupJournal for Peace and Nuclear Disarmament2575-16542018-01-0111496510.1080/25751654.2017.14103861410386A Strategic Plan for Nuclear Disarmament: Engineering a Perfect Political StormRandy Rydell0Mayors for PeaceRydell surveys two contrasting trends in nuclear disarmament: the lack of progress in eliminating nuclear arsenals and the growth of support for a treaty banning such weapons on humanitarian grounds. Both are guided by “political will.” He describes the uses of this term in General Assembly and NPT deliberations. He stresses the importance of collective action on four levels: grassroots; coalitions of states; the nuclear-weapon states; and a common central forum at the United Nations. To sustain this political will, he argues for a “strategic plan” covering all these levels. Its core consists of activities involving actual reductions and destruction of warheads, bombs, and delivery systems, all undertaken with relevant controls for transparency, verification, irreversibility, universal membership, and legal bindingness. Sustaining it will require a blend of political forces yielding a “perfect storm” of pressures from all four dimensions of political will. The author stresses that prospects for disarmament rest on both ideals and self-interest. The article offers some thoughts on how to counter standard anti-disarmament criticisms and also identifies 10 practical initiatives to advance disarmament. The author relied on primary reference materials from the United Nations, the ban-treaty negotiations, NPT review conferences, and official statements by international officials.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/25751654.2017.1410386Political willnuclear disarmamentUnited Nationsstrategic planperfect storm
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Randy Rydell
spellingShingle Randy Rydell
A Strategic Plan for Nuclear Disarmament: Engineering a Perfect Political Storm
Journal for Peace and Nuclear Disarmament
Political will
nuclear disarmament
United Nations
strategic plan
perfect storm
author_facet Randy Rydell
author_sort Randy Rydell
title A Strategic Plan for Nuclear Disarmament: Engineering a Perfect Political Storm
title_short A Strategic Plan for Nuclear Disarmament: Engineering a Perfect Political Storm
title_full A Strategic Plan for Nuclear Disarmament: Engineering a Perfect Political Storm
title_fullStr A Strategic Plan for Nuclear Disarmament: Engineering a Perfect Political Storm
title_full_unstemmed A Strategic Plan for Nuclear Disarmament: Engineering a Perfect Political Storm
title_sort strategic plan for nuclear disarmament: engineering a perfect political storm
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Journal for Peace and Nuclear Disarmament
issn 2575-1654
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Rydell surveys two contrasting trends in nuclear disarmament: the lack of progress in eliminating nuclear arsenals and the growth of support for a treaty banning such weapons on humanitarian grounds. Both are guided by “political will.” He describes the uses of this term in General Assembly and NPT deliberations. He stresses the importance of collective action on four levels: grassroots; coalitions of states; the nuclear-weapon states; and a common central forum at the United Nations. To sustain this political will, he argues for a “strategic plan” covering all these levels. Its core consists of activities involving actual reductions and destruction of warheads, bombs, and delivery systems, all undertaken with relevant controls for transparency, verification, irreversibility, universal membership, and legal bindingness. Sustaining it will require a blend of political forces yielding a “perfect storm” of pressures from all four dimensions of political will. The author stresses that prospects for disarmament rest on both ideals and self-interest. The article offers some thoughts on how to counter standard anti-disarmament criticisms and also identifies 10 practical initiatives to advance disarmament. The author relied on primary reference materials from the United Nations, the ban-treaty negotiations, NPT review conferences, and official statements by international officials.
topic Political will
nuclear disarmament
United Nations
strategic plan
perfect storm
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/25751654.2017.1410386
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