Web version of a press release issued on 6th August 2005 by SGR
To coincide with the 60th anniversary of the dropping of the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Scientists for Global Responsibility (SGR) and Architects and Engineers for Social Responsibility (AESR) call on scientists and technologists to cease working on projects which contribute to the creation, development, improvement or manufacture of further nuclear weapons. We also call on the scientific and technical community to demand the complete elimination of nuclear weapons and, as a first step towards this, demand that the nuclear powers honour their obligations under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
Notes:
1. Scientists for Global Responsibility (SGR) is a UK organisation of approximately 600 scientists and technologists promoting ethical science and technology - based on the principles of openness, accountability, peace, social justice, and environmental sustainability. For more information see http://www.sgr.org.uk/
2. Architects and Engineers for Social Responsibility (AESR) is a UK organisation of approximately 250 engineers and architects which works closely with SGR and has similar concerns. http://www.sgr.org.uk/AESR/AESR_Overview.htm
3. The first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima on 6th August, 1945.
4. This call echoes one made last month by Professor Sir Joseph Rotblat – the only scientist to resign from the Manhattan Project (which created the first atomic bomb) because of ethical concerns. Rotblat J. (2005). Message to the inheritors of the Manhattan Project. 12th July, 2005. http://www.atomicmirror.org/
5. The cost of the current expansion programme at the AWE is planned to be about £2 billion. Details can be found in AWE’s Annual Reports, at http://www.awe.co.uk/ For detail of scientific exchanges between nuclear weapons laboratories, low yield nuclear weapons and other background, see: Langley C. (2005). Soldiers in the Laboratory: military involvement in science and technology – and some alternatives. Scientists for Global Responsibility. (p60-61).
6.
While the UK government’s official position is that no decision
has yet been taken on whether to commission a replacement for Trident, their
activities to date on this issue indicate that their sympathies lie with replacement.
Robin Cook, former Foreign Secretary, has argued it is both against the
7. For more information about the US-India discussions, see: Ramesh R. (2005). America to aid India's nuclear power project. The Guardian, 20th July. http://www.guardian.co.uk/
8. For more information about Iran’s activities, see: BBC news online (2005). Iran nuclear process 'under way'. 2nd August. http://news.bbc.co.uk/
9. Figures for casualties due to the Hiroshima bomb are given in: Krieger D. (2003). Remembering Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The Blackaby Papers, No. 4. Abolition 2000 UK, London. http://www.abolition2000uk.gn.apc.org/
10. Details of the world’s nuclear arsenals can be found in: Smith D. (2003). The Atlas of War and Peace. Earthscan, London. (p26-27). A similar estimate is given in: Norris R., Kristensen H. (2002). Global nuclear stockpiles, 1945-2002. Bulletin of Atomic Scientists. November/December; vol. 58, no. 06. (p103-104). http://www.thebulletin.org/ For an assessment of the huge destructive effects of a nuclear weapons exchange, see: Turco, R.P., Toon, A.B., Ackerman, T.P., Pollack, J.B., Sagan, C. (1990). Climate and Smoke: An Appraisal of Nuclear Winter. Science, volume 247. (p167-168)
11. Detailed discussion of the alert status of nuclear weapons can be found in: Phillips A., Starr S. (2004). Eliminate launch on warning. Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, Washington DC. http://www.wagingpeace.org/
12. For official documents on the NPT and its 2005 conference, see: http://disarmament2.un.org/wmd/npt/index.html For NGO commentary on the outcome, see http://www.reachingcriticalwill.org
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