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FCNL
Faith groups urge NATO to remove US nukes from Europe
The National Council of Churches USA has joined with three ecumenical partners on both sides of the Atlantic to urge NATO to remove all U.S. nuclear weapons in Europe.
Letters were sent to the leaders of NATO, U.S. and Russia in mid-March by the heads of the NCC, the World Council of Churches, the Conference of European Churches, and the Canadian Council of Churches.
Removal of the U.S. weapons still stationed in Germany,Netherlands, Belgium, Italy and Turkey, the churches note, would reduce by one-third the number of countries that have nuclear weapons on their soil from 14 to nine.
The 200 or so nuclear weapons involved are “remnants of Cold War strategies” the church councils say in joint letters. “NATO should rethink deterrence and security cooperation in Europe,” they say, and make good on NATO’s new commitment last year to “creating the conditions for a world without nuclear weapons.”
The four councils acted now in anticipation of an important NATO nuclear policy review this year. That review and a NATO summit in 2012 present an “opportunity for change that is long overdue and widely anticipated,” their letters say.
Some NATO countries, led by Germany, maintain that the weapons in question have no role today. Others insist that they be kept for political reasons even though their military utility is widely questioned. These countries include France, which also has its own nuclear arsenal, and some of the new members of NATO in Eastern Europe.
The councils had addressed NATO together on this issue twice during NATO’s 60th anniversary in 2009, followed by a series of church, government and NATO meetings. At the Lisbon summit late last year, however, NATO members did not make major changes in nuclear policy. The issue of the U.S. tactical nuclear weapons still based in the five non-nuclear European member states is especially divisive.
The church councils also express concern about Russia’s large arsenal of tactical nuclear weapons and stress the urgent need for transparency, relocation and reductions there as well. However, the councils urge NATO to exercise its own nuclear arms control responsibilities and not link the decision with potentially lengthy negotiations between the U.S. and Russia that would involve other arms control issues.
The policies of all four councils of churches call for complete nuclear disarmament. A WCC delegation visited key capitals in Europe in 2004 to advocate that NATO remove the U.S. tactical or battlefield nuclear weapons still in question now.
The text of the church councils’ letter to NATO is available at http://www.oikoumene.org/?id=8432
Source: www.ncccusa.org