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July 26, 2022

SGI President Issues Statement Ahead of 2022 NPT Review Conference Calling for “No First Use” of Nuclear Weapons

Daisaku Ikeda has been a passionate campaigner for nuclear abolition for over 60 years.
Daisaku Ikeda has been a passionate campaigner for nuclear abolition for over 60 years.

On July 26, 2022, ahead of the Tenth NPT (Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons) Review Conference that opens on August 1 at UN Headquarters in New York, SGI President Daisaku Ikeda called on the five nuclear-weapon states to declare that they will never be the first to use nuclear weapons in a conflict: the principle of “No First Use.”

Today the risk that nuclear weapons will be used is at its highest level since the Cold War. Mr. Ikeda, a passionate campaigner for nuclear abolition for over 60 years, urges the five nuclear-weapon states under the NPT—the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France and China—to give substance to a joint statement made by their leaders on January 3, 2022, that “a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought,” by declaring policies of No First Use.

A visitors looks up at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial in the rain
In the rain, a visitor looks up at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial (A-bomb Dome), which was the only structure left standing in the area where the first atomic bomb exploded on 6 August 1945.

He proposes that the following points be included in the Final Document of the Review Conference:

  • That the five nuclear-weapon states pledge to continue to abide by their January Joint Statement, immediately pursuing measures to reduce the risks posed by nuclear weapons in accord with their Article VI nuclear disarmament commitments.
  • That the five nuclear-weapon states, as a matter of highest priority, declare their commitment to the principle of No First Use at the earliest possible date.
  • That in order to give concrete form to the joint statement’s declaration that “none of our nuclear weapons are targeted at each other or at any other State,” the principle of No First Use be universalized as the security policy of all states possessing nuclear weapons as well as the nuclear-dependent states.

Mr. Ikeda urges: “We must remember that it was never the purpose of the NPT to establish continuing nuclear threat and confrontation as the inevitable fate of humankind.” He asks us to learn from the world’s hibakusha—the victims of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings and the testing of nuclear weapons—who insist that no one anywhere should suffer what they have endured.

Mr. Ikeda argues that commitment to No First Use would also free resources to protect people from shared threats such as the COVID-19 pandemic and climate change.

On August 4, during the NPT Review Conference, the SGI will hold a side event promoting No First Use together with other like-minded organizations.

Read the full statement on this website.

(Adapted from a July 26, 2022, press release of the International Office of Public Information, Tokyo, Japan)

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