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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, May 02, 2000 |
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N-powers for strengthening anti-ballistic missile treaty
UNITED NATIONS, MAY 1. The five main nuclear powers promised
their ``unequivocal commitment to the ultimate goals of a
complete elimination of nuclear weapons'' and a treaty on
complete disarmament under strict international control. But no
specifics or timetable was given.
The United States, Russia, France, Britain and China, in a 23-
point statement concluded over the weekend, called for
strengthening the 1972 Anti-ballistic Missile treaty.
The statement, to be issued at the current NPT conference, is
aimed at countering criticism that the five, particularly the
U.S. and Russia, are moving far too slowly in reducing their
strategic and tactical nuclear arms, estimated at more than
20,000 warheads between them.
The meeting, which ends on May 19, is to set the goals for the
187 signatories to the NPT for the next five years.
The five, including the U.S., called for ``preserving and
strengthening'' the 1972 U.S.-Russian Anti-ballistic Missile
Treaty, which the Clinton administration wants amended to
accommodate its controversial new programme against incoming
nuclear missiles. Diplomats said the language was aimed at
ensuring that the pact could not be changed or abandoned
unilaterally.
The statement also declares that none of the five has its nuclear
weapons targeted at any specific State. Diplomats said that in
reality they could be targeted within minutes, but noted that
this provision was a positive signal.
The statement reaffirms a resolution on the West Asia, concluded
at the 1995 NPT conference, which calls on all States that have
not signed the treaty to do so at an early date. But it does not
mention Israel by name, the only suspected nuclear arms State in
the region not to sign the NPT.
- Reuters
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