In a parliamentary vote to "replace" the Trident nuclear weapons
system, the proposal went ahead with 409 votes to 161 against. But the
ruling and formerly disarmament minded Labour party is far from
unanimous, some 95 of Labour members of parliament voted against
Blair's government. This is the biggest Labour party rebellion since
the Iraq war.
Only
24 percent of the public support the government's plans to replace
Trident and 51 percent think that the final decision to replace the
Trident should be made through a public referendum. Several members of
Blair's own government have resigned in protest.
Nicky Davies of
Greenpeace International warned: "Blair is the ultimate global
hypocrite. He demonises other states for trying to acquire nuclear
weapons, yet has no shame in foisting a Cold War relic, capable of
killing millions, on to the next generation."
"And far from
making the world a safer place, Blair's lust for nukes will encourage
others to follow his dangerous and unnecessary example. His legacy will
be a more dangerous world".
Blair's program breaks the
international Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and undermines the
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. It also puts Tony Blair at risk of
breaking the same international disarmament treaty that he says Iran
must respect.
Recent protestsWe
opposed the new Trident program with intensive lobbying and a series of
direct action protests. Our climbers spent a cold last night on a crane
outside Big Ben, while they were eventually compelled to come down the
message on their banner, "
Tony loves WMD", definitely got through.
Last month, the Arctic Sunrise
blockaded the UK's nuclear submarine base.
After a day long stand off police boarded the ship, smashing their way
onto the bridge. The crew was arrested for being in a restricted
area, and our ship impounded for a week.
At the time, Greenpeace UK campaigner Louise Edge, said from on board:
"We're
blockading the base because these nuclear arms submarines pose a threat
to the security of the world, not least by encouraging other countries
to go nuclear in the future".
Tony Blair is playing a
dangerous game by saying to countries like North Korea and Iran that
nuclear weapons are necessary for national defence, that the UK doesn't
care about its international legal obligations, and that nuclear
proliferation is the way forward.
Rather than squander an
estimated 76 billion UK pounds on new and more sophisticated ways to
bomb the world to pieces, we calculate that spending the same amount on
tackling climate change could reduce the UK's carbon emissions by over
12 percent, making the world a much safer place.
In the Middle EastWhile the Arctic Sunrise is in the UK taking action against nuclear weapons in Europe; the Rainbow Warrior pushing for a
Nuclear Free Middle East: a Middle East free of all nuclear technology, both civil and military.