Remarks on the 2014 NPT Preparatory Committee Meeting
Remarks
Thomas M. Countryman
Assistant Secretary, Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation
Washington, DC
April 28, 2014
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Hi everyone, I’m Tom Countryman, the Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation
at the U.S. Department of State. I will be heading our U.S. Delegation to the 2014 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty
Preparatory Committee Meeting, or the NPT PrepCom, at the UN in New York from April 28th to May 9th. This will be the
third and final PrepCom leading up to the NPT Review Conference in 2015.
In New York, our delegation will work with representatives from 189 NPT states parties to strengthen the Treaty and set
the stage for 2015. The NPT Review Conference is held every five years, and in 2015 we look to build upon the success of
the 2010 NPT RevCon, where the conference approved a comprehensive, 64-item Action Plan, the first of its kind in the
NPT’s forty-four year history.
The NPT remains the cornerstone of the global nonproliferation regime. The NPT’s three mutually reinforcing pillars
focus on 1-) halting the further spread of nuclear weapons 2-) continuing down the path of further reductions in
existing nuclear arsenals toward our shared goal of a world without nuclear weapons, and 3-) promoting the peaceful uses
of nuclear energy and technology under appropriate safeguards.
The NPT remains the cornerstone of the global nonproliferation regime. The NPT’s three mutually reinforcing pillars
focus on 1-) halting the further spread of nuclear weapons 2-) continuing down the path of further reductions in
existing nuclear arsenals toward our shared goal of a world without nuclear weapons, and 3-) promoting the peaceful uses
of nuclear energy and technology under appropriate safeguards.
President Obama reaffirmed our commitment to the NPT in Prague in 2009 and again in Berlin last year. In Prague the
President said, "The basic bargain [embodied in the NPT] is sound… Countries with nuclear weapons will move towards
disarmament, countries without nuclear weapons will not acquire them, and all countries can access peaceful nuclear
energy.”
At this final PrepCom before the 2015 Review Conference, the United States will encourage parties to take stock of
progress made in implementing the 2010 Action Plan, identify remaining obstacles, and work to find common ground on ways
to overcome them. We look forward to reporting detailed information on our efforts to translate these actions into
accomplishments.
Over the course of the PrepCom, the United States will use a variety of ways to present the work we have completed on
all three pillars of the NPT in a variety of different ways. For example, we will issue a national report on the steps
that we have taken to implement key elements of the 2010 Action Plan that uses a common framework agreed by all five
nuclear weapon states. We will also highlight our contributions to International Atomic Energy Agency programs
harnessing the peaceful uses of nuclear energy for efforts like fighting disease, improving food security, and managing
water resources.
We look forward to highlighting these and other accomplishments, whether from the floor of the UN, in side events with
other countries and nongovernmental organizations, or through other activities planned. We do this with one goal in
mind: to strengthen the NPT so that it remains a durable norm and bulwark against the further spread of nuclear weapons.
Much has been accomplished, but more work remains. We look forward to making additional progress on this important issue
at the PrepCom and 2015 Review Conference. Thank you.
ENDS