UN Security Council rejects Russia-backed resolution on banning weapons in space
UNB
Publish: 21 May 2024, 06:34 PM
UNITED
NATIONS, May 21 (AP/UNB) - The United States said Monday that Russia last week
launched a satellite that could be part of weaponizing space, a possible future
global trend that members of the United Nations Security Council condemned even
as they failed to pass a measure against it.
The Security Council
resolution drafted by Russia rivaled one backed by the U.S. and Japan that
failed last month. The rival drafts focused on different types of weapons, with
the U.S. and Japan specifying weapons of mass destruction. The Russian draft
discussed all types of weapons.
The U.S. and its allies
said the language that the 15-member council debated on Monday was simply meant
to distract the world from Russia's true intention: weaponizing space.
"The culmination of
Russia's campaign of diplomatic gaslighting and dissembling is the text before
us today," U.S. deputy ambassador Robert Wood told the council.
Russia's U.N.
ambassador, Vassily Nebenzia, denied that his nation was trying to mislead the
world. Backed by China and others, he called the vote "a unique moment of
truth for our Western colleagues."
"If they fail to
support this, then they will clearly show that their main priority remains
keeping freedom of the way for themselves to expedite the militarization of
outer space," Nebenzia said.
Every nation says it
wants weapons barred from space, and council members repeated that Monday. But
when it came time to vote, the council evenly split 7-7 between backers of the
U.S. and of Russia, with Switzerland abstaining. The measure failed under U.N.
rules because it didn't receive nine votes.
"We have this
negative, squabbling attitude among leading space powers that seem more
interested in scoring points off their adversaries rather than engaging in
constructive dialogue," said Paul Meyer, Canada's former ambassador for
disarmament and a fellow at the Vancouver-based Outer Space Institute.
Since before humans left
the Earth, the world's most powerful nations have worried about their enemies
using outer space to attack them .
The Soviet Union and the
United States sent men into space in 1961. Six years later, the Soviets, the
U.S. and the United Kingdom signed a treaty declaring outer space a global
commons that could be used for only peaceful purposes.
Even though nations
could not wage war without the space-based communications, reconnaissance and
weather tools that satellites and spacecraft provide, the 1967 Outer Space
Treaty requires them to keep their weapons on Earth.
"You realize what
an important conflict-prevention measure that was," Meyer said.
It's become even more
important, he said, as a growing number of nations have moved into space. About
a dozen have the capacity to launch spacecraft, and about 80 have their own
satellites, not to mention the private companies with assets in orbit.
All of that could be at
risk if a conflict in space causes an explosion and shrapnel, which could
disable the vital systems that millions of people around the world depend on.
"A lot of people
have a stake in being able to operate in space safely and securely," Meyer
said.
The U.S. has gathered
highly sensitive intelligence about Russian anti-satellite weapons that has
been shared with the upper echelons of government, four people who had been
briefed on the intelligence said in February. The people, who were not
authorized to comment publicly, said the capability was not yet operational.
END/UNB/AP/PR
