What are the prospects for nuclear non-proliferation after US withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal? Lords International Relations Committee to take evidence
Monday, 28 January 2019 10:21
The House of Lords International Relations Committee will continue
taking evidence for its inquiry ‘the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty and nuclear disarmament’ on Wednesday 30 January, hearing
from four former senior UK officials and experts.
Nuclear weapons are on the international agenda in a way they have
not been since the end of the Cold War with rising tensions between
nuclear-armed states and the fragmenting of existing
non-proliferation and arms control...Request free trial
The House of Lords International Relations Committee will continue
taking evidence for its inquiry ‘the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty and nuclear disarmament’ on Wednesday 30 January, hearing
from four former senior UK officials and experts.
Nuclear weapons are on the international agenda in a way they have
not been since the end of the Cold War with rising tensions between
nuclear-armed states and the fragmenting of existing
non-proliferation and arms control agreements. The Committee is
examining the state of global nuclear diplomacy and the United
Kingdom’s role in it.
Appearing at 10.40am will
be:
-
Andrea Berger, Senior Research Associate and
Senior Program Manager, James Martin Center for
Nonproliferation Studies
-
Sir Simon Gass, former British
Ambassador to Iran and former Political Director,
Foreign and Commonwealth Office
Questions are likely to
include:
-
What are the prospects of the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (the Iran nuclear deal)
surviving following US withdrawal?
-
What is the current state of the negotiations
between the United States and North
Korea?
-
How should the UK view its future role in
global nuclear diplomacy?
Appearing at 11:40am will
be:
-
John Gower, former Assistant Chief
of Defence Staff (Nuclear, Chemical,
Biological), Ministry of Defence
-
Patricia Lewis, Research Director,
International security, Chatham House
Questions are likely to
include:
-
How would you characterise the global level
of nuclear risk?
-
How has the negotiation of the Treaty on the
Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (the Ban Treaty) affected
global nuclear diplomacy?
-
To what extent have relevant new technologies
affected global nuclear diplomacy, and what future
technological developments are likely to further
undermine the nuclear status quo?
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