Author: NAPF

  • Nuclear Dangers with Profs. Marty Hellman and Benoît Pélopidas

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    Our next Zoom discussion on Nuclear Dangers will be with Prof. Martin Hellman and Prof. Benoît Pélopidas on Tuesday, November 29 at 11 a.m. PT / 2 p.m. ET. Be sure to register HERE!

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    Professors Martin E. Hellman and Benoît Pelopidas will discuss why luck can not be a viable strategy when it comes to use of nuclear weapons. They will consider the very concept of luck and what it truly means, the evidence of its role in the past, how current doctrines are relying on it today, and what that means for the Ukraine War. Says Prof. Hellman, “Those who discount the risk of the Ukraine War leading to a nuclear war are probably right, but probably is not an adequate assurance when our nation’s survival is at stake.” Join us for what promises to be a provocative discussion.

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    Martin E. Hellman, Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University, is best known for his invention, with Diffie and Merkle, of public key cryptography, the technology that, among other uses, enables secure Internet transactions. He is currentlly focused on Rethinking National Security. Prof. Hellman is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and the recipient of the ACM Turing Award, often called “the Nobel Prize of Computer Science.”

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    Professor Benoît Pélopidas is the founding director of the Nuclear Knowledges program at Sciences Po (CERI) in Paris. He is also an affiliate of the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC) at Stanford University. Prof. Pélopidas focuses on the institutional, conceptual, imaginal and memorial underpinnings of nuclear weapons. He has engaged with influencers from all over the world to reconnect democracy, intergenerational justice, and nuclear policy.

    [/fusion_text][fusion_imageframe image_id=”20630|full” max_width=”” sticky_max_width=”” style_type=”” blur=”” stylecolor=”” hover_type=”none” bordersize=”” bordercolor=”” borderradius=”” align_medium=”none” align_small=”none” align=”center” margin_top=”” margin_right=”” margin_bottom=”” margin_left=”” lightbox=”no” gallery_id=”” lightbox_image=”” lightbox_image_id=”” alt=”” link=”https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZIvf-uhpzIjEtI1Fb_l_NFp7l2PjI2n5_tl” linktarget=”_self” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” sticky_display=”normal,sticky” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_offset=”” filter_hue=”0″ filter_saturation=”100″ filter_brightness=”100″ filter_contrast=”100″ filter_invert=”0″ filter_sepia=”0″ filter_opacity=”100″ filter_blur=”0″ filter_hue_hover=”0″ filter_saturation_hover=”100″ filter_brightness_hover=”100″ filter_contrast_hover=”100″ filter_invert_hover=”0″ filter_sepia_hover=”0″ filter_opacity_hover=”100″ filter_blur_hover=”0″]https://wagingpeace.davidmolinaojeda.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/nuclear-dangers-HELLMAN-BENOIT-R1-jpg-e1667950385493.jpg[/fusion_imageframe][/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

  • UN First Committee Side Event Brings Diplomats and Youth Together

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    On October 11th, the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (NAPF), its youth initiative Reverse The Trend (RTT), Soka Gakkai International (SGI), and the Mission of Kiribati co-sponsored a hybrid event entitled Humanitarian Disarmament Education.  Speakers were: H.E. Ambassador Tito, the Permanent Representative of Kiribati to the UN; Mr. Aziz Azril; the Deputy Permanent Representative of Malaysia to the UN; Anna Ikeda; Program Coordinator for Disarmament, Office for UN Affairs, Soka Gakkai International; Christian N. Ciobanu, Policy and Advocacy Coordinator, NAPF and Co-Founder, Reverse The Trend: Save Our People, Save Our Planet; Jeremiah Williams, a student at Pace University; Alicia Sanders-Zakre, Policy and Research Coordinator, ICAN; and Mary Dickson, Nevada Test Site Downwinder. Dr. Ivana Hughes, President of NAPF chaired the meeting. A sizeable audience of college students was in attendance.

    In her opening remarks, Dr. Ivana Hughes of NAPF stressed the imperative of nuclear disarmament education as a powerful tool to help achieve a just and peaceful world. Dr. Hughes emphasized that nuclear destruction did not simply end with Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but its legacy from decades of testing and development is prevalent in many parts of the globe such as the American Southwest, Marshall Islands, Kiribati, French Polynesia, and Kazakhstan. Dr. Hughes reminded the audience that we all continue to be the victims of nuclear terror with the normalization of discourse around nuclear weapons use.

    H.E. Ambassador Teburoro Tito of Kiribati stressed that the damage caused by nuclear weapons testing is still present and impacting affected communities in his country. H.E. Ambassador Tito specifically addressed the youth in attendance, encouraging them to continue their disarmament education and help in the global effort to eliminate WMDs. Finally, he described the struggle for nuclear disarmament to “the greatest love story to save mankind.”

    Mr. Aziz Azril of Malaysia discussed the TPNW, the rhetoric associated with nuclear weapons doctrines and the dangerous normalization of these weapons. Mr. Azril began his discussion on the universalization of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW). Specifically, he discussed the need for states parties to advocate for the TPNW and shift the rhetoric associated with nuclear weapons. He further explained that the nuclear weapon states should change their current “moral rhetoric” about their nuclear weapons. 

     The representative further underscored how student activism can lead to nuclear disarmament. For example, a grassroots movement sparked the nuclear disarmament movement in Apartheid South Africa, which further led to both the end of apartheid and to South Africa’s Post-Apartheid government renouncing its nuclear weapons program.   

    Anna Ikeda of SGI explained that disarmament education can push the needle forward. In this connection, Ikeda mentioned that the creation of the TPNW can be seen as an educational journey. Ikeda stressed that our shared humanity is the focal point of nuclear disarmament education and campaigning. With the rise of militarism and racism globally, the quality of education was also emphasized, pushing the value and need for an intersectional education encompassing diversity and self-reflection.

    Mr. Christian Ciobanu of NAPF and RTT stressed the importance of youth advocacy as the vehicle of current and future change in nuclear disarmament. RTT works globally by collaborating with frontline communities on the twin existential threats of climate change and nuclear weapons. RTT encourages youth activists to raise awareness about the TPNW. Ciobanu emphasized the need for multipronged approaches to nuclear disarmament education. He discussed RTT’s widespread campaigns through curricula, filmmaking, toolkits, and mediums like poetry and art. He further highlighted RTT’s new journal that contains submissions from international youth on nuclear disarmament and environmental justice. 

    Jeremiah Williams of Pace University spoke of his personal journey to involvement with the existential issue of nuclear proliferation and its disarmament. He shared his reflections about the overwhelming lack of youth presence and diversity in the discussions of the issues. Williams made an appeal to the youth in audience to propagate nuclear disarmament as a crucial vehicle for change. He stressed that the inclusion of young people is essential, and that they have a right to determine their own future and influence policy of the future they will be living in.

    Alicia Sanders-Zakre of ICAN presented ICAN’s new university study on Schools of Mass Destruction. As explained by Sanders-Zakre, numerous universities are involved in supporting the U.S Nuclear Weapons Complex, aiding their design, research, engineering, and normalization of nuclear weapons. Instead, she proposes that the universities and students put their efforts towards nuclear disarmament advocacy and education. Sanders-Zakre called out the U.S. refusal to sign the TPNW and said that the treaty must bring about a new order of global peace.

    Mary Dickinson, a downwinder of U.S. nuclear weapons testing, gave a heart wrenching and harrowing speech on her personal account of the terror and danger of nuclear weapons and their testing. She called herself and others affected by nuclear weapons testing soldiers of the Cold War. Dickinson spoke of the gruesome and existential danger that nuclear weapons have wrought, and looms over us in this very moment. She explained that the downwinders and their descendants are disappointed by the lack of the accountability and refusal by the U.S to provide adequate compensation.  Dickinson highlighted the deeply tragic danger that nuclear weapons pose to all humanity, and that we should never forget what is being fought for when advocating for a peaceful nuclear weapons-free world.

    This event served as a pertinent reminder of the aims of disarmament education, and the vital need for it in a global system, which has normalized the existence of nuclear weapons and their proliferation.

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  • Nuclear Dangers with John Burroughs, Jackie Cabasso, and Andrew Lichterman

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    We hope you will join us for a Zoom discussion on Nuclear Dangers with John Burroughs, Jacqueline Cabasso, and Andrew Lichterman on Thursday, October 27 at 11 a.m. PT / 2 p.m. ET. Be sure to register HERE!

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    John Burroughs, of Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy, and Jacqueline Cabasso and Andrew Lichterman, of Western States Legal Foundation, will discuss Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and accompanying nuclear threats with reference to international law; whether “geopolitical” analysis is the appropriate framework; and divergent approaches of peace advocates.

    John is the principal author of the paper, End the War, Stop the War Crimes;

    Jacqueline, a key actor in peace and disarmament networks, is quoted extensively in this article published soon after the invasion, A conflict over Ukraine embroils four of the world’s major nuclear powers;

    Andrew is the author of the paper, The Peace Movement and the Ukraine War: Where to Now?

    Christian Ciobanu, our Policy and Advocacy Coordinator, will moderate.

    Thursday, October 27, 2022
    11:00 am PT 2:00 pm ET 8:00 pm CET

    PLEASE REGISTER HERE

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  • 2022 Poetry Contest Winners

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    We are pleased to announce the winners of our 2022 Poetry Contest. They are: Abby E. Murray for The War in Spring (First Place, Adult Category ), Chivas Sandage for What the Body Knows (Honorable Mention, Adult Category), Victoria Shen for i am not merely black and white keys (First Place, Ages 13-18 Category), Avery London for Burn This Poem (Honorable Mention, Ages 13-18 Category), Ollie Wayer for Not Dead (Honorable Mention, Ages 13-18 Category), and Cara Wang for An Immigrant’s Journey (First Place, Ages 12 and Under Category). Congratulations to all of our winners. The winning poems can be found below.

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    First Place – Adult Category

    The War in Spring
    By Abby E. Murray

    I wanted the war to be over
    so I stepped outside where it is
    mid-March in the capital
    of a country that fights
    only once it is too late. The grass
    is matted with mud stirred up
    by a late snow, which raged
    as if it would last forever
    then sank beneath a hard sun
    we used to know as mild.
    The air here seethes with the smell
    of rain and the death of a dictator
    whose season has begun to end.
    Near the reservoir, thousands
    of plum blossoms face the sky
    like they won’t fall in a matter
    of days. Mama ducks teach
    their young to swim and know
    two earthly truths: it has always
    been this way, and it has never
    been this way before.

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    Honorable Mention – Adult Category

    What the Body Knows
    By Chivas Sandage

    “In those days I thought their endless thrum
    was the great wheel that turned the days, the nights.”
    Lynda Hull

    Darkness, damp and thick, hovers in bare maples, sifting moonlight
    as a plane stitches the night, drawing a vanishing line from far away
    over the river, over the garden, over the pale, yellow house and marriage bed

    to cities we may never see. Holding hands in the dark, two women listening
    for signs of spring, we hear only the radio echo in our heads
    long after turning it off—a neighborhood hit
    by too many rockets for an accurate count,
    a reporter explaining disembodied cries like fair weather.
    Spring far away as childhood, the dream of peace farther—
    a myth to get us by. But we hear the season breathing.

    We dream robins return, remember the first notes
    of the peepers’ song like a lost part of us, a song once heard never forgotten,
    layered choruses punctuated by solos shaking summer trees—
    cicada, katy-did, cricket, wood frog—tribes playing through the night
    all percussion and counterpoint, regularly missing
    the beat, the great thrum rising in waves, rhythms
    driven in every direction, round and round, until we
    are part of the song, waning, breaking, only to build, to tremble—

    the song crescendos over the village, over the river, over the garden
    and marriage bed. The same song sung for our ancestors century
    after century gives something we need, a song to remind us
    what the body knows, what blood and bone remember.

    Waking in darkness, the rest of our lives a blank slate—one day
    or decades—another chance to redeem, re-dream: we want
    that which is lost returned, to restore, repair, recover. Falling
    back asleep, we dream the river thaws, the garden drinks,
    and the tribes call to each other, our songs all sung as one—
    wild and imperfect.

    [/fusion_text][fusion_text columns=”” column_min_width=”” column_spacing=”” rule_style=”default” rule_size=”” rule_color=”” content_alignment_medium=”” content_alignment_small=”” content_alignment=”” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” sticky_display=”normal,sticky” class=”” id=”” margin_top=”” margin_right=”” margin_bottom=”” margin_left=”” font_size=”” fusion_font_family_text_font=”” fusion_font_variant_text_font=”” line_height=”” letter_spacing=”” text_color=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_offset=””]

    First Place – Age 13-18 Category

    i am not merely black and white keys
    By Victoria Shen

    i am not merely black and white keys,
    but a larger entity of wooden sleekness
    home to a series of metal strings that make

    noise:
    it fills the empty hallways of the hospital
    where patients lie and families mourn as i
    sing chopin’s songs through the soft loud-
    speakers

    creating a space where everyone is safe,
    families can be together even as
    bombs drop on their houses but
    it doesn’t matter.

    knowing that the bar lines and staff lines and
    staff of the hospital stop.
    they listen and unite

    I unite a Japanese soldier and a civilian from china
    they don’t speak but understand each other in all languages
    they stand together in all languages where

    anybody can stand together in any language
    they can be together in perfect harmony that creates a space for everyone

    [/fusion_text][fusion_text columns=”” column_min_width=”” column_spacing=”” rule_style=”default” rule_size=”” rule_color=”” content_alignment_medium=”” content_alignment_small=”” content_alignment=”” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” sticky_display=”normal,sticky” class=”” id=”” margin_top=”” margin_right=”” margin_bottom=”” margin_left=”” font_size=”” fusion_font_family_text_font=”” fusion_font_variant_text_font=”” line_height=”” letter_spacing=”” text_color=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_offset=””]

    Honorable Mention – Age 13-18 Category

    Burn this Poem
    By Avery London

    I want you to burn this poem
    in the American River
    rub the ash on your face
    and finally, finally
    forgive yourself
    Do it quietly
    please
    because you are a choir
    with your head bent
    towards the waters
    The soot
    is why we are human
    and the soot
    is why we want to wash off
    But keep that smudge a little longer
    I want you to burn this poem
    in the American River
    remember to sing to yourself
    each day
    and finally, finally
    forgive

    [/fusion_text][fusion_text columns=”” column_min_width=”” column_spacing=”” rule_style=”default” rule_size=”” rule_color=”” content_alignment_medium=”” content_alignment_small=”” content_alignment=”” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” sticky_display=”normal,sticky” class=”” id=”” margin_top=”” margin_right=”” margin_bottom=”” margin_left=”” font_size=”” fusion_font_family_text_font=”” fusion_font_variant_text_font=”” line_height=”” letter_spacing=”” text_color=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_offset=””]

    Honorable Mention – Age 13-18 Category

    Not Dead
    By Ollie Wayer

    “human spirit is pretty much dead,” he says, tilting his head.
    then why do i smile when a baby laughs?
    why do we hold each other’s hands?
    is it not because we’re human?

    or why do we caress petals and leaves
    or sit beneath those old, wide trees
    or cry about our scraped up knees?
    we’ve been broken, we’ve been beaten
    chewed up, spat out, chopped up and eaten,
    but we’re still here.
    we’re Still here
    human spirit is going to the store and helping someone with a heavy box.
    it’s staring up at the stars and wondering who else has found the big dipper?
    it’s strength shown in numbers, in cameo clothing and scrubs, in crooked teeth and oily hands.
    it’s power in recognition, and recognition in power.
    we’re Still here.
    despite being trashed and crashed and bashed on and thrashed around like a chew toy.
    we Still smile.
    we Still dream of that white of peace.
    we Still hold hands, link arms, cross our fingers, hope, cry, shout, laugh, scream
    we’re Still strong.
    and we are Not dead.

    [/fusion_text][fusion_text columns=”” column_min_width=”” column_spacing=”” rule_style=”default” rule_size=”” rule_color=”” content_alignment_medium=”” content_alignment_small=”” content_alignment=”” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” sticky_display=”normal,sticky” class=”” id=”” margin_top=”” margin_right=”” margin_bottom=”” margin_left=”” font_size=”” fusion_font_family_text_font=”” fusion_font_variant_text_font=”” line_height=”” letter_spacing=”” text_color=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_offset=””]

    First Place – Age 12 and Under Category

    An Immigrant’s Journey
    By Cara Wang

    Thoughts, words, ideas,
    Sown,
    A seed yet to sprout.

    Arguing, conflicting shouts,
    About the journey, and the papers, my missing papers,
    The winter frost, strangling the seed from the inside out.

    But the resilient seed survives
    The angry winds, sleepless nights, hushed whispers,
    For they are but mere obtacles.

    Soon, after a tumultuous journey,
    The seed has dug deep into the earth,
    Creating a space to start growing.

    First leaves sprout,
    Awkward and dark green,
    Different.

    The plant shies away from the sunlight,
    Retreating into itself,
    But –

    It senses a guiding hand,
    Gently straightening the wrinkled stem,
    Sprinkling two droplets of water.

    An opportunity to be different,
    But also welcomed,
    Newly transplanted.

    [/fusion_text][fusion_text columns=”” column_min_width=”” column_spacing=”” rule_style=”default” rule_size=”” rule_color=”” content_alignment_medium=”” content_alignment_small=”” content_alignment=”” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” sticky_display=”normal,sticky” class=”” id=”” margin_top=”” margin_right=”” margin_bottom=”” margin_left=”” font_size=”” fusion_font_family_text_font=”” fusion_font_variant_text_font=”” line_height=”” letter_spacing=”” text_color=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_offset=””]

    [/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

  • What I didn’t get to say at the UN

    Over the last weekend of September, in between a cross-country race for my high schooler, a soccer game for my 6th grader, and saying good bye to my daughter as she headed to Europe to study medicine, I was working on a statement to deliver during the United Nations General Assembly on September 26. My statement would take place at a commemorative meeting for the International Day for Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons and I only had three minutes to deliver it. Three minutes is not a lot of time; about three hundred words to be exact. And I had so much to say.

    I wanted to tell the delegates about my amazing kids and husband and dog and why I feel that the biggest gift I can leave to my children would be a world free of nuclear weapons. I wanted to tell the delegates that my main motivation in pursuing the hard work of nuclear disarmament is love. Love for my family, for our beautiful planet, for all life on Earth, and for humanity itself. I wanted to tell them that nuclear weapons, in the words of David Krieger, threaten everything we love and everything we’ve ever known. They threaten humanity itself.

    We live in a challenging time. I wanted to tell the delegates about tears in my eyes while in the Times Square subway station just days earlier. I was on my way to the General Assembly while passing through the station. If you’ve ever been there, you’ll know that it’s not exactly the kind of location that is inspiring. But thinking about the weight of the world and seeing people singing, holding hands, rushing to wherever they were going, or selling fruit cups, brought tears to my eyes. If a nuclear weapon were to be used in New York City, that subway station would surely be vaporized. And so much more.

    Last year, an international treaty that bans nuclear weapons – the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) – entered into force. A response of nuclear weapon states to this treaty has been to point out that they would love to get rid of nuclear weapons if it weren’t for the “bad” countries that possess them or aspire to possess them. But there is no such thing as bad or good nuclear weapons. They are all bad. A single nuclear weapon used today would be much more powerful than the bombs the United States used in attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. More likely, multiple weapons would be delivered simultaneously on an intercontinental ballistic missile. And unlike in 1945, there would most certainly be a response consisting of more nuclear strikes.

    But I didn’t get to say all this. Instead, I focused on the lessons from the past, the current terrifying arsenals and modernization plans, and the future on a planet that currently supports a human civilization, however imperfect it may be, and that may not be able to do so in the future. Some necessary context: the use of nuclear weapons in attacks on Japan was not the only time that humanity suffered due to nuclear weapons. The suffering includes a long legacy of nuclear weapons testing on the atolls and islands of the Marshall Islands, Kiribati, French Polynesia, and Alaska, to the deserts of the American Southwest, Australia, Kazakhstan, and China, and in other locations around the world. This legacy consists of decades of physical health effects, such as increased rates of cancer and negative maternal health impacts, as well as mental and cultural demise.

    Some more context: today, nine countries possess around 13,000 weapons, about 1800 of which are on what is called a hair-trigger alert. This means that many hundreds of weapons can be launched within minutes in crisis situations. This also means that accidental use or use due to misunderstanding or miscalculation is much more likely. Finally, the use of even small fractions of the current arsenals would result in millions of direct deaths and even billions due to starvation within the first two years, depending on the exact circumstances of the weapons used and their total number. The latter is a consequence of something scientists called nuclear winter more than four decades ago. The results of a recent study of nuclear winter are simply terrifying.

    At the UN, I didn’t get to say everything I wanted to. But I had love in my heart and a clear message. Everything we know about nuclear weapons from thinking about the past, the present, and the future says that the only road ahead is that toward a world free of nuclear weapons.

    You can watch my statement HERE.

    – Ivana

  • President’s Letter: September 2022

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    Dear NAPF Community,

    As the Ukraine War continues to rage, geopolitical tensions rise, and nuclear threats are not only used, but also normalized by the popular media, team NAPF feels a renewed sense of urgency and importance to our work. Our calls for a peaceful world free of nuclear weapons feel as important as at any point since our founding in 1982, and certainly more important than at any point in this century.

    Two international days that align with our mission were commemorated and promoted at the United Nations in New York in September. They are the International Day Against Nuclear Tests (normally August 29, but this year recognized on September 7) and the International Day For Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons (September 26). Christian and I attended both high-level meetings and I also had the opportunity to deliver a statement on behalf of NAPF on September 26. My statement focused on the absolute imperative of nuclear weapons abolition, drawing on lessons from the past, the current state of affairs, and what studies – including those of nuclear winter – tell us about the future on Earth ravaged by nuclear war. Please watch it below, if you haven’t already!

    [/fusion_text][fusion_youtube id=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIHwWjfFUdo&t=74s” alignment=”center” width=”” height=”” autoplay=”false” api_params=”” title_attribute=”” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” class=”” css_id=”” /][/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container][fusion_builder_container type=”flex” hundred_percent=”no” hundred_percent_height=”no” hundred_percent_height_scroll=”no” align_content=”stretch” flex_align_items=”flex-start” flex_justify_content=”flex-start” hundred_percent_height_center_content=”yes” equal_height_columns=”no” container_tag=”div” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” status=”published” border_style=”solid” box_shadow=”no” box_shadow_blur=”0″ box_shadow_spread=”0″ gradient_start_position=”0″ gradient_end_position=”100″ gradient_type=”linear” radial_direction=”center center” linear_angle=”180″ background_position=”center center” background_repeat=”no-repeat” fade=”no” background_parallax=”none” enable_mobile=”no” parallax_speed=”0.3″ background_blend_mode=”none” video_aspect_ratio=”16:9″ video_loop=”yes” video_mute=”yes” absolute=”off” absolute_devices=”small,medium,large” sticky=”off” sticky_devices=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” sticky_transition_offset=”0″ scroll_offset=”0″ animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″ filter_hue=”0″ filter_saturation=”100″ filter_brightness=”100″ filter_contrast=”100″ filter_invert=”0″ filter_sepia=”0″ filter_opacity=”100″ filter_blur=”0″ filter_hue_hover=”0″ filter_saturation_hover=”100″ filter_brightness_hover=”100″ filter_contrast_hover=”100″ filter_invert_hover=”0″ filter_sepia_hover=”0″ filter_opacity_hover=”100″ filter_blur_hover=”0″][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_2″ layout=”1_2″ align_self=”auto” content_layout=”column” align_content=”flex-start” valign_content=”flex-start” content_wrap=”wrap” spacing=”” center_content=”no” link=”” target=”_self” min_height=”” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” sticky_display=”normal,sticky” class=”” id=”” type_medium=”” type_small=”” order_medium=”0″ order_small=”0″ dimension_spacing_medium=”” dimension_spacing_small=”” dimension_spacing=”” dimension_margin_medium=”” dimension_margin_small=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” padding_medium=”” padding_small=”” padding_top=”” padding_right=”” padding_bottom=”” padding_left=”” hover_type=”none” border_sizes=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” border_radius=”” box_shadow=”no” dimension_box_shadow=”” box_shadow_blur=”0″ box_shadow_spread=”0″ box_shadow_color=”” box_shadow_style=”” background_type=”single” gradient_start_color=”” gradient_end_color=”” gradient_start_position=”0″ gradient_end_position=”100″ gradient_type=”linear” radial_direction=”center center” linear_angle=”180″ background_color=”” background_image=”” background_image_id=”” background_position=”left top” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_blend_mode=”none” render_logics=”” filter_type=”regular” filter_hue=”0″ filter_saturation=”100″ filter_brightness=”100″ filter_contrast=”100″ filter_invert=”0″ filter_sepia=”0″ filter_opacity=”100″ filter_blur=”0″ filter_hue_hover=”0″ filter_saturation_hover=”100″ filter_brightness_hover=”100″ filter_contrast_hover=”100″ filter_invert_hover=”0″ filter_sepia_hover=”0″ filter_opacity_hover=”100″ filter_blur_hover=”0″ animation_type=”” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_offset=”” last=”false” border_position=”all” first=”true” spacing_right=””][fusion_imageframe image_id=”20521|full” max_width=”” sticky_max_width=”” style_type=”” blur=”” stylecolor=”” hover_type=”none” bordersize=”” bordercolor=”” borderradius=”” align_medium=”none” align_small=”none” align=”none” margin_top=”” margin_right=”” margin_bottom=”” margin_left=”” lightbox=”no” gallery_id=”” lightbox_image=”” lightbox_image_id=”” alt=”” link=”” linktarget=”_self” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” sticky_display=”normal,sticky” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_offset=”” filter_hue=”0″ filter_saturation=”100″ filter_brightness=”124″ filter_contrast=”100″ filter_invert=”0″ filter_sepia=”0″ filter_opacity=”100″ filter_blur=”0″ filter_hue_hover=”0″ filter_saturation_hover=”100″ filter_brightness_hover=”100″ filter_contrast_hover=”100″ filter_invert_hover=”0″ filter_sepia_hover=”0″ filter_opacity_hover=”100″ filter_blur_hover=”0″]https://wagingpeace.davidmolinaojeda.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Molly_Patrick_UN-scaled.jpg[/fusion_imageframe][fusion_text columns=”” column_min_width=”” column_spacing=”” rule_style=”default” rule_size=”” rule_color=”” content_alignment_medium=”” content_alignment_small=”” content_alignment=”” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” sticky_display=”normal,sticky” class=”” id=”” margin_top=”” margin_right=”” margin_bottom=”” margin_left=”” font_size=”” fusion_font_family_text_font=”” fusion_font_variant_text_font=”” line_height=”” letter_spacing=”” text_color=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_offset=””]

    With Molly McGinty (IPPNW) and Patrick Karakezi (Restless Development) on September 26.

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    With Togzhan Kassenova, author of Atomic Steppe, on September 7.

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    For the International Day For Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons, we also organized a panel discussion featuring H.E. Ambassador Teburoro Tito of Kiribati, Dimity Hawkins from ICAN Australia, Vaela Baleicakau Sulfite, Mere Tuilau from yDISARM Pacific, Kasha Sequoia Slavner from Global Sunrise Project, and Dr. Yael Danieli from the International Center for MultiGenerational Legacies of Trauma. Christian moderated and the video is available HERE.

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    Panelists and participants at the September 26 event.

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    In New York, the week of the UN General Assembly is best known for the traffic gridlock it brings to midtown Manhattan, but this year, with so much at stake, many were paying attention to addresses by heads of state and other top government officials. The chasm between the US and its allies on the one hand, and Russia on the other, was on full display. Christian attended nearly all of the sessions and I attended a few, including the one featuring the video address by President Zelinsky of Ukraine. We were encouraged by statements made by states that are party to the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, urging all other states to join the TPNW. We were also inspired by the statement by the President of the Marshall Islands, stressing that, “It is vital that the legacy and contemporary challenges of nuclear impact testing be better addressed, that climate change be addressed with the urgency and commitment it deserves, and that our voice as an equal partner be strengthened.”

    This month we received the wonderful news that Richard Falk’s book This Endangered Planet: Prospects and Proposals for Human Survival (1971) was selected as a Book for the Century (Political and Legal) on the occasion of the centennial issue of the magazine Foreign Affairs, issued by the Council on Foreign Relations. Richard’s book is part of a set of three books considered “essential for understanding the century ahead.” The reviewers highlighted Richard’s use of terms such as “limits to growth” and “spaceship earth,” calling the book “evocative and illuminating.” In the book, Richard calls “for a revolution in consciousness that would reimagine how peoples and societies could organize themselves for sustainable life.” See the full review HERE and join us in congratulating Richard!

    In order to celebrate this enormous honor and to revisit the topics Richard discussed in the book more than 50 years ago, Richard and I met in conversation as part of our Nuclear Dangers series. I was – as always – humbled by Richard’s wisdom, warmth, insight, and grace. He continues to inspire me personally to do better and to be better. If you missed the event, you can watch the recording below.

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    Our next two Nuclear Dangers events will take place on Zoom on Thursday 10/27 at 11 a.m. PT with John Burroughs, Jackie Cabasso, and Andrew Lichterman and Tuesday 11/29, also at 11 a.m. with Marty Hellman and Benoit Pelopidas. We are very much looking forward to these opportunities to explore the current challenges and think together about the path forward. Stay tuned for details to come.

    We will also hold an event on the importance of disarmament education next week as a side event to the meetings of the UN First Committee (on disarmament and international security). The event will take place on Tuesday, 10/11 1:15-2:30 p.m. on Zoom. Details will be posted on our website shortly.

    Preparations are in high gear at this point for our first annual Women Waging Peace Luncheon on November 10, honoring Cynthia Lazaroff and Senator Monique Limón. Read more about our honorees HERE. If you are part of our local Santa Barbara community, we hope you may be able to join us! If you are too far away to make the trip, we hope you might consider making a donation to support the event.

    If you have not seen our website recently, check out some changes we made to the homepage and how information is organized. It’s work in progress, but we’re very excited to feature a new look!

    As we continually reflect on the importance of our own work, we are encouraged by the efforts of many others around the globe to address the challenges of the current moment. With colleagues from Malaysia and Australia, Richard Falk has published A Call To All Who Care About Humanity’s and the Planet’s Future. See HERE for the call and to sign the petition. On October 27, I will moderate a panel to discuss this call; stay tuned for details. Additionally, religious leaders from across the US came together to write a letter to President Biden regarding the imperative of arms control negotiations with Russia; see HERE. Also, a campaign for Peace in Ukraine is organizing events this month in recognition of the upcoming 60th anniversary of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Find out more about the campaign’s efforts HERE. Finally, the Declaration of Concern we wrote back in May feels as relevant today as it did in the early months of the war. If you haven’t, please read it and sign it.

    We are thankful for everything you do to make our work possible and invite you to continue to engage in any and all efforts for a just and peaceful world, one that is free of nuclear weapons.

    Warmly and with gratitude,

    Ivana

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  • NAPF Statement at the UN International Day for Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons

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    September 26 is the International Day for Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons and NAPF was proud to attend a High-Level Plenary Meeting to commemorate and promote this important day and to deliver a statement as one of only three NGOs to represent civil society. Our President Ivana Nikolić Hughes delivered the statement at the end of the meeting’s morning session in the UN Trusteeship Council chamber in the New York UN Headquarters during the General Assembly.

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    We were inspired by the statements made by the UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres – a fierce advocate for nuclear disarmament, as well as the excellent statements by the UN General Assembly President, Csaba Korosi, the President of the Republic of Kiribati, Taneti Maamau, and representatives of many of the states in attendance, including Costa Rica, Mexico, Austria, South Africa, and more, as well as ICRC and NGO colleagues Molly McGinty from IPPNW and Patrick Karakezi from Restless Development. We were heartened by the many calls for states to sign and/or ratify the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons – our path forward to a world free of nuclear weapons.

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  • Spotlight on Christian N. Ciobanu – NAPF Director of Policy and Advocacy

    We are excited to introduce a new series on our website called Spotlight! We will use this series to highlight people at NAPF and in the nuclear disarmament sphere more generally. For our first Spotlight, we bring you Christian N. Ciobanu, NAPF’s Director of Policy and Advocacy.

    Tell us about your childhood and high school years. What were your interests back then?

    I grew up near the United Nations in Tudor City, a neighborhood in East Midtown Manhattan. In high school, I was passionate about public debate, politics, and ancient history. 

    What did you study in college?

    I studied Political Science and Economics at Drew University. I primarily focused on economic development, which motivated me to help communities in Africa. As a result, I interned for the United Methodist Church and Drew University’s Communities of Shalom Initiative in Mzuzu, Malawi, the warm heart of Africa. I collaborated with stakeholders on microenterprises. I worked closely with the local Methodist Reverend and representatives of CitiHope International. 

    I also studied Political Science at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies (Geneva, Switzerland) and then Nonproliferation and Terrorism Studies at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies (Monterey, CA).

    When did you become interested in peace and nuclear weapons issues and why/how?

    In 2010, I had the opportunity to attend the 8th NPT Review Conference. At the Review Conference, I heard the testimonies of the Hibakusha (survivors of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki). Their testimonies motivated me to take action and become an advocate for a world free of nuclear weapons.

    What are you working on at NAPF?

    Currently, I serve as NAPF’s Policy and Advocacy Coordinator. This position enables me to raise public awareness and encourage states to support the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) and monitor international peace and security discussions inside the United Nations. I also develop and foster vital relationships between NAPF and states, including Kazakhstan, Marshall Islands, and Kiribati.

    As the Policy and Advocacy Coordinator, I am heavily involved in the discussions on the Positive Obligations of the TPNW, including victim assistance, environmental remediation, international cooperation, and assistance. As a result of my involvement on the positive obligations, I was appointed as an adviser on the TPNW to the Permanent Mission of Kiribati.

    I also supervise NAPF’s interns in New York. The interns engage in e-diplomacy by tweeting about the international meetings and help to organize events.

    Finally, I serve as the primary coordinator of Reverse The Trend: Save Our People, Save Our Planet. This NAPF initiative amplifies the voices of youth from communities that have been impacted by nuclear weapons and climate change. We work directly with Marshallese youth through the Marshallese Educational Initiative.

    What are you most passionate about in your work?

    I am most passionate about empowering and providing opportunities for youth, especially youth from affected communities to attend high-level meetings on nuclear disarmament affairs and meet with diplomats. It is imperative for the international community to hear their voices. We were able to bring 18 young people to Vienna in June of 2022 for the First Meeting of States Parties on the TPNW and surrounding meetings (ICAN Forum and the UN Humanitarian Conferences). In August of 2022, we enabled young people and colleagues from affected communities to attend the 10th Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference.

    Is there anything else you’d like to share with us?

    In the summer of 2016, I was awarded the Kathryn Davis Projects for Peace Fellowship. As part of this fellowship, I organized a summer conference on nuclear disarmament in Bali, Indonesia.

    Moreover, I served as the official co-chair of the Global Youth Forum on the TPNW, which was held in Auckland, New Zealand in December 2018.

    I have also given presentations at several universities, including UPenn, Harvard Law School, NYU, the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, and Nagasaki University.

  • Nuclear Dangers with Richard Falk and Ivana Hughes

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    We hope you will join us for a Zoom discussion on Nuclear Dangers and beyond with Richard Falk and Ivana Hughes on Thursday, September 29 at 11 a.m. PT and 2 p.m. ET. Be sure to register HERE!

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  • Richard Falk’s book This Endangered Planet (1971) honored by Foreign Affairs

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    We are thrilled to share that This Endangered Planet: Prospects and Proposals for Human Survival (1971) by Richard Falk, our Senior Vice President, has been selected as a Book for the Century (Political and Legal) on the occasion of the centennial issue of the magazine Foreign Affairs, issued by the Council on Foreign Relations. Richard’s book is part of a set considered “essential for understanding the century ahead.” The reviewers highlighted Richard’s use of terms such as “limits to growth” and “spaceship earth,” calling the book “evocative and illuminating.” In the book, Richard calls “for a revolution in consciousness that would reimagine how peoples and societies could organize themselves for sustainable life.” See the full review HERE and join us in congratulating Richard!

    To celebrate this enormous honor and to revisit the topics Richard discussed in the book more than 50 years ago, our President Ivana Nikolić Hughes and Richard will meet in conversation as part of our Nuclear Dangers series. Details will be announced shortly!

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