Archive for April, 2010

Nuclear Security Summit focuses on nuclear terrorism threat

April 13th, 2010 by Cara Bautista from Groundswell Blog, from Peace Action West » Nuclear Weapons

The first ever Nuclear Security Summit to address preventing nuclear terrorism wrapped up today. Initiated by President Obama, the summit gathered 47 world leaders in DC to commit to achieving the goal of securing all vulnerable nuclear material, such as plutonium or highly enriched uranium, and securing loose nuclear weapons within four years. With the Cold War over, nuclear terrorism has emerged as a grave threat to US and global security. This Washington Post article has good coverage of the summit and illustrates why it is so important:

“Nuclear materials that could be sold or stolen and fashioned into a nuclear weapon exist in dozens of nations,” Obama said Tuesday morning. “Just the smallest amount of plutonium — about the size of an apple — could kill and injure hundreds of thousands of innocent people.”


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WILPF-sponsored Walk for Nuclear Abolition begins outside White House

April 9th, 2010 by Ellen Thomas from Proposition One In 2010 Campaign

4/8/2010  (Lafayette Park, Washington DC) – The Walk Begins.

The newest phase of the Proposition One Campaign began on Thursday with a hike from Peace Park, DC, to Peace Park in Takoma Park, Maryland.

Above, Jay Marx and Ethan Genauer were interviewed at the White House by a Scripps Howard journalist, as they began the Walk for Nuclear Abolition to New York City.   There were several other journalists present, especially Japanese.  There will be a HUGE Japanese presence at the Non-proliferation Treaty events in New York, April 30 through the first week of May, including 100 Hibakusha (survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs).  We hope there will be an even huger US presence!


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Obama signs New START treaty in Prague, but will the Senate ratify?

April 8th, 2010 by Cara Bautista from Groundswell Blog, from Peace Action West » Nuclear Weapons

(Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

After a year of negotiations, the President Obama and Russian President Medvedev signed a new treaty today to reduce nuclear weapons stockpiles in both countries and make the world that much safer.

But will the Senate do the right thing and ratify the treaty, or will they hold it hostage to partisan politics?

 Please click here to ask your senators to support ratifying the New START agreement to reduce our nuclear arsenal.

At the signing ceremony today in Prague, President Obama spoke about how the treaty opens the door to further actions to reduce the threat posed by nuclear weapons. Here’s an excerpt:


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U.S. CITIZEN NUCLEAR WATCHDOGS CALLING ON VISITING HEADS OF STATE TO PRESS FOR GLOBAL DISARMAMENT AT NUCLEAR SECURITY SUMMIT

April 8th, 2010 by Ellen Thomas from Proposition One In 2010 Campaign

MEDIA ADVISORY: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 
PRESS CONFERENCE TO BE HELD 9 AM MONDAY, APRIL 12 at Peace House, 1233 12th St. NW, WASHINGTON, DC (3 blocks west of the Washington Convention Center where the Nuclear Security Summit is happening April 12-13)

U.S. CITIZEN NUCLEAR WATCHDOGS TO CALL ON VISITING HEADS OF STATE
TO PRESS FOR GLOBAL DISARMAMENT AT NUCLEAR SECURITY 
SUMMIT

Letter to 47 World Leaders Will Express Solidarity Against Nuclear Threat,
 Urge Nations to Demand U.S Leadership Now Toward Global Nuclear Abolition By 2020


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Obama’s Nuclear Posture Review Overview

April 6th, 2010 by Cara Bautista from Groundswell Blog, from Peace Action West » Nuclear Weapons

The Obama administration’s long-delayed Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) was released today and, as expected, it’s a mixed bag. Outlining US nuclear weapons policy for the next 5-10 years, the NPR does reject some of the bad policies put forward by the Bush administration and helps to reduce the role nuclear weapons play in US security strategy.

On the other hand, the NPR definitely falls short of being a transformational document. Yesterday was the one year anniversary of Obama’s speech from Prague, in which he stated “clearly and with conviction America’s commitment to seek the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons.” The NPR does not realign US nuclear weapons policy enough to achieve the ambitious agenda Obama laid out in that speech.


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