Sunday, August 28, 2022

The Non-Proliferation Treaty is reviewed every five years for progress being made to end nuclear weapons on Earth.


Since 1970. Why is it taking so long?
    
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT): our dossier (click here)

The NPT (click here) allows for the parties to gather every five years to review its operation. At the 1995 Review and           Extension Conference, the parties extended the Treaty indefinitely and formalized the practice convening a Review Conference every five years. The Tenth NPT Review Conference has been delayed by the global COVID-19 pandemic, but parties aim to hold the meeting at the United Nations headquarters in New York in 2022. The official NPT Review Conference page can be found at the United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs....

Office of Disarmament Affairs (click here)

All the necessary people needed to secure reliable disarmament are in place. It is time for all countries owning nuclear weapons to act in earnest to end the existence of nuclear weapons. Nuclear technology is more dangerous today than ever before and it leads to a dead end. The nuclear holocaust must never be engaged as the only survivor may be Earth and certainly not in it's current state.

It is difficult to believe 52 years has gone by and far less progress has occurred than originally expected. 


Nuclear non-proliferation has been pursued for decades. Reducing the nuclear arsenal globally has been a purposeful pursuit so some idiot like Trump wouldn't do something so stupid it could cause a global retaliation that would destroy civilization. If nuclear weapons were ever used again, there would be little hope in the future for peace.