Categories
Selected Articles

Latin America at the Crossroads: Reviving Nuclear Leadership for a Safer World

Spread the love

In 1967, Latin America and the Caribbean made history. With the Treaty of Tlatelolco, it became the world’s first nuclear-weapon-free zone, positioning itself as a moral compass in a world on the brink of annihilation.

For decades, the region led by example in disarmament affairs — but sadly, that is no longer true. Today, it stands at a crossroads — one defined not only by what it chooses to do, but by what it risks by remaining silent regarding the prohibition of nuclear weapons.

Reawakened global fears of nuclear use

The current geopolitical landscape — with an increased complicity by war in Ukraine, rising U.S.-Iran tensions and the modernization of nuclear arsenals — has reawakened global fears of nuclear use.

From AI-integrated weapons systems to doctrines that lower the threshold for nuclear deployment, humanity is closer to nuclear incidents than at any point since the Cold War. Amid this crisis, Latin America’s voice is notably subdued.

While 13 Latin American and Caribbean states have signed and ratified the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), major regional players remain outside its framework. Brazil continues to invest in enriched uranium for energy and naval propulsion, Argentina possesses significant uranium reserves and Colombia has shown little interest in signing the treaty.

This absence creates a vacuum in regional leadership and undermines the disarmament legacy Latin America once proudly upheld.

From vanguard to vacancy

Latin America and the Caribbean were once a leader in disarmament diplomacy. The creation of the Treaty of Tlatelolco laid the foundation for subsequent nuclear-weapon-free zones in Africa, Southeast Asia and Central Asia.

The region’s leadership helped shift global attitudes and created legal precedents for future treaties — including the TPNW. Yet, that energy has decreased.

Political volatility, economic fragility and growing military-industrial ties — often fostered by external actors (private companies) — have diluted the region’s commitment to disarmament diplomacy.

Passive complicity

In some cases, non-alignment has turned into passive complicity. Fears of alienating NATO allies, geopolitical uncertainty and a lack of public debate have stalled progress.

Brazil, for instance, insists that the TPNW could conflict with its civilian nuclear program — a claim not fully supported by legal analysis because nuclear energy is not directly connected with nuclear weapons.

Colombia, meanwhile, has focused more on internal security and organized crime — sidelining global arms control debates. These positions typically reflect not national disinterest, but a challenge to keep relevant disarmament on the current political agenda of the region.

Nuclear weapon states exerting influence

Meanwhile, nuclear-armed powers continue to exert influence in Latin America — through arms deals, defense pacts and infrastructure investments.

For example, both the United States and China are competing for influence in critical infrastructure — including ports and satellite monitoring stations — sometimes linked to dual-use technologies.

These partnerships, while not openly military, create subtle yet real pressures on countries to maintain strategic ambiguity rather than take firm disarmament stances.

A humanitarian and development imperative

The Treaty is not merely symbolic. It reasserts the illegitimacy of nuclear weapons under international law, establishes victim assistance obligations and reinforces the humanitarian rationale for disarmament.

Notably, it is the first treaty to incorporate environmental remediation measures — a critical point for biodiversity-rich countries in the Latin American and Caribbean region.

Radioactive contamination from nuclear testing, while not directly inflicted upon the region, has disproportionate effects on Indigenous populations elsewhere — linking global nuclear justice with local environmental justice.

Supporting Latin America’s development goals

Endorsing the Treaty aligns with Latin America’s developmental goals. Healthcare, infrastructure, education and climate resilience — the pillars of any progressive regional agenda — stand in direct competition with rising global military expenditures.

According to a 2023 report by the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), nuclear-armed states spent over $91 billion on nuclear weapons in a single year. Based on the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute’s (SIPRI) latest report, military expenditure has risen consistently in the last 10 years. The opportunity cost is staggering — schools not funded, roads not built and vaccines not distributed.

For Latin America — a region fighting against historical economic inequality and the long-term effects of dealing with internal conflicts — disarmament should be a development strategy.

The role of civil society

Latin American civil society is one of the most powerful, yet underutilized forces in the disarmament movement. Youth movements, feminist collectives, Indigenous organizations, faith-based institutions and academic think tanks have the credibility and moral authority to shift the conversation from elite diplomacy to grassroots urgency.

Reframing nuclear disarmament as an issue of social justice is key. Nuclear weapons represent the concentration of destructive power in the hands of a few, often at the expense of the Global South.

They exacerbate global hierarchies, extractive economies and environmental destruction. Latin America knows these systems all too well — and has the moral voice to contest them.

Organizations such as ICAN have already launched regional campaigns to raise awareness and pressure governments. But what is needed is a broader coalition. Artists, journalists and educators must become cultural champions in humanitarian disarmament — challenging the myth that nuclear weapons equal security.

A geopolitical window: Risks and opportunities

Current global instability also creates unexpected opportunities. The erosion of trust in international institutions and the evident failures of traditional security doctrines open space for alternative voices.

Latin America can position itself as a counter-model — one that prioritizes peace, sustainability and cooperative security.

Furthermore, the Treaty of Tlatelolco provides a unique legal and moral foundation for advancing this leadership. It shows that regional commitments can influence global norms.

However, the treaty must not be treated as a historical relic — it must be reinterpreted as a living document that invites countries to take the next step: Joining the TPNW.

Towards a moral reawakening

Latin America is more than a geographic entity — it is a moral agent. At a time when nuclear dangers are intensifying, the region has the potential to rise again — not through military might, but through principled leadership.

Its silence could be tomorrow’s regret. But today’s action could be a cornerstone of global hope.

The question is not whether Latin America matters in the nuclear debate. It is whether it will choose to matter again.

The post Latin America at the Crossroads: Reviving Nuclear Leadership for a Safer World appeared first on The Globalist.


Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Why Trump’s Attitude on Ukraine Is Changing

Spread the love

Following the Pentagon announcing a pause on weapons, the U.S. president said Ukraine must defend itself from Russia.

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Trump Officials Keep Getting Impersonated by A.I. ‘Vishing’ Scammers—What to Know and How to Protect Yourself

Spread the love

Donald Trump talks on the phone in the McLaren garage prior to the F1 Grand Prix of Miami at Miami International Autodrome in Miami, Fla., on May 5, 2024.

“If you receive a message claiming to be from a senior US official, do not assume it is authentic,” the FBI warned in May. The public service announcement was written as advice for everyone but noted that many of the targets of “malicious actors” impersonating U.S. officials are other “current or former senior US federal or state government officials and their contacts.”

[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

While every corporate worker today is probably familiar with HR-mandated trainings to try to combat “phishing”—scams that involve deception over email—and while “smishing,” which occurs over SMS messages, has become more prevalent, the FBI warned that “malicious actors are more frequently exploiting AI-generated audio to impersonate well-known, public figures or personal relations to increase the believability of their schemes” in what is known as “vishing.”

Read More: From Scams to Music, AI Voice Cloning Is on the Rise

And officials at the highest levels of government have been impersonated and targeted, according to reports.

On Tuesday, the Washington Post reported that Marco Rubio, President Donald Trump’s Secretary of State and acting National Security Adviser, was the latest to be impersonated by an unknown individual, who used AI to mimic his voice and writing style in voice and text messages on the non-government encrypted communications app Signal to “three foreign ministers, a U.S. governor, and a U.S. member of Congress,” according to a State Department cable sent July 3.

Read More: What Is Signal, the Messaging App Used by Trump Officials, and Is It Safe?

Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the White House on July 7, 2025

According to the cable sent to State Department staff, the imposter sought to manipulate officials with the “goal of gaining access to information or accounts,” which is a criminal offense. Officials declined to comment to the Post on the specific targets of the impersonation campaign and the contents of messages sent.

Rubio is not the first in the Trump Administration to be impersonated. 

In late May, the Wall Street Journal reported that federal authorities were looking into an unknown individual’s impersonation of White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles to try to reach out to prominent Republican senators and congressmembers as well as business executives.

Wiles claimed her personal cellphone’s contacts were hacked, and while calls and messages did not come from her number, recipients claimed the voice on the line sounded like hers, leading officials to believe AI technology was utilized.

Chief of Staff Susie Wiles at the White House on July 7, 2025.

As the White House and FBI said at the time that they were taking the incident seriously, Trump seemed unbothered, commenting: “Nobody can impersonate Susie. There’s only one Susie.”

The incidents within Trump’s orbit are particularly concerning as the President himself reportedly utilizes a personal cellphone and has answered calls from numbers he doesn’t know.

“It was only a matter of time,” David Axelrod, a former senior strategist to President Barack Obama, posted on X about the Rubio report. “This is the new world in which we live and we’d better figure out how to defend against it because of its implications for our democracy and the world.”

Nicholas Thompson, CEO of The Atlantic, whose editor in chief was unintentionally added to a Signal group chat earlier this year with top officials including Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and former National Security Adviser Mike Waltz, who was dismissed from the role after the controversy, posted on X: “One reason top government officials are supposed to use secure platforms—instead of regular text services—is so that inevitable scams like this are less likely to work.”

The State Department told the Post that it would “carry out a thorough investigation and continue to implement safeguards to prevent this from happening in the future.”

How to avoid being a victim of ‘vishing’

Generative AI has made it much easier to mimic other people’s voices, which in turn facilitates vishing scams. 

The FBI in its May PSA urged people to try to verify the identity of a caller or voicemail. “If contacted by someone you know well via a new platform or phone number, verify the new contact information through a previously confirmed platform or trusted source,” it recommended.

You should also pay close attention to a contact’s tone and word choice to try to differentiate a legitimate phone call or voice message from a malicious impersonation, though it warned that “AI-generated content has advanced to the point that it is often difficult to identify.”

“When in doubt about the authenticity of someone wishing to communicate with you, contact your relevant security officials or the FBI for help,” the PSA said, adding: “The FBI requests victims report any incident to your local FBI Field Office or the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at www.ic3.gov. Be sure to include as much detailed information as possible.”

Rev, an AI-transcription software company, outlines in a blog three distinct differences between an AI-generated voice and a human voice: a flat-speaking tone (generative-AI has difficulty replicating emotion and sentiment), slurred unnatural speech including stumbling on phrases or uncommon words, and strange background noises like repeated crackling. Though Rev also warns: “As generative AI continues to improve, synthetic audio will sound more and more like we do.”

Computer-security company McAfee pointed out several other potential signs of a vishing attack, including an unsolicited or unprompted phone call, an aggressive assertion of authority, and an urgent request for sensitive information like social security numbers.

“Somewhere in the script for a vishing attack, the caller will ask for information. It may start with something harmless, like asking to confirm your address. If they can get you talking, they will soon ask for more valuable information like a social security number,” McAfee warns. “It is a red flag when someone needs you to give them information immediately. Vishing attackers use the fear of harmful consequences to pressure victims into sharing data. They will tell you that you need to act now or that the call is your final opportunity to fix a problem.”

The Department of Veterans Affairs also issued general guidelines on how to prevent getting scammed over the phone, including signing up for the Federal Trade Commission’s Do Not Call registry to reduce robocalls, not providing personal details or payment information over the phone, and, simply, hanging up when you feel things aren’t right.


Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Church may not be an international corporation, but Synod office seems to love business meetings – Crux | Taking the Catholic Pulse

Spread the love


Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Longtime AP journalist Paul Shin, who covered South Korea’s turbulent modern history, dies at 84

Spread the love

Longtime AP journalist Paul Shin, who covered South Korea’s turbulent modern history, dies at 84 [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Hamas used sexual violence as ‘weapon of war’ in 2023 attacks

Spread the love

The document builds on other investigations by international and Israeli human rights groups and the United Nations.

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Motorcyclist (20s) dies in Co Laois crash

Spread the love

A man, aged in his 20s, has died following a single-vehicle motorcycle crash in Co Laois on Tuesday night

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Legal action expected over loyalist bonfire sparking concern in Belfast

Spread the love

It is one of an estimated 300 bonfires set to be lit over July 10-11 ahead of the annual Orange Order marches on July 12th

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Jailed Kurdish militant leader urges PKK fighters to disarm ahead of symbolic peace ceremony

Spread the love

Jailed Kurdish militant leader urges PKK fighters to disarm ahead of symbolic peace ceremony [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Donald Trump Threatened Putin and Xi He Would Bomb Moscow, Beijing: Audio

Spread the love

The newly released audio captured Trump talking about his conversations with Putin and Xi.

Spread the love