Banning WMD from the Middle East
The
Middle East might seem inhospitable territory for a zone free of
weapons of mass destruction. But as long ago as 1974, the United Nations
endorsed establishing a nuclear-weapon-free zone in the region, and
progress toward that goal has been slow but not entirely imperceptible
in the years since. Beginning after the 2010 Review Conference for the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, a vigorous diplomatic effort sought to
transform a regional WMD-free zone from a far-fetched dream into—if not
an immediate reality—a genuine possibility, supported by a durable
process demonstrating tangible progress. But last year, after
attempts to organize a conference on the zone ended in failure, progress
seemed far from tangible. Below, Mansour Salsabili of Iran, Ehud Eiran
of Israel, Martin Malin of the United States, and Ayman Khalil of Jordan
debate how the process can be revived—and what failure to revive it
would mean, both for the Middle East and for the nonproliferation
regime.
http://thebulletin.org/banning-wmd-middle-east
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