SIPRI YEARBOOK 1997

 Contents
Introduction
Major armed conflicts
Armed conflict prevention, management and resolution
The Middle East peace process
Russia: conflicts and its security environment
Europe: in search of cooperative security
Military expenditure
Military research and development
Arms production
The trade in major conventional weapons
Multilateral military-related export control measures
Nuclear arms control
The Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty
Chemical and biological weapon developments and arms control
Conventional arms control
Arms control and disarmament agreements
Chronology 1996

12. The Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty*
Eric Arnett


* Chapter summary from the SIPRI Yearbook 1997: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997).

The Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) was completed and opened for signature in 1996. China's acceptance of the treaty marked a watershed in its arms control policy. By the end of 1996 the majority of states had signed it and only India had declared unconditionally that it would not. India's refusal to sign could prevent the treaty from achieving its full legal force, although the international norm against testing is universally accepted.

Although modernization of delivery systems has become more important than modernization of warheads, the CTBT has an important effect on both established arsenals and proliferation.

Appendix 12A gives the text of the CTBT.
Appendix 12B, by Ragnhild Ferm, provides data on nuclear explosions in 1945-96.

 [Home page button] Homepage
<http://editors.sipri.se/pubs/yb97/ch12.html > - updated 9 Feb 2001 -
Address enquiries concerning this page to Editorial Department or Gerd Hagmeyer-Gaverus (webmaster) -
© SIPRI 1997.