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Summary of U.S. Implementation of the "13 Practical
Steps on Nonproliferation and Disarmament" Agreed to at the
2000 NPT Review Conference
April 4, 2002
Press Contacts: Daryl
Kimball, Executive Director, (202) 463-8270 x107 Paul
Kerr, Research Analyst, (202) 463-8270 x102
In 1995 and 2000, when the nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty (NPT) was under review, the nuclear-weapon states and non-nuclear-weapon
states recognized that to preserve the objective of global nuclear
nonproliferation, the nuclear-weapon states needed to reiterate
and update their NPT Article VI disarmament commitments. On the
basis of their May 1995 agreement to strengthen the treaty review
process and pursue specific principles and objectives for nuclear
nonproliferation and disarmament, the nuclear and non-nuclear NPT
states-parties reached consensus to indefinitely extend the NPT.
In May 2000, the nuclear-weapon states reaffirmed this approach
by agreeing to a 13-point program of action on disarmament steps
related to Article VI. This month, as delegates from over 100 states
gather in New York for the first meeting on the NPT since the 2000
review conference, they will find that very little progress has
been achieved toward these and other nuclear security objectives.
For an overview of the NPT, see www.armscontrol.org/factsheets/nptfact.asp.
For the full text of the 2000 NPT review conference final document,
see www.armscontrol.org/act/2000_06/docjun.asp.
The following are the 13 "practical steps" outlined in
the 2000 NPT review conference final document (shown in italics)
and a brief analysis of progress made toward their implementation.
1. Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
The importance and urgency of signature and ratification, without
delay and without conditions and in accordance with constitutional
processes, to achieve the early entry into force of the Comprehensive
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.
- Opened for signature in 1996, the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty
(CTBT) prohibits all nuclear weapon test explosions. For the treaty
to enter into force, 44 countries designated as "nuclear-capable
states" must ratify the agreement. Of those 44, three-India,
Pakistan, and North Korea-have not signed the treaty and another
ten, including the United States and China, have signed, but not
ratified, the accord. Although 34 countries-including Russia and
Ukraine, two of the 44 nuclear-capable states-completed treaty
ratification since the 2000 NPT review conference, the treaty
is unlikely to enter into force soon, particularly since the Bush
administration has said it does not plan to ask the Senate to
reconsider its October 1999 rejection of U.S. ratification of
the treaty.
2. Nuclear Test Moratorium
A moratorium on nuclear weapon test explosions or any other
nuclear explosions pending entry into force of that Treaty.
- No country has tested a nuclear weapon since India and Pakistan
conducted their nuclear tests in May 1998. While the Bush administration
claims it does not foresee a need to conduct a nuclear test in
the near term, it has also not ruled out future U.S. nuclear testing.
A congressionally established panel recommended in March 2002
that the United States reduce to between three months and one
year the amount of time needed to prepare for and conduct a nuclear
test after a decision to do so. Current U.S. test readiness is
a two to three year period. The Bush administration has asked
Congress to fund work to study modifying existing U.S. nuclear
weapons for new military missions, which the administration claims
would not require nuclear testing. And the administration has
also expressed interest in developing new types of nuclear weapons,
which would likely require nuclear tests.
3. Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty
The necessity of negotiations in the Conference on Disarmament
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 in accordance
with the statement of the Special Coordinator in 1995 and the mandate
contained therein, taking into consideration both nuclear disarmament
and nuclear non-proliferation objectives. The Conference on Disarmament
is urged to agree on a programme of work, which includes the immediate
commencement of negotiations on such a treaty with a view to their
conclusion within five years.
- A 66-member body that works by consensus, the Conference on
Disarmament (CD) has not started negotiations on a fissile material
cutoff treaty, which would ban production of highly enriched uranium
and plutonium for weapons purposes. Member countries, including
the United States and Russia, are considering a work program proposal
that would include establishing a CD ad hoc committee to negotiate
such a treaty, but China does not support the proposal because
it does not include parallel negotiations on the prevention of
an arms race in outer space. The United States opposes negotiations
on outer space, although it would be willing to discuss, not negotiate
on, the subject. This standoff has stalemated the conference,
which has not held any treaty negotiations except for a couple
of weeks in August 1998, since the CD completed the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty in 1996.
4. Nuclear Disarmament Discussions
The necessity of establishing in the Conference on Disarmament
an appropriate subsidiary body with a mandate to deal with nuclear
disarmament. The Conference on Disarmament is urged to agree on
a programme of work which includes the immediate establishment of
such a body.
- The current work program proposal under consideration by the
CD to negotiate a treaty banning production of fissile material
also includes setting up a CD subsidiary body to "exchange
information and views" on practical steps toward nuclear
disarmament. While many conference members favor negotiations
on the issue, it is clear that they would be willing to accept
the current offer to hold talks on the subject. This proposal,
if eventually approved, would satisfy the NPT review conference's
call "to deal with," not negotiate on, the issue of
nuclear disarmament. However, beginning such talks hinges on the
conference finding an acceptable approach to addressing the outer
space issue.
5. Irreversibility of Nuclear Reductions
The principle of irreversibility to apply to nuclear disarmament,
nuclear and other related arms control and reduction measures.
- In its latest proposal on a "legally binding agreement"
to reduce U.S. and Russian nuclear arms to 1,700-2,200 deployed
strategic warheads each by 2012, the Bush administration has rejected
the principle of irreversibility in favor of flexibility. Briefing
reporters in Geneva on March 22, U.S. Undersecretary of State
for Arms Control and International Security John Bolton said the
United States wants the final U.S.-Russian agreement to include
a mechanism that would permit either country to exceed agreed
limits on the number of deployed strategic warheads if they notified
the other. In addition, the Bush administration is now planning
to store rather than destroy most of the warheads removed from
delivery vehicles. In keeping with this plan, the Bush administration
will keep enough warheads in a "responsive force" to
enable the United States to deploy an additional 2,400 strategic
nuclear weapons within a three-year period after completing the
reductions called for by the proposed U.S.-Russian agreement.
While past strategic reduction agreements between the two countries
did not require the destruction of actual warheads, the agreements
did call for destruction of delivery vehicles. Presidents Bill
Clinton and Boris Yeltsin agreed in March 1997 to pursue "measures
relating to
the destruction of strategic nuclear warheads,"
as part of a START III framework. The Bush administration does
not support such an approach in the current talks with Russia.
6. Elimination of Nuclear Arsenals
An unequivocal undertaking by the nuclear-weapon States to accomplish
the total elimination of their nuclear arsenals leading to nuclear
disarmament to which all States parties are committed under Article
VI.
- At the 2000 NPT review conference, the nuclear-weapon states
pledged themselves unequivocally to the ultimate elimination of
nuclear weapons. Under Article VI of the NPT, nuclear-weapon states
are legally bound "to pursue negotiations in good faith on
effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race
at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a Treaty on
general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international
control." Mexican Ambassador Antonio de Icaza heralded the
2000 NPT statement, declaring, "What has always been implicit
has now become explicit."
- Bush administration officials contend that the United States
supports the NPT and that "it understands its special responsibility
under Article VI." At the upcoming meeting, U.S. officials
will likely highlight President Bush's effort to secure an agreement
to reduce U.S. and Russian strategic deployed nuclear arsenals
to no more than 2,200 by 2012. However, the administration plans
to store most of the warheads rather than destroy them in future
strategic reductions that are currently being discussed with Russia,
moving Washington away from the weapons-elimination pledge. In
addition, the recently completed U.S. nuclear posture review projects
that the United States will retain nuclear weapons for the indefinite
future. China also reportedly has a strategic modernization effort
underway to expand the size of its current nuclear arsenal.
7. The START II, START III, and ABM Treaties
The early entry into force and full implementation of START
II and the conclusion of START III as soon as possible while preserving
and strengthening the ABM Treaty as a cornerstone of strategic stability
and as a basis for further reductions of strategic offensive weapons,
in accordance with its provisions.
- The Bush administration has taken actions that are in direction
opposition to the above-stated goals. By pursuing an agreement
with Russia to reduce deployed strategic nuclear warheads to a
level of 1,700-2,200 apiece, the United States has signaled it
will not seek entry into force of the START II treaty or to negotiate
a START III treaty as outlined by then-Presidents Bill Clinton
and Boris Yeltsin in March 1997. In setting the START process
aside, the United States and Russia will not be obligated to give
up multiple warheads (MIRVs) on missiles, as called for by START
II, and the United States is not seeking actual destruction of
warheads as proposed under the START III framework.
- After pledging to offer Russia amendments to modify the Anti-Ballistic
Missile (ABM) Treaty during the 2000 presidential campaign, President
George W. Bush did not do so, and he announced on December 13,
2001 his intention to withdraw from the treaty, which prohibits
Washington and Moscow from building nationwide strategic missile
defense systems. Unless President Bush decides to reverse his
decision, the U.S. withdrawal from the ABM Treaty will occur on
June 13 and the treaty will no longer be in force.
8. Securing Excess Nuclear Material
The completion and implementation of the Trilateral Initiative
between the United States of America, the Russian Federation and
the International Atomic Energy Agency.
- Started in 1996 between the United States, Russia, and the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the Trilateral Initiative seeks to
develop methods for the IAEA to secure and verify the peaceful
status of excess weapons-grade nuclear material in the United
States and Russia. Progress has been made in developing technical
criteria and other arrangements for a model verification system,
and both Washington and Moscow have already identified at which
storage facilities the IAEA will monitor their respective excess
plutonium, ensuring it is not returned to military use. Still
unresolved are issues over the scope of the verification system,
exact specifications for material subject to verification, and
the duration of the verification measures.
9. Other Nuclear-Weapon States' Actions
Steps by all the nuclear-weapon States leading to nuclear disarmament
in a way that promotes international stability, and based on the
principle of undiminished security for all:
- Further efforts by the nuclear-weapon States to reduce their
nuclear arsenals unilaterally
- The Bush administration originally proposed that U.S.-Russian
deployed strategic warhead reductions be undertaken unilaterally,
but Russia has insisted they be accomplished through a legally
binding, bilateral agreement. On February 5, 2002 Secretary of
State Colin Powell endorsed this general approach, which President
Bush later affirmed. Since the 2000 NPT review conference, no
nuclear-weapon state has reduced its arsenal, and China is actually
pursuing a strategic modernization program that the U.S. intelligence
community recently said could result in an increase in the number
of warheads China deploys on long-range ballistic missiles, from
approximately 20 today to 75 to 100 by 2015.
- Increased transparency by the nuclear-weapon States with regard
to the nuclear weapons capabilities and the implementation of agreements
pursuant to Article VI and as a voluntary confidence-building measure
to support further progress on nuclear disarmament
- The United States and Russia have pledged that their planned
deployed strategic nuclear reductions will be done in a transparent
and verifiable way, although they have not yet reached agreement
on the details.
- The further reduction of non-strategic nuclear weapons, based
on unilateral initiatives and as an integral part of the nuclear
arms reduction and disarmament process
- On September 27, 1991, President George H. W. Bush announced
that the United States would eliminate all of its ground-launched
nonstrategic nuclear weapons and withdraw all of its tactical
nuclear weapons from U.S. naval ships and submarines, as well
as all nuclear weapons associated with land-based naval aircraft.
He also asked Soviet leaders to reciprocate, which the Kremlin
pledged to do on October 5, 1991. While it is believed that Moscow
followed through on withdrawing its deployed tactical nuclear
weapons to Russia, these actions have not been verified. Currently,
the United States deploys approximately 1,700 nonstrategic nuclear
weapons, while Russia deploys an estimated 3,600 and retains several
thousand more nondeployed tactical nuclear weapons.
- Russia dismissed allegations in early 2001 that it had deployed
tactical nuclear weapons in its Kaliningrad Oblast, which sits
on the Baltic Sea between Poland and Lithuania. The United States
still deploys some 200-600 tactical nuclear gravity bombs in seven
European countries as part of its NATO obligations. In its April
1999 strategic concept, NATO described the nuclear forces based
in Europe as "an essential political and military link between
the European and North American members of the Alliance."
- While the proposed 1997 START III framework called for Moscow
and Washington to explore measures on tactical nuclear weapons,
neither the United States nor Russia has made the issue a priority.
- Concrete agreed measures to further reduce the operational
status of nuclear weapons systems
- While campaigning for president in May 2000, Bush said the United
States "should remove as many weapons as possible from high
alert, hair-trigger status." Bush's stated goal of reducing
the number of operationally deployed strategic nuclear warheads
by 2012 will effectively reduce the alert status of a large portion
of the U.S. arsenal, although the administration has indicated
that many of the warheads scheduled for retirement could be redeployed
within "weeks" or "months." The U.S. military
is considered capable of launching thousands of nuclear warheads
within minutes of being informed of a decision to do so by the
president. Russia is believed to have a similar capability.
- A diminishing role for nuclear weapons in security policies
to minimize the risk that these weapons ever be used and to facilitate
the process of their total elimination
- The Bush administration claims that its January 2002 nuclear
posture review seeks to reduce U.S. dependence on nuclear weapons,
but the posture review asserts that nuclear weapons are needed
to assure U.S. allies of U.S. security commitments; to dissuade
hostile countries from pursuing weapons of mass destruction capabilities;
to deter enemies from attacking U.S. territory, forces, or friends
and allies; and to defeat adversaries decisively. The nuclear
posture review also calls for new nuclear weapon capabilities
to attack hard and deeply-buried targets, to attack mobile and
relocatable targets, to defeat chemical and biological weapons
agents, and to improve accuracy and limit collateral damage. With
its emphasis on preserving flexibility in sizing its nuclear forces
and refurbishing and revitalizing the U.S. nuclear infrastructure,
the Bush administration is signaling that nuclear weapons are
considered essential and that the United States intends to keep
them long into the future.
- State Department spokesman Richard Boucher reiterated past U.S.
negative security assurance pledges in a statement made on February
22, 2002, in which he said, "The United States reaffirms
that it will not use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear-weapon
state-parties to the Treaty on the Nonproliferation of Nuclear
Weapons, except in the case of an invasion or any other attack
on the United States, its territories, its armed forces or other
troops, its allies, or on a state toward which it has a security
commitment carried out, or sustained by such a non-nuclear-weapon
state in association or alliance with a nuclear-weapon state."
- The credibility of this pledge was undermined, however, by subsequent
statements by administration officials responding to reports about
the nuclear posture review. On March 22, Secretary of State Powell
said, "For those nations that are developing these kinds
of weapons of mass destruction, it does not seem to us to be a
bad thing for them to look out from their little countries and
their little capitals and see a United States that has a full
range of options
to defend the United States of America,
the American people, our way of life, and our friends and allies."
- In recent years, Russia has also underscored an increasing reliance
on its nuclear forces as compensation for its declining conventional
force capabilities, and China has a strategic modernization plan
underway.
- The engagement as soon as appropriate of all the nuclear-weapon
States in the process leading to the total elimination of their
nuclear weapons
- The United States and Russia have thus far confined their negotiations
on nuclear weapons reductions to themselves. Other nuclear-weapon
states have indicated that they will not enter into such talks
until the U.S. and Russian arsenals drop to a level comparable
with theirs, which each remain in the low hundreds.
10. Excess Fissile Material
Arrangements by all nuclear-weapon States to place, as soon
as practicable, fissile material designated by each of them as no
longer required for military purposes under IAEA or other relevant
international verification and arrangements for the disposition
of such material for peaceful purposes, to ensure that such material
remains permanently outside of military programmes.
- The United States, Russia, and the IAEA are working on developing
a model verification regime for the storage of fissile material
declared in excess to security needs. This agreement, called the
Trilateral Initiative, would safeguard fissile material to ensure
that it is not used for military purposes. Additionally, Washington
and Moscow are continuing their "HEU Deal," under which
a private company in the United States purchases Russian fissile
material for use in U.S. power reactors. Under the Cooperative
Threat Reduction program, the United States is also helping Moscow
safely secure fissile material located in Russia. Additionally,
the Bush administration announced on January 23 that it would
continue implementing a U.S.-Russian agreement that would make
34 metric tons of military plutonium in each country unusable
for weapons purposes.
- Although France and Britain have committed not to produce additional
fissile material, they have not come to agreement on the disposition
of their stockpiles and have not engaged the IAEA in securing
their respective excess material. China, which has a strategic
modernization program under way that U.S. intelligence estimates
say could substantially increase the number of deployed Chinese
warheads, may actually be increasing its stockpile of weapons-grade
fissile material.
11. General and Complete Disarmament
Reaffirmation that the ultimate objective of the efforts of
States in the disarmament process is general and complete disarmament
under effective international control.
- While progress in nuclear disarmament has been slow, efforts
to eliminate chemical, biological, and conventional weapons have
also been dragging. The United States in July 2001 rejected a
draft verification protocol to the Biological Weapons Convention
and five months later called for the international community to
abandon the existing process to strengthen the accord. A number
of countries are believed to have or are pursuing chemical and
biological weapons programs. And the total value of the global
conventional arms trade has increased over the past three years
to total $36 billion in new arms agreements in 2000, according
to an August 2001 Congressional Research Service report.
12. Regular Reports on Disarmament Progress
Regular reports, within the framework of the NPT strengthened
review process, by all States parties on the implementation of Article
VI and paragraph 4 (c) of the 1995 Decision on "Principles
and Objectives for Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament,"
and recalling the Advisory Opinion of the International Court of
Justice of 8 July 1996.
- This statement at the NPT review conference marked the first
time that the nuclear-weapon states committed to regular reporting
on their implementation of Article VI. Since 1995, all five nuclear-weapon
states have voluntarily provided reports on their progress toward
implementing nuclear disarmament obligations. The 2002 meeting
is expected to yield an agreement on how official reporting should
be carried out.
13. Verification
The further development of the verification capabilities that
will be required to provide assurance of compliance with nuclear
disarmament agreements for the achievement and maintenance of a
nuclear-weapon-free world.
- Verification is one of the most crucial aspects of international
arms control and disarmament treaties. In recent years, NPT states-parties
have sought to strengthen safeguards through a proposal called
the "93+2 Program." Created in response to the IAEA's
inability to detect Iraqi and North Korean clandestine nuclear
weapons programs, the proposal seeks to increase transparency
among member states and employ newly developed verification techniques,
such as environmental sampling, while substantially shortening
the time period required before an inspection could take place.
These provisions were intended to be in place by 1995, but many
were delayed, causing them to be divided into two parts. With
regard to the first part, the IAEA has adopted no-notice inspections
and environmental sampling as part of its verification measures.
The second part requires countries to approve the Additional Safeguards
Protocol, which calls for increased IAEA inspection authority,
greater transparency, and exchanges of information among member-states.
To date, 61 countries, including all of the nuclear-weapon states,
have either signed the additional protocol or come to agreement
with the IAEA over the protocol.
- The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty is effectively verifiable
through a treaty-sanctioned global monitoring and verification
system as well as national intelligence means and civilian seismic
detection networks. However, the treaty has not yet entered into
force, and the preparatory commission for the CTBT Organization
(CTBTO) is working to establish an international monitoring system
(IMS) to detect any nuclear tests and explosions. Despite the
United States' lack of support for the CTBT, the United States
continues to pay 95 percent of its annual dues to the CTBTO to
support the establishment of the IMS. However, the United States
declared in August 2001 that it would not provide financial or
technical support for on-site inspections related to the treaty.
- U.S. and Russian reductions under the START I treaty have been
recently completed and fully verified under a system of intrusive
inspections and information exchanges. The United States and Russia
have said that they would like to use START I verification provisions
to verify compliance with the strategic arms agreement currently
under negotiation, although a senior U.S. official recently said
the United States has offered suggestions to reduce the "burdensomeness
of some of the inspections." START I is due to expire in
2009 unless extended by the treaty parties.
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