1 / 7

Anti Nuclear Weapon Protests

Anti Nuclear Weapon Protests. By L eo Matlock. 2 Waves of Protests. First Wave – 1958 – 1963 - Creation of CND and use of famous peace sign. Anti weapon emotions still high following US attacks on Japan. Second Wave – 1980 – 1989

melina
Télécharger la présentation

Anti Nuclear Weapon Protests

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Anti Nuclear Weapon Protests By Leo Matlock

  2. 2 Waves of Protests • First Wave – 1958 – 1963 - Creation of CND and use of famous peace sign. Anti weapon emotions still high following US attacks on Japan. • Second Wave – 1980 – 1989 • CND revived, END Created. Furthered by deployment of missiles by US on European soil in opposition to Russia.

  3. First Wave 58-63 • Britain announces intention to develop H Bomb, triggers anti nuclear emotion. • CND created, initially intends to liaise with Labour party to create change. • CND momentum & lack of support from Labour means CND becomes a movement in itself. • CND support decreases greatly after Test Ban treaty and start of Vietnam war distracts activists.

  4. First Wave – Protest Methods • March to Aldermaston, a weapons base, from London. • Attempts to obtain parliamentary/political support from Labour party. Labour in 1960 passes unilateral opposition to nuclear weapons motion after pressure from CND. • Committee of 100 was a ‘militant’ ally of CND. Supported by most members, not leadership. Practiced illegal activity - civil disobedience, sit down protests, marches. Preached non violent methods, urged members to be non violent, and for the most part this was followed. • First Wave – All significant theory and practice was non violent

  5. Second Wave 80-89 • Revitalised following USA plan to deploy Pershing II missiles in Germany to combat the USSRs development of Cruise missiles – Europe as a whole threatened. • END created – focus on Europe. • CND members, 4000 in 79 – 100’000 in 84 • CND fragmented slightly and became more of an umbrella focus for smaller groups, Green CND, Student CND Trade Union CND etc etc.

  6. Second Wave Protests • CND abandoned anti civil disobedience stance, although remained non violent. • Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp, sit in protest and civil disobedience next to intended nuclear weapons site. Non violent to people, although property was attacked and vandalised. • European unity – organised simultaneous demonstrations across Europe & USA. Protesters totalled millions on various days between 81 and 83 and against visit of Reagan in 82. • INF Treaty between US and Soviets meant anti nuclear weapons protests were not longer urgently needed and the issue fell quickly out of mainstream politics. • Compared to First Wave - More radical, more people involved, wider variety of forms of protest, more support from organised groups but remained non violent.

  7. Conclusions • Pretty much all non violent. • The fact that it was generally pacifists that were demonstrating was a key reason for this. Although helped by sporadic promotion of non violent methods by organisations • Variety of forms of non violent protest, sought political support, marches, sit ins, petitions, protests, when coordinated across Europe saw great success • Protests took part in developed, and mostly democratic countries, more freedom of movement/speech. Campaigning against a policy rather than government itself helped focus the protests on matter at hand, controlling influence. • Saw major successes as a whole. First Wave set precedent and mobilised support, important in the successes of second wave. Pressured US & USSR into INF in 87. Millions of protesters during 80s peaking in 83. “During the 1980s, a strong anti-nuclear war movement made the notion of a world without nuclear weapons seem possible”

More Related