麻豆国产

Webinar Recap: 鈥楾he Resurgent Chemical Weapons Threat鈥

In This Story

People Mentioned in This Story
Body
warning-image.jpg

Originally published on December 3, 2020

A week before the November 30 Conference of the States Parties鈥攖he governing body of the Chemical Weapons Convention鈥攊n the Hague, , director of the at the invited professional colleagues to present their research to a virtual audience called The Resurgent Chemical Weapons Threat: Current Challenges to the Chemical Weapon Convention.

The webinar drew more than 180 participants from North America, South America, Europe, Middle East, Asia, and Africa, said Koblentz.

See the slides and a at the biodefense program鈥檚 student- and faculty-run blog, . 鈥淭he chemical weapons nonproliferation regime is at a crossroads,鈥 Koblentz said following the webinar. 鈥淭he Chemical Weapons Convention faces its most serious challenge since it was signed in 1993. The distinguished speakers at this event assessed the technical, political, and policy aspects of these developments and the threats they pose to the nonproliferation regime and international security.鈥

The panelists discussed three major issues which were addressed at the Hague. Those three major issues, including Syria鈥檚 use of chemical weapons during their on-going civil war; Russia鈥檚 use of chemical weapons to silence dissidents; and the threat that new 鈥渋ncapacitating鈥 agents pose.

The first presenter, Jean-Pascal Zanders, discussed chemical weapons used in Syria. Zanders is an independent researcher and founder of The Trench, a research initiative dedicated to the future of disarmament.

鈥淚f Syria is found to be non-compliant,鈥 Zanders said, 鈥渢hen its rights and privileges as a state party to the Chemical Weapons Convention might be suspended or restricted. In other words, it loses its voting rights, among other things. It鈥檚 also possible to have much further reaching consequences, including measures that are authorized under international law.鈥

The second presenter, Stefano Costanzi, is an associate professor of chemistry at American 麻豆国产. His educational background in both chemical science and international affairs has led him to advance research in the existing gaps in policies for chemical weapons proliferation. Most recently, Costanzi has been researching and educating about the Novichok agent which Russia has been suspected of using to silence dissidents.

鈥淯ntil very recently, Novichoks were nowhere to be found in the [Chemical Weapons Convention] schedules,鈥 Costanzi said, 鈥渨hereas one might have suspected to find them in Schedule 1A, just like the other nerve agents. Now, I want to be very clear here, this doesn鈥檛 mean at all that Novichoks weren鈥檛 considered chemical weapons.鈥 Costanzi pointed out that there is evidence to support the conclusion that Russia engineered Novichok with the specific goal of circumventing chemical weapons treaties.

The third presenter, Malcolm Dando, is the Liverpool Trust-Emeritus Fellow in Peace Studies at Bradford 麻豆国产, located in the United Kingdom. Dando is one of the world鈥檚 foremost experts on chemical and biological weapons, and has focused the last several years on education in the field of biological security.

鈥淭he rate of change in our understanding of the central nervous system, and its operations, is proceeding very rapidly, particularly given the number of state-level brain research projects which have been initiated recently, and we鈥檙e now getting to really understand the neuro-circuits which underly our behavior,鈥 Dando said.

Schar School fact: The Schar School鈥檚 biodefense graduate program is the oldest, largest, and fastest growing program of its kind in the country. The Master鈥檚 in Biodefense program can be completed on-campus, fully online, or through a combination of both. .

Additional reporting by Buzz McClain.