Obama to call for nuclear-free world in speech

PRAGUE (Reuters) – US President Barack Obama will  call for the elimination of all nuclear weapons across the  globe, in remarks today he hopes will lend credibility to  his message in atomic disputes with Iran and North Korea.
Visiting Prague during an eight-day visit to Europe, Obama  plans to deliver what his aides have billed as a major speech on  weapons proliferation.

Obama, who is making his debut on the world stage, said in  Strasbourg, France on Friday that he would lay out an agenda to  secure the world’s loose nuclear materials and halt the spread  of illicit weapons.

He added that he wanted to offer an agenda “to seek the goal  of a world without nuclear weapons.”
“Even with the Cold War over, the spread of nuclear weapons  or the theft of nuclear material could lead to the extermination  of any city on the planet,” Obama said.

Obama, a former US senator who succeeded President George  W Bush in January, has long shown interest in the issue of  halting weapons proliferation and wants to make it a signature  foreign policy issue for his new administration.
“The president has been very focused on these issues of  proliferation for many years,” White House Deputy National  Security Adviser Denis McDonough told reporters.

“Tomorrow, I think you’ll hear the president, in a very  comprehensive way, outline many of the things that he’s been  talking about and working on for some time,” McDonough said.

While in Prague, Obama will also discuss climate change and  energy security with the 27 leaders of European Union countries  at a summit hosted by the Czech EU presidency, undermined by a  government collapse last week.
Thousands of Czechs are expected to turn up for Obama’s  speech at a square outside the mediaeval Prague Castle, with the  panorama of the historic Czech capital in the background.