The Conference on Disarmament (CD) is the single multilateral forum of the international community for negotiating arms control and disarmament agreements, comprising 65 member states including the five nuclear-weapon states under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and other militarily significant countries, and operating from Geneva, Switzerland, under United Nations auspices.[1][2] Established in 1979 as the successor to earlier disarmament negotiating bodies such as the Eighteen-Nation Committee on Disarmament, the CD operates by consensus and addresses a core agenda including nuclear disarmament, prevention of nuclear war, outer space arms control, and fissile material production bans.[3][4] Its notable achievements include negotiating the Chemical Weapons Convention in 1992, which prohibits the development and stockpiling of chemical weapons, and the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty in 1996, aimed at banning all nuclear explosions.[3][3] However, the CD has faced prolonged paralysis since 1996, failing to adopt an annual programme of work or commence substantive negotiations due to the veto power inherent in its consensus rule, which allows any single member to block decisions on key issues such as a treaty banning fissile material production for weapons.[5][6][7] This dysfunction has drawn widespread criticism for rendering the forum ineffective amid evolving global security threats, prompting calls for structural reforms to restore its relevance.[6][5]
History
Establishment and Early Years (1979–1980s)
The Conference on Disarmament was formally established in 1979 as the principal multilateral forum for negotiating disarmament and arms limitation agreements, emerging from the First Special Session of the United Nations General Assembly devoted to disarmament (SSOD-I), held from May 23 to June 30, 1978.[8][3] SSOD-I's Final Document outlined the need for a single negotiating body to replace fragmented predecessors, including the Eighteen-Nation Disarmament Committee (ENDC, active 1962–1969) and the Conference of the Committee on Disarmament (CCD, 1969–1978), which had conducted parallel talks in Geneva but lacked universal nuclear state participation.[3] Initially operating as the Committee on Disarmament with 40 members—including the five nuclear-weapon states (United States, Soviet Union, United Kingdom, France, and China)—it expanded membership over time while prioritizing inclusivity among major powers.[9]The body's rules of procedure, finalized on July 30, 1979, mandated consensus for all decisions, a mechanism designed to secure buy-in from rival nuclear powers amid late Cold War distrust, effectively granting each state veto power over substantive progress.[8][10] This approach reflected the geopolitical tensions of the era, including the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 and breakdowns in bilateral US-Soviet talks like SALT II, which spilled into multilateral scrutiny as members sought to multilateralize strategic arms control.[3] Early sessions, starting February 14, 1979, at the Palais des Nations in Geneva, focused on a 15-item agenda prioritizing nuclear disarmament, with initial work programs attempting balanced treatment of issues like comprehensive test bans and fissile material cut-offs despite persistent bilateral preferences.[11]In its formative years through the 1980s, the CD grappled with mutual suspicions, establishing ad hoc committees to explore specific mandates; for example, in 1979, an ad hocworking group addressed chemical weapons verification, open to all members.[12] By 1980, guidelines were adopted for ad hoc committees on nuclear weapons options, enabling structured but limited deliberations on ending the arms race and disarmament measures, though consensus often preserved the status quo favoring nuclear retainers.[11] The forum's name evolved to Conference on Disarmament in 1984, underscoring its negotiating mandate amid ongoing efforts to integrate emerging threats like intermediate-range missiles into multilateral frameworks.[9]
Cold War Negotiations (1980s–1991)
The Conference on Disarmament's negotiations in the 1980s reflected the interplay of Cold War arms race dynamics and emerging superpower détente, with mutual assured destruction incentivizing limited, verifiable accords over transformative reductions that risked strategic imbalance. Verification hurdles, particularly for nuclear matters, stalled comprehensive advances, as seismic monitoring and on-site inspections faced technical and trust deficits amid espionage suspicions. Progress centered on chemical weapons, where mutual vulnerabilities enabled consensus, contrasting with nuclear domains where offensive parity deterred concessions without reciprocal safeguards.[13][14]In March 1980, the CD established an ad hocworking group on chemical weapons to explore a ban, expanding it in 1984 into a full negotiating committee that drafted core provisions of the eventual Chemical Weapons Convention, including destruction timelines and challenge inspections.[14][15] Parallel efforts addressed nuclear test bans; ad hocworking groups re-established in 1983 examined verification modalities, such as international seismic networks, but failed to yield a mandate amid disputes over scope and complianceenforcement.[12][16] These committees operated within annual work programs, including 1984–1986 agendas that allocated plenary time to agenda items on nuclear disarmament and prevention of arms races.[17]U.S. President Reagan's March 23, 1983, announcement of the Strategic Defense Initiative intensified Soviet objections, framing it in CD plenaries as undermining the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and escalating space weaponization risks, though no formal Soviet boycott of the CD occurred—unlike suspensions in bilateral INF talks.[18][17] Geopolitical frictions, including the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, permeated statements, with Western delegations linking disarmament trust to Soviet withdrawals and Eastern bloc responses decrying U.S. aid to insurgents as proxy escalation.[19] Resumed engagement post-1985, tied to Gorbachev's conciliatory shifts and the December 1987 INF Treaty eliminating intermediate-range missiles, fostered incremental CD momentum, evidenced by sustained sessions averaging 40–50 plenaries yearly across 39 members.[20][21]
Post-Cold War Transition (1990s)
Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union on December 25, 1991, the Conference on Disarmament entered a transitional phase characterized by initial optimism for accelerated multilateral progress, as the bipolar rivalry that had dominated Cold War dynamics subsided. This shift coincided with bilateral U.S.-Russia arms reductions under the START I Treaty, signed on July 31, 1991, and ratified in 1994, which reduced deployed strategic nuclear warheads by about 30 percent from Cold War peaks. However, the absence of superpower antagonism reduced the external pressure that had previously compelled concessions, allowing the CD's consensus-based decision-making to amplify the veto power of smaller states and foreshadow emerging frictions in a multipolar environment.[22]A key achievement amid this transition was the negotiation and adoption of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) on August 10, 1996, after intensive multilateral efforts spanning over four decades but accelerating post-Cold War.[23] The CD established an Ad Hoc Committee on a Nuclear Test Ban in January 1994, enabling formal negotiations from 1994 to 1996 that involved all 38 member states at the time and addressed verification challenges through an International Monitoring System.[24] This success reflected residual momentum from the era's reduced tensions, with nuclear-weapon states like the United States and Russia endorsing the ban following their own testing moratoriums initiated in 1992.[23]Parallel discussions on a fissile material cut-off treaty (FMCT) gained traction in the mid-1990s, leveraging the CD's agenda to restrain future production of weapons-grade uranium and plutonium amid ongoing U.S.-Russia reductions under START II, signed January 3, 1993.[25] In March 1995, the CD mandated an Ad Hoc Committee to explore "effective international arrangements to assure the non-production of fissile material for nuclear weapons," though substantive negotiation stalled due to debates over scope, verification, and linkage to existing stockpiles.[25] The Group of 21 (G-21), representing non-aligned and developing states, exerted growing influence by insisting on equitable treatment of nuclear haves and have-nots, critiquing Non-Proliferation Treaty asymmetries and conditioning FMCT support on parallel commitments to total disarmament.[26]By the late 1990s, these dynamics highlighted how the post-bipolar landscape diminished incentives for rapid compromise, as non-nuclear members increasingly used consensus vetoes to prioritize comprehensive agendas over incremental bans, setting the stage for protracted impasses.[22] The CD's expansion to 61 members in June 1996 further diversified viewpoints, amplifying G-21 advocacy for negative security assurances and production cutoffs without immediate stockpile dismantlement.[27] This period thus marked a pivot from Cold War-driven urgency to a more fragmented process, where multilateralism's inclusivity inadvertently empowered blocking coalitions absent existential threats.[22]
Mandate and Procedures
Core Objectives and Agenda
The Conference on Disarmament's primary mandate, as the sole multilateral negotiating body for disarmament, centers on achieving verifiable multilateral agreements to curb the nuclear arms race, prevent proliferation, and promote strategic stability without eroding essential deterrence capabilities. This objective stems directly from its establishment under the framework of the United Nations General Assembly's first Special Session on Disarmament (SSOD-I) in 1978, which designated the CD—then the Committee on Disarmament—as the forum for negotiating binding treaties on weapons of mass destruction, emphasizing phased reductions backed by verification mechanisms.[3][28] The focus prioritizes nuclear issues, including bans on fissile material production and arms control in emerging domains like outer space, to foster global norms that constrain escalation risks while accounting for asymmetric threats that could destabilize unilateral concessions.[8]The CD's formal agenda, adopted in 1978 and refined over subsequent decades, includes four core items: (1) cessation of the nuclear arms race and nuclear disarmament, encompassing comprehensive test ban measures and stockpile reductions; (2) a treaty prohibiting the production of fissile material for nuclear weapons and other explosive devices (FMCT); (3) prevention of an arms race in outer space (PAROS), addressing weaponization beyond Earth's atmosphere; and (4) effective measures relating to negative security assurances, whereby nuclear-weapon states commit not to use or threaten nuclear weapons against non-nuclear states parties to the Non-Proliferation Treaty.[29][30] These items, formalized as priorities in the 1995 program of work, reflect SSOD-I's empirical priorities for prioritizing nuclear threats as the gravest risk to humanity, yet they largely sideline conventional force disparities—such as large-scale non-nuclear militaries—that could exploit nuclear restraints, highlighting a causal gap in addressing total military balances for realistic stability.[29][31]In contrast to bilateral pacts like U.S.-Soviet arms control treaties, which allow tailored reciprocity between peers, the CD's multilateral format seeks universality to bind all major powers, theoretically enhancing legitimacy but practically complicating enforceability amid veto-prone consensus requirements and divergent national security incentives.[3] This approach underscores first-principles realism: disarmament efficacy demands mutual vulnerability reductions only where power symmetries permit, as unilateral or partial multilateral steps risk incentivizing cheating or compensatory buildups in unchecked domains.[32]
Consensus-Based Decision-Making
The Conference on Disarmament operates under a consensus rule for substantive decisions, requiring unanimous agreement among all 65 member states, a procedure formalized upon its establishment in 1979 to prevent outcomes driven by majority voting that could marginalize minority security interests.[3][33] This approach, inherited from Cold War-era predecessors like the Eighteen-Nation Committee on Disarmament, ensures that no state can be compelled into agreements perceived as threats, but it also grants de factoveto power to any single member, extending beyond the limited privileges of the UN Security Council's permanent members.[22]Historical precedents illustrate how individual states have leveraged this unanimity to halt progress, as seen in the 1960s when France, as a participant in the ENDC, resisted comprehensive test ban negotiations amid its independent nuclear pursuits, delaying multilateral advances until bilateral U.S.-Soviet agreements paved partial paths forward.[3] More recently, Pakistan has repeatedly obstructed work programs, notably blocking the commencement of fissile material cut-off treaty talks in 2009 and 2011 by withholding consent, citing unresolved regional security asymmetries that it argues necessitate broader conventional arms control before nuclear restraints.[34][35]This mechanism fosters lowest-common-denominator results by incentivizing obstruction over compromise, as any member's dissent derails initiatives without accountability mechanisms akin to those in other forums, leading to structural paralysis where substantive outputs remain elusive despite annual sessions.[36] For instance, the 1998 programme of work (CD/1299), which briefly re-established ad hoc committees on key issues including fissile materials, collapsed without implementation due to subsequent blocks, marking the start of prolonged inaction that persists as states prioritize defensive vetoes over negotiated disarmament.[32] While averting potentially destabilizing rushed pacts, the rule's causal rigidity—rooted in equalizing negotiating leverage—has empirically stifled the CD's mandate, with consensus achieved on formal programmes only thrice since 1979 (1998, 2009, and sporadically thereafter).[37]
Session Structure and Operations
The Conference on Disarmament holds its annual sessions in Geneva, structured into three distinct parts to maintain ongoing deliberations: the first part spans approximately 10 weeks beginning in the penultimate week of January and extending into March; the second part lasts 7 weeks from May to June; and the third part covers 7 weeks in August.[8][38] This cyclical format aims to ensure continuity in addressing disarmament issues but has perpetuated procedural repetition, as sessions often recycle prior debates without advancing negotiations due to the body's consensus-driven processes.[36]Presidency rotates monthly on a four-week basis among representatives from the Conference's four regional and political groupings—Western European and Others Group (WEOG), Eastern European Group (EEG), Group of 21 (G-21), and the People's Republic of China—typically following an alphabetical sequence within each group to distribute leadership equitably.[8][39] The president chairs plenary meetings, facilitates informal consultations, and coordinates agenda implementation, though the rotation can introduce inconsistencies in priorities and momentum across months.[40]Operational activities primarily involve formal plenary meetings for statements and decisions, supplemented by informal consultations among delegations to explore issues outside recorded proceedings, and the infrequent establishment of subsidiary bodies by consensus for targeted technical examinations of agenda items such as nuclear disarmament or outer space arms control.[40][41] These subsidiary bodies, when activated, operate informally unless otherwise specified and report back to plenaries, but their rarity underscores a reliance on broad, non-binding discussions that rarely yield binding outcomes.[38] Observer states, numbering over two dozen non-members, may attend plenaries and certain informal sessions but hold no decision-making authority, limiting their role to advocacy without influencing consensus.[3]The Conference's budget forms part of the United Nations regular budget, covering facilities at the Palais des Nations, while staffing draws from the UN Office at Geneva (UNOG) and the Geneva Branch of the UN Office for Disarmament Affairs (UNODA) for secretariat functions, enabling self-directed operations despite administrative ties to the UN system.[3][8] Since the 1996 completion of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty, substantive engagement has waned, with plenary attendance and participation shifting toward ritualistic national position restatements rather than negotiation, reflecting broader institutional paralysis and reduced high-level involvement from key states.[36][5] This trend has intensified critiques that the session structure, while preserving institutional persistence, entrenches deadlock by prioritizing procedural continuity over decisive action.[27]
Organizational Framework
Membership Composition
The Conference on Disarmament (CD) consists of 65 member states, comprising the five nuclear-weapon states recognized under the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT)—the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France, and China—and 60 other states deemed to possess key military significance.[8][42] This composition ensures participation from all acknowledged nuclear-armed states, including non-NPT possessors India, Pakistan, and Israel, which maintain nuclear capabilities outside the treaty's framework.[3]Membership emphasizes states with substantial military capabilities, such as regional powers including Brazil, Egypt, and Iran, alongside major economies and strategic actors from various continents.[3] The selection criterion of "key military significance" prioritizes nations influential in global security dynamics, though it results in a body where nuclear states hold disproportionate leverage in disarmament deliberations due to their arsenals and veto power via consensus rules.[42]Originally established in 1979 with 40 members, the CD expanded progressively through consensus-based admissions to balance geopolitical interests, admitting 23 states in 1995 and reaching 65 by February 1999.[3] These enlargements reflected efforts to incorporate emerging powers and maintain equitable representation amid shifting alliances, without formal quantitative thresholds for military spending or GDP but guided by informal consultations on strategic relevance.[43]
Regional and Political Groupings
The members of the Conference on Disarmament are informally organized into regional and political groupings that coordinate positions, deliver collective statements, and exert influence on deliberations, frequently resulting in bloc voting dynamics that prioritize group consensus over individualized, merit-driven evaluations. These alignments, comprising the Western European and Others Group (WEOG), the Eastern European Group (EEG), the Group of 21 (G-21), and China as a standalone entity, facilitate unified interventions in plenaries and subsidiary bodies, where group statements—such as those from the G-21 issued as official documents—routinely shape agenda priorities and procedural outcomes.[3][26]The WEOG, encompassing about 25 states including NATO members like the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, and extended partners such as Australia, Japan, Canada, and South Korea, advances positions aligned with nuclear transparency, verification standards, and non-proliferation enforcement.[44] This group often counters proposals perceived as undermining strategic stability, leveraging its numerical weight in rotations for presidency, which formally cycles alphabetically among all 65 members every four working weeks but benefits from internal coordination for agenda influence.[39]The EEG, consisting of six post-Soviet states—Belarus, Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, Romania, Russia, and Ukraine—operates under Russian leadership and emphasizes sovereignty in arms control, frequently aligning against Western-led initiatives on issues like fissile material controls.[44] Its cohesion enables effective vetoes in the consensus-based framework, perpetuating Eastern bloc perspectives inherited from Cold War structures.The G-21, drawing from Non-Aligned Movement principles and including roughly 34 developing and non-aligned states such as Algeria, Brazil, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Iran, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, South Africa, and Venezuela, prioritizes comprehensive nuclear disarmament, negative security assurances, and equitable multilateralism.[27] Group statements from the G-21 dominate many plenary sessions, as evidenced by their repeated issuance on core agenda items, reinforcing collective bargaining that can stall progress unless aligned across blocs.[3]China's status as a "Group of One" affords it operational flexibility, enabling ad hoc alignments—such as with the G-21 on outer spacearms race prevention—while avoiding fixed bloc constraints, thus allowing tailored positions on sensitive technologies.[3] Within the G-21, outliers like Pakistan exhibit de facto independent maneuvering, notably obstructing Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty (FMCT) negotiations since May 2009 by insisting on prior resolutions to regional imbalances, diverging from broader group emphases on other disarmament pillars.[45][46]These groupings, originating from bipolar confrontations, sustain veto-driven impasse in the post-Cold War multipolar context, where coordinated plenary interventions—often comprising a majority of formal statements—entrench divisions, subordinating empirical security assessments to political solidarity and impeding substantive treaty advancements.[5][39]
Leadership and Subsidiary Mechanisms
The presidency of the Conference on Disarmament rotates among its 65 member states in English alphabetical order, with each president serving for four consecutive weeks during the annual session from January to September.[1] This structure, outlined in the CD's rules of procedure, aims to distribute leadership equitably but is constrained by the requirement for consensus on all substantive decisions, which frequently limits the president's ability to advance initiatives independently.[38] Presidents often consult within informal regional and political groupings—such as the Western European and Others Group (WEOG), Eastern European Group, Group of 21 non-aligned states, and P5 nuclear powers—to build support, though these consultations do not override the individual state's rotational role.[47]To address specific agenda items, the Conference appoints coordinators, typically one per item or cluster, selected through consultations guided by the current president and drawn from member states' representations.[47] These coordinators chair subsidiary bodies established for preparatory work, such as the five bodies re-established in February 2025 to examine items including cessation of nuclear arms race and fissile material cut-off, but their mandates are confined to information exchange and technical discussions rather than binding negotiations due to persistent consensus barriers.[48]Ad hoc committees for substantive treaty negotiations, like the one active from 1994 to 1996 that produced the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty text, have not been reconstituted since, as unanimity on mandates remains elusive amid geopolitical divisions.[49]Technical expert groups are established only sporadically and on an ad hoc basis when consensus permits, with the Conference relying primarily on external data from organizations like the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO) for verification-related inputs rather than developing independent mechanisms.[1] Administrative support lacks a dedicated permanent secretariat; instead, the Director-General of the United Nations Office at Geneva serves as the CD's Secretary-General, with operational liaison provided by the United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs (UNODA) in Geneva, limiting internal capacity and reinforcing dependence on member states' diplomatic resources.[50] This lightweight structure underscores the consensus rule's paralyzing effect, as even minor organizational decisions require full agreement, contributing to decades of stalled progress on core disarmament objectives.[3]
Relationship to the United Nations
Formal Independence
The Conference on Disarmament (CD) functions as a standalone multilateral negotiating body, distinct from the principal or subsidiary organs of the United Nations, notwithstanding its hosting at the Palais des Nations in Geneva and periodic references in UN Security Council and General Assembly resolutions.[51][27] This status traces to its establishment in 1979 following the First Special Session on Disarmament (SSOD-I) in 1978, where states agreed to create a dedicated forum insulated from UN institutional structures to prioritize negotiation over broader multilateral oversight.[8]The CD maintains self-governance through its autonomous adoption of rules of procedure (CD/8/Rev.10, last revised substantively post-SSOD-I) and annual agendas, which incorporate General Assembly recommendations and member proposals without subordination to UN voting or budgetary controls.[8][3] While its secretariat receives administrative support from the United Nations Office at Geneva—including appointment of the secretary by the UN Secretary-General—and utilizes UN facilities, operational financing relies on voluntary contributions from member states rather than assessed UN dues, preserving fiscal independence.[27] This framework has historically resisted proposals for deeper UN integration, as evidenced by sustained member emphasis on preserving procedural flexibility amid post-Cold War reform debates, enabling frank exchanges unencumbered by UN-wide consensus pressures but forgoing direct linkage to UN enforcement or verification apparatuses.[32]
Reporting and Interaction Mechanisms
The Conference on Disarmament submits an annual report to the United Nations General Assembly's First Committee on Disarmament and International Security, detailing its session activities, plenary discussions, and any substantive progress or lack thereof.[8][52] These reports, transmitted as official documents such as A/79/27 for the 2024 session, consistently record the body's consensus-based deliberations on agenda items like nuclear disarmament and the prevention of an arms race in outer space, while underscoring the absence of negotiated outcomes since 1996.[47]Interactions with the United Nations Security Council remain infrequent and non-binding, limited to occasional references in broader UN disarmament debates rather than direct briefings or mandates from the CD.[53] The United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs (UNODA) facilitates informational support and hosts CD documentation, but exercises no directive authority over the conference's operations or decisions.[8] UN agencies, including the Office of the Secretary-General, hold observer status in CD sessions, allowing participation in debates without voting rights or influence on consensus requirements.[50]From 2022 to 2025, annual reports and plenary statements have repeatedly documented the CD's deadlock, exacerbated by geopolitical divisions including the ongoing crisis in Ukraine, with no advancement on core agenda items despite heightened global nuclear risks.[54][55] These reporting mechanisms confer a degree of institutional legitimacy through UN affiliation, yet they impose minimal accountability, enabling the CD to operate in relative isolation from broader UN enforcement structures and perpetuating procedural stasis amid external pressures.[27]
Key Negotiation Topics
Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty
In 1995, the Conference on Disarmament (CD) adopted a mandate by consensus to establish an ad hoccommittee for negotiating a non-discriminatory, multilaterally verifiable treaty banning the production of fissile material—highly enriched uranium (HEU) and plutonium—for nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices.[56] This initiative built on earlier proposals, including a 1993 U.S. announcement under PresidentClinton to pursue such a cutoff to cap global fissile material inventories, estimated at that time to exceed 2,000 tonnes of HEU and over 500 tonnes of separated plutonium worldwide.[57] The mandate emphasized verifiability to ensure compliance, reflecting first-principles concerns that unmonitored production could enable indefinite arsenal expansion despite a nominal ban.Negotiations stalled immediately after the mandate, with no substantive work in the ad hoc committee due to consensus requirements in the CD. Pakistan has consistently blocked progress since 1996, citing security asymmetries with India, whose nuclear facilities remain largely outside International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards, allowing potential ongoing fissile production.[58]India's estimated weapons-usable plutonium stockpile stands at approximately 0.7 tonnes from dedicated military reactors, supplemented by unsafeguarded civilian output, compared to Pakistan's smaller ~0.4 tonnes of plutonium and reliance on HEU production amid perceived threats from India's larger overall fissile base.[59] Without mandatory declarations and intrusive verification of existing stockpiles—estimated globally at 1,240 tonnes of unirradiated HEU and 565 tonnes of separated plutonium as of early 2024—a cutoff treaty risks codifying disparities, as states could draw down undeclared reserves to build weapons covertly, rendering the ban aspirational rather than causal in preventing proliferation.[59]U.S. proposals have underscored these verification challenges. A 1993 draft sought to halt future production while promoting irreversibility through stockpile reductions, though without detailed verification mechanisms.[60] The 2006 Bush administration submission (CD/1776) proposed a 15-year production moratorium on HEU and plutonium without formal verification provisions, prioritizing simplicity over enforceability, which drew criticism for enabling non-compliance by non-transparent actors.[25] Reports from UN Groups of Governmental Experts (GGE) in the 2010s, including the 2015 GGE on FMCT feasibility, recommended exploring verification technologies like satellite monitoring and material accounting but highlighted technical hurdles in distinguishing military from civilian fissile flows, particularly for states like India with dual-use infrastructure.[61]Recent efforts, such as the September 2024 high-level meeting in New York co-hosted by Japan, Australia, and the Philippines to launch a "Friends of FMCT" group, have reaffirmed commitment to negotiations but yielded no CD committee establishment.[62]China conditions FMCT progress on a broader CD package including prevention of an arms racein outer space (PAROS), linking the issues despite their technical independence, while Pakistan maintains its veto absent stockpile equity measures.[60] These positions perpetuate deadlock, as empirical stockpile asymmetries—e.g., India's capacity for rapid plutonium expansion via unsafeguarded fast breeder reactors—demonstrate that verification of both future production and legacy stocks is prerequisite to any treaty's credibility, absent which it fails to alter incentives for accumulation.[59]
Prevention of Arms Race in Outer Space
The Conference on Disarmament has addressed the prevention of an arms race in outer space (PAROS) as a core agenda item since the 1980s, aiming to prohibit the deployment of weapons in orbit or on celestial bodies beyond existing obligations under the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, which bans nuclear weapons and weapons of mass destruction in space but lacks provisions for conventional systems or verification.[63] Efforts to establish an ad hoccommittee for negotiations in the 1980s stalled without consensus on a mandate, reflecting early divergences over definitions of space weapons and enforcement mechanisms.[64] No substantive progress has occurred since, as geopolitical mistrust and technical challenges—such as distinguishing military from civilian dual-use technologies—have prevented agreement, leaving PAROS discussions mired in annual plenary statements rather than treaty drafting.[65]In 2008, Russia and China jointly submitted a draft Treaty on the Prevention of the Placement of Weapons in Outer Space, the Threat or Use of Force against Outer Space Objects (PPWT), prohibiting the stationing of weapons in space and threats from ground-based systems, with an updated version proposed in 2014 that removed some definitional ambiguities but retained broad prohibitions.[66] The United States rejected both drafts, arguing they failed to include robust verification provisions, omitted ground-based anti-satellite (ASAT) systems capable of reaching orbit, and ignored behavioral norms for responsible operations amid proliferating dual-use capabilities.[67] This stance underscores a causal reality: space serves as a domain for power projection through surveillance, navigation, and precision targeting, where unverifiable bans cannot reliably deter adversaries possessing terrestrial launchers that evade orbital restrictions, as ground-based systems enable asymmetric threats without permanent space presence.[68]Empirical demonstrations of these challenges include China's January 11, 2007, direct-ascent ASAT test, which destroyed the defunct Fengyun-1C weather satellite at an altitude of over 530 miles using a kinetic kill vehicle launched from Xichang, generating at least 2,087 tracked debris pieces and an estimated 35,000 fragments larger than 1 cm, complicating orbital operations for years.[69] Similarly, Russia's November 15, 2021, test intercepted its own Kosmos 1408 satellite, producing over 1,500 trackable debris objects and hundreds of thousands of smaller pieces, endangering the International Space Station and highlighting how such demonstrations prioritize kinetic capabilities over debris mitigation, exacerbating congestion in low Earth orbit where dual-use technologies blur lines between testing and weaponization.[70] These events empirically validate deterrence imperatives, as states retain ground-launched ASAT options that render orbital bans ineffective without intrusive monitoring, which PPWT proposals lack.[71]Western states, led by the United States, advocate transparency and confidence-building measures (TCBMs), such as codes of conduct for satellite operations and debris reduction guidelines, over binding treaties that exclude verifiable compliance amid rapid advancements in counter-space technologies.[72] This approach prioritizes practical risk reduction—e.g., notifications of maneuvers and data-sharing on conjunctions—over prohibitions, recognizing that space's strategic value as a "high ground" for military enablers demands behavioral restraints enforceable through national technical means rather than consensus-dependent accords vulnerable to defection by non-signatories or covert ground developments.[73] Absent such ground rules, PAROS remains stalled, with discussions in parallel UN forums like the Open-Ended Working Group yielding norms but no legally binding outcomes, as empirical tests by major powers signal ongoing competition over disarmament rhetoric.[67]
Negative Security Assurances and Other Items
Negative security assurances (NSAs) refer to undertakings by nuclear-weapon states to refrain from using or threatening to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear-weapon states, particularly those adhering to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT).[74] In the Conference on Disarmament (CD), NSAs have been a standing agenda item since 1979, with dedicated ad hoc committee discussions occurring annually from 1983 to 1994, yet no multilateral legally binding instrument has emerged.[75] Nuclear-weapon states have issued unilateral declarations—such as the United States' policy against first use except in response to attacks involving weapons of mass destruction— but these lack enforceability and reciprocity, effectively rewarding non-nuclear states for compliance without obliging disarmament by possessors.[76][77]Progress on NSAs has been stymied by nuclear-weapon states' concerns that formal assurances would erode deterrence credibility, particularly extended deterrence to allies and responses to non-compliant actors outside the NPT framework, such as North Korea's nuclear program.[78] A 1995 CD working group, convened amid the NPT Review Conference, recommended further assurances but failed to produce binding outcomes, as nuclear powers prioritized verifiable non-proliferation over unconditional pledges amid rising proliferation risks.[79] Non-nuclear states, often through Group of 21 advocacy, push for NSAs as NPT implementation steps, but the absence of consensus reflects causal realities: assurances ignore asymmetric threats from rogue regimes and could incentivize ambiguity in aggressor intent without mutual verification.[80] Recent CD subsidiary body discussions, such as those in 2021 and 2024, reiterate pledges but yield no treaty text, underscoring the inequity where non-proliferation commitments face no parallel disarmament enforcement.[81][82]Among other ancillary agenda items, the comprehensive programme of disarmament—aiming for general and complete disarmament under effective international control—has seen no substantive advancement since its inclusion as item 6, remaining a declarative goal without phased implementation or timelines due to divergences on sequencing nuclear reductions versus conventional arms and verification regimes.[8] Similarly, item 5 addresses new types of weapons of mass destruction, new systems of such weapons, and radiological weapons, with subsidiary bodies like that in 2024 examining emerging technologies but producing only reports, not prohibitions, as states debate definitions amid biotechnological and cyber-nuclear convergence risks without agreed controls.[83][3] These items highlight the CD's pattern of minimal progress on peripheral topics, where non-binding exchanges fail to address underlying causal barriers like enforcement gaps and geopolitical mistrust.[84]
Achievements and Outcomes
Chemical Weapons Convention
The Conference on Disarmament established an Ad Hoc Committee on Chemical Weapons in 1984 to advance negotiations toward a comprehensive ban, building on preliminary multilateral discussions that dated back to the 1970s and incorporating elements from bilateral U.S.-Soviet agreements, such as the 1987 Memorandum of Understanding on the destruction of chemical weapons stockpiles.[85][86] The committee's work focused on defining prohibitions against development, production, stockpiling, and use, while establishing a robust verification framework involving declarations of existing arsenals and on-site inspections to ensure compliance and destruction.[87] This effort culminated in the CD's approval of the treaty text through its Ad Hoc Committee's report, adopted unanimously at the 635th plenary meeting on September 3, 1992.[88]The Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on Their Destruction opened for signature on January 13, 1993, in Paris, and entered into force on April 29, 1997, following ratification or accession by 65 states, which triggered the operationalization of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) as its implementing body.[89] As of 2023, 193 states are parties to the CWC, covering 98% of the global population and encompassing all known possessor states' declared stockpiles.[90] The OPCW has since verified the irreversible destruction of all declared chemical weapons stockpiles worldwide, totaling over 72,000 metric tons, through continuous monitoring and challenge inspections.[91]The CWC's negotiation success within the CD stemmed from the post-Cold War thaw, which diminished superpower rivalries and enabled consensus on intrusive verification measures that were politically viable for chemical weapons but more contentious for nuclear arsenals.[14] Unlike nuclear issues, chemical weapons faced lower strategic stakes due to their perceived limited military utility in peer conflicts and the strong normative taboo reinforced by historical uses in World War I, facilitating agreement on mandatory destruction timelines and OPCW oversight.[86] This verifiable regime, emphasizing empirical data from inspections over trust-based assurances, addressed proliferation risks effectively and marked one of the CD's few post-1996 substantive achievements.[89]
Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty
The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) stands as the Conference on Disarmament's (CD) paramount accomplishment in curtailing nuclear proliferation through verifiable constraints on testing. Substantive negotiations commenced in January 1994 under a CD ad hoc committee mandate established in August 1993, culminating in the treaty's adoption by consensus on August 28, 1996, and its opening for signature on September 24, 1996.[92][23] The treaty imposes a zero-yield prohibition on all nuclear weapon test explosions and any other nuclear explosions, extending beyond prior partial test ban efforts by eliminating thresholds for detection and encompassing both military and purported peaceful detonations.[93][94]Central to the CD's contributions was the formulation of the treaty's verification protocol, which establishes the International Monitoring System (IMS)—a global network of over 300 facilities, including 50 primary and auxiliary seismic stations, hydroacoustic, infrasound, and radionuclide sensors designed to detect explosions down to yields as low as 1 kiloton through empirical seismic data analysis. This technical architecture, refined during CD deliberations, prioritizes geophysical evidence over diplomatic pledges, enabling on-site inspections and confidence-building measures upon verified anomalies.[95][96]By October 2025, 187 states have signed the CTBT, with 178 having ratified it, yet entry into force awaits ratification by all 44 Annex 2 states—key nuclear-capable nations whose ratification is prerequisite—including signatories China, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Russia, and the United States, plus non-signatories India, North Korea, and Pakistan.[97][98] Pre-CTBT, states conducted at least 2,056 nuclear test explosions from 1945 to 1996, providing a historical dataset that validated the IMS's discriminatory power between earthquakes and explosions.[99] Since 1996, de facto adherence has persisted via unilateral moratoriums, with seismic networks confirming no full-scale tests by declared nuclear states, though North Korea's six declared tests (2006–2017) underscored verification's role in attributing violations.[100][101]The treaty's genesis drew causal impetus from bilateral U.S.-Soviet reductions under the INF Treaty (1987) and START I (1991), which eroded incentives for explosive testing amid shrinking arsenals, yet CD consensus dynamics—requiring unanimity—have since enabled holdout states to impede ancillary negotiations, perpetuating the treaty's provisional status despite its empirical verification successes.[23]
Other Contributions to Arms Control
The Conference on Disarmament has facilitated multilateral discussions on the prevention of nuclear war and nuclear risk reduction, including proposals for confidence-building measures such as improved communication channels to avert miscalculations during crises.[102] These efforts, centered on agenda item 2, have emphasized non-binding norms for early warning and de-escalation, drawing from Cold War-era deliberations in the 1980s that informed broader United Nations General Assembly resolutions on reducing nuclear dangers.[103] However, no legally enforceable guidelines emerged from these talks, limiting their practical impact compared to bilateral hotlines like the U.S.-Soviet Moscow-Washington direct link established in 1963.In the realm of transparency, the CD's agenda item 7 promotes voluntary reporting on armaments and military capabilities, contributing to informal data-sharing norms among member states without mandatory compliance or verification protocols.[1] Such measures aim to build trust but remain aspirational, as evidenced by sporadic submissions to related UN mechanisms like the Register of Conventional Arms, which rely on self-reporting prone to under-disclosure.The CD provided foundational inputs to the negotiation of the Biological Weapons Convention in the early 1970s through its predecessor body, influencing prohibitions on biological agents, though subsequent review conferences operate independently without direct CD involvement.[1] These collateral contributions pale in scope and enforceability against bilateral arms control pacts, such as the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaties (START I in 1991 and New START in 2010), which incorporated on-site inspections and data exchanges verifiable by both parties, achieving measurable reductions in deployed strategic warheads from over 12,000 in 1991 to under 1,550 by 2023. The CD's non-binding outputs thus serve primarily as forums for dialogue rather than drivers of verifiable disarmament.
Challenges and Deadlock
Historical Onset of Paralysis (1996–Present)
Following the successful negotiation and adoption of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) on 10 August 1996, which was opened for signature on 24 August 1996, the Conference on Disarmament (CD) entered a phase of institutional paralysis. This treaty marked the forum's final substantive multilateral achievement, after which efforts to adopt a comprehensive program of work collapsed, with no such agreement reached since.[93] The absence of structured agendas prevented the establishment of effective subsidiary bodies for ongoing negotiations on core items like fissile material production cut-offs, shifting the CD from active treaty drafting to procedural stalemate.[5]The nuclear tests by India on 11 and 13 May 1998, followed by Pakistan's on 28 and 30 May 1998, intensified this deadlock by demonstrating the limits of disarmament norms amid nuclear proliferation beyond the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) regime. These detonations, the first since China's 1996 test, undermined the universality of test-ban commitments and prompted extensive plenary debates in the CD but yielded no programmatic breakthroughs. Annual attempts to revive work through "framework" proposals—aimed at balancing priorities like nuclear disarmament and outer spacearms control—consistently failed to secure consensus among the 65 members.[104][105]Quantitatively, from 1998 onward, CD sessions averaged 10–15 plenary meetings per year across its three annual parts (typically January–March, May–June, and August), with the majority consisting of unilateral statements rather than deliberative progress. No treaties have been negotiated or concluded in this period, and subsidiary bodies—occasionally re-established for specific mandates—have proven dormant or ineffective, producing no verifiable binding outcomes. This pattern of minimal output, tied to the erosion of post-Cold War disarmament momentum following non-NPT nuclear developments, empirically defines the onset of prolonged inaction.[3]
Geopolitical and Structural Causes
The consensus decision-making rule in the Conference on Disarmament (CD), requiring unanimity among its 65 members, structurally empowers smaller states to veto progress, amplifying power asymmetries and incentivizing obstruction to leverage bilateral rivalries.[22] For instance, Pakistan has repeatedly blocked negotiations on a fissile material cut-off treaty (FMCT) since 2009, citing the need for parity with India, which possesses larger conventional forces and a nuclear arsenal developed outside the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) framework.[45][46] Non-NPT states such as Pakistan, India, and Israel demand linkages to broader disarmament measures addressing existing stockpiles before accepting production bans, viewing FMCT talks as discriminatory without reciprocal constraints on nuclear-weapon states' arsenals.[106]Geopolitical multipolarity has intensified mutual distrust among major powers—particularly the United States, Russia, and China—undermining incentives for compromise in the CD, as crises like Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine and North Korea's ongoing nuclear tests divert diplomatic focus and erode trust in arms control commitments.[107] U.S.-Russia tensions, including Russia's suspension of New START inspections and data exchanges, have spilled over into multilateral forums, with Russia blocking CD work programs to protest perceived Western hypocrisy on disarmament.[3] Similarly, U.S.-China strategic competition, marked by disputes over space weaponization and regional alliances, reinforces zero-sum perceptions that prioritize deterrence over collective restraint.[68]Structurally, the CD lacks enforcement mechanisms, rendering agreements non-binding without external verification or penalties, while its rigid agenda—fixed on four core issues since 1995—ignores emergent threats like conventional arms proliferation and cyber-enabled escalation, perpetuating paralysis.[108] This has resulted in over two decades of failed work programs, with more than 20 attempts collapsing due to vetoes, as seen in the 2022 rejection of a Polish-drafted program blocked by Russia.[3][5] The absence of adaptive procedures exacerbates veto incentives, where states exploit consensus to avoid concessions amid asymmetric capabilities and unresolved regional imbalances.[109]
Positions of Major Powers
The United States prioritizes negotiations on a Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty (FMCT) as the immediate next step in multilateral nuclear disarmament efforts within the Conference on Disarmament, proposing working groups to commence talks as recently as 2016 under the Obama administration and reiterating support in 2024 statements.[25][110] The U.S. opposes formal negotiations on the Prevention of an Arms Racein Outer Space (PAROS) absent effective verification provisions, arguing that unverifiable commitments would fail to constrain potential adversaries while constraining allies.[111] U.S. positions emphasize verifiable restraints on fissile material production over broader disarmament without reciprocal constraints, critiquing the CD's consensus rule for enabling obstruction by states unwilling to accept balanced obligations.[36]Russia links FMCT progress to constraints on U.S. missile defenses, contending that systems like those deployed since the early 2000s erode strategic stability and incentivize fissile material expansion.[112] In tandem with China, Russia has repeatedly introduced draft treaties for PAROS, seeking to prohibit the deployment of weapons in orbit and limit ground-based anti-satellite systems to preserve space as a domain free of arms competition.[63] Post-2022 Ukraine invasion and Western sanctions, Russian delegations have conditioned CD advancements on addressing perceived threats to national security, including NATO expansion and arms transfers, hardening opposition to unilateral concessions in favor of linked security guarantees.[113]China advocates parallel or prioritized attention to PAROS over exclusive focus on FMCT, citing U.S. space capabilities as a destabilizing factor that necessitates multilateral norms against orbital weaponization, as outlined in joint working papers since 2000.[114] While maintaining one of the smaller operational nuclear stockpiles among recognized powers—estimated at around 500 warheads in recent assessments—China's lack of transparency on fissile material stocks and production facilities raises verification challenges for any cutoff regime.[115]France and the United Kingdom generally align with the U.S. in supporting FMCT as a verifiable cap on new fissile material for weapons, while endorsing PAROS discussions only if they incorporate robust monitoring to prevent asymmetric advantages.[116]India has expressed willingness for FMCT negotiations in principle but insists on comprehensive disarmament context, while Pakistan consistently blocks mandates, arguing that a cutoff would entrench India's estimated 2-3 times larger fissile stockpile advantage without addressing delivery systems or existing asymmetries.[117][25][118]
Criticisms and Reform Proposals
Ineffectiveness and Obsolescence Arguments
The Conference on Disarmament has produced no major treaties since concluding the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty in August 1996, resulting in nearly three decades of substantive paralysis that critics argue renders it ineffective for contemporary arms control needs.[3][5] This stagnation contrasts sharply with the CD's earlier achievements, such as negotiating the Chemical Weapons Convention finalized in 1993, when geopolitical alignments facilitated progress amid the Cold War's end; today, the forum's consensus rule enables single-state vetoes, primarily by China, Pakistan, Russia, and others, to block initiatives like a fissile material cutoff treaty.[36][5]Proponents of obsolescence contend that the CD's multilateral format diverts resources from more pragmatic bilateral negotiations, which have historically yielded verifiable reductions, such as the U.S.-Russia Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty signed in 1987 and subsequent START accords, without the encumbrance of universal consensus.[119][120] The forum's failure to adapt has imposed opportunity costs, sidelining negotiations on emerging domains like cyber weapons and artificial intelligence in military applications, where ad hoc groups of governmental experts outside the CD have advanced discussions more effectively.[121] Think tanks including the Nuclear Threat Initiative have highlighted this diminished authority, noting the CD's inability to convene substantive work erodes its relevance amid proliferating threats from non-state actors and revisionist powers unwilling to constrain their arsenals.[3]From a deterrence-oriented perspective, critics argue the CD's emphasis on uniform disarmament overlooks the causal asymmetries in global security, where compliant states like the United States face asymmetric advantages exploited by non-compliant actors—such as Russia's suspension of New START in 2023 and China's arsenal expansion to over 500 warheads by 2024—effectively empowering revisionists through inaction.[122][123] This structural flaw, compounded by the body's expansion to 65 members since 1996 without corresponding decision-making reforms, has fostered perceptions of irrelevance, with UNIDIR analyses underscoring how procedural rigidity inhibits responses to a multipolar nuclear landscape.[36][121]
Consensus Rule Flaws and Alternatives
The consensus rule in the Conference on Disarmament requires the absence of objection from any member state for decisions, effectively granting each of the 65 participants veto power over substantive and procedural matters alike.[22] This mechanism, intended to foster universal agreement, has instead enabled persistent obstruction, as a single dissenting state can halt progress indefinitely, subordinating the collective will to individual national interests.[124] In practice, it contrasts sharply with decision-making in comparable international bodies; for instance, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) employs majority voting, including two-thirds majorities for conventions and amendments, allowing functionality despite disagreements. Similarly, the World Trade Organization (WTO) prioritizes consensus but permits fallback to three-quarters majority votes on key issues like accessions or waivers, preventing total paralysis. These alternatives demonstrate that diluted unanimity does not preclude effective multilateralism, whereas the CD's absolute consensus amplifies spoilers' leverage in a forum where stakes vary asymmetrically by state power and security concerns.Adopted in the CD's 1979 Rules of Procedure upon its formal establishment as the premier disarmament negotiating body, the consensus rule reflected an era of perceived bipolar parity between superpowers, aiming to extend veto protections beyond U.S.-Soviet dynamics to emerging nuclear states and non-aligned actors.[125] This choice presumed balanced incentives for cooperation in a Cold War context, but in a post-1991 multipolar landscape with expanded membership and divergent priorities—such as non-proliferation versus fissile material cut-offs—it has proven maladaptive, entrenching deadlock by equating minor powers' objections with major stakeholders' reservations.[36] Defenders, including some non-Western delegations, maintain that consensus ensures caution against hasty treaties lacking buy-in, potentially averting destabilizing outcomes in high-stakes arms control where implementation failures could erode trust.[126] Critics, notably from U.S. and European perspectives, counter that it has devolved into a "blunt instrument" abused for procedural blocks, fossilized from its original superpower-balancing intent and unfit for iterative progress amid geopolitical flux.[124][22]Reform proposals emphasize realism over idealism, advocating graduated departures from unanimity to restore agency to the majority. One approach involves qualified majority voting—such as two-thirds thresholds—for subsidiary committees on specific agendas like fissile material talks, reserving full consensus for final treaty texts to balance efficiency with safeguards.[126] Others suggest "sunset clauses" in rules, automatically reverting to majority mechanisms after prolonged inaction, or empowering the UN General Assembly to override deadlocks on procedural starts via advisory resolutions, leveraging its broader representativeness.[38] Additional ideas include a "code of conduct" formalizing good-faith limits on vetoes, distinguishing substantive from obstructive uses to curb abuse without wholesale rule changes.[38] These draw from precedents in other regimes, underscoring that consensus, while theoretically inclusive, causally incentivizes minimalism when states anticipate defection, whereas structured majorities compel negotiation toward viable compromises reflective of weighted interests.[39]
Perspectives from Non-Members and Observers
Non-member states, including Israel, which seeks annual observer status but faces periodic denials due to consensus requirements, criticize the Conference on Disarmament for its perceived bias toward Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) priorities that sideline regional security concerns, such as verification and compliance by adversarial actors.[127][128]Israel maintains that effective disarmament negotiations must precede from mutual recognition and peace processes, rather than unilateral demands that ignore threats like undeclared programs or state-sponsored proliferation.[129]Observer states, typically over 30 non-members including European Union countries and aspiring members like those from the 28 pending applicants, express frustration over restricted access—such as the 2023 session's complete exclusion of observers amid member disputes—which amplifies perceptions of the CD's insularity and detachment from broader global dynamics.[130][83] These entities often advocate for expanded participation to counter NAM-influenced deadlocks, arguing that the forum's paralysis undermines its legitimacy for non-participants who pursue independent security policies.[38]Empirical outcomes underscore these views: non-members and even participating states unaffected by CD constraints continue arms advancements, as seen in North Korea's persistent nuclear tests and missile launches—totaling over 100 launches since 2019—despite its membership and 2022 presidency rotation, demonstrating the body's inability to enforce restraint or adapt to asymmetric threats.[131][132]NAM perspectives, aligned with Group of 21 positions, attribute stagnation to nuclear states' "lack of political will," while external analyses highlight how consensus enables blocking by NAM-aligned members on initiatives like fissile material cut-offs, prioritizing sovereignty preservation over collective action.[133][36]
Recent Developments
Post-2010 Stalemate Persistence
The Conference on Disarmament has maintained its inability to adopt a substantive programme of work since 1996, with post-2010 sessions characterized by plenary discussions rather than negotiations on key issues like a fissile material cut-off treaty (FMCT) or negative security assurances.[3] In 2013, the United Nations General Assembly adopted resolutions on FMCT and nuclear disarmament, establishing mechanisms to address these topics outside the CD's consensus-bound framework, underscoring the body's paralysis as states sought alternative paths amid persistent vetoes by major powers such as Pakistan and China.[134] This rhetorical emphasis on urgency yielded no breakthroughs within the CD, where sessions from 2010 onward reiterated familiar positions without establishing ad hoc committees.[5]The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted in-person meetings from 2020 to early 2021, but its impact on the underlying stalemate was negligible, as virtual and hybrid plenaries resumed without advancing beyond statements on emerging threats.[3] By 2021–2022, Russia's invasion of Ukraine prompted dedicated plenary discussions on nuclear risks and crisis management, with delegations like the United States calling for risk reduction measures, yet these yielded no agreed initiatives or working groups due to consensus requirements.[135] Similarly, North Korea's nuclear tests and missile launches, including those post-2017 moratorium claims, were condemned in plenaries—such as in 2018 statements referencing site closures that proved temporary—but elicited only verbal condemnations without programmatic responses.[136] North Korea's 2022 presidency of the CD further highlighted procedural absurdities, drawing international criticism for entrusting leadership to a proliferator amid ongoing tests.[137]In 2025, the CD's sessions—spanning January to March, May to June, and August to September—reaffirmed the deadlock, with no agreement on ad hoc committees despite high-level calls for progress on FMCT and other mandates.[3] Statements from Ukraine and European Union delegations in September lamented the "continued deadlock," attributing it to blocking by key members, while plenary debates on regional tensions like Ukraine persisted without substantive outcomes.[138] This pattern of inertia contrasts with external rhetorical commitments, as the CD submitted only procedural reports to the UN General Assembly, marking over two decades without treaty negotiations.[47]
High-Level Initiatives and External Pressures
In September 2023, Japan hosted a commemorative high-level event on the Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty (FMCT) during the UN General Assembly high-level week, co-sponsored with Australia and the Philippines, to refocus international attention on negotiating the treaty within the Conference on Disarmament (CD).[139] Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida attended, emphasizing the need for renewed momentum amid stalled CD talks, though the event yielded no substantive negotiation mandate.[140]The European Union and France have issued repeated calls for interim measures, including moratoria on fissile material production for nuclear weapons pending an FMCT. In January 2025, the EU urged China and other relevant states to declare an immediate moratorium during its CD opening statement.[141]France echoed this in June 2025, advocating maintenance of such moratoria by all states capable of producing fissile material, while critiquing the CD's paralysis but stopping short of consensus rule alterations.[142]UN General Assembly resolutions have reinforced multilateral disarmament efforts, with Resolution 79/46, adopted on December 2, 2024, promoting multilateralism in disarmament and non-proliferation, including CD revitalization.[143] Think tanks like the UN Institute for Disarmament Research (UNIDIR) have conducted stocktakes, such as its June 2024 paper analyzing FMCT negotiation barriers and a March 2024 event assessing progress options, highlighting persistent definitional and verification disputes without proposing veto overrides.[144]External pressures, including U.S. sanctions on Russia and China, have indirectly exacerbated CD divisions by deepening strategic mistrust, as evidenced by stalled trilateral nuclear talks and Russia's suspension of New START implementation amid broader sanctions.[145] Bilateral and minilateral arrangements, such as the 2021 AUKUS pact providing Australia with nuclear-powered submarines, underscore alternatives to CD multilateralism, prioritizing alliance-specific capabilities over universal treaties and raising non-proliferation concerns without CD involvement.[146]These initiatives remain largely symbolic, generating diplomatic rhetoric but failing to compel breakthroughs due to the CD's consensus requirement, which empowers vetoes by major powers prioritizing sovereignty over collective restraint.[147] Absent reforms to dilute veto power, external pressures like sanctions or bilateral pacts reinforce state-centric realism, diverting resources from the CD without altering underlying geopolitical incentives.[148]