
NVMP-Nieuwsflits
Drie Nobelprijswinnaars, Nihon Hidankyo (Nobelprijs voor de Vrede 2024), ICAN (Nobelprijs voor de Vrede 2017) en International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (Nobelprijs voor de Vrede 1985), die de prijs kregen voor hun inspanningen voor nucleaire ontwapening, hebben in een gezamenlijke brief president Trump en president Poetin, opgeroepen elkaar te ontmoeten en werk te maken van kernontwapening.
Aangespoord door de uitspraken van president Trump dat hij gesprekken wil voeren over denuclearisatie met president Poetin en dat Moskou openstaat voor dit idee, stuurden de drie organisaties een brief naar de twee regeringen, waarin ze hen aanspoorden het voorbeeld te volgen van president Reagan en Gorbatsjov, die elkaar in 1986 in IJsland ontmoetten en de grootste kernwapenreducties tot nu toe overeenkwamen.
Dear Presidents Donald J. Trump and Vladimir V. Putin,
We write to you as Nobel Peace Prize Laureates committed to the elimination of nuclear weapons. At this moment of extreme nuclear danger, we call on you to take urgent steps to de-escalate tensions and to engage in meaningful negotiations for nuclear disarmament.
The current climate surrounding nuclear weapons is the most volatile in decades.
Alarmingly, we are witnessing a resurgence of dangerous ideas which had been relegated to Cold War history books: radical new calls for nuclear proliferation and the extension of nuclear deterrence practices. The expansion of nuclear weapons capabilities is not a route to safety — it only increases the risk these weapons will be used by accident or design. The only viable security strategy is one that moves the world away from the brink of nuclear catastrophe and prioritizes disarmament.
As the States Parties to the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) declared at their recent meeting in New York:
“The long-standing disarmament and non-proliferation architecture is being eroded, arms control agreements abandoned, and military postures hardened, further weakening the existing global security architecture. A tense and increasingly polarized international security environment, combined with a lack of trust and communication, exacerbates the existing dangers of nuclear weapons use. Urgent action is needed to rebuild dialogue, restore confidence and trust, recommit to nuclear disarmament, and prevent a return to nuclear brinkmanship with catastrophic consequences for all humankind.”
Recent statements from your administrations have featured rhetoric about the desirability of a world without nuclear weapons and the exorbitant cost of nuclear weapons, funds that could be put to far better use. Talk about denuclearization must be matched by deeds. The world cannot continue to walk the edge of catastrophe.
The hibakusha, survivors of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and survivors of nuclear weapons testing around the world, carry with them the painful memories of the horrors that nuclear weapons inflict on human beings. They know, from firsthand experience, that no one should ever have to endure the suffering that these weapons cause.
This June 21, a group of hibakusha will arrive in Reykjavík aboard the Peace Boat where they will visit Höfði House – the site of one of the most promising moments in the history of nuclear disarmament. The 1986 summit between Presidents Reagan and Gorbachev in Reykjavík paved the way for significant arms reductions. They very nearly achieved an historic breakthrough for the elimination of all nuclear weapons. That moment proved that political will can overcome seemingly insurmountable divides. You have an opportunity now to recapture that spirit, and to go further and achieve what Presidents Reagan and Gorbachev could not: the total elimination of nuclear weapons.
As Nobel Peace laureates, we urge you to meet with one another to reach an agreement on total nuclear disarmament.
As the Chair of The Norwegian Nobel Committee Jørgen Watne Frydnes said at the Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony in December 2024:
“Disarmament requires courageous and visionary political leaders. None of the nine countries that possess nuclear weapons – the United States, Russia, China, France, the United Kingdom, India, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea – appear interested in nuclear disarmament and arms control at present.”
This is the moment to show the world the courageous and visionary leadership that is needed. Nuclear weapons are not an inevitable force of nature that must be endured. They were built by human hands, and they can be dismantled by human hands. All that’s required is political will. It is within your power, as Presidents of the most powerful nuclear countries in the world, to end nuclear weapons before they end us. But, as the Doomsday Clock shows, time is running out. Meet. Talk. Eliminate nuclear weapons for good.
With utmost urgency and hope,
Terumi Tanaka, Shigemitsu Tanaka, and Toshiyuki Mimaki, on behalf of Nihon Hidankyo, Nobel Peace Prize 2024
Melissa Parke and Akira Kawasaki, on behalf of ICAN, Nobel Peace Prize 2017
Michael Christ, on behalf of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, Nobel Peace Prize 1985

European proliferation talking points
What began as an idea floated by French President Emmanuel Macron about extending France’s nuclear weapons for broader European use, has quickly escalated into a full-blown debate about nuclear proliferation as leaders scramble to respond to uncertainties raised by Trump’s many changes in foreign policy. Across Europe and Asia, political leaders are openly discussing new nuclear armament, with some even suggesting stationing nuclear weapons on their soil. These suggestions are being put forward in open defiance of their country’s international legal commitments to the nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty.
ICAN has put these talking points together as a guide for campaigner to discuss the issue and raise concerns with relevant stakeholders.
Nuclear weapons in Europe are meant to be used in Europe:
It’s dishonest to discuss nuclear weapons in abstract terms when their intended military use is in a European war theater. These weapons are meant to be launched and exploded on European soil, with all the catastrophic humanitarian consequences that entails. The mere presence of nuclear weapons in Europe increases the likelihood of nuclear conflict, putting millions of innocent civilians at risk. This is not a hypothetical threat—it’s a very real and present danger.
A European nuclear force violates the NPT and the TPNW:
All European countries have legally binding commitments under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) not to accept control over nuclear weapons. The proliferation of nuclear weapons in Europe would undermine the NPT, which is already under strain. Without the NPT, other nations could pursue nuclear weapons, making Europe and the world even more dangerous. The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), representing a growing global norm, also calls for complete nuclear disarmament, and any
move to expand Europe’s nuclear capabilities would contradict this goal.
Normalizing nuclear weapons benefits Russia:
The only beneficiaries of expanding nuclear weapons in Europe are aggressors who seek to normalize their use. Creating or expanding a European nuclear arsenal plays into their hands, reinforcing the idea that nuclear weapons are a legitimate tool of statecraft. This creates more instability, making it easier for rogue actors to justify nuclear proliferation.
A European nuclear “shield” is a fantasy:
The idea that France could provide a “nuclear shield” for Europe is deeply flawed and rests on the hope that Paris would risk its own survival to defend another nation. The European readiness to actually use nuclear weapons would need to be consistently higher than Russia’s readiness. Out-deterring Putin, a wanted war criminal, does not sound like a good strategy. But even if: Not even France and the UK combined could realistically hope to inflict more damage on Russia than they would suffer in retaliation. The concept of a
European nuclear force offering protection is an illusion, not a strategic reality.
Nuclear build-up in Europe would take too long to be a meaningful security policy.
Any plans to build up a European nuclear weapons arsenal would take several years of continued political will and massive financial investments in nuclear weapons programmes. Even proponents of nuclear deterrence would agree that it cannot reduce the perceived imminent threat or provide security anytime soon.
General Talking Points on Nuclear Deterrence
Nuclear deterrence fails to guarantee security:
The notion that nuclear weapons provide security is based on the assumption that nuclear deterrence can never fail. However, deterrence only functions if the threat of mass destruction is credible—meaning a government is willing to commit mass murder on a scale never before seen. This is a deeply troubling principle that should not underpin any security policy.
Nuclear deterrence creates a dangerous cycle:
For nuclear weapons to be a credible deterrent, a country must be willing to destroy cities and kill millions of civilians. But if one country is willing to cross that line, why wouldn’t the other country be equally willing to do the same in return? The logic of deterrence
works in both directions, making it an unstable and dangerous basis for security. It fosters an arms race that increases the risk of catastrophic conflict.
Nuclear weapons are not “just big normal weapons”:
Nuclear weapons are fundamentally different from conventional weapons. They are indiscriminate, inhumane, and militarily useless, and leave a contaminating legacy beyond the battlefield. The war in Ukraine, for instance, is being fought with conventional forces—
soldiers, tanks, drones, and artillery—not nuclear weapons. For both Russia and Ukraine, nuclear weapons are not a viable military option. There is a reason that weapons designed to cause indiscriminate, long-term harm are prohibited, because they do not protect
populations and instead put them at higher risk of harm.
Nuclear deterrence is sanitized language for “ready and willing to mass murder civilian populations”:
The core of nuclear deterrence is the threat of annihilating entire populations. Governments relying on nuclear deterrence must maintain the credibility of this threat, signaling that they are willing to commit mass murder. This is not a legitimate security policy—it is a moral, legal and political abyss that must be rejected.
The risk of nuclear conflict is already too high:
The threat of nuclear weapons being used again is at its highest point in decades. The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has placed the Doomsday Clock closer to midnight than ever before, signaling the growing risk of nuclear war. The time to act is now—before the threat becomes a reality.
80 years of living under the threat of nuclear war:
It has been 80 years since nuclear weapons were first detonated (Trinity) and used in war (during the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki). Survivors have driven the call for nuclear disarmament through initiatives like the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear
Weapons (TPNW). The TPNW is a clear and urgent call to abolish nuclear weapons once and for all.
The Future of Europe will Not be Written in the Mushroom Clouds!