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Arms Experts Rap Congress for Backing Bush Administrations
Nuclear Weapons Ambitions; A Setback for Addressing
Global Nuclear Dangers
For Immediate Release: November 7, 2003
Press Contacts:
Daryl
Kimball, Executive Director, (202) 463-8270 x107;
Christine Kucia, Research
Analyst, (202) 463-8270 x103
(Washington, D.C.): A congressional decision announced today to
allow the Bush administration to further explore new nuclear weapons
is a serious error that will be a setback to U.S. efforts
to persuade and prevent other nations from developing nuclear weapons,
according to the Arms Control Association, a nonpartisan membership
organization dedicated to promoting effective arms control policies.
As part of their consideration of the fiscal year 2004 defense authorization
bill, House and Senate legislators complied with a White House request
to repeal a 10-year-old ban on research leading to development of
new nuclear weapons with yields of less than five kilotons, so-called
low-yield weapons. They also approved Bush administration
proposals to continue researching new types of nuclear bunker
busters to destroy targets deep underground and shorten the
time required to prepare for a full-scale nuclear test from 24 months
to 18 months.
Congress and the Bush administration have made a mistake by
opening the door to a new wave of global nuclear weapons competition.
The diplomatic and security costs of the Bush administrations
proposals to explore new nuclear weapons far outweigh any marginal
benefits such arms might yield, said Daryl Kimball, executive
director of the Arms Control Association.
This sends a dangerous message that will hamper U.S. efforts
to prevent other nations from developing nuclear weapons,
he warned.
Lawmakers have signaled that they also harbor some unease with the
administrations plans to reinvigorate U.S. nuclear weapons
research and test preparations. While supporting research into new
low-yields weapons, legislators withheld authorization to actually
engineer, develop, and test new or modified nuclear bombs. And earlier
this week, congressional appropriators cut proposed 2004 funding
for studying bunker busters in half-from $15 million to just $7.5
million-and barred the Department of Energy from spending $4 million
of an approved $6 million for new weapon concepts until it submits
a report on U.S. nuclear stockpile requirements.
This congressional skepticism may help head off future, more dangerous
Bush administration nuclear arm proposals, Kimball noted. Further
efforts by this or another administration to win necessary congressional
approval for engineering, development, and testing of new or modified
nuclear weapons will be vigorously opposed and must be defeated,
he said.
Expert scientists have contradicted the arguments made by proponents
of low-yield nuclear weapons, saying that new and smaller
nuclear warheads are dirty, dangerous, and unnecessary. Dr. Sidney
Drell, a Stanford University physicist and longtime advisor to the
U.S. nuclear program, wrote in Arms Control Today in March, Even
a lower-yield, one-kiloton nuclear warhead (1/13 the size of the
Hiroshima bomb) detonated at a depth of 20-50 feet would eject more
than one million cubic feet of radioactive debris, forming a crater
about the size of ground zero at the World Trade Center. Drell
added, The result would be a highly contaminated zone and
atmospheric fallout that would endanger civilians, as well as military
personnel who might be ordered into the area.
The perceived usabilityof such weapons is a dangerous
notion, Kimball argued. Nuclear weapons should not be considered
just another weapon in our arsenal. They are mass terror weapons
whether used by the United States or another country, he stressed.
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The Arms Control Association is an independent, nonprofit membership
organization dedicated to promoting public understanding of and
support for effective arms control policies to address security
threats posed by nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons, as well
as conventional arms.
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