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news
Apr 03, 2010Now or never: get rid of nuclear weapons.
Apr 02, 2010European Days of Action against nuclear weapons
Feb 10, 2010US Missile Interceptors Planned for Romania by 2015
Feb 05, 2010Romania accepts US 'invitation' to host anti-missile shield
Feb 02, 201050 activists enter "Dal Molin" base and chain them selves to the cranes
Feb 02, 2010Blenheim Sun reports on "courageous" protests at Waihopai spy base
Jan 27, 2010Mapping the troop deployment to Afghanistan
Jan 07, 2010Yemen to let US setup air base on its soil
Jan 07, 2010The question no US official dare ask
Jan 06, 2010 Waihopai Spybase Protest, January 22-24
Jan 06, 2010An alliance larger than one issue
Jan 05, 2010U.S. deploys fleet of interceptor missile ships to Mediterranean
Dec 09, 2009Initiative Concerning Pelindaba Treaty for African Nuclear Weapons Free Zone
Nov 14, 2009US health agency to take 'fresh look' at Vieques
Nov 14, 2009Obama lays out America’s Asia-Pacific agenda
Nov 13, 2009Pentagon urged to keep Guam better informed on Marine transfer
Nov 07, 2009US 8th Army headquarters may stay in Korea
Nov 07, 2009 USA to launch ICBM Minutman III on Nov 18 from Vandenberg Air Force Base to the Marshall Islands
Nov 05, 2009US may locate NATO missile command in Czech Republic
Nov 05, 2009US granted access to ALL Colombian airports!!
Apr 20, 2009AP News: Gorbachev: Huge U.S. military budgets make idea of nuclear weapons-free world mere talk
Gorbachev: US military power blocks 'no nukes'
Apr 16, 2009 President Barack Obama's call for a nuclear weapons-free world is welcome, but the huge U.S. defense budget may prove an "insurmountable obstacle" to reaching that goal, former Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev said Thursday. Talk of nuclear disarmament would be "just rhetorical" if other nations were asked to give up nukes while the United States maintains an overwhelming conventional military superiority, Gorbachev said. What's needed, he said, are talks to "demilitarize" world politics. Gorbachev, last leader of the now-defunct Soviet Union, helped inaugurate two days of discussions on nuclear disarmament involving some 100 former and current international leaders, under the sponsorship of the Italian Foreign Ministry, the U.S.-based organization Nuclear Threat Initiative and Gorbachev's own World Political Forum. The U.S. contingent was led by former Secretary of State George P. Shultz, former Defense Secretary William Perry and ex-Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia.. In an afternoon of talks, conference participants repeatedly applauded the positions Obama has taken on the nuclear future, including his unprecedented joint statement April 1 with Russian President Dmitri Medvedev that the two leaders had "committed our two countries to achieving a nuclear free world." Egyptian diplomat Nabil Fahmy recalled a different time. "In the 1970s, when we said we wanted a nuclear-free world, we were laughed out of the room. It was as if today I took this chair and threw it into that chandelier," he told fellow conferees in a grand meeting room at the Italian ministry. "I am pleased and honored that we are discussing this seriously now." Shultz, 88, President Ronald Reagan's secretary of state in 1982-89, called nuclear abolition "an idea whose time has come." But, he added, "time is not on our side. The key phrase must be `careful urgency.'" Gorbachev, 78, who once bargained with Reagan over possibly eliminating nuclear arsenals, said the major nuclear powers only recently have recognized that "the current situation is untenable" — a world with more than 23,000 atomic warheads, 95 percent of them in U.S. and Russian hands. But a "militarized" world without nuclear weapons would also be untenable, he suggested, since it would leave other nations potentially vulnerable to U.S. military power. "Defense budgets far exceed reasonable security needs," Gorbachev said.. "The United States spends on military purposes almost as much as the rest of the world put together." U.S. military spending totals more than $600 billion this year. "Military superiority would be an insurmountable obstacle to ridding the world of nuclear weapons," the ex-Soviet president said. "Unless we discuss demilitarization of international politics, the reduction of military budgets, preventing militarization of outer space, talking about a nuclear-free world will be just rhetorical." Asked about Gorbachev's call for conventional arms negotiations, Perry said talks on nuke control could still go ahead independently. "Many things need to happen in parallel with nuclear disarmament," he said. "If there is no solution to all of these problems it does not mean that you don't proceed on nuclear arms control." Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
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