For immediate release
June 11, 2002
New Movement Towards a Space Weapons Ban
On June 10 and 11, a workshop and expert meeting were held in Berlin,
Germany, on the questions how a space weapons ban could be achieved.
On the invitation of three scientific organizations, experts from
the US, China, Russia, the United Kingdom, and Germany met to discuss
proposals for a space weapons ban that have been officially tabled
in the past.
The Chinese representative surprised the attendants with a brand new
proposal that will be officially introduced into the United Nations'
Conference of Disarmament at the end of this month. Fu Zhigang from
the Permanent Mission of the People's Republic of China to the CD
explained details of a working paper his country drafted jointly with
Russia. The suggested agreement would obligate the States Parties
"not to place in orbit around the Earth any objects carrying
any kinds of weapons, not to install such weapons on celestial bodies,
or not to station such weapons in outer space in any other manner."
Several other draft treaties were also presented and discussed by
the scientific, legal, and policy experts at the workshop. The Space
Preservation Act of 2002, introduced at the US Congress by Representative
Dennis Kucinich, is complemented by the companion Space Preservation
Treaty and used as a tool to both educate the public on the dangers
of an arms race in space and build pressure on the US administration
to reconsider its space weaponization plans. Considerably older is
the Proposed Treaty on the Limitation of the Military Use of Outer
Space drafted by German scientists in 1984 which at that time was
supported by the SPD and Green Party in the German Bundestag.
The discussion showed that activities to prevent an arms race in space
are as important now and then. The participants will continue their
efforts in the future to raise international attention for a space
without weapons.
Background information: The workshop "Space Weapons Ban - How Can It Be
Achieved" was held on June 10 and 11, 2002, at the
Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften in Berlin and
convened by ACDIS (Program in Arms Control, Disarmament, and International
Security at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign), INESAP
(International Network of Engineers and Scientists Against Proliferation), and VDW (Federation of German Scientists).
For further details contact INESAP Coordinator Regina Hagen by e-mail
at inesap@hrzpub.tu-darmstadt.de.
Space Weapons Ban: How Can It Be Achieved? June 2002, Berlin, Workshop Program.