Is the Nobel Committee Finally Abiding by Nobel’s
Will?

The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded Friday to the
International Campaign for the Abolition of Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) — listen to
my radio show with one of ICAN’s leaders two years ago here.
It’s conceivable that some Americans will now learn,
because of this award, about the new treaty that bans the possession of nuclear
weapons.
This treaty has been years in the works. This past
summer 122 nations agreed on the language of it, including these words:
Each State Party undertakes never under any
circumstances to:
(a) Develop, test, produce, manufacture, otherwise
acquire, possess or stockpile nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive
devices;
(b) Transfer to any recipient whatsoever nuclear
weapons or other nuclear explosive devices or control over such weapons or
explosive devices directly or indirectly;
(c) Receive the transfer of or control over nuclear
weapons or other nuclear explosive devices directly or indirectly;
(d) Use or threaten to use nuclear weapons or other
nuclear explosive devices;
(e) Assist, encourage or induce, in any way, anyone
to engage in any activity prohibited to a State Party under this Treaty;
(f) Seek or receive any assistance, in any way, from
anyone to engage in any activity prohibited to a State Party under this Treaty;
(g) Allow any stationing, installation or deployment
of any nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices in its territory or
at any place under its jurisdiction or control.
Not bad, right? This treaty is something of a rebuke
to the nuclear-armed nations, chiefly the United States and Russia, that are in
violation of existing law, which requires them to work toward disarmament. This
new law will require every nation to not possess nuclear weapons at all. It’s
also a corrective to the additional current violation, unique to the United
States, of placing nuclear weapons that supposedly belong to it in other
nations, namely the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Italy, and Turkey, all of
which possess U.S. nuclear weapons.
Already in the past week, since the new treaty
opened for signatures, 53 nations have signed and 3 ratified. Once 50 have
ratified, the nuke ban becomes law, and its violators become outlaws. You can
urge the U.S. government to sign on, join the world, support the rule of law,
and promote human survival here.
The New York Times is already
suggesting that the Nobel Committee’s choice of awardee is somehow related to
the lawlessness of North Korea. It’s worth noting, however, that the only
nuclear-armed nation in the world (there are nine of them, not counting those
with “U.S.” weapons) that voted last October to create the new treaty was North
Korea. Of course, North Korea, in the Trump era, has not signed or ratified and
is unlikely to do so. But I’d bet heavily that North Korea would do so if just
one particular other nation agreed to do so as well.
Behind this award is years of work by ordinary
people struggling for the survival of life on earth. And behind their receiving
of the award may be another struggle that very few have heard about. I refer to
the campaign led by Fredrik
Heffermehl to persuade the Nobel Committee to abide by the legal mandate of
Alfred Nobel’s will, the document that created the prize. The press
release announcing this
year’s prize contains this key paragraph:
“The decision to award the Nobel Peace Prize for
2017 to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons has a solid
grounding in Alfred Nobel’s will. The will specifies three different criteria
for awarding the Peace Prize: the promotion of fraternity between nations, the
advancement of disarmament and arms control and the holding and promotion of
peace congresses. ICAN works vigorously to achieve nuclear disarmament. ICAN
and a majority of UN member states have contributed to fraternity between
nations by supporting the Humanitarian Pledge. And through its inspiring and
innovative support for the UN negotiations on a treaty banning nuclear weapons,
ICAN has played a major part in bringing about what in our day and age is
equivalent to an international peace congress.”
This is exactly right, and very new. It is also
exactly what legal suits and public lobbying have pressured the committee to
do.
The fact is that we need a new prize, separate from
the peace prize, for “general good stuff.” When someone proposes that Colin
Kaepernick get the Nobel Peace Prize for protesting racism, it ought to be
possible to name a prize that he should get, rather than
getting oneself labeled a racist for pointing out that Kaepernick has done
nothing to qualify himself for the peace prize. Or when Malala Yousafzai
actually receives the prize for promoting education, or Al Gore for opposing
climate destruction, we ought to be able to say “No, no. Those are wonderful
things. Give those people the General Nice Stuff Prize. The peace prize is
legally mandated to go to those working for peace and disarmament.”
Now, the prize was meant for individuals, not
organizations, but even Heffermehl doesn’t demand adherence to that detail. In
fact, for what I believe may be the first time, the prize has now gone to a
nominee that Heffermehl recommended as
among those suitable by the criteria in the will. Is this part of a trend?
That’s not as clear. Recent winners have included a militarist president of
Columbia for negotiating a peace treaty (but with his partners in that treaty
left out), a group that organized a nonviolent revolution in Tunisia, the second-biggest
warmakers and weapons dealers on earth in the form of the European Union, a
U.S. President who bombed 8 countries and developed drone warfare to the point
that the UN declared war, rather than peace, to have become the norm, and other
quite dubious awardees — but also an organization seeking to eliminate chemical
weapons, a diplomatic-minded former president of Finland, etc.
The purpose of the will, not included in the three
criteria, but made clear by Nobel, was to provide funding for work on the three
criteria. Thus giving prize money to the EU, which could have had ten times the
money simply by buying a bit less weaponry, or giving it to famous, wealthy
presidents and politicians, seems off. But giving it to ICAN seems, finally, to
have caught on to what the purpose of the Nobel Peace Prize was supposed to be.
Three cheers for somebody doing something right in this world!
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