K.S. Rajan (5 Dec 2012)
"UN VOTES AGAINST
ISRAEL"
UN calls on Israel to open nuclear facilities
General Assembly approves resolution calling on Israel to open
its nuclear program for IAEA inspection, join NPT
Associated Press
Published: 12.04.12, 09:47 / Israel News
The UN General Assembly overwhelmingly approved a resolution
Monday calling on Israel to quickly open its nuclear program for
inspection and backing a high-level conference to ban nuclear
weapons from the Middle East which was just canceled.
All the Arab nations and Iran had planned to attend the
conference in mid-December in Helsinki, Finland, but the United
States announced on Nov. 23 that it wouldn't take place, citing
political turmoil in the region and Iran's defiant stance on
nonproliferation. Iran and some Arab nations countered that the
real reason for the cancellation was Israel's refusal to attend.
The resolution, approved by a vote of 174-6 with 6 abstentions,
calls on Israel to join the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty
"without further delay" and open its nuclear facilities to
inspection by the International Atomic Energy Agency. Those
voting "no" were Israel, the US, Canada, Marshall Islands,
Micronesia and Palau.
Resolutions adopted by the 193-member General Assembly are not
legally binding but they do reflect world opinion and carry
moral and political weight.
Israel refuses to confirm or deny it has nuclear bombs though it
is widely believed to have a nuclear arsenal. It has refused to
join the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, or NPT, along with
three nuclear weapon states - India, Pakistan and North Korea.
The Arab proposal to create a weapons-of-mass-destruction-free
zone in the Mideast, and to pressure Israel to give up its
undeclared arsenal of perhaps 80 nuclear warheads, was endorsed
at an NPT conference in 1995 but never acted on. In 2010, the
189 parties to the 1970 treaty called for convening a conference
in 2012 on the establishment of a WMD-free zone in the Middle
East.
The resolution, which was approved by the assembly's disarmament
committee before the conference was cancelled, noted the
decision to hold it "with satisfaction."
But Israel has long said there first must be a Mideast peace
agreement before the establishment of a Mideast zone free of
weapons of mass destruction. The region's Muslim nations argue
that Israel's undeclared nuclear arsenal presents the greatest
threat to peace in the region.
Just before Monday's vote, Iranian diplomat Khodadad Seifi told
the assembly "the truth is that the Israeli regime is the only
party which rejected to conditions for a conference." He called
for "strong pressure on that regime to participate in the
conference without any preconditions."
Israeli diplomat Isi Yanouka said his country has continuously
pointed to the danger of nuclear proliferation in the Mideast,
singling out Iran and Syria by name.
"All these cases challenge Israel's security and cast a dark
shadow at the prospect of embarking on a meaningful regional
security process," he said.
"The fact that the sponsors include in this anti-Israeli
resolution language referring to the 2012 conference proves
above all the ill-intent of the Arab states with regard to this
conference," Yanouka said.
Syrian diplomat Abdullah Hallak told the assembly his government
was angry that the conference wasn't going to take place because
of "the whim of just one party, a party with nuclear warheads."
"We call on the international community to put pressure on
Israel to accept the NPT, get rid of its arsenal and delivery
systems, in order to allow for peace and stability in our
region," he said.
The conference's main sponsors are the US, Russia and Britain.
British Foreign Office Minister Alistair Burt has said it is
being postponed, not cancelled.
While the United States voted against the resolution, it voted
in favor of two paragraphs in it that were put to separate
votes. Both support universal adherence to the NPT, and call on
those countries that aren't parties to ratify it "at the
earliest date." The only "no" votes on those paragraphs were
Israel and India.