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Disarmament

Disarmament refers to the reduction or elimination of a country's military forces, capabilities, or weapons. It encompasses measures to reduce stockpiles of weapons, curb development and production, and prevent transfers to others. It can be unilateral, bilateral, regional, or multilateral. Disarmament is distinct from arms control, which aims to regulate and manage weapons to reduce risks without necessarily eliminating them.

Types include nuclear disarmament (reducing or eliminating nuclear arsenals), conventional disarmament (reducing conventional arms), chemical and

Key mechanisms include international treaties and norms, verification and transparency, dismantling facilities, and destruction of weapons.

- Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) aims to prevent spread of nuclear weapons while pursuing disarmament.

- Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) and its OPCW verification regime.

- Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) prohibiting development and stockpiling of biological agents.

- Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) establishing a ban on nuclear tests and a global monitoring system (though

- Regional and bilateral accords such as the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT/START) and INF.

Challenges include security concerns, verification and compliance, enforcement, political will, and potential strategic instability from disarmament

biological
disarmament,
and
broader
strategic
or
modern
arms-control
measures
such
as
weapons
non-proliferation
and
demobilization.
Multilateral
treaties
create
obligations
and
verification
regimes,
for
example:
not
yet
in
force).
progress.
Proponents
argue
disarmament
can
reduce
the
risk
of
war
and
free
up
resources;
critics
warn
that
rapid
moves
without
reliable
guarantees
can
threaten
security.
The
international
community
continues
to
pursue
gradual,
verifiable
disarmament
through
treaties,
transparency,
and
confidence-building
measures.