U.S. Funds Released for Shchuchye
A U.S.-sponsored chemical demilitarization program in Russia received
a boost October 23 after President George W. Bush signed the fiscal
year 2003 defense appropriations bill, which released funds that
had been withheld from fiscal years 2000-2002 for the planning,
design, or construction of a chemical weapons destruction facility
at Shchuchye.
Congress requires that the president certify Russian compliance
with certain conditions, such as abiding by arms control treaties,
in order to provide funding for Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR)
programs, which include nuclear, biological, and chemical nonproliferation
and disarmament projects.
In fiscal year 2000, President Clinton certified Russian compliance,
but Congress denied funding for Shchuchye. In addition to
the usual CTR certification requirements, some Republicans who questioned
Russias commitment to destroying its chemical weapons stockpile
denied funding again and inserted a provision into the fiscal year
2001 defense authorization bill imposing additional conditions on
funds for the chemical demilitarization program. Among the requirements,
the secretary of defense must certify that Russia has declared its
entire chemical weapons stockpile and that Moscow is committed to
allocating at least $25 million per year for Shchuchyes
construction and operation.
The Pentagon has been unable to certify these conditions and has
therefore been prevented from spending money on Shchuchye
that was allocated after the legislation was passed. The 2003 appropriations
bill provides the president with the authority to waive the certification
requirements, allowing the Defense Department to spend the backlogged
funds and money to make up the 2000-2001 gap.
President Bush had asked Congress to grant him the authority to
waive the conditions and allow the Shchuchye project to proceed.
The House and Senate finally agreed to grant a one-year waiver authority
as part of the appropriations bill in order to release the money
withheld from fiscal years 2000-2002.
The congressional requirements and the Pentagons decision
not to certify Russias compliance, however, might still prevent
expenditure of funds allocated for fiscal year 2003. Waiver authority
for 2003 funds was not in the appropriations bill. Although the
fiscal year 2003 defense authorization bill could grant the president
waiver authority for the general CTR program and the chemical destruction
project, Congress has not yet completed it.
Before Congress passed the appropriations bill, Senator Richard
Lugar (R-IN), a key proponent of the CTR program in Congress, accused
his colleagues in July of dangerous foot-dragging on the waiver
issue. He declared, It has been more than five years since
the U.S. and Russia, each, ratified the Chemical Weapons Convention
but no Russian chemical weapons are being destroyed
. Almost
two million rounds of chemical weapons in relatively small and discrete
shells [are] awaiting elimination at Shchuchye. Lugar
urged Congress to grant the president permanent waiver authority.
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