US-Russia Summit advances key points in international Open Letter
Posted: 17th June 2021
US-Russia Summit advances key points in
international Open Letter
At their Summit Meeting in Geneva yesterday, President’s Biden and Putin adopted a
U.S.-Russia Presidential Joint Statement on Strategic Stability in which they reaffirmed
‘the principle that a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought’ and announced that they will embark together on an integrated bilateral
Strategic Stability Dialogue in the near future. ‘
Through this Dialogue, we seek to lay the groundwork for future arms control and risk reduction measures.’
This agreement advances key points in the
Open Letter to Presidents Biden and Putin in Advance of their June 16, 2021 Summit, which was sent to the two leaders last week. The Open letter was endorsed by over 1200 political, military and religious leaders, as well as legislators, academics and scientists and other representatives of civil society.
Endorsers included UN Messengers for Peace
Michael Douglas and
Jane Goodall; public visionary
Deepak Chopra; two former UN Under-Secretary Generals for Disarmament
Sergio Duarte and
Nobuyasu Abe; Nobel Peace Laureate
Mairead Maguire; former US Secretary of Defense
William Perry, former Swedish Prime Minister
Ingvar Carlsson; and a number of former foreign and defense ministers, generals, UN ambassadors and other officials of nuclear armed, allied and non-nuclear countries.
From Joint Presidential Statement to concrete policy
In addition to affirming that “
A nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought”, the Open Letter calls on the
USA and Russia to make a ‘
joint commitment that their nations will not use nuclear weapons first under any circumstances, and to make this a key step toward fulfilling the United Nations goal to totally eliminate nuclear weapons from the planet.’ The adoption of such
No First Use (NFU) policies should be one of the objectives of the
Strategic Stability Dialogue that the two leaders are embarking upon.
There is growing traction globally for the adoption of
NFU policies by the nuclear armed (and allied) states, as evidenced by legislative action, public appeals and
NFU campaigns including the global campaign
NoFirstUse Global.
The adoption of such policies would not only reduce the risk of nuclear attacks, but aso pave the way to the adoption of more comprehensive nuclear disarmament measures toward the goal of a nuclear-weapon-free world. See
Why No-First-Use.
Yours sincerely
UNFOLD ZERO