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Language: British Columnist Deplores “Weapons of Mass Destruction”A British newspaper columnist today called for the end of the use of the term “weapons of mass destruction” (see GSN, Jan. 7). “May I implore our leaders, and the journalists who cover these matters, to give the glib WMD phrase a long, long holiday? It’s overused, overwrought and, worst of all, over here,” London Times columnist Richard Morrison wrote. “Surely it isn’t beyond the combined wit of the geniuses in the White House and 10 Downing Street to think up a fresher cliche that disguises their real intentions just as effectively,” he added. The phrase “weapons of mass destruction” was used 2,000 times during White House press briefings last year, Morrison wrote, citing a U.S. academic. While the phrase was chosen by the American Dialect Society as “word of the year” for 2002, it also leads a list of phrases compiled by Lake Superior State University in Michigan that should cease to be used because of “misuse, overuse and general uselessness,” he added. The expanding use of the phrase “weapons of mass destruction” might have a more sinister purpose, Morrison wrote. Noting that most military experts only cite nuclear weapons as a true “weapon of mass destruction,” he suggested that the expansion of the term’s definition might be done to gain support for military action against Iraq. “Like all the best political euphemisms, it is vague enough to cover anything that the speaker wishes it to mean at any time in the future,” Morrison wrote. “Chemical and biological weapons may be vile, but they don’t destroy whole cities and their populations. Yet by including them in the catchall WMD phrase, our leaders are much more likely to find a reason to go to war,” he said (Richard Morrison, London Times, Jan. 24).
From January 24, 2003 issue.CD: Ambassadors Seek to Break Five-Year U.N. DeadlockFive former presidents of the U.N. Conference on Disarmament yesterday presented a program of work aimed at ending a five-year stalemate over such thorny issues as the prevention of an arms race in outer space and nuclear disarmament (see GSN, Jan. 22). The “five ambassadors” are calling for ad hoc committees to be set up on four sticking issues: guarantees not to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear states, nuclear disarmament, a ban on production of weapon-grade fissile materials and prevention of an arms race in space. They are also proposing the appointment of three special coordinators to oversee work on the subjects of new types of weapons of mass destruction, a comprehensive disarmament program and transparency in armaments. Belgian Ambassador Jean Lint introduced the plan on behalf of himself and the delegates from Algeria, Chile, Colombia and Sweden, all of whom have led the conference in the past. U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan welcomed “any proposals aimed at fostering consensus on the program of work” in a message delivered Tuesday by U.N. Geneva Director General Sergei Ordzhonikidze. “These efforts,” he said, “have given rise to new hopes for dealing with the issues of nuclear disarmament and the prevention of an arms race in outer space” (U.N. release, Jan. 23).
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