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Dear Friend,
In 1968, the five countries that already had nuclear
weapons made a promise: in exchange for everyone else agreeing never
to develop them, they would get rid of their own. That promise is
encoded in the NPT, the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons.
Fifty-eight years later, the weapons are still here.
There are around 12,000 of them and the numbers are increasing. The
countries that promised to disarm are spending record sums, over $100
billion in 2024 alone, making them newer, faster and bigger. And this
week, those same countries are gathered in New York for the NPT Review
Conference, where they will reaffirm their commitment to a world
without nuclear weapons.
The Cornerstone Report is
ICAN's new publication documenting how the nuclear-armed states and
their allies have spent five decades performing compliance with the
NPT while not actually implementing their agreements. The report also
looks at what the majority of the world's countries, the ones that
have kept their side of the bargain, can do about
it.
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