|
For
immediate use: 13 May 2002
"Any
reduction in nuclear warheads is to be welcomed," said CND Chair
Carol Naughton this afternoon, "but President Bush's claim that
this
treaty will liquidate the legacy of the Cold War suggests he is
even further detached from reality than we feared."
The proposed
reduction in Russian and US warheads has been well-trailed since the start
of the Bush presidency and was the subject of some discussion at the Non-Proliferation
Treaty Conference in New York last month.
In her
report from the NPT Carol said:
The
willingness of the US and Russia to decrease current warhead numbers is
part of the strategy to replace some of them with new, reduced yield 'bunker
busters' and medium range delivery systems which will lower the nuclear
threshold.
Also
aired at the NPT was the problem with 'handshake diplomacy' instead of
nuclear disarmament agreements which include detailed clauses about verification
and transparency.
"Storing
surplus warheads for possible future use is not nuclear disarmament"
said Carol Naughton,
"and the legacy of the Cold War will only
be liquidated when the last warhead has been dismantled and the doctrine
which fed it has been consigned to the history books."
Further
information from Press Officer Nigel Chamberlain on 07968 420859.
|