Weaponization of the outer space
could pose serious threats to the world, so measures are urgently
needed to prevent this from happening, a senior Chinese diplomat
said in Geneva on Thursday.
"It is in the interest of all countries to protect the humanity
from the threat of outer space weapons," Chinese Ambassador for
Disarmament Affairs Cheng Jingye told a plenary session of the UN'
s Conference on Disarmament (CD).
According to the ambassador, the deployment of weapons in outer
space would bring unimaginable consequences.
"The outer space assets of all countries would be endangered,
mankind's peaceful use of outer space threatened, and international
peace and security undermined," he said.
Cheng stressed to the 65 member states of the CD that "prevention
is far better than facing the consequences."
"It is true that so far there are still no weapons in outer space,
but this should not become our excuse for sitting idly by," he
said.
"The history of the development of nuclear weapons constantly
reminds us that once outer space weapons become full-fledged, how
difficult it would be to control them and to prevent their
proliferation, let alone to eliminate them," he warned.
"We simply cannot afford to delay actions and wait until the
deployment of outer space weapons and an arms race in outer space
become a reality. The price would be too high," he added.
Cheng said the effective way to prevent outer space weaponization
was to conclude a new international legal instrument.
"There is a sound basis and the conditions are ripe for negotiating
such a legal instrument," he said, noting that there has been
growing awareness and broad ground on the importance of prevention
of an outer space arms race.
The ambassador recalled that in 2002, seven countries, namely
Russia, China, Indonesia, Belarus, Vietnam, Zimbabwe and Syria,
jointly presented a working paper to the CD.
The working paper, in a form of a
treaty, puts forward detailed proposals on all composing elements
of a new legal instrument on outer space security, he said.
The CD is focusing talks this month on prospects for launching
negotiations on prevention of arms race in outer space.
The United States and Britain are almost alone among the CD's 65
member states in opposing the start of the negotiations.
(Xinhua News Agency June 9, 2006)