On May 11, 1995 C.E., diplomats packed a conference room in New York City and made a decision that reshaped the future of nuclear weapons — or at least the future of the effort to contain them. Without a vote, by consensus, parties to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty agreed to keep the agreement alive forever. What began as a 25-year experiment in collective security became a permanent fixture of international law.
What the evidence shows
- Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty: The NPT was opened for signature in 1968 C.E. and entered into force in 1970 C.E., with an original lifespan of 25 years before parties would decide its fate.
- Indefinite extension: At the 1995 C.E. Review Conference in New York City, more than 170 state parties agreed by consensus to extend the treaty with no expiration date — the outcome of sustained U.S. diplomatic efforts led by Ambassador Thomas Graham Jr.
- NPT membership: As of 2016 C.E., 191 states had become parties to the treaty, making it one of the most widely subscribed arms control agreements in history.
How the world got here
In the early 1960 C.E.s, the fear was not abstract. U.S. analysts predicted that 25 to 30 countries could possess nuclear weapons within two decades. The Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 C.E. had already brought the world close to catastrophe. Against that backdrop, the Eighteen Nation Committee on Disarmament — a United Nations-sponsored body meeting in Geneva, Switzerland — spent three years negotiating a treaty that could hold the line.
The NPT rests on a central bargain: non-nuclear states agree never to build nuclear weapons, and in exchange, nuclear-armed states agree to share peaceful nuclear technology and work toward eventual disarmament. The five recognized nuclear-weapon states — the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France, and China — are the same five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council, a coincidence of power that critics have never let pass without comment.
For 25 years the treaty held — imperfectly, but it held. When 1995 C.E. arrived and parties had to decide whether to let it expire or extend it, the diplomatic stakes were enormous. The consensus outcome was anything but guaranteed.
Why the 1995 extension mattered
A treaty with an expiration date is a different instrument than one without one. States calculating whether to build nuclear weapons factor in how long the rules will last. By removing the sunset clause, the 1995 C.E. conference sent a signal: this framework is not going away.
The extension also came with commitments. Parties agreed to strengthen the review process, work toward a Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty — which followed in 1996 C.E. — and pursue a zone free of weapons of mass destruction in the Middle East. That last commitment has remained largely unfulfilled, a source of ongoing tension within the treaty system.
The International Atomic Energy Agency, or IAEA, plays a central enforcement role under Article III of the treaty: non-nuclear states accept IAEA safeguards to verify that their nuclear activities remain peaceful. The Additional Protocol, adopted after the 1991 C.E. Gulf War revealed gaps in the inspection regime, further strengthened those verification tools.
The broader human picture
Arms control treaties are sometimes written as though they spring from nowhere — the product of great-power negotiation and little else. The NPT’s history is more layered than that. Pressure from non-aligned nations — many of them newly independent states from Africa, Asia, and Latin America — helped shape both the treaty’s terms and its three-pillar structure: nonproliferation, disarmament, and the peaceful use of nuclear energy. The insistence that non-nuclear states receive access to civilian nuclear technology was not a concession extracted from reluctant nuclear powers; it was a demand from the developing world that it be treated as a full partner in the nuclear age, not merely a subject of others’ rules.
The 1995 C.E. conference’s consensus outcome also reflected the end of the Cold War’s particular realignment. Newly independent states from the former Soviet Union — including Ukraine, Belarus, and Kazakhstan — had given up nuclear weapons they inherited, joining the treaty as non-nuclear states. Their participation made indefinite extension more meaningful and more achievable.
Lasting impact
The predictions from the 1960 C.E.s never came true. Instead of 25 to 30 nuclear states, the world in 2025 C.E. has nine — and four of those never joined the NPT. Whether that outcome is primarily the treaty’s doing, or the result of economics, security alliances, and political calculation, is a genuine debate among scholars. What is not in dispute is that the NPT became the backbone of an entire nonproliferation architecture: the Nuclear Suppliers Group controls the export of sensitive technology; the IAEA Additional Protocol tightens inspections; the 2017 C.E. Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons pushed further, though nuclear-armed states refused to join it.
The indefinite extension in 1995 C.E. kept that architecture intact and gave it a permanent legal foundation. In a world that has so far avoided a second nuclear weapon use after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, that foundation is not a small thing.
Blindspots and limits
The NPT’s critics are not wrong. The five recognized nuclear-weapon states still hold an estimated 12,000 to 13,000 warheads between them, and progress on the disarmament pillar — Article VI — has been halting at best. North Korea announced its withdrawal in 2003 C.E. and conducted its first nuclear test in 2006 C.E., the only state ever to do so; India, Pakistan, and Israel have never joined. The treaty also cannot easily address the dual-use problem: civilian nuclear reactors produce materials that can, under certain conditions, be redirected toward weapons. The gap between what the treaty promises and what it has delivered on disarmament remains wide, and the communities living downwind of past nuclear tests — many of them Indigenous peoples in the Pacific, Central Asia, and the American Southwest — were never made whole by any of these agreements.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the modern era
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