The Chronicle Library Shelf.

AuthorRoche, Douglas
PositionTowards a Nuclear Weapon Free World - Book review

TOWARDS A NUCLEAR WEAPON FREE WORLD

Edited by Manpreet Sethi

KW Publishers, New Delhi, 2009

pp. 164, $16

In politics, timing is everything. The same might be said for book publishing. The appearance of Towards a Nuclear Weapon Free World at this new moment of rich potential for nuclear disarmament is a stroke of fortune.

United States President Barack Obama has set the goal of a nuclear weapon free world high on his agenda. High-level non-partisan support from former cold war leaders in the US is backing him. And, not least, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has won a resounding victory at the polls, enabling the Congress Party to plan its programme over the next five years in stability.

The strength of Prime Minister Singh is important because, in his inaugural address to an international conference on nuclear disarmament in New Delhi in 2008, he called for negotiations of a nuclear weapons convention "to eliminate nuclear weapons within a time-bound framework." Mr. Singh's whole address is contained in this book and it makes for inspired reading. India, he writes, "is ready to add its own weight and voice to the global debate on nuclear disarmament with a view to crafting such a consensus on disarmament and non-proliferation."

Many people in the world think that India abandoned any such aspirations when it joined the nuclear weapons "club" in 1998. As a longtime proponent of nuclear disarmament myself, I wish India had not done this. But my experience as Canada's Ambassador for Disarmament taught me a cold truth: if the principal powers in the world are going to maintain nuclear weapons for themselves, India will join them. The only way to keep India from maintaining its own nuclear arsenal is for a global ban on nuclear weapons to come into effect.

In fact, in 1988, then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi went to the United Nations to propose a 15-year action plan for the complete elimination of nuclear weapons. The big powers--the US, the Soviet Union, the UK, France and China--would not cooperate. The world started to slide into two classes: nuclear haves...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT