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NonProliferation

Nonproliferation refers to international efforts to prevent the spread of weapons of mass destruction and the materials, technologies, and know-how used to develop them. The term is most often applied to nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons and to the delivery systems that can carry them, but it also encompasses related dual-use goods and technologies that could enable proliferation.

Nuclear nonproliferation is the best-developed component. The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), opened for signature in 1968

Other components include chemical and biological nonproliferation measures. The Australia Group coordinates export controls on chemical

Nonproliferation policy is supported by United Nations Security Council resolutions, regional organizations, and national legislation. Effective

Ongoing negotiations and reforms aim to strengthen the legal architecture and enforcement mechanisms.

and
entering
into
force
in
1970,
is
the
central
legal
framework.
It
rests
on
three
pillars:
nonproliferation,
disarmament,
and
the
peaceful
use
of
nuclear
energy.
States
party
commit
to
refrain
from
acquiring
nuclear
weapons,
undertake
measures
toward
disarmament,
and
cooperate
in
peaceful
nuclear
technology
under
safeguards.
The
International
Atomic
Energy
Agency
(IAEA)
verifies
compliance
through
safeguards
agreements
and
inspections.
Export-control
regimes
such
as
the
Nuclear
Suppliers
Group
(NSG)
coordinate
controls
on
sensitive
nuclear
exports,
while
the
Comprehensive
Nuclear-Test-Ban
Treaty
(CTBT)
seeks
to
ban
all
nuclear
tests,
though
it
has
not
yet
entered
into
force.
Proposals
for
a
Fissile
Material
Cut-off
Treaty
(FMCT)
have
faced
negotiations
challenges.
and
biological
agents
and
related
equipment;
the
Wassenaar
Arrangement
manages
dual-use
and
conventional
arms
transfers.
The
Proliferation
Security
Initiative
and
various
sanctions
regimes
are
used
to
interdict
illicit
transfers
and
pressure
violators.
Regional
and
bilateral
agreements
supplement
global
instruments.
implementation
requires
robust
export
controls,
transparent
reporting,
verification,
and
sustained
international
diplomacy.
Despite
progress
since
the
Cold
War,
challenges
persist,
including
gaps
in
verification,
illicit
procurement
networks,
rapid
advances
in
dual-use
technology,
and
geopolitical
tensions
that
can
hinder
cooperation.