Thursday, 22 March 2018

SWI swissinfo.ch/Frédéric Burnand: Why Switzerland hasn’t (yet) signed the treaty banning nuclear weapons

Front page - SWI swissinfo.ch

Disarmament
Why Switzerland hasn’t (yet) signed the treaty banning nuclear weapons
By Frédéric Burnand in Geneva

    Politics
    Conflict

    in depth: International Geneva

 See in other languages: 3
This content was published on March 19, 2018 11:00 AMMar 19, 2018 - 11:00
essai nucléaire

The French army exploded an atomic bomb in a test over the island of Mururoa in the Pacific Ocean on July 2, 1966
(Keystone)

Switzerland has not yet signed or ratified the Nuclear Weapons Ban Treaty, adopted by the United Nations last summer. A decision is expected in the coming months. Meanwhile, pressure is building for the Swiss to adhere to the convention.

Despite participating in the preparatory work and negotiations of the treaty, Switzerland is one of several countries that has yet to sign the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. To date, 122 countries have adopted the treaty, 57 have signed and five have ratified it.

Campaigners argue that a failure to sign the treaty by Switzerland could have an impact on the country’s humanitarian credentials.

“If Switzerland does not sign this treaty, people will question our status as a champion of humanitarian rights and disarmament. I think [failure to sign] would undermine our credibility in this area,” Beatrice Fihn, head of the Geneva-based International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICANexternal link) said during an interview on RTS recently. ICAN received the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize for its driving role in the adoption of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons which is designed to reinforce article 6 of the Treaty on the non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (TNPexternal link, 1968).

Will the Swiss parliament agree to its ratification? Both chambers are due to debate the question following a parliamentary question external linkfiled by Social Democrat Carlo Sommaruga, urging Bern to ratify the treaty as soon as possible.
Sabrina Dallafior

Sabrina Dallafior, Switzerland's ambassador in Geneva responsible for disarmament issues
(swissinfo.ch)
Doubts in Bern

Ambassador Sabrina Dallafior, who represents Switzerland at the United Nations Conference on Disarmament in Geneva, defends the cautious position taken by Bern in relation to the signing of the treaty. She says it may take several months before a decision is made to sign the treaty or not.

“An interdepartmental group in Bern is analysing the text to evaluate its coherence with the law and its articulation with respect to the Treaty on the non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, and if prohibition is the best method for achieving nuclear disarmament,” says Dallafior.  

“Switzerland participated in negotiations and the preparatory work of the treaty. We have approved the result of the negotiations on July 7 because Switzerland shares the desire for a world without nuclear weapons and supports the mention in the treaty of the catastrophic humanitarian impact of the use of a nuclear weapon.”

However, the government does not hide a certain scepticism towards this agreement: “We are not sure that this treaty will really be a step towards the elimination of nuclear weapons because the countries which have the atomic bomb are not a party to it, although we are convinced that they should be implicated, them and their allies. This treaty should not be against them but with them,” insists Dallafior.

For Fihn, this argument does not wash.

“Disarmament is something that happens over the long term. We are going to be able to ban and eliminate all the nuclear weapons. The only question to ask is the following: are we going to do it now or after they have been used,” Fihn asked in the same RTS interview.
The Council Chamber of the Conference on Disarmament - the main multilateral forum for nuclear disarmament
Conference on Disarmament
Can the Swiss help revitalise nuclear talks?
By Simon Bradley

Switzerland is taking over the presidency of the world's main multilateral forum for nuclear disarmament, which has been deadlocked for two decades.

    in depth: International Geneva

    Politics
    Conflict

See in other languages: 4
Difficult compromise

Former French diplomat and consultant with the Geneva Centre for Security Policy (GCPS) Marc Finaud emphasises the difficulties of the Swiss position: “Bern wants to examine all the implications of the treaty. That’s logical and legally justified. But what Switzerland hopes to do – bridge the divide between the opponents and partisans of the treaty – seems like trying to square the circle. You either agree to it or you don’t. There is practically no possible compromise.”

A specialist in the proliferation of weapons, Finaud says: “States that possess nuclear weapons and those protected by them under bilateral agreements still rely on them and don’t want them to be called illegal or illegitimate as this would call into question their security arrangement, but they are a minority. The vast majority of countries support the text. So it's a growing trend and a norm that will exist and that's where all countries will have to make a choice. Switzerland is confronted with this choice and it will be difficult to have a compromise solution."

In fact, the treaty’s adoption is a recognition of the renewed threat posed by atomic bombs.
Multiple threats

The risk in North Korea is especially palpable in spite of the spectacular announcement of a possible meeting between US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un - who declare themselves ready to negotiate the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula – that has reduced tensions to a certain extent.

But the fact remains that North Korea considers itself a new nuclear power, adding to the list of eight countries which hold nuclear weapons (France, Britain, Russia, United States, China, Israel, India and Pakistan).

The risk of proliferation is far from being side-lined, as much because the US president is still threatening to derail the international agreement on the Iranian nuclear programme, which, in fact, aims to prevent Tehran from becoming another nuclear power.
Risk to existing treaties

Dallafior points out another aspect of the threat posed by nuclear weapons.

“For several years, we have observed with great concern a trend towards armament rather than disarmament in the nuclear field,” she comments. “The quantity of nuclear weapons may have gone down but capacities have increased from a qualitative standpoint. Every nuclear state is carrying out modernization programmes.”

UN secretary general Antonio Guterres shares her concern. At a meeting of the Security Council on the non-proliferation of weapons on January 18, Guterres reminded attendees: “The concerns in the world about the subject of nuclear weapons have reached their highest levels since the Cold War. This in the context of increasing military budgets and over-accumulation of weapons”. A growth in the arms trade that was documented in the most recent report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).

Guterres singled out Washington and Moscow, commenting that “the confidence regarding the nuclear issue and other issues between the United States and the Russian Federation continues to weaken. Vital measures to reduce strategic armaments taken during and after the Cold War are under threat. It appears that there is no longer an interest in negotiating new treaties to reduce the nuclear arsenal after the expiration of the Treaty on Measures for Further Reductions and Limitations of Strategic Offensive Arms, in 2021.”
Other avenues

Pertinent or not, the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons is far from the only response to the nuclear threat. In Geneva, the Conference on Disarmament (CD) has agreed on a new working procedure [[to establish five working groups to explore common ground on so-called “core issues”] after 20 years of paralysis, leading some to hope that new ways of addressing the nuclear threat could be on the horizon if the willingness to advance demonstrated by its members continues.

“I note that this decision has been taken by consensus, which seemed impossible in relation to the CD. It concerns nuclear, but also other developments in the weapons industry. Disarmament as a whole,” comments Dallafior.
Meeting
Multilateral nuclear talks
Geneva's long-running diplomatic ballet
By Mark Henley

Photographer Mark Henley takes a behind-the-scenes look at the Geneva-based Conference on Disarmament.

    in depth: International Geneva

    Culture
    Politics

See in other languages: 3


Translated from French by Sophie Douez
Neuer Inhalt

Horizontal Line
subscription form

Form for signing up for free newsletter.

Sign up for our free newsletters and get the top stories delivered to your inbox.
Email address
Top stories (weekly)
Latest news (daily)
Business (weekly)
Politics (weekly)
Society (weekly)
Fintech (monthly)

Click here to see more newsletters
WEF 2018

WEF Teaser 2018
Podcast
There is one comment on this article.
|
Log In

Write a comment...
"gaz commented on the content at 19 March 2018 12:13".
gaz 19-Mar-2018 12:13
The father was present at the british tests in australia the story he recounts is there were rumours of two new ships so when they called for volunteers he and his mate elected to volunteer only as sailors to end up in the desert after a long train ride and a total communications embargo, they finally secured some acknowledgement of health problems but by then hardly any were left alive ..... sound familar
Write an answer...
Related Stories
A picture of Ignazio Cassis
International Diplomacy
Swiss Foreign Affairs Minister calls for renewed disarmament efforts

Ignazio Cassis spoke today at the Geneva Conference on Disarmament and pledged Switzerland’s full support for efforts to prevent armed conflicts.
1 There is one comment on this article.

    Politics

A 1971 file photo of a nuclear bomb detonated at the Mururoa atoll in French Polynesia
“Don’t Bank on the Bomb”
Report criticises banks for investing in nuclear weapons
By Simon Bradley

Anti-nuclear groups based in Switzerland and the Netherlands claim over 300 banks, pension funds and other financial institutions – including the ...

    in depth: International Geneva

    Politics
    Business

See in other languages: 2
South Korea tests a missile
Nuclear weapons
Switzerland holds off signing nuclear ban treaty
By Simon Bradley

Around 50 nations are set to sign the first-ever treaty to ban nuclear weapons. Switzerland says it needs more time.
1 There is one comment on this article.

    in depth: International Geneva

    Politics

See in another language: 1
bomb testing in north korea
Nuclear test
Switzerland prepared to mediate in North Korean tensions
By swissinfo.ch and agencies

Switzerland has joined the international outcry against the latest North Korean nuclear test, and has offered its services as mediator.
1 There is one comment on this article.

    Politics
    Conflict

See in other languages: 4
Amnesty International activists hold a giant gun replica AK-47 during a rally
‘Reckless’ weapons trade
Foreign minister urges full implementation of arms treaty
By Simon Bradley

States must focus more effort on fully implementing the landmark Arms Trade Treaty (ATT), Swiss Foreign Minister Didier Burkhalter said on Monday.
2 There are 2 comments on this article.

    in depth: International Geneva

    Business
    Politics
    Conflict

Foreign Minister Didier Burkhalter speaking in Cancún
Controlling weapons
Geneva to host Arms Trade Treaty secretariat
By swissinfo.ch and agencies

The city of Geneva has been chosen as the seat of the permanent secretariat of the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT), a new convention that aims to regulate ...
2 There are 2 comments on this article.

    Politics

Footer

    The company | Partnerships | Imprint | Jobs | Play SWI | Newsletter subscription | Contact

Back to top
World partners:

    Radio Netherlands Worldwide | Radio Canada International | Radio Praha | Polskie Radio

    RTS | SRF | RSI | RTR | SWI

Front page - SWI swissinfo.ch
swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR

No comments: