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Yorkshire campaign for
nuclear disarmament
Press Release
- Friday October 1st
POLL
SHOWS GENERAL PUBLIC OPPOSE SPACE WEAPONS, WANT A TREATY TO BAN THEM AND
DON’T TRUST THE US ON STAR WARS
Results come just weeks before Bush plans to announce the star of Star
Wars
See
a powerpoint presentation of the results here
See the full results data in pdf form here
Results of an official
ICM opinion poll of 1008 individuals commissioned by the Campaign for
Nuclear Disarmament, unveiled today, show an overwhelming opposition to
space weapons and a lack of trust in the US’s pronouncements on Star Wars.
Notable results include:
- 72% of respondents
believe placing offensive weapons in space would make the world a more
dangerous place
- BUT 69% of respondents
believe placing "DEFENSIVE" weapons in space would still make the world
a more dangerous place }
- The majority of
respondents would be in favour of a Treaty banning the development or
deployment of offensive space weapons (63%), weapons that are both defensive
and offensive (57%) and even "defensive" space weapons (69%)
- 67% of respondents
oppose UK involvement in the US Missile Defence system if it involves
the deployment of weapons in space that have a capability of being both
defensive and offensive. Since it is virtually impossible to make a
space weapon that has only a defensive capability and is not able to
attack offensively in some way if desired, that makes opposition to
the US Star Wars system considerable if, as expected, it employs space-based
weapons systems in the future.
Neil Kingsnorth, CND’s
Star Wars Campaigner, said,
"The United States Administration plans to put weapons in space, dominate
space and fight in and from space - they have said it themselves time
and time again. What's more they plan to use their Missile Defence system
as an excuse to achieve it. These results show clearly that the British
people think the idea of arming the heavens is a step too far and we expect
the British government to respond by declaring its opposition to space
weapons and by pushing hard to achieve a Treaty banning them for good."
Kate Hudson, CND chair,
said,
"These results show an overwhelming majority in favour of a complete
ban on all possible types of space weapon. The threat of a battlefield
in space is looming large, especially with the US's destabilising Star
Wars system due online soon. It is crucial that the international community,
including our government, works fast to develop a framework to ban space
weapons before the world is faced with a space arms race"
The results come at
a crucial time. As well as coinciding with Keep Space for Peace Week,
they come just weeks ahead of the expected announcement by George Bush
that his Star Wars system is up and running. They also come amid news
that the US was planning to deploy a test space weapon (NFIRE) within
weeks, before international outrage appears to have caused a postponement
of these plans.
The poll was commissioned
as a new phase in CND’s Star Wars campaign gathers pace and follows the
release of a detailed report on space weapons over the Summer and a successful
demonstration at the Fylingdales Star Wars base in Yorkshire with Thom
Yorke of Radiohead last Saturday (25th Sept).
ICM Research interviewed
a random selection of 1008 adults aged 18+ by telephone between 22-23
September 2004. Interviews were conducted across the country and the results
have been weighted to the profile of all adults. The opinion poll was
funded by a generous grant by the Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust.
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Yorkshire CND plans
to use the results to inform our campaign strategy and as part of new
materials to be produced over the coming months. Watch this space.
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