Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • News
  • Editorial/Opinion
  • Glossary
User account menu
  • Log in

Breadcrumb

  1. Home

Iran Accord and Momentum-building

By kamala , 3 April 2015
Author
Rene Wadlow

Iran Accord and Momentum-building 
                    Rene Wadlow* 

    Citizens of the World welcome the agreements reached on the Iranian nuclear program.  These long and serious negotiations carried out on the edge of the Lake of Geneva captured the Swiss spirit of compromise: agreements must provide benefits for all parties and must be seen as having long-range consequences. 

    A steady, systematic momentum is needed in everything.  Now, motion is needed to develop a broad security and cooperation system for the Middle East, somewhat on the lines of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). 

    The timing of the agreement on the nuclear program of Iran is an important prelude to the Review Conference on the Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) which will start at the United Nations in New York on 27 April and run through most of the month of May. A nuclear-weapon- free Middle East has been one of the themes of previous NPT Reviews, held every five-years since 1975. Little or no progress has been made on this narrow concentration on nuclear weapons alone. 

    Thus, there is a need to focus on creating a broad security and cooperation zone, which like the OSCE, has conflict resolution, arms control, human rights and economic cooperation dimensions.As with the period prior to the August 1975 Helsinki Conference on European Security, strong and diverse leadership is needed, leadership coming from both governments and non-governmental and academic organizations.  Track II diplomacy − informal and usually off-the-record talks −  played an important role in leading up to the Helsinki agreement and its application. 

    Formal talks among government representatives had started during the first half of 1973 and then were carried on from September 1973 to June 1975 in Geneva. However, prior to 1973 and during the Geneva stage of the negotiations there had been a good number of informal discussions including NGO representatives and academics. The Middle East merits such strong and creative efforts as well. 

    A security and cooperation zone for the wider Middle East will need opportunities for open and good faith discussions on security, economic and cultural policies to be set which enhance the dignity of all sectors of the population.  Such discussions require a vital and diversified civil society. Civil society must increase its contribution in terms of information and detailed analysis.  This is a challenge which world citizens and all of good will must undertake. 

   * Rene Wadlow, President, Association of World Citizens.

Copyright mediaforfreedom.com

Column
News

Editorial

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6

Recent content

  • Decent work to achieve sustainable development
    11 years ago
  • If tobacco kills! Do not reinvent the wheel
    11 years ago
  • Dangerous Disintegration of Yemen
    11 years ago
  • Governments to improve environment for e-commerce
    11 years ago
  • Libya latest peace talks have gone ‘well beyond what we have expected’
    11 years ago
  • Improve environment for e-commerce
    11 years ago
  • A Nepali-American Delegation in Washington DC
    11 years ago
  • Happy Tears: Human Connection Leading to Human Development
    11 years ago
  • Vietnam's major regional thrust for a malaria-free Asia Pacific by 2030
    11 years ago
  • World Water Day 2015
    11 years ago

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • …
  • Page 142
  • Page 143
  • Page 144
  • Page 145
  • Page 146
  • Page 147
  • Page 148
  • Page 149
  • Page 150
  • …
  • Next page
  • Last page