Blix chides U.S. for its nuclear aspirations


Electrical Commissioning In Industrial Power Systems

Our customized live online or in‑person group training can be delivered to your staff at your location.

  • Live Online
  • 12 hours Instructor-led
  • Group Training Available
Regular Price:
$599
Coupon Price:
$499
Reserve Your Seat Today
Washington is not taking "the common bargain" of the nonproliferation treaty as seriously as it once did, and that's dimming global support for its campaign to shut down North Korea's and Iran's nuclear programs, the United Nations former chief weapons inspector says.

Undersecretary of State John Bolton, by questioning the value of treaties and international law, has also damaged the U.S. position, Hans Blix said.

"There is a feeling the common edifice of the international community is being dismantled," the Swedish arms expert told reporters.

Blix, now chairman of the Swedish government-sponsored Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission, spoke with media in the second week of a month-long conference to review the treaty — signed by nuclear powers and other nations in 1968 — that came into force in 1970. State Department spokesperson Tom Casey disagreed, saying, "both Mr. Bolton... and this administration as a whole, has a very strong track record in terms of... supporting the nonproliferation treaty."

Under the 188-nation pact, nations without nuclear weapons pledge not to pursue them, in exchange for a commitment by the first declared nuclear-armed powers — the U.S., Russia, Britain, France and China — to negotiate toward nuclear disarmament.

The review conference has been stalled by a dispute over agenda language dealing with complaints by some that the Big Five are moving too slowly on disarmament.

Egypt recently scuttled an apparent agreement on the agenda. It wants language that focuses more on assessing how well nuclear powers have done in taking specific steps toward disarmament, under commitments they made in 2000 at the last of these twice-a-decade conferences.

Nuclear "have-nots" complain that the Bush administration, has acted contrary to those commitments, by rejecting the test-ban treaty, for example.

Washington wants the conference to focus on what it alleges are Iran's plans to build nuclear arms in violation of the treaty, and on North Korea's withdrawal from the treaty and claim to have nuclear bombs. North Korea said reports it could soon conduct an underground nuclear test were speculation cooked up by Washington.

Blix cited Bush administration proposals to build new nuclear weapons and talk in Washington even of testing weapons, after a 13-year moratorium, as well as comments by Bolton, Bush's embattled nominee to be U.N. ambassador, devaluing treaties and the authority of international law.

"Why are you complaining about (North Korea) breaching the treaty if treaties are not binding?" Blix, an international lawyer, asked.

Blix led U.N. teams that found no evidence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq in 700 inspections. The U.S. invaded anyway.

U.S. inspectors also found no such weapons programs.

Related News

Russia to triple electricity supplies to China

Amur-Heihe ETL Power Supply Tripling will expand Russia-China electricity exports, extending 750 MW DC full-load…
View more

3-layer non-medical masks now recommended by Canada's top public health doctor

Canada Three-Layer Mask Recommendation advises non-medical masks with a polypropylene filter layer and tightly woven…
View more

Vehicle-to-grid could be ‘capacity on wheels’ for electricity networks

Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G) enables EV batteries to provide grid balancing, flexibility, and demand response, integrating renewables…
View more

Warren Buffett-linked company to build $200M wind power farm in Alberta

Rattlesnake Ridge Wind Project delivers 117.6 MW in southeast Alberta for BHE Canada, a Berkshire…
View more

What can we expect from clean hydrogen in Canada

Canadian Clean Hydrogen is surging, driven by net-zero goals, tax credits, and exports. Fuel cells,…
View more

DOE Announces $34 Million to Improve America?s Power Grid

DOE GOPHURRS Grid Undergrounding accelerates ARPA-E innovations to modernize the power grid, boosting reliability, resilience,…
View more

Sign Up for Electricity Forum’s Newsletter

Stay informed with our FREE Newsletter — get the latest news, breakthrough technologies, and expert insights, delivered straight to your inbox.

Electricity Today T&D Magazine Subscribe for FREE

Stay informed with the latest T&D policies and technologies.
  • Timely insights from industry experts
  • Practical solutions T&D engineers
  • Free access to every issue

Live Online & In-person Group Training

Advantages To Instructor-Led Training – Instructor-Led Course, Customized Training, Multiple Locations, Economical, CEU Credits, Course Discounts.

Request For Quotation

Whether you would prefer Live Online or In-Person instruction, our electrical training courses can be tailored to meet your company's specific requirements and delivered to your employees in one location or at various locations.