
News
August 8, 2005
WCC message on 60th anniversary of Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings
"The unfinished business of banning nuclear weapons has been
derailed and urgently needs to be put back on track" is the central
point of a message sent 4 August by the World Council of Churches (WCC)
Commission of the Churches on International Affairs (CCIA) acting director
Clement John to WCC member churches and the national council of churches
in Japan.
Sixty years after the first atomic bombings in 1945, "nine states
- not one - now possess nuclear arms," while "proven remedies
against the use of nuclear weapons are being eroded," the message
warns. At a major review conference of the Nuclear Proliferation Treaty
in May 2005, "the WCC saw cracks widen in each of the treaty's
three pillars - in disarmament, non-proliferation and peaceful uses
of nuclear technology," it reports.
The message recalls that shortly after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the
WCC had declared that "although law may require the sanction of
force, the overwhelming force of modern warfare threatens the basis
for law itself".
Endorsing the view of Hiroshima's mayor today that "the indispensable
key to preventing nuclear proliferation is an international community
co-operating and monitoring the situation together," "on anniversaries
and every day, the imperative of Hiroshima and Nagasaki allows for no
alternative," the WCC message concludes.
The full text of the message is as follows:
The World Council of Churches and its member churches remember in
thought and prayer all who perished and all who have suffered the
consequences of the first atomic bombs or subsequent tests.
While most anniversaries lose importance over time, the anniversary
of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki only becomes more
important with every passing year. The reason is that the unfinished
business of banning nuclear weapons has been derailed and urgently
needs to be put back on track.
The bombings in 1945 were judged at the time as the ultimate indictment
of the abuse of force. Yet 60 years later weapons a thousand times
more fearsome are still with us and now nine states-not one-possess
nuclear arms. Also today, proven remedies against the use of nuclear
weapons are being eroded. Arms control treaties remain stillborn or
are in neglect. The leadership required to sponsor and enforce them
is absent.
On anniversaries, history is the best teacher. The World Council
of Churches has listened closely to nuclear history and shared its
lessons with governments around the world.
In 1955, the WCC called for the complete elimination and prohibition
of nuclear weapons verified by effective inspections. In 1965, the
WCC applauded the partial Test Ban Treaty, but urged that it be extended
and that money spent on nuclear weapons be used to assist developing
countries. In 1975, the WCC warned that deploying tactical nuclear
weapons had lowered the nuclear threshold, noted that important states
had not yet signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), and
affirmed the treaty demilitarizing space. In 1985, the WCC called
governments - especially those with a unilateralist record - to make
good-faith use of United Nations disarmament mechanisms, including
the UN Conference on Disarmament. In 1995, the WCC urged adoption
of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.
Today, critical progress in each of these areas is still pending
and dangerously overdue. Despite nuclear crises in Iran and North
Korea, other eminently feasible measures are languishing as well-including
a treaty to control the nuclear fuel cycle, a protocol to stiffen
the inspection powers of the International Atomic Energy Authority,
plans to pull back nuclear weapons to 'home' territory, and pledges
never to use nuclear weapons first starting with the five permanent
members of the UN Security Council.
The WCC policy is that all states together bear responsibility for
the success of nuclear arms control. Governments that have said the
world is more secure without nuclear weapons must bridge the gap between
intransigent nuclear weapons states that have pledged to disarm on
the one hand, and those reconsidering the option to seek nuclear weapons
on the other.
Instead, at a month-long review conference of the all-important NPT
this May, the WCC saw cracks widen in each of the treaty's three pillars
- in disarmament, non-proliferation and peaceful uses of nuclear technology.
Many eyes turned from these signs of disrepair in the international
community to the world's leading nations, the original nuclear powers.
Shortly after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the World Council of Churches
declared that although law may require the sanction of force, the
overwhelming force of modern warfare threatens the basis for law itself.
Last month Hiroshima's Mayor Tadatoshi Akiba wrote the US President
about the essential alternative to using force: "The indispensable
key to preventing nuclear proliferation is an international community
co-operating and monitoring the situation together, not one forcibly
governed by the rule of might".
Mayors, parliamentarians and peace groups in more than 100 countries
- and WCC member churches in Japan and around the world-are committed
to refocusing world leaders on achieving a nuclear weapons-free world.
On anniversaries and every day, the imperative of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
allows for no alternative.
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