75 Years After Hiroshima

6 August 2020 • 
Commentary, Disarmament, Publications
What is the legacy of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki? What are the gravest threats today? Angela Kane addresses these and other questions in her interview with Tagesschau.
Share this:

Today, 6 August 2020, marks 75 years since the first use of nuclear weapons in war. VCDNP Senior Fellow Angela Kane discussed the legacy of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in an interview with Hilde Stadler of Bayerischer Rundfunk and ARD, published in German.

According to Ms. Kane, also the former UN High Representative for Disarmament Affairs, today's most immediate threat is the decay in arms control between the United States and the Russian Federation, which together maintain the vast majority of the operational nuclear weapons today. In particular, she noted decade-high numbers in global armaments spending, the abrogation of a number of bilateral arms control agreements and the increased prominence of nuclear weapons in military doctrines.

One response to this decay has been the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), said Ms. Kane. While she does not expect the TPNW to lead to actual reductions in nuclear warheads, it may provide a normative force against nuclear weapons, supported by civil society. Moreover, Ms. Kane advocated an emphasis on multilateralism generally and multilateral approaches to nuclear disarmament specifically.

The bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki are a part of history that should remind us of the humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons use, said Ms. Kane.

Read the full article

Also available through Tagesschau.


Related Experts

Angela Kane
Senior Fellow

Related Content

Conventional Arms Control and Confidence- and Security-Building Measures for Students and Young Professionals

19 March 2021 • 
Are you under 35 years old and interested in military security in Europe? Do you want to win up to €3,000 and present your work to diplomats in Vienna? The VCDNP is proud to support the 2021 OSCE-IFSH Essay Competition, again as a co-organiser and judge.
Read more

Artificial Intelligence in the Military Domain: Technical, Legal, and Ethical Perspectives

2 April 2024 • 
The VCDNP hosted a webinar exploring the rapidly evolving use of artificial intelligence in the military domain from technical, legal, and ethical perspectives.
Read more
1 2 3 103
cross
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram