GENEVA, Aug 20 (AFP) - Diplomats and experts are increasingly questioning the purpose of the UN
Conference on Disarmament (CD) which, dogged by disagreement, has
effectively been unable for the last two years to get its work programme off
the starting blocks.
Only a few weeks away from rounding up its annual session here on September
22, the Geneva-based Conference has still not managed to agree on how to
launch negotiations on creating a 'de-nuclearised' world.
In the short-term, the Conference cannot even agree on how to start talks on
the drawing up of a treaty banning the production of fissile material used
in making nuclear bombs.
The 66 Conference members are divided between those who see a link among all
the issues dealing with general disarmament, and others who want them dealt
with separately.
In addition, the five officially recognised nuclear powers -- US, France,
Britain, Russia and China -- all have differing stances.
"If within the next months no compromise is achieved to make possible the
resumption of serious negotiations in the CD it would be reasonable to
dissolve the CD," vice-president of the Geneva International Peace Research
Institute Jozef Goldblat said.
At the end of last year's session of the Conference, the French and British
representatives both expressed doubts about the effectiveness of the body.
Hubert de la Fortelle of France said the Conference was "gravely ill", while
Britain's Ian Soutar described it as having reached a "lamentable impasse".
A year later, and some diplomats are still saying the same thing. Others
such as Algeria's Ambassador Mohamed Dembri still want to have faith in the
Conference, the only body to discuss disarmament at the international level.
But the mechanisms of this body whose basic rule is agreement by consensus
meaning each member has the right of veto, need reviewing, Goldblat
believes.
For this reason, he has called for the treaty dealing with the elimination
and halt of fissile material production to be discussed outside the
Conference.
"Since all the nuclear countries, the five official ones and three
non-official ones (India, Pakistan and Israel) agree on the principle of
such a treaty, why not discuss it somewhere else?" he has said.
Such a method was put forward by Canada for the banning of mines, one of the
subjects which remains on the Conference's agenda. It resulted in the
signing of an international convention in December 1997 in Ottawa. However
the signatures of the US, China and Russia are notable in their absence.
Another bone of contention is the US programme of anti-missile ballistic
missiles -- called Nuclear Missile Defense (NMD) -- which the US holds on to
as a way of better countering new additions to the club of long range
missile owners such as North Korea.
China and Russia oppose the programme, Moscow believing it in violation of
the ABM (Anti-Ballistic Missile Systems) agreement it concluded with
Washington in 1972 on reducing missiles of this kind.
"The international dynamic at the beginning of the nineties after the
collapse of Communism which favoured the banning of nuclear tests and the
indefinite extension of a treaty on nuclear non-proliferation, no longer
exists," Goldblat said.
The Conference on Disarmament is virtually blocked, at least until the
summer of 2001, or six months after the US takes over the presidency of the
body, some diplomats have noted.
However, between now and then, diplomats will continue to meet every
Thursday during the three annual sessions to restate their differences.
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