The
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament today agreed with the findings of the world’s
top thinktank. SIPRI, which monitors global peace, has claimed there is an
increased risk that nuclear weapons will be used in the future.
The annual
report of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute on armaments,
disarmament and international security noted that the five states with the
biggest nuclear arsenals (USA,
Russia, Britain, France
and China)
are all updating or plan to update their nuclear weapons systems, despite a
gradual decline in overall warhead numbers. [see note 1]
Commenting
on the trend towards lower yield weapons, Ian Anthony, a nuclear expert at the
Institute said “The concern is that countries are starting to see these weapons
as useable, whereas during the Cold War they were seen as a deterrent.”
Kate
Hudson, Chair of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, said, “Many people
wrongly thought that the conclusion of the Cold War signalled the end of the
nuclear threat, but with states such as Britain modernising their weapons
systems and others making more ‘usable’ lower-yield weapons, the risk is large
and growing. Now more than ever we need a Nuclear Weapons Convention, a draft
of which is already lodged at the UN, so that nuclear weapons join biological
and chemical weapons as part of history, rather than something that can make
civilisation history.”
The report
also analyses world military expenditure for 2006, which is
estimated to have reached $1204 billion – a 3.5% increase in real terms since
2005 and a 37% rise since 1997. SIPRI also predicts that the current and long-term commitments for the US alone in relation to the war in Iraq
will take the bill to $2267 billion by 2016.
Kate Hudson
further commented, “The UK has the second highest military expenditure in the
world, yet only the fifth biggest economy. The UK
spent $59bn on defence last year – almost as much as China
and Israel
combined. [see note 2] We need a debate about what can provide real security
for this country, which spends much more per person on defence than the average
European state, and whether up to £76bn on Trident would be better spent
elsewhere."
On a similar theme Elisabeth Sköns, SIPRI's Military
Expenditure and Arms Production Programme Leader said “It is worth asking how
cost-effective military expenditure is as a way of increasing the security of
human lives, if we talk about avoiding premature deaths and disability due to
current dangers. For example, we know that millions of lives could be saved
through basic health interventions that would cost a fraction of what the world
spends on military forces every year”.
end
Notes
to Editors:
1.
The
report is based at http://yearbook2007.sipri.org/
2.
Chinese
military spending for 2006 is cited as $49bn by SIPRI. The figure for Israel
is $11bn. All available from http://first.sipri.org/non_first/milex.php
3.
For further information and interviews
please contact Ben Soffa, CND's Press & Communications
Officer, on 0207 7002350 or 07968 420859
4.
SIPRI
should be contacted on +46 8 655 97 00 or via Evamaria Loose-Weintraub on
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
5.
According to a July 2006 ICM poll,
59% of the British public opposes a replacement of Trident when presented with
a cost of at least £25 billion. Click here for a full copy
of the poll.
6. The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
(CND) is one of Europe’s biggest single-issue peace campaigns, with over 35,000
members in the UK.
CND campaigns for the abolition of all nuclear weapons everywhere. www.cnduk.org
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