"Though we have achieved progress, our work is not over. That is why I support the mission of the Arms Control Association. It is, quite simply, the most effective and important organization working in the field today."
The New Nuclear Proliferation Crisis
For over five decades, the United States has sought to make the                acquisition and development of nuclear weapons more technically                challenging and less acceptable. Republican and Democratic leaders                alike have worked to restrain unbridled nuclear weapons competition                and to stop the spread of these deadly weapons through the nuclear                Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) of 1968 and associated diplomatic                strategies. 
               Even as the nonproliferation system has become more sophisticated,                the challenges it confronts have become more complex. Over the last                decade, the NPT has endured successive crises involving Iraqi and                North Korean nuclear weapons programs. Iran now appears to be on                the verge of a nuclear weapons capability. Non-NPT member states                India, Pakistan, and Israel have advanced their nuclear weapons                programs with relative impunity. The possibility of terrorist acquisition                of nuclear weapons has added a new layer of risk.
               In the face of these problems, it has become fashionable for many                U.S. policymakers to dismiss arms control and nonproliferation as                ineffective. Instead, they emphasize the role of pre-emptive military                action and the pursuit of new nuclear-weapon capabilities to dissuade                and destroy adversaries seeking weapons of mass destruction. Such                an approach would forfeit essential nonproliferation tools and provide                a false sense of security.
               In practical terms, military pre-emption is no substitute for a                comprehensive and consistent preventive approach. As the recent                U.S. experience in Iraq shows, wars cost lives and money and lead                to unintended consequences; nonmilitary solutions should not be                undervalued. Iraq’s nuclear program was actually dismantled                through special international weapons inspections, which likely                could have contained the Iraqi weapons threat if they had been allowed                to continue.
               Proliferation problems in North Korea and Iran defy easy military                solutions. In both cases, multilateral diplomacy aimed at the verifiable                halt of dangerous nuclear activities is the preferred course. Nuclear                proliferation must be met with firm resolve but not in a way that                creates an even more uncertain and dangerous future. Rather, the                United States must strengthen and adapt—not abandon—preventive                diplomacy and arms control. Nonproliferation efforts have succeeded                when U.S. leadership has been consistent and steadfast. 
               The NPT security framework has led several states to abandon their                nuclear weapons programs. The NPT is so broadly supported that,                in addition to the original five nuclear-weapon states, only three                clearly have nuclear arsenals and they are outside the NPT. Cooperation                with international inspections and safeguards against proliferation                are now a standard expectation of all states. U.S.-Soviet agreements                corralled their nuclear arms competition and increased transparency,                thereby reducing instability and the risk of nuclear war.
               Nevertheless, the evolving nature of the nuclear threat requires                a more comprehensive and robust global nonproliferation strategy.                First, the United States should fully support strengthened international                monitoring and inspection capabilities, which aid U.S. intelligence                and provide the basis for collective action against noncompliance.                Evidence of North Korea’s illicit nuclear weapons work was                discovered in 1992 as a result of that country joining the NPT and                agreeing to inspections. The dangerous extent of Iran’s nuclear                program has been revealed only through new international inspections.                
               Second, all cases of nuclear proliferation must be addressed. The                United States and other global powers can no longer ignore the possession                of nuclear weapons by their allies and friends. Although India and                Pakistan are not a direct threat to the United States, they do threaten                one another, and so long as Israel possesses nuclear weapons, others                in the region will likely seek them too. China has aided Pakistan’s                nuclear program, and in turn, Pakistan has aided North Korea and                Iran. 
               It is also time for the international community to consider new                ways to restrict access to dangerous nuclear technologies. The NPT                guarantee of access to “peaceful” nuclear technology and                the broad diffusion of that technology has allowed states such as                Iran to acquire uranium-enrichment or plutonium-production facilities                useful for weapons. The availability of the most weapons-relevant                technologies can be limited without denying access to basic and                legitimate nuclear power technology.
               Finally, the United States and other nuclear-weapon states must                reduce the role of nuclear weapons. To comply with their own NPT                disarmament commitments, they must actually dismantle—not test                and improve—their deadly stockpiles. In the long run, the continued                possession and threat of use of nuclear weapons by a few undermines                the security of all. Without more effective U.S. leadership in each                of these areas, the struggle against proliferation will fall short                and leave a more dangerous world for generations to come.