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Media Release

16 December 2009

International Commission for Nuclear Non-proliferation and Disarmament: Report Launch in Tokyo on 15 December 2009

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama launched the report of the International Commission on Nuclear Non-proliferation and Disarmament, Eliminating Nuclear Threats: A Practical Agenda for Global Policymakers, at a ceremony in Tokyo on 15 December 2009.

The Commission’s 230-page report, the most comprehensive of its kind, is the unanimous product of an independent global panel of fifteen commissioners, including Ambassador Wiryono Sastrohandoyo from Indonesia.

The Commission’s report is supported by a high-level international advisory board and worldwide network of research centres who together brought an outstanding level of technical and policy expertise, and strategic and political experience, to the Commissioner’s year-long deliberations and consultations.

The Commission was established as a joint initiative of the Australian and Japanese Governments in July 2008 and is Co-chaired by former Australian foreign minister, Gareth Evans, and former Japanese foreign minister, Yoriko Kawaguchi.

The report’s detailed analysis, sharply focused policy recommendations, and short, medium and long term practical agendas, address the whole range of issues relating to nuclear non-proliferation, disarmament and the peaceful uses of nuclear energy – issues which policymakers are presently debating in the context of the 2010 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Review Conference and the period beyond.

The report describes in detail what policymakers need and how that opportunity can and should be seized. The report notes that with new United States and Russian leadership seriously committed to nuclear disarmament action, there is a new opportunity - the first since the immediate post-World War II and post-Cold War years - to halt, and reverse, the problem of nuclear weapons.

The starting point of the report is that the nuclear status quo is not an option. Nuclear weapons are only ones ever invented with the capacity to destroy life on the planet, and present arsenals could do so many times over. So long as any such weapons exist, they could one day be used, by accident, miscalculation or design. The report notes that the problem of nuclear weapons is at least equal to climate change in terms of gravity - and much more immediate in its potential impact.

The report evaluates in detail the threats and risks associated with the failure to persuade existing nuclear-armed states to relinquish their weapons, to prevent new states acquiring them, to stop terrorists gaining access to them, and to properly manage a rapid expansion in civil nuclear energy.

Among the more significant of the report’s 76 recommendations are:

The full text of the report and further background information is available online at www.icnnd.org.

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