Envoy Voices Concerns Over Militarizing Outer Space, Cyberspace
TEHRAN - Iran’s Representative to the UN General Assembly First Committee Heidar Ali Balouji has once again warned that weapons of mass destruction are an existential threat to humanity, saying the international community should address traditional and non-traditional security concerns in cyberspace and outer space.
Balouji made the remarks while addressing the 77th session of the committee’s meeting on disarmament and international security held in New York on Monday.
Outlining Iran’s principled stance on disarmament and international security, he said new and unconventional security threats have undermined the peace and deteriorated the security situation in the world.
He warned that increased tensions along with nuclear arms race could lead to a cold, and even nuclear, war in the world.
Balouji drew attention to the spike in military expenditures and the all-time high in military transfers in 2021, saying the United States has the highest military spending and nuclear arms in comparison with other countries.
He said the implementation of the binding legal obligations of nuclear powers in accordance with Article VI of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) has not been realized due to the failure of international nuclear arms control treaties and the unfortunate lack of success of two consecutive NPT review conferences.
Nuclear powers are increasing their stockpile of arsenals, he warned.
Besides erosion of the arms control architecture, there was non-compliance with the NPT by nuclear-weapon states, the Iranian envoy said, emphasizing that the international community must hold them accountable.
Balouji added that the Zionist regime is equipped with weapons of mass destruction, has carried out cyber and physical attacks against nuclear facilities, and has also assassinated scientists.
He noted that the Zionists have prevented nuclear disarmament in the region, urging the international community to put pressure on the regime to join the NPT as a non-nuclear-weapon party and subject their activities to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards.
“We believe that nuclear weapons are not deterrents, but tools of mass murder,” he said.
The Zionists, which pursue a policy of deliberate ambiguity about their nuclear weapons program, are estimated to possess 200 to 400 nuclear warheads in their arsenal, making them the sole possessor of non-conventional arms in the Middle East region.
The illegitimate entity has, however, refused to either allow inspections of its military nuclear facilities by the IAEA or sign the NPT.
What has emboldened Tel Aviv to accelerate its nuclear activities, according to observers, is the support that it receives from the United States and Europe, which are both highly critical of Iran’s peaceful nuclear energy program.
In his address, the Iranian diplomat further explained that nuclear disarmament through total elimination could be a simple solution, adding that the use of chemical or biological weapons should be rejected and all the conventions in this regard must be implemented.
The United States has blocked the Biological Weapons Convention’s strengthening and total elimination of chemical weapons and had reservations about the 1925 Geneva Protocol, he said.
Cyberspace and outer space could only be utilized for peaceful purposes, he said, expressing Iran’s opposition to reckless decision-making or unilateral interpretations in reference to two regrettable examples of irresponsible behavior by the U.S. and the Zionists regime.