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Fifty years on, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament celebrates with
a forward-looking expert conference and a mass protest
CND: life begins at 50
Milan Rai
On 16-17 February, CND celebrated its fiftieth birthday in
style  holding a "Global Summit for a Nuclear
Weapons-Free World" at London's dramatic glass-walled
City Hall (courtesy of mayor Ken Livingstone, who opened the conference).
Future focus
The most striking aspect of the
gathering was its resolute focus
on the future.
Despite its being a birthday
event, there was no massive
exhibition detailing CND's turbulent and fascinating history,
no panel of long-experienced
activists drawing lessons from
five decades of campaigning, no
new film documenting the
development of the nuclear disarmament movement. (And, of
course, the history of CND was
written three years ago by CND
chair Kate Hudson Now More
Than Ever, reviewed in
PN2466).
Instead of looking backwards,
the global summit concentrated
with laser-like intensity on the
requirements for creating a
nuclear-weapons-free world.
Expert stream
The conference was slightly
uncomfortably divided in two,
with an open, activist strand
hearing excellent speeches from
a range of activists and leading
figures, and a semi-private,
expert strand, with round-table
discussion of the technicalities of
nuclear abolition. (A small number of activists were permitted
to attend  and speak at  the
expert strand.)
The expert strand was attended by an extraordinary range of
high-level individuals from
around the world (not all of
whom got a chance to speak,
sadly), who met under something akin to Chatham House
rules, meaning that no one could
be identified or quoted without
their permission.
Peace News did gain permis-
sion to quote ambassador
Thomas Graham, chair of the
US Bipartisan Security Group,
and for 30 years a senior US
arms control negotiator.
Ambassador Graham said, in a
discussion about what a nuclear-
weapons-free world would look
like: "If nuclear weapons were
verifiably and completely eliminated, we [the United States]
would, relatively speaking, be
much stronger militarily than
we are today."
Which put a lot of the rest of
the discussion into an interesting context.
On the Damascus road?
There was a sense of excitement
at the conference. Partly that
came from a British Defence
Secretary telling the UN Conference on Disarmament that
Britain desired a world without
nuclear weapons (though not
just yet), and pledging Aldermaston as a "disarmament laboratory" (though, for the moment, mainly for building new bombs).
Yes, Des Browne told the
world on 5 February that Britain
has "a vision of a world free of
nuclear weapons", and that what
was needed was "a transparent,
sustainable and credible plan for
multilateral nuclear disarmament".
The minister acknowledged
that in the absence of progress
on disarmament  "forward
planning, commitment and
action toward multilateral
nuclear disarmament" by the
nuclear weapon states, this could
lead to the crumbling of the
nonproliferation system.
A real St Paul-type conversion? The was much scepticism.
However, there was a sense
that history was changing
course, a feeling reinforced by
the participation in the conference of ambassador Graham,
who chairs a nuclear abolitionist
group of senior Republicans and
Democrats  many of whom
could fairly be described as cold
war hawks, for example, Henry
Kissinger, another member of
the Bipartisan Security Group or
"the Hoover process".
Hearing from the South
From another perspective we
heard from authentic voices
from the Global South, ambassador Abdul Minty, South Africa's
representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency,
and formerly an Aldermaston
marcher (1959), from Achin
Vanaik of the Indian Coalition
for Nuclear Disarmament and
Peace, and from Zia Mian, Pakistani physicist and disarmament campaigner.
In one of the most highly-
charged moments of the sum-
mit, ambassador Minty revealed
that South Africa (which abandoned its nuclear weapons unilaterally and is militantly in
favour of nuclear disarmament)
is, like Iran, seeking a uranium
enrichment capability.
The atmosphere in the hall
grew tense.
The feeling of the conference
seemed to be that the struggle
against nuclear weapons is also a
struggle against nuclear power,
but that those seeking nuclear
abolition should try not to
divide over this issue.
In an "expert" session, Zia
Mian illustrated the enormous
stockpiles of nuclear weapons-
usable materials (highly-enriched uranium and plutonium  much of it "civilian")
existing today, and the ease with
which nuclear power facilities
can be used for military purpos-
es.
Even if all stockpiles and all
relevant equipment could be
eliminated, it only took a rich
and powerful state three years to
build the first nuclear bomb, so
"breakout" would (from a technical point of view) take no
longer in the future.
Expert activists
Conference co-organiser Rebecca
Johnson of the Acronym Institute (and Faslane 365) called the
participants "activist experts and
expert activists".
The speaker list was breathtaking. Apart from those already
mentioned, we heard: Pierre Villard of the French Mouvement de
la Paix, Hiroshi Taka of Japan's
Gensuikyo, Jacki Cabasso of Mayors for Peace, Sian Jones of
Aldermaston Women's Pace
Camp(aign), Bianca Jagger of
the World Future Council,
Angus Robertson (SNP MP),
Caroline Lucas (Green MEP),
Jeremy Corbyn (Labour MP)
Professor Ken Booth (Aberystwyth University), and Ambassador Sergio Duarte, UN High
Representative for Disarmament
Affairs.
Vision
Finally, to encourage us, CND
vice-president Bruce Kent
invoked sites surrounding the
river Thames, on which we were
looking out.
The Tower of London, which
we could see, used to be a torture chamber, but now torture
was abolished; the HMS Belfast
(upriver, just out of sight) used
to be a warship, but now was a
museum; further up the river
was Hammersmith, where
William Morris wrote his vision
of the future, News from Nowhere.
Visions can come true. Bruce
Kent says so.
Milan Rai is a co-editor of Peace
News. His media column will
resume next issue.
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