Antarctica is the only place on Earth where people have agreed not to fight. Not because of love for peace, but because the cold makes war meaningless. But it is this cold that created the warmest example of international cooperation. There are no armies, no borders, no permanent population. There is science, logistics, and a common goal — to understand the planet we live on. Antarctica has become a symbol of what humanity can agree on when it comes to survival.
The Antarctic Treaty, signed on December 1, 1959, became a historic precedent. 12 countries, including the Soviet Union and the United States, agreed that the continent would be used only for peaceful purposes. Military bases, nuclear tests, and burial of radioactive waste are prohibited. The freedom of scientific research is guaranteed. This was not just a treaty — it was an experiment in the depoliticization of an entire continent. And it works to this day.
Today, there are about 80 scientific stations in Antarctica, belonging to different countries. But in practice, these stations operate as a single network. Scientists from the United States and Russia take ice samples together. Chinese and Australians share weather data. Europeans and Japanese repair each other's equipment. In emergency cases — fire, illness, accident — nationality does not matter. Here, a code of mutual assistance is in effect, which is rarely encountered on the Big Earth.
Why does cooperation in Antarctica work? Because it is beneficial to everyone. Studying the climate, the ozone hole, glaciers, the magnetic field — these are tasks that cannot be solved alone. Data exchange accelerates science. And science is the only meaning of presence here. Science unites stronger than ideology. And this is the best lesson Antarctica gives to humanity.
Antarctica is the last wilderness on the planet. But it is fragile. Melting ice, pollution, tourism — all these threats know no borders. Therefore, countries cooperate in the protection of the continent. The Protocol on Environmental Protection (1991) prohibits the extraction of minerals, introduces strict norms for waste disposal. This is collective responsibility that has no national boundaries. And it works.
Seven countries have territorial claims in Antarctica. But the treaty has frozen these claims. No one can expand or defend them by force. This is a unique situation: the dispute remains, but it does not hinder cooperation. Everyone understands: the icy land is not worth war. But this is a diplomatic miracle — the ability to agree without resolving the dispute.
The model of Antarctica has already been used as an example for space. The Moon, Mars, asteroids — there too, the principles of "common good" can work. The idea that space beyond national jurisdiction should serve everyone originated here. Antarctica is a prototype of the future humanity if it decides to live without wars.
Antarctica is not just a cold continent. It is hope. Hope that people can unite for a common cause. That science can be stronger than politics. That even in the most severe conditions, one can find a common language. If we can agree on the icy desert, perhaps we can agree on everything else.
Новые публикации: |
Популярные у читателей: |
Новинки из других стран: |
![]() |
Контакты редакции |
О проекте · Новости · Реклама |
Молдавская цифровая библиотека © Все права защищены
2019-2026, LIBRARY.MD - составная часть международной библиотечной сети Либмонстр (открыть карту) Сохраняя наследие Молдовы |
Россия
Беларусь
Украина
Казахстан
Молдова
Таджикистан
Эстония
Россия-2
Беларусь-2
США-Великобритания
Швеция
Сербия