Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

World|Wed, Jul. 08 2009 06:26 PM EDT

Ecumenicals, Evangelicals Hail U.S.-Russia Plan to Slash Nuke Piles

By Eric Young|Christian Post Reporter

Correction appended:

Christian advocates for a world free of nuclear weapons said Tuesday that they were encouraged by the commitment of Presidents Barack Obama and Dmitry Medvedev to slash nuclear stockpiles by about a third though some pointed out that the move is not enough.

“It is heartening that the leaders of the United States and Russia have now made a preliminary agreement and public commitment to achieve specific cuts in each country's stockpiles of strategic nuclear weapons,” expressed the Rev. Dr. Samuel Kobia, general secretary of the World Council of Churches.

“Their proposed cut is an encouraging initiative and a step forward on the difficult but essential journey that the world must take to free itself from the spectre of self-destruction,” he added Tuesday.

On Monday, Obama and Medvedev signed a series of agreements and joint statements, ranging from cooperation on Afghanistan to the resumption of military cooperation.

The centerpiece agreement of the presidents’ summit in Moscow was the replacement to the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START), which expires Dec. 5. The planned replacement pact, which Medvedev called a “reasonable compromise,” calls for each side to reduce strategic warheads to a range of 1,500 to 1,675, and strategic delivery vehicles to a range of 500 to 1,100 within seven years.

Current limits allow a maximum of 2,200 warheads and 1,600 launch vehicles.

In his statement Tuesday, WCC head Kobia said it was necessary that the United States and Russia –possessors of most of the world’s nuclear weapons – lead nuclear disarmament by concrete example.

“[W]e believe that by doing so they will gradually gain the moral authority needed to encourage other states in eliminating these weapons of mass destruction,” Kobia expressed.

Jessica Wilbanks, campaign manager for the Two Futures Project, expressed similar sentiments but said the new agreement is not yet going far enough.

“The reductions are relatively modest, and the announcement lacks an articulation of the real danger we face from continuing to rely on nuclear weapons as a means of security,” said Wilbanks, whose new movement of anti-nuke Christians has been endorsed by a number of prominent evangelicals.

Though she hailed the “mere fact that the Moscow Summit took place” and said the agreement was definitely good news, Wilbanks affirmed that the world “deserves more from the U.S. and Russia, which currently hold 95 percent of the world’s arsenal of nuclear weapons.”

“Ask God to stir their hearts, and pray that the critical first step of the nuclear arms reductions through today’s Moscow Summit will bloom into an appropriately urgent commitment to nuclear disarmament led by the U.S. and Russia,” she urged concerned believers.

Founded by Baptist minister Tyler Wigg-Stevenson, the Two Futures Project seeks to educate and mobilize Christians on the issue of nuclear weapons – an issue that, until more recently, was typically addressed by more liberal Christian groups, such as the WCC, which has called for the abolition of nuclear arms since shortly after their inception. Continue »

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  • artm »
    Fri Jul 10, 2009 7:29 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    where is the discernment of the church today.? all this agreement will do is weaken America. which just might be the plan of God, it will bring about God's judgment against a people that have rejected his word.

  • Wed Jul 08, 2009 11:07 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    We need to think through a new passive "communication dimension" of foreign policy initiative that initially seems to serve most free-world interests: task military grade communication and observation satellites and drone platforms to enable "public and/or media access" to observe events and or report out information in sealed off societies that refuse to allow the media to do their free market reporting of observations.

    While this may prove embarrassing from time to time it would only apply to countries that restrict or prohibit the free market media from doing their job. Rules of engagement would obviously need to be carefully thought through.

    Free the media or we will enable your actions to speak for themselves to the world. There is nothing more compelling to change tyrants than 4 or 5-billion wittinesses. Would this serve only the agents of change and not the agents of freedom and liberty? Yes it could be used against or for, our goals. There would be no guarantee it would work for our national interests at all times. On the other hand, it's not as though we concede any heretofore unknown spy technologies, and with low level drones flying above 55,000 feet, we have a virtual bird's eye view of every bloody nose, license plate, and untied shoelace. At least give it a trial run.

    http://umc-unofficiallaymanopenforum.ning.com/forum/topics/permagod-1

    Rich

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