Ljubljana

09 May 2016

Secretary-General's message to NATO Conference on Disarmament

Mr. Kim Won-soo, Under-Secretary-General and High Representative for Disarmament Affairs

I am pleased to greet the annual NATO Conference on disarmament, non-proliferation and arms control.

The United Nations attaches great importance to its invaluable partnerships with NATO and other regional organizations and arrangements across the world. These groupings are many and various, from the Organisation for Security Cooperation in Europe, to ASEAN to, of course, NATO.

NATO, as a regional collective security institution, continues to have an essential role to play in disarmament and arms control efforts, both regionally and globally.
I encourage NATO to enhance its engagement in this area, and work together with regional countries to reduce tension, build confidence and advance constructive dialogue.

The United Nations welcomes NATO’s commitment to our shared goal of a world free of nuclear weapons, as expressed through your declaration in 2012.

Beyond traditional security threats, the world faces new threats that NATO is well placed to help address. Cyber- and outer space represent new military frontiers where developments threaten to outpace our  response capacities. Emerging technologies such as autonomous weapons, and ever-more sophisticated missiles, are similarly challenging to collective security.

Threats are especially acute where such hazards intersect. The nexus between chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear weapons, cyber security and terrorism is a case in point.

We need to cooperate with agility and creativity to respond to these 21st-century concerns, just as we continue to strive for shared solutions to the security dilemmas we inherited from the 20th century.

The United Nations looks forward to working with important security institutions such as NATO to achieve our shared goals of security and peace.