They all promise to give up nuclear weapons, and they're rattling them off

During the two-week negotiations on the assessment of the process of implementation of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons from 1970, the main focus was on Iran's nuclear program
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Nuclear explosion, Nuclear weapons, Photo: Shutterstock
Nuclear explosion, Nuclear weapons, Photo: Shutterstock
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.
Ažurirano: 03.05.2013. 16:34h

The round of world negotiations on nuclear weapons ended in Geneva. Participants warned that nuclear weapons are spreading, despite promises to give them up.

During the two-week negotiations on the assessment of the process of implementing the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons from 1970, the main focus was on Iran's nuclear program, which the country insists is for peaceful purposes, and on North Korea, which conducted provocative nuclear tests, AP reported. .

In preparation for the next major review of the treaty's implementation in 2015, many countries have said that the indefinite extension of the treaty in 1995 does not mean that individual countries can permanently possess nuclear weapons.

Some of them stated that they consider the use of nuclear weapons only in extreme circumstances and in accordance with international humanitarian regulations. Others, on the other hand, presented that any use of such weapons would be a violation of those laws.

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