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Fifth Column
Obama plans big push to end nukes!
2009-02-19
The Obama administration is planning a series of "game changing" moves on the issue of global nuclear disarmament, members of an international commission said at the weekend.

"I think it's fair to say that we are pushing at a reasonably open door on all these issues," Gareth Evans of the International Commission on Nuclear Non-proliferation and Disarmament told reporters Sunday after meetings in Washington with senior U.S. officials, in which he outlined five priority issues the new administration should address to reduce the nuclear threat.

But some observers suggested the commission needs to broaden its focus.
Because they just don't have enough to do ...
"Everything we heard "... was extremely encouraging, and it's extremely important in global terms, because in this, as in frankly so many other areas, U.S. leadership is absolutely critical and Â... has been somewhat missing over the last eight years," said Evans, former foreign minister of Australia and co-chair of the commission -- an international body established by the Australian and Japanese governments to lead a global debate on cutting nuclear arsenals and to work to ensure the success of the next round of talks on the nuclear non-proliferation treaty in 2010.

Evans and the commission's other co-chair, former Japanese Foreign Minister Yoriko Kawaguchi, met with U.S. Vice President Joseph Biden, national security adviser Gen. James Jones, Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg and the chairmen of several key congressional committees, including Massachusetts Democrat John Kerry of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

"I got a very, very positive impression of serious commitment from President Obama to really do some game-changing things in this area," Evans added in an interview with The Australian newspaper.
What will Mr. Evans do when he finds out that the Iranians cheated and that they're the only country left with nukes? A stern letter? Economic sanction? Grovel?
The White House National Security Council spokesman's office declined to respond directly to Evans' comments, but a senior administration official told UPI that the issues the commission had raised were "important issues, priority issues. They're under review and we look forward to engaging (with them) early and in depth."

The five issues that the commissioners called on the United States to make "particular priorities in terms of new action or renewed action," as Evans put it, were:

  • Getting the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty ratified, "if that can possibly be managed. We understand the political difficulties";

  • "Revitalizing the negotiations on a fissile material cutoff treaty," an international agreement to ban the production of new fissile material for nuclear weapons;

  • Successfully concluding a deal with Russia on the "continuation or replacement or extension" of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, or START, "involving further deep reductions in strategic weapons";

  • Starting "serious, wide-ranging strategic dialogues" with both Russia and China on other issues, especially the controversial U.S. ballistic missile defense program; and

  • "Visible changes in U.S. nuclear doctrine" to rule out the first use of nuclear weapons.

  • Evans called these "very, very important steps "... in changing the psychological landscape internationally and reinvigorating the momentum for both disarmament and non-proliferation."

    Henry Sokolski, the executive director of the Nonproliferation Policy Education Center, told UPI the commission was "pushing very hard on issues where national governments are already focused like a laser beam. They should be putting a spotlight on things that national governments are not paying so much attention to. "... That is where they can add value."

    As an example, Sokolski cited the spread of nuclear power and "the question of how there can be a growth in the number of states with large nuclear reactors without a growth in the numbers of nuclear (weapons) ready states."
    Which makes nuclear power ucky and unacceptable. Welcome to more greenhouse gasses. Or the New Stone Age.
    "They have done great work in lifting the carpet on the growing nuclear capabilities of Pakistan, India and China and the threats that poses," he continued. "We need to see more detail as to what might be done to counter those threats."

    The commission, he concluded, was "still a work in progress."
    Posted by:3dc

    #20  Its also good to remember who Gareth Evans is. He was and Australian academic who entered politics in the Labor [read socialist] party and became Attorney General. He got the nickname "Biggles" for sending the Australian airforce over Tasmania when the Tasmanians were building a dam the then newly elected Australian government didn't like. He was always incredibly arrogant but finally got hounded out of Australian politics when it was found that he was rogering the leader of a fringe left wing party in the Senate humorously called the Australian Democrats. He never achieved much as a politician because he thinks he is smarter than everyone else [and certainly is as a legal academic] but has no clue about the real world. He is trying to find a place in history. But he has already got it, just like Bill Clinton.
    Posted by: Omoter Speaking for Boskone7794   2009-02-19 20:45  

    #19  A bunch of peacenik socialist tranzis BS'ing with each other.
    Posted by: Cynicism Inc   2009-02-19 16:27  

    #18  I think the Russians would welcome nuclear disarmament.

    They started putting biological warheads on ICBMs in the 1980s.
    Posted by: Plastic Snoopy   2009-02-19 13:33  

    #17  unless Bambi gives away the store.

    It's credible to think that's his intent.
    Posted by: lotp   2009-02-19 13:32  

    #16  Per trailing wife's comment, I have to wonder if this is all just a bunch of window dressing.

    I mean to be fair to The 0ne, window dressing seems to be the only thing he's any good at thus far.
    Posted by: eltoroverde   2009-02-19 13:18  

    #15  You go Barry! Absolutely impressive. The bloody wonk is an expert on phueching EVERYTHING!
    Posted by: Besoeker   2009-02-19 13:05  

    #14  the International Commission on Nuclear Non-proliferation and Disarmament -- an international body established by the Australian and Japanese governments to lead a global debate on cutting nuclear arsenals and to work to ensure the success of the next round of talks on the nuclear non-proliferation treaty in 2010.

    met with U.S. Vice President Joseph Biden, national security adviser Gen. James Jones, Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg and the chairmen of several key congressional committees, including Massachusetts Democrat John Kerry of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

    "I got a very, very positive impression


    tu3031 nailed it. An international committee, responsible to no one, made up of retired politicians from non-nuclear nations (what our British cousins call a "quango", I believe), met with members of two branches of the U.S. government without direct responsibility for the matter at hand, leaving the quango members with a strong impression of something or other, which the office actually kinda sorta responsible for refused to officially comment on. If nothing else, giving a strong impression of agreement with everyone's favourite issues is what President Obama does best.

    I shouldn't worry too much about this. President Obama is going to have to figure out how to safely dispose of his discarded nukes before he can actually do so, or the issue will become seriously toxic for him.

    /yes, I did mean to say that. So there.
    Posted by: trailing wife   2009-02-19 12:50  

    #13  The Russians are in the lose 'em situation. They don't have the money to support their current nuke force. Unfortunately Obambi is gonna ride to Putie's rescue w/o any net benefit for America or the west.
    Posted by: ed   2009-02-19 12:42  

    #12  Nukes, use 'em or lose 'em?
    Posted by: Glenmore   2009-02-19 12:34  

    #11  Obama's good friend and office mate Bill Ayers wanted to kill off 10% of Americans. Looks like the Manchurian President may far exceed that.

    Alternatively, why not fold the American nuclear umbrella in 5 years and let those nations decide whether they want to go naked or go nuke, including Mr. Gareth Evans own country?
    Posted by: ed   2009-02-19 12:31  

    #10  Captain Dipshit strikes again.
    Posted by: Ho Chi Glusoque7625   2009-02-19 12:20  

    #9  Obama... dangerously naive

    No, "Fucking Moron is a lot closer.
    Posted by: Rednek Jim   2009-02-19 12:18  

    #8  This moron's gonna get us all killed.
    Posted by: Parabellum   2009-02-19 12:09  

    #7  A modest reduction in our arsenal won't hurt us: many of the weapons are aging and the maintenance cost is high. We'd need new ones down the road but I'm guessing Bambi won't go for that.

    So if one can use said modest reduction as a chip to get the Russians and Chinese to limit their own stockpile, fine and dandy, but that is as good as you're going to get.

    Iran won't stop its drive to get nukes. Neither will the Norks. You might persuade nations such as Egypt and Brazil to hold off for now. But the game otherwise isn't going to change.

    This is all deck-chair arrangement unless Bambi gives away the store.
    Posted by: Steve White   2009-02-19 11:52  

    #6  Although the article doesn't mention it, the O administration has been discussing an 80%+ reduction in the US arsenal to avoid the costs of maintenance and modernization of the warheads.
    Posted by: rwv   2009-02-19 11:25  

    #5  Prisoner's Dilemma, anyone?
    Posted by: mojo   2009-02-19 11:23  

    #4  Ahh, the optimism of ignorance.
    Posted by: gorb   2009-02-19 11:21  

    #3  From reading this, it ought to be headlined "Gareth Evans plans big push to end nukes". Which, of course, means absolutely nothing.
    Posted by: tu3031   2009-02-19 11:06  

    #2  Rogue nation or terrorists threaten nuclear blackmail. Now what are you going to do, Genius? The Big O and his ideologues have a suicide wish.
    Posted by: Alaska Paul   2009-02-19 11:03  

    #1  Well, if you can get the Russians and the Chinese to agree, and stop Iran's nuclear program and the other programs in the Middle East that are popping up because of it, and can keep other nations from wanting nukes, then it should work!

    Obama... dangerously naive.
    Posted by: DarthVader   2009-02-19 11:02  

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