UK public supports no-first-use
Posted: 23rd August 2022
UK public supports no-first-use:
Government tries to remove this from draft NPT report.
Final week of the NPT.
As
States Parties to the Non-Proliferation Treaty enter the fourth and final week of the
10th NPT Review Conference at the United Nations in New York, one of the key issues is whether or not the nuclear weapon and allied states will agree to the
adoption of no-first-use policies.
A call made by
NoFirstUse Global and like-minded governments for the
NPT final document to include support for no-first-use policies has been integrated into the
draft report of NPT Review Conf. Main Committee 1 – the committee dealing with nuclear risk-reduction and disarmament.
This is the first time that support for no-first-use (NFU) policies has made it into a draft
NPT report. The
strength of support generated by the global no-first-use campaign is demonstrated by the fact that the
NFU call remains in the revised draft, even after counter-lobbying by nuclear-weapon states.
NPT draft report and no-first-use
“The nuclear weapon States agree to take steps to diminish, with a view to eliminating, the role and significance of nuclear weapons in all military and security concepts, doctrines and policies; for nuclear weapon States this should include the adoption of no first use doctrines.”
Main Committee 1 Draft Report rev 2. 10th NPT Review Conference
UK public supports NFU: Government opposes
One of the governments opposing the inclusion of no-first-use in the
NPT report is the United Kingdom.
Last Friday (August 19) the UK representative called on the Chair of Main Committee 1 to delete the reference to no-first-use because the UK could not agree to such a policy. Such a position is in direct contradiction to public, parliamentary and expert opinion in the UK supporting no-first-use.
A
public survey undertaken by
YouGov last month, for example, found that
79% of UK people (random sample of 1765 adults) support the adoption of no-first-use policies, while only 8% oppose such policies (12% have no opinion either way). For details see
Anxiety about nuclear war escalates as the Doomsday Clock ticks closer to midnight, by Steve Barwick, Chair of the UK Nuclear Education Trust.
In addition,
Rising nuclear risk, disarmament and the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, a report prepared by the
UK House of Commons Select Committee on International Relations in preparation for the
NPT Review Conference, calls for the adoption of no-first-use policies.
The
Birmingham Declaration adopted by the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, held in Birmingham UK in July this year, also promotes no-first-use.
UK House of Lords supports no-first-use
The Government should consider clarifying its nuclear posture at the 2020 NPT Review Conference and encouraging other members of the P5 to take similar steps. This could include providing clearer negative security assurances, considering declarations of sole purpose and a no first use commitment, and further work on de-alerting. The objective should be to reduce the possibility of misperceptions and misunderstanding during a crisis.
Rising nuclear risk, disarmament and the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, a report prepared by the UK House of Commons Select Committee on International Relations. 24 April, 2019. Para 428.
UK experts, religious leaders, civil society leaders etc support no-first-use
Finally, the call for no-first-use policies has been supported by numerous UK parliamentarians, religious leaders, academics/scientists, former military and political leaders, youth, leaders of civil society organizations and others in an
Appeal to Presidents Putin and Biden and in the
Open Letter to the NPT: From Nuclear Threats to human security, both which are also endorsed by similar voices from other nuclear-armed and non-nuclear countries.
Even if the UK and other nuclear states block the adoption of language supporting no-first-use in the final
NPT document which is scheduled to be adopted by the end of this week (it requires consensus for adoption), the strong support for no-first-use at the
NPT Review Conference has already
elevated the NFU policy proposal in capitals and in the international disarmament agenda. This increases the possibilities of it being taken up in other relevant UN bodies such as the UN General Assembly, UN Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons, UN High Level Week, Conference on Disarmament, Human Rights Council and more.
Two of the UK military and political leaders supporting no-first-use
Commander Robert ForsythUK Royal Navy (retired)
“Submerged on patrol, commanding officers of strategic submarines have no way of knowing why they have been ordered to fire, what the target is, or the consequences on civil population of doing so. As such, I was not prepared to launch a first strike with Polaris missiles from my submarine in the 1970’s and remain
strongly opposed to First Use of any nuclear weapons.”
Lord David HannayCo-chair of the UK All Party Parliamentary Group on Global Security and Non-proliferation. Former UK Ambassador to the United Nations and the European Union
“It’s high time the five Permanent Members of the UN Security Council sat down and had a serious discussion of how to reduce the risks of nuclear war, including such concepts as No First Use and Sole Purpose. After all… they collectively re-affirmed the Reagan / Gorbachev view that a nuclear war cannot be won and must not be fought.”
NoFirstUse Global is a network of organizations, academics, policy makers and civil society advocates working cooperatively for the adoption of no-first-use policies by nuclear-armed States, the support for such policies from nuclear allied countries, and the implementation of such policies to help achieve broader nuclear risk-reduction, non-proliferation and disarmament measures.