
MANCHESTER (CNS): The United Kingdom (UK) should “forsake” its nuclear arsenal and spend the money it saves on helping the poorest people of society, the Catholic bishops of England, Scotland and Wales said in a statement on January 11.
They said the United Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons offered an opportunity to build peace through dialogue rather than the threat of mutual destruction.
They said that the treaty, which was signed by 122 countries in 2017 and will come into legal force on January 22, was a “historic milestone on the path to nuclear disarmament.”
The treaty creates a legally binding instrument for the prohibition of nuclear weapons with a view to their total eradication.
Britain has not signed the treaty. Other countries with nuclear arsenals—Russia, the United States, China, France, Israel, India, North Korea and Pakistan—also have not signed.
The bishops said in their joint statement that the treaty could serve to help countries “refocus on genuine peacebuilding rooted in dialogue, justice, respect for human dignity, and care for our planet.”
The statement was signed by Bishop Declan Lang of Clifton, chairperson of the International Affairs Department of the Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales; Bishop William Nolan of Galloway, representing the Commission for Justice and Peace of the Bishops’ Conference of Scotland; and Auxiliary Bishop William Kenney of Birmingham.
“We urge support for the treaty and repeat our call for the UK to forsake its nuclear arsenal,” the statement continued, adding that “the resources spent on manufacturing, maintaining and upgrading these weapons of mass destruction should be reinvested to alleviate the suffering of the poorest and most vulnerable members of our society, for the common good of all peoples.”
The bishops went on to urge to UK government “to strengthen its arms control regulations, tackling the manufacture and sale of other weaponry, which continues to destroy so many lives throughout the world.”
The UK’s nuclear arsenal is limited to the Trident warheads carried on four Vanguard-class strategic nuclear submarines based at Faslane Bay on Gare Loch in the west of Scotland.
One of the submarines is always at sea, ensuring that the UK has the capability of firing a nuclear missile at any time.
In 2016, despite objections from the Catholic Church, politicians in London voted to replace the fleet with Dreadnought class submarines, which will come into service in 2028.