Goff on missile defence system
Goff on missile defence system
Australia's decision
to investigate missile defence was a matter for it to
decide, Foreign Minister Phil Goff said today.
"As a
sovereign nation it makes its own decisions, just as we make
ours," Mr Goff said.
"New Zealand, however, will not
be seeking to become involved in missile defence.
"As
Australian Defence Minister Robert Hill has acknowledged,
the programme remains technically unproven and is enormously
expensive.
"Other nuclear weapons states such as China
see the programme as making a pre-emptive nuclear strike
possible and may therefore simply respond by escalating a
nuclear arms race.
"New Zealand regards the greatest
contemporary threat to us as being terrorism, against which
missile defence would be unlikely to provide protection.
New Zealand is not under threat of nuclear attack by another
state.
"Because of its catastrophic impact, nuclear
warfare however continues to pose a threat to mankind
generally.
"The greatest safeguard against this is to
make continued efforts multilaterally to achieve nuclear
disarmament.
"Two years ago the nuclear weapons states
made an unequivocal commitment at the Non Proliferation
Treaty Review Conference to eliminate nuclear weapons, which
they should be pressed to fulfil.
"New Zealand will
continue to make efforts through groups such as the New
Agenda to progress nuclear disarmament.
"Eliminating
nuclear weapons is the only ultimate defence against their
use," Mr Goff
said.