Middle East nuclear weapons ban proposal stumbles at U.N.
Tue May 12, 2015 1:50am BST
By Louis Charbonneau
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) – A
U.N. attempt to work out a ban on nuclear weapons in the Middle East
was in jeopardy after Egypt complained on Monday about the lack of
progress and demanded the resignation of the Finnish coordinator of the
initiative.
Western
officials said Arab proposals drafted by Egypt for a major nuclear
non-proliferation conference at United Nations headquarters in New York
could torpedo the process and push Israel to walk away.
Israel neither confirms nor denies the widespread assumption that it controls the Middle East’s only nuclear arsenal. Israel, which has never joined the 1970 nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), agreed to take part in NPT meetings Monday as an observer, ending a 20-year absence.
The
head of Egypt’s delegation, Assistant Foreign Minister Hashim Badr,
rejected any suggestion that Cairo was a spoiler and insisted that he
wanted to move the process forward, not kill it.
“Egypt
has come to New York to secure a conference (on banning nuclear weapons
in the Middle East), we want a conference,” Badr said in an interview.
“This is a key issue for Egypt for a long time, for decades, since
1974-75.”
Egypt,
in a proposal officially backed by all Arab countries and outlined in a
“working paper” submitted by Arab delegations, called for Jaakko
Laajava, the U.N. coordinator for organising the conference, to be
dismissed. The 2010 NPT review meeting had called for a Middle East
conference in 2012, but it never took place.
Egypt’s
proposal said U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon should convene a
conference on a regional ban of weapons of mass destruction within 180
days after the NPT conference ends on May 22 and demanded that Israel
immediately join the NPT as a non-nuclear arms state.
Despite
the official backing of Arab delegations, several diplomats, including
two Arabs, told Reuters that Saudi Arabia, Iraq and United Arab Emirates
have reservations about Egypt’s proposal. “Egypt wants to be in
charge,” a diplomat said.
Israel’s delegation declined to comment on the proposal.
The
Jewish state has said it would consider inspections and controls under
the NPT only if was at peace with its Arab neighbours and Iran.
Washington
and Israel say it is Iran’s nuclear programme that threatens the
region. Iran says its programme is peaceful. It is negotiating with
world powers to curb it in exchange for the lifting of sanctions.
Finnish
diplomat Laajava managed to get Israel, Arab states and Iran to attend a
preparatory session in the Swiss city of Glion in October 2013. Western
officials cite that as progress.
Washington
has not given up hope. “We have seen significant progress in the
regional consultations that have taken place,” a U.S. official said.
Arab
delegates said Israel was not serious about a conference on banning
weapons of mass destruction. Israel has conditioned its participation on
an agenda being agreed in advance and says it wants to discuss regional
security, conventional weapons and the Middle East peace process.
(Reporting by Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Grant McCool and Ken Wills)
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