[Enver Masud is the founder of The Wisdom Fund, and recipient of the
Human Rights Foundation GOLD AWARD for his book The War on Islam.]
Non-Proliferation Treaty (July 1, 1968)
- Forbids the five member states with nuclear weapons from transferring them to any other state
- Forbids member states without nuclear weapons from developing or aquiring them
- Provides assurance through the application of international safeguards that peaceful nuclear energy in NNWS will not be diverted to nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices
- Facilitates access to peaceful uses of nuclear energy for all NNWS under international safeguards
- Commits all member states to pursue good faith negotiations toward ending the nuclear arms race and achieving nuclear disarmament.
["As the United States Air Force (USAF) builds up its deployments of
aircraft in the Middle East, it has emerged that a huge new bomb has
recently been developed that will be used in the war against Iraq.
It is the most powerful conventional bomb to be deployed anywhere in
the world and is described as having an effect as devastating as
that of a small nuclear artillery shell."--Paul Rogers, "The
Mother of all Bombs--How the US Plans to Pulverise Iraq," March 7, 2003]
[Unverified Report: "The USA has already used Nuclear Weapons in
Gulf War I and Afghanistan, and is duping us as it prepares to use
them again in Gulf War II. . . . When, on July 16th, 1945, the first
atomic bomb was tested at Alamogordo, New Mexico, the USA had a
cover story ready to hide this fact: a "Munitions Train" had blown
up." Is the MOAB in reality a nuclear weapon?--George Paxinos,
March 12, 2003]
[The recently released Nuclear Posture Review makes a mockery of 30
years of US commitments under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty
(NPT). . . .
In 1996, the International Court of Justice unanimously held that
Article VI obligates states to "bring to a conclusion negotiations
leading to nuclear disarmament in all its aspects."--John Burroughs,
"Rule
of Power or Rule of Law?," National Press Club Press Conference,
Washington, D.C., April 4, 2002]
[. . . The IAEA report, by its director-general, Mohamed ElBaradei,
is based on his visit to Iran in February. Iran falls under the IAEA
inspection regime because it signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) under which nuclear power projects are examined to make
sure that no material is diverted to military use.
. . . The conclusion of El Baradei's nine-page report is that Iran
has committed minor infringements of the IAEA reporting rules. The
text pointedly does not use the word "violation" and says that Iran
has taken steps to fill the gaps.--Bronwen Maddox, "Nuclear
threat to West's hopes of stability," Times Online, June 13, 2003]
Gillian Tett, "Iranians avoid censure on nuclear programme," Financial Times,
June 18, 2003
Julian Borger, "US scraps nuclear weapons watchdog," Guardian, July 31, 2003
"U.S. Marks Hiroshima Anniversary By Holding Top Secret Summit to
Discuss Expanding Nation's Nuclear Arsenal," Democaracy Now,
August 5, 2003
[The head of the United Nations' nuclear watchdog has called on the
United States to set an example to the rest of the world and cut its
nuclear arsenal and halt research programs.--"US
should set disarming example: Elbaradei," AAP, August 27, 2003]
"IAEA conference to discuss Israeli nukes for first time,"
World Tribune, August 28, 2003
[Officials confirm that the nation can now launch nuclear weapons
from land, sea and air. The issue complicates efforts to rein in
Iran. --Douglas Frantz, "Israel Adds Subs to Its Atomic Ability,"
Los Angeles Times, October 12, 2003]
[Israeli and American officials have admitted collaborating to
deploy US-supplied Harpoon cruise missiles armed with nuclear
warheads in Israel's fleet of Dolphin-class submarines, giving the
Middle East's only nuclear power the ability to strike at any of its
Arab neighbours.--Peter Beaumont and Conal Urquhart, "Israel deploys nuclear arms in submarines,"
Observer, October 12, 2003]
Ewen Macaskill and Dan De Luce, "Diplomatic coup on nuclear programme averts crisis," Guardian,
October 22, 2003
Erich Marquardt, "Iran's Long-Term Interests at Stake in Decision to
Comply with IAEA," Power and Interest News Report, October 23,
2003
["And under the current regime, there is nothing illicit for a
non-nuclear state to conduct uranium-enriching activities ... or
even to possess military-grade nuclear material," he said.--"'35 or 40'
countries able to make nuclear weapons: IAEA chief," AFP,
October 31, 2003]
Ian Traynor, "Tehran accused of 18-year cover-up," Guardian, November 12,
2003
"UN
stands by Iran nuclear report," BBC News, November 13, 2003
Gordon Prather, "Israeli
paranoia on Iran 'nukes'," WorldNetDaily.com, November 15, 2003
Paul Harris, "Bush plans new nuclear weapons: 'Bunker-buster'
bombs set to end 10-year research ban," The Observer, November
30, 2003
"A new era of nuclear weapons: Bush's
buildup begins with little debate in Congress," San Francisco
Chronicle, December 7, 2003
"'Scrap
nuclear arms' Israel urged," BBC News, December 12, 2003
"Iran
signs nuclear inspection treaty," Guardian, December 18, 2003
[Critics say American 'double standard' will undermine efforts to
curb nuclear arms.--Douglas Frantz, "Observers
Fault U.S. for Pursuing Mini-Nukes," Los Angeles Times, December
23, 2003]
[Take the recent hi-tech agreement between India and the United States, on
cooperation in nuclear power and space technologies.
"Transfers of dual-use technology, nuclear technology and space technology
is violating a basic principle of the Non Proliferation Treaty,"--Paul Anderson,
"Is
Pakistan's nuclear programme dying?," BBC News, March 3, 2004]
Pamela Hess, "Pentagon
Wants New Generation Of Smaller Cheaper Nukes," UPI, April 2, 2004
[The US and UK governments will this week be accused of conspiring to break
the international agreement to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons.--"Conspiracy
threat to anti-nuke treaty," New Scientist, June 17, 2004]
Ron Jacobs, "Nukes
in the US Protectorate of Iraq?," CounterPunch, June 22, 2004
Louis Charbonneau, "El-
Baradei wants Israel to discuss scrapping nukes," Reuters, July 4, 2004
Dafna Linzer, "U.S.
Shifts Stance on Nuclear Treaty: White House Resists Inspection
Provision," Washington Post, July 31, 2004
[What the US did, in effect, was to torpedo a new global treaty banning the
production and supply of materials essential to the building of nuclear
weapons.
It is known as the fissile material cut-off treaty.--Simon Tisdall, "You show
yours, I'll hide mine," Guardian, August 6, 2004]
Andrew Buncombe, "US
nuclear upgrade may violate test ban," Independent, February 8, 2005
Randeep Ramesh, "America to
aid India's nuclear power project: Deal breaks bar on countries which
refuse to be monitored," Guardian, July 20, 2005
Gordon Prather, "Tearing Up the
NPT," Antiwar.com, July 23, 2005
Gordon Prather, "The U.S. Is Violating
the NPT -- Not Iran," Antiwar.com, September 26, 2009
[United States named their best transport planes the 'Globemasters'. Today
they use them to plant nuclear bomb stockpiles around the world, in violation of the
Non-Proliferation Treaty.--Manlio Dinucci, "The 'Globemaster' brings us his
nuclear bombs," voltairenet.org, December 31, 2022]