A/RES/80/24 GA
Nuclear disarmament : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly
80
Session
114
Yes
44
No
19
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | A/C.1/80/L.44 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | A/RES/80/24 |
| Category | POLITICAL AND LEGAL QUESTIONS |
| P5 Positions |
|
| UN Document | A/RES/80/24 ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — A/80/PV.52
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Full text of resolution
United Nations
A/RES/80/24
General Assembly
Distr.: General
3 December 2025
25-19815 (E)
*2519815*
Eightieth session
Agenda item 99 (b)
General and complete disarmament: nuclear disarmament
Resolution adopted by the General Assembly
on 1 December 2025
[on the report of the First Committee (A/80/534, para. 7)]
80/24. Nuclear disarmament
The General Assembly,
Recalling its resolution 49/75 E of 15 December 1994 on a step-by-step
reduction of the nuclear threat, and its resolutions 50/70 P of 12 December 1995,
51/45 O of 10 December 1996, 52/38 L of 9 December 1997, 53/77 X of 4 December
1998, 54/54 P of 1 December 1999, 55/33 T of 20 November 2000, 56/24 R of
29 November 2001, 57/79 of 22 November 2002, 58/56 of 8 December 2003, 59/77
of 3 December 2004, 60/70 of 8 December 2005, 61/78 of 6 December 2006, 62/42
of 5 December 2007, 63/46 of 2 December 2008, 64/53 of 2 December 2009, 65/56
of 8 December 2010, 66/51 of 2 December 2011, 67/60 of 3 December 2012, 68/47
of 5 December 2013, 69/48 of 2 December 2014, 70/52 of 7 December 2015, 71/63
of 5 December 2016, 72/38 of 4 December 2017, 73/50 of 5 December 2018, 74/45
of 19 December 2019, 75/63 of 7 December 2020, 76/46 of 6 December 2021, 77/65
of 7 December 2022, 78/53 of 4 December 2023 and 79/50 of 2 December 2024 on
nuclear disarmament,
Reaffirming the commitment of the international community to the goal of the
total elimination of nuclear weapons and the establishment of a nuclear-weapon-free
world,
Bearing in mind that the Convention on the Prohibition of the Development,
Production and Stockpiling of Bacteriological (Biological) and Toxin Weapons and
on Their Destruction of 19721 and the Convention on the Prohibition of the
Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on Their
Destruction of 19932 have already established legal regimes on the complete
prohibition of biological and chemical weapons, respectively, and determined to
achieve a comprehensive nuclear weapons convention on the prohibition of the
_______________
1 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 1015, No. 14860.
2 Ibid., vol. 1974, No. 33757.
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development, testing, production, stockpiling, loan, transfer, use and threat of use of
nuclear weapons and on their destruction, and to conclude such an international
convention at an early date,
Recognizing the urgent need to take concrete practical steps towards achieving
the establishment of a world free of nuclear weapons,
Bearing in mind paragraph 50 of the Final Document of the Tenth Special
Session of the General Assembly, the first special session devoted to disarmament, 3
calling for the urgent negotiation of agreements for the cessation of the qualitative
improvement and development of nuclear-weapon systems and for a comprehensive
and phased programme with agreed time frames, wherever feasible, for the
progressive and balanced reduction of nuclear weapons and their means of delivery,
leading to their ultimate and complete elimination at the earliest possible time,
Reaffirming the conviction of the States Parties to the Treaty on the
Non‑Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons4 that the Treaty is a cornerstone of nuclear
non‑proliferation and nuclear disarmament, and the importance of the decision on
strengthening the review process for the Treaty, the decision on principles and
objectives for nuclear non‑proliferation and disarmament, the decision on the
extension of the Treaty and the resolution on the Middle East, adopted by the 1995
Review and Extension Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the
Non‑Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,5
Stressing the importance of the 13 steps for the systematic and progressive
efforts to achieve the objective of nuclear disarmament leading to the total elimination
of nuclear weapons, as agreed to by the States Parties in the Final Document of the
2000 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of
Nuclear Weapons,6
Recognizing the important work done at the 2010 Review Conference of the
Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,7 and affirming its
22-point action plan on nuclear disarmament as an impetus to intensify work aimed
at beginning negotiations for a nuclear weapons convention,
Regretting that the tenth Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, held from 1 to 26 August 2022, and the ninth
Review Conference, held from 27 April to 22 May 2015, did not reach agreement on
the substantive final document,
Reaffirming the continued validity of agreements reached at the 1995 Review
and Extension Conference and the 2000 and 2010 Review Conferences until all their
objectives are achieved, and calling for their full and immediate fulfilment, including
the action plan on nuclear disarmament adopted at the 2010 Review Conference,
_______________
3 Resolution S-10/2.
4 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 729, No. 10485.
5 See 1995 Review and Extension Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons, Final Document, Part I (NPT/CONF.1995/32 (Part I) and
NPT/CONF.1995/32 (Part I)/Corr.2), annex.
6 2000 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,
Final Document, vol. I (NPT/CONF.2000/28 (Parts I and II)), part I, section entitled “Article VI
and eighth to twelfth preambular paragraphs”, para. 15.
7 2010 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,
Final Document, vols. I–III (NPT/CONF.2010/50 (Vol. I), NPT/CONF.2010/50 (Vol. II) and
NPT/CONF.2010/50 (Vol. III)).
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Reiterating the highest priority accorded to nuclear disarmament in the Final
Document of the Tenth Special Session of the General Assembly and by the
international community,
Reiterating its call for an early entry into force of the Comprehensive Nuclear-
Test-Ban Treaty,8
Noting the new strategic arms reduction treaty between the Russian Federation
and the United States of America, in order to achieve further cuts in their deployed
and non‑deployed strategic nuclear weapons, and stressing that such cuts should be
irreversible, verifiable and transparent,
Noting also the statements by nuclear-weapon States of their intention to pursue
actions in achieving a world free of nuclear weapons, as well as the steps taken to
reduce the role and number of nuclear weapons, and urging nuclear-weapon States to
take further measures for progress on nuclear disarmament within a specified
framework of time,
Recognizing the complementarity of bilateral, plurilateral and multilateral
negotiations on nuclear disarmament, and that bilateral negotiations can never replace
multilateral negotiations in this respect,
Noting the support expressed in the Conference on Disarmament and in the
General Assembly for the elaboration of an international convention to assure
non‑nuclear-weapon States, without exception or discrimination, against the use or
threat of use of nuclear weapons under any circumstances, and the multilateral efforts
in the Conference to reach agreement on such an international convention at an early
date,
Recalling the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice on the
legality of the threat or use of nuclear weapons, issued on 8 July 1996,9 and
welcoming the unanimous reaffirmation by all judges of the Court that there exists an
obligation for all States to pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion negotiations
leading to nuclear disarmament in all its aspects under strict and effective
international control,
Recalling also paragraph 176 of the Final Document of the Seventeenth
Conference of Heads of State or Government of Non-Aligned Countries, held on
Margarita Island, Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, from 13 to 18 September 2016,
in which the Conference on Disarmament was called upon to agree on a balanced and
comprehensive programme of work by, inter alia, establishing an ad hoc committee
on nuclear disarmament as soon as possible and as the highest priority, while the
necessity was emphasized of starting negotiations in the Conference on Disarmament,
without further delay, on a comprehensive nuclear weapons convention that sets, inter
alia, a phased programme for the complete elimination of nuclear weapons within a
specified framework of time,
Noting the adoption of the programme of work for the 2009 session by the
Conference on Disarmament on 29 May 2009,10 after years of stalemate, and
regretting that the Conference did not succeed in reaching consensus on a programme
of work for its 2025 session,
Reaffirming the proposals submitted by the States members of the Conference
on Disarmament that are members of the Group of 21 on the follow-up to the 2013
_______________
8 See resolution 50/245 and A/50/1027.
9 A/51/218, annex.
10 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Sixty-fourth Session, Supplement No. 27 (A/64/27),
para. 18.
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high-level meeting of the General Assembly on nuclear disarmament, pursuant to
Assembly resolution 68/32 of 5 December 2013, as contained in documents of the
Conference,11
Reaffirming also the importance and validity of the Conference on Disarmament
as the sole multilateral disarmament negotiating forum, and expressing the need to
adopt and implement a balanced and comprehensive programme of work on the basis
of its agenda and dealing with, inter alia, four core issues, in accordance with the rules
of procedure,12 and by taking into consideration the security concerns of all States,
Reaffirming further the specific mandate conferred upon the Disarmament
Commission by the General Assembly, in its decision 52/492 of 8 September 1998, to
discuss the subject of nuclear disarmament as one of its main substantive agenda
items,
Recalling the United Nations Millennium Declaration,13 in which Heads of State
and Government resolved to strive for the elimination of weapons of mass destruction,
in particular nuclear weapons, and to keep all options open for achieving that aim,
including the possibility of convening an international conference to identify ways of
eliminating nuclear dangers,
Underlining the importance of convening, as a priority, a United Nations high-
level international conference on nuclear disarmament to review the progress made
in this regard,
Recalling the high-level meeting of the General Assembly on nuclear
disarmament held on 26 September 2013, and the strong support for nuclear
disarmament expressed therein,
Recalling also action 25 of the Pact for the Future,14 in which Heads of State
and Government decided, inter alia, to recommit to the goal of the total elimination
of nuclear weapons, and seek to accelerate the full and effective implementation of
respective nuclear disarmament and non‑proliferation obligations and commitments,
Welcoming the commemoration of 26 September as the International Day for the
Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons, devoted to furthering this objective, as
declared by the General Assembly in its resolution 68/32 and subsequently welcomed
in its resolutions 69/58 of 2 December 2014, 70/34 of 7 December 2015, 71/71 of
5 December 2016, 72/251 of 24 December 2017, 73/40 of 5 December 2018, 74/54
of 19 December 2019, 75/45 of 17 December 2020, 76/36 of 6 December 2021, 77/47
of 7 December 2022, 78/27 of 4 December 2023 and 79/47 of 2 December 2024,
Recalling the declaration of the States members of the Agency for the
Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean on the
International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons, in Mexico City on
26 September 2025,
Expressing deep concern about the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of
any use of nuclear weapons,
Recalling the successful convening of the first, second, third and fourth
Conferences on the Humanitarian Impact of Nuclear Weapons, in Oslo on 4 and
5 March 2013, in Nayarit, Mexico, on 13 and 14 February 2014, and in Vienna on
_______________
11 See CD/1999 and CD/2067.
12 CD/8/Rev.9.
13 Resolution 55/2.
14 Resolution 79/1.
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8 and 9 December 2014 and on 20 June 2022, and recalling also that 127 nations have
formally endorsed the Humanitarian Pledge issued following the third Conference, 15
Recalling also the signing by the nuclear-weapon States, namely, China, France,
the Russian Federation, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
and the United States of America, of the Protocol to the Treaty on a Nuclear-Weapon-
Free Zone in Central Asia,16 in New York on 6 May 2014,
Recalling further the proclamation of Latin America and the Caribbean as a
Zone of Peace on 29 January 2014 during the Second Summit of the Community of
Latin American and Caribbean States, held in Havana on 28 and 29 January 2014,
Welcoming the entry into force of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear
Weapons17 on 22 January 2021 and the successful convening of the third Meeting of
States Parties to the Treaty in New York from 3 to 7 March 2025, and the latest
ratification by Ghana on 26 September 2025,
Reaffirming that, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations, States
should refrain from the use or threat of use of nuclear weapons in settling their
disputes in international relations,
Seized of the danger of the use of weapons of mass destruction, particularly
nuclear weapons, in terrorist acts and the urgent need for concerted international
efforts to control and overcome it,
1.
Urges all nuclear-weapon States to take effective disarmament measures
to achieve the total elimination of all nuclear weapons at the earliest possible time;
2.
Reaffirms that nuclear disarmament and nuclear non‑proliferation are
substantively interrelated and mutually reinforcing, that the two processes must go
hand in hand and that there is a genuine need for a systematic and progressive process
of nuclear disarmament;
3.
Welcomes and encourages the efforts to establish new nuclear-weapon-
free zones in different parts of the world, including the establishment of a Middle East
zone free of nuclear weapons, on the basis of agreements or arrangements freely
arrived at among the States of the regions concerned, which is an effective measure
for limiting the further spread of nuclear weapons geographically and contributes to
the cause of nuclear disarmament;
4.
Encourages States Parties to the Treaty on the South-East Asia Nuclear-
Weapon-Free Zone18 and the nuclear-weapon States to intensify ongoing efforts to
resolve all outstanding issues, in accordance with the objectives and principles of the
Treaty;
5.
Recognizes that there is a genuine need to diminish the role of nuclear
weapons in strategic doctrines and security policies to minimize the risk that these
weapons will ever be used and to facilitate the process of their total elimination;
6.
Urges the nuclear-weapon States to stop immediately the qualitative
improvement, development, production and stockpiling of nuclear warheads and their
delivery systems;
7.
Also urges the nuclear-weapon States, as an interim measure, to de-alert
and deactivate immediately their nuclear weapons and to take other concrete measures
to reduce further the operational status of their nuclear-weapon systems, while
_______________
15 See CD/2039.
16 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 2970, No. 51633.
17 A/CONF.229/2017/8.
18 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 1981, No. 33873.
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stressing that reductions in deployments and in operational status cannot substitute
for irreversible cuts in and the total elimination of nuclear weapons;
8.
Reiterates its call upon the nuclear-weapon States to carry out effective
nuclear disarmament measures with a view to achieving the total elimination of
nuclear weapons within a specified framework of time;
9.
Calls upon the nuclear-weapon States, pending the achievement of the
total elimination of nuclear weapons, to agree on an internationally and legally
binding instrument on a joint undertaking not to be the first to use nuclear weapons;
10. Urges the nuclear-weapon States to commence plurilateral negotiations
among themselves at an appropriate stage on further deep reductions of their nuclear
weapons, in an irreversible, verifiable and transparent manner, as an effective measure
of nuclear disarmament;
11.
Underlines the importance of applying the principles of transparency,
irreversibility and verifiability to the process of nuclear disarmament;
12. Also underlines the importance of the unequivocal undertaking by the
nuclear-weapon States, in the Final Document of the 2000 Review Conference of the
Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, to accomplish the
total elimination of their nuclear arsenals leading to nuclear disarmament, to which
all States Parties are committed under article VI of the Treaty, and the reaffirmation
by the States Parties that the total elimination of nuclear weapons is the only absolute
guarantee against the use or threat of use of nuclear weapons;19
13. Calls for the full and effective implementation of the 13 practical steps for
nuclear disarmament contained in the Final Document of the 2000 Review
Conference;
14. Also calls for the full implementation of the action plan as set out in the
conclusions and recommendations for follow-on actions of the Final Document of the
2010 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of
Nuclear Weapons, particularly the 22-point action plan on nuclear disarmament;
15. Urges the nuclear-weapon States to carry out further reductions of
non‑strategic nuclear weapons, including on unilateral initiatives and as an integral
part of the nuclear arms reduction and disarmament process;
16. Calls for the immediate commencement of negotiations in the Conference
on Disarmament, in the context of an agreed, comprehensive and balanced programme
of work, on a non‑discriminatory, multilateral and internationally and effectively
verifiable treaty banning the production of fissile material for nuclear weapons or
other nuclear explosive devices on the basis of the report of the Special Coordinator 20
and the mandate contained therein;
17. Urges the Conference on Disarmament to commence as early as possible
its substantive work during its 2026 session, on the basis of a comprehensive and
balanced programme of work that takes into consideration all the real and existing
priorities in the field of disarmament and arms control, including the immediate
commencement of negotiations on a comprehensive nuclear weapons convention;
_______________
19 2000 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,
Final Document, vol. I (NPT/CONF.2000/28 (Parts I and II)), part I, section entitled “Article VII
and the security of non-nuclear-weapon States”, para. 2.
20 CD/1299.
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18. Calls for the conclusion of an international legal instrument on
unconditional security assurances to non‑nuclear-weapon States against the threat or
use of nuclear weapons under any circumstances;
19. Also calls for the early entry into force, universalization and strict
observance of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty as a contribution to
nuclear disarmament, while welcoming the latest ratification by Papua New Guinea
on 13 March 2024;
20. Reiterates its call upon the Conference on Disarmament to establish, as
soon as possible and as the highest priority, an ad hoc committee on nuclear
disarmament in 2026 and to commence negotiations on a phased programme of
nuclear disarmament leading to the total elimination of nuclear weapons within a
specified framework of time;
21. Calls for the convening, as soon as possible, of a United Nations high-
level international conference on nuclear disarmament to review the progress made
in this regard;
22. Requests the Secretary-General to submit to the General Assembly at its
eighty-first session a report on the implementation of the present resolution;
23. Decides to include in the provisional agenda of its eighty-first session,
under the item entitled “General and complete disarmament”, the sub-item entitled
“Nuclear disarmament”.
52nd plenary meeting
1 December 2025
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