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"In my home there are few publications that we actually get hard copies of, but [Arms Control Today] is one and it's the only one my husband and I fight over who gets to read it first."

– Suzanne DiMaggio
Senior Fellow, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
April 15, 2019
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Statement Regarding the Report of the International Atomic Energy Agency on Its Investigation of Iran's Nuclear Program

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Statement by Daryl Kimball, Executive Director

For Immediate Release: June 15, 2004

Press Contacts: Paul Kerr, Nonproliferation Analyst, (202) 463-8270 x102; Daryl Kimball, Executive Director, (202) 463-8270 x105

(Washington, D.C.): The report by the Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency makes it clear that leaders in Tehran must go further to explain the details and ultimate purpose of Iran's nuclear program and should do so without further delay. Russia, Pakistan, and other states involved in nuclear trade with Tehran should fully cooperate with the IAEA's ongoing efforts to get a complete picture of the Iranian nuclear program.

Over the last two years, the IAEA has uncovered evidence that Iran is now closer to a nuclear weapons-making capability than previously believed. An IAEA investigation and inspections in early 2003 led the agency to report Nov. 10, 2003 that Iran had for many years pursued nuclear activities in violation of its nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) obligations. The latest report from the IAEA makes it clear that while Iran has sometimes grudgingly granted the IAEA access to the sites and facilities in question, a number of key issues regarding Iran's nuclear activities need to be clarified. The report finds that Iran has stopped uranium enrichment as it pledged last fall, but that it has continued to seek parts for such activities.

Leaders in Tehran should maintain their suspension of uranium enrichment activities and refrain from other projects that have military applications until international concerns about its nuclear program are resolved. Iran is legally permitted under the NPT to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes but this process can also be used to develop nuclear weapons.
Even with greater transparency under the Additional Protocol, which Iran signed last year and which allows more intrusive IAEA inspections, it is still possible that Iran might someday decide to withdraw from the NPT and pursue nuclear weapons.

In the long run, turning Iran away from nuclear weapons will require a new and more sophisticated joint U.S.-European-Russian strategy to reduce Iran's incentives to acquire nuclear weapons and increase the benefits of openness and compliance. An important element of such a strategy would be for the United States and Israel to reassure Tehran that it does not have to fear an attack by either country if Iran drops its pursuit of nuclear weapons, ends its support of terrorism, and stops threatening the existence of Israel.

The United States should also make clear that it does not support the possession of nuclear weapons by other countries, including Israel, India, and Pakistan, which are not party to the NPT. To avoid the perils of nuclear weapons, all states must comply with global rules against the development and possession of nuclear weapons. Leaders in Tehran cannot be allowed to justify their nuclear weapons ambitions by pointing to the nuclear bomb arsenals and activities of other countries.

Nevertheless, it is ultimately up to Iran to abide by its commitments not to develop nuclear weapons. Tehran should not use the behavior of others as a pretext for activities that go against its own security interests and threaten its neighbors. As Ali Akbar Salehi, Iran's former envoy to the IAEA, wisely noted in an interview June 9, acquiring nuclear weapons will not improve Iran's prestige and cannot buy more security, but only invite more dangers to Iran and the region.

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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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Arms Control Association Experts Criticize Bush Administration's Plan for Keeping Excessive Nuclear Stockpile

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Experts Urge Real Reductions of Nuclear Forces

 

For Immediate Release: June 4, 2004

Press Contacts: Daryl Kimball, (202) 463-8270 x107 Wade Boese, (202) 463-8270 x104

(Washington, D.C.): The Department of Energy announced yesterday that it had delivered an overdue and classified report to Congress on how many nuclear weapons the United States will keep in the future. While the Energy Department claims the U.S. nuclear stockpile "will be the smallest it has been in several decades" under the proposed Bush administration plan, experts at the Arms Control Association (ACA) said it still far exceeds U.S. security needs and reflects outdated Cold War-era thinking about nuclear weapons.

Few details about the new stockpile plan, which pertains to both deployed and stored warheads, have been made public.

What is known, however, is that U.S. operationally deployed strategic warheads will be reduced from the several thousands existing today to between 1,700 to 2,200 by the end of 2012 as called for by the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT), which the United States and Russia signed in May 2002. It is also apparent that the United States, under the new stockpile plan, will retain thousands of additional warheads in storage and is hedging toward building more warheads in the future. According to the Energy Department, the stockpile will be supported by a "responsive infrastructure," including plans for a new facility to make key nuclear bomb components, research into new nuclear weapon designs, and a heightened readiness to resume nuclear testing.

"The reality is that administration's nuclear stockpile plan does not significantly alter the number of existing nuclear warheads and delivery systems and therefore only marginally affects the residual nuclear potential of the United States and Russia," charged Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association. He explained that SORT did not require the destruction of a single warhead or delivery vehicle-only that they be stored apart, which means the United States will be preserving "thousands of reserve warheads that are costly to maintain and could be redeployed relatively quickly, making it difficult to predict total force levels over the next decade."

"The United States and Russia should not be making sleight-of-hand reductions, but actually destroying nuclear weapons and delivery systems," Kimball recommended. "Reductions coupled with preparations to build new nuclear weapons does not inspire confidence that this administration is serious about reducing the long-term role of nuclear weapons in U.S. security policy," Kimball added.

The United States currently deploys approximately 6,000 strategic nuclear warheads on its triad of land-based missiles, submarines, and bombers. Its entire nuclear force numbers approximately 10,000 total warheads. Russia currently deploys roughly 5,000 strategic nuclear warheads out of an estimated arsenal of some 20,000 total nuclear warheads.

Two years ago, the Pentagon indicated it planned to store up to 2,400 nuclear warheads in a state of readiness, enabling them to be returned to service within weeks, months, or at most three years after being removed from deployment. This so-called responsive force would constitute only part of the U.S. nuclear warhead reserve. It is unclear to what extent this proposal made it into the recently recommended stockpile plan.

Kimball stated, "It is in the U.S. national security interest to undertake more rapid and real cuts in its nuclear weapons stockpile to set an example for Russia. The nuclear threat from Russia today is that one of its thousands of warheads could be accidentally launched or stolen by terrorists so the United States should create the conditions necessary for Russian leaders to feel secure enough to dismantle their arsenal to the greatest extent possible. The administration's stockpile plan does not do that."

"The nuclear stockpile plan coupled with this administration's other nuclear weapons policies falls far short of President Bush's rhetoric that he would reduce U.S. reliance on nuclear weapons and cut those forces to the lowest level possible," said Wade Boese, research director of the Arms Control Association. "The administration is missing a grand opportunity to signal to other countries that nuclear weapons are not essential for security. Rather than eliminating thousands of obsolete, excess weapons, the administration continues to cling to them," he added.

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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

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Congressional Members and Nat'l Security Experts Say Bush's Costly and Counterproductive Nuclear Weapons Plans Should Be Shelved

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For Immediate Release: May 7, 2004

Press Contacts: Daryl Kimball, (202) 463-8270 x107 Wade Boese, (202) 463-8270 x104


(Washington, D.C.): Bush administration plans to spend tens of millions of dollars this year exploring new types of nuclear weapons will frustrate and undercut U.S. efforts to prevent other countries from acquiring or building up nuclear weapons arsenals, according to two leading Congressional Democrats and non-government national security experts May 4.

Congressional committees began earlier this week to consider the Bush administration's fiscal year 2005 budget request, including $9 million to investigate new nuclear weapon concepts, such as low-yield warheads; $27 million to continue research on modifying high-yield warheads to destroy targets buried deep underground; and nearly $30 million for a new nuclear bomb-making facility. Administration intentions to continue and advance these programs are clear and will cost at least hundreds of millions more.

Speaking at a press conference sponsored by the nonpartisan Arms Control Association, Representative John Spratt (D-S.C.), ranking member of the House Budget Committee, warned that the Bush administration proposals suggest, "This administration seems to believe that the United States can move the world in one direction while we ourselves move in a different direction."

"The challenges of nuclear proliferation, whether in Iran, North Korea, or in the recently uncovered Pakistani nuclear black market, will only be complicated if the United States pursues new nuclear weapons, sending the message that nuclear weapons are somehow desirable," added Representative Ellen Tauscher (D-Calif.) in a statement prepared for the press conference.

Recommending that the United States should "back away from the development" of new types of nuclear weapons, Spratt indicated that money would be more wisely spent on nonproliferation programs designed to safeguard and secure nuclear weapons and related materials in Russia, other former Soviet states, and elsewhere. "There's no better way to protect Americans from weapons of mass destruction than to eliminate those weapons at their source," said Spratt.

Tauscher also urged Congress not to fund the proposed weapons research. "Rather than rush to develop weapons that may prompt a new arms race, Congress should curtail these steps and engage in a serious debate over the role of nuclear weapons in the United States' defense posture," she stated.

Bush administration officials claim that the current U.S. nuclear stockpile is antiquated. They argue that new types of nuclear weapons that are either less powerful or more capable of destroying deeply buried targets will better persuade terrorists and so-called rogue regimes of U.S. willingness to use nuclear arms and, therefore, deter such adversaries from attacking the United States or stockpiling dangerous weapons.

In a March report to Congress, the administration asserted the new weapons research would only "slightly complicate U.S. nonproliferation diplomacy."

"That's a real understatement if I've ever heard one," said Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association. Kimball declared, "Not only would the proposed new weapons produce massive human, material, and political damage if used, but efforts to enhance the belief in the minds of adversaries that [the United States] might use nuclear weapons will only make it harder and harder to convince them to exercise nuclear restraint."

Charles Peña, director of defense policy studies at the Cato Institute, agreed. The development of new types of U.S. nuclear weapons "will actually propel countries to want to accelerate their nuclear weapons programs," Peña stated at the May 4 briefing. He further contended that regimes fearing a preemptive U.S. nuclear attack might be more willing to pass chemical, biological, or nuclear arms to terrorists because they could conclude that was the only way to strike the United States.

Another factor against developing nuclear weapons designed to go after targets deep underground is that such warheads won't work, said Frank von Hippel, a physicist and former assistant director for national security in the White House. He explained that warhead materials are not strong enough to "penetrate beyond tens of feet deep."

The United States currently deploys nearly 6,000 strategic nuclear warheads on bombers, missiles, and submarines, but is planning to whittle that total down to less than 2,200 warheads by Dec. 31, 2012.

Yet, the administration is calling for construction of a new facility for building the explosive cores or plutonium pits of U.S. nuclear weapons. This facility would churn out up to 450 pits a year based on the assumption that the United States will need to maintain more than 10,000 pits.

Von Hippel, who recently co-authored an Arms Control Today article on the proposed pit facility, argued that it greatly exceeds realistic requirements for maintaining the U.S. stockpile. The facility could cost up to $4 billion to complete and $300 million annually to operate.

Kimball condemned the administration's pit facility plan, as well as its new nuclear weapons research proposals, as both "costly and counterproductive."

A full transcript of the May 4 briefing with Congressman Spratt is available online at http://www.armscontrol.org/events/May_2004PressConference.asp.

Dr. von Hippel's article, "Does the United States Need a New Plutonium-Pit Facility?," is also available online at http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2004_05/FettervonHippel.asp.

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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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Full Proceedings of the Paul C. Warnke Conference on the Past, Present & Future of Arms Control Now Online

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For Immediate Release: April 2, 2004

Press Contacts: Daryl Kimball, Executive Director, (202) 463-8270 x107;
Wade Boese, Research Director, (202) 463-8270 x104

(Washington, D.C.): Top arms control and national security experts gathered recently for a one-day conference to analyze current and emerging dangers posed by nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons and ballistic missiles and to recommend solutions to curb these threats. A record of the conference's proceedings, including keynote speeches by Senators Joseph Biden (D-Del.) and Jack Reed (D-R.I.), is now available online in a PDF booklet at <http://www.armscontrol.org/system/files/WarnkePDFTranscript.pdf>.

At the conference, more than a dozen leading current and past security policymakers and practitioners spoke to a whole host of arms control issues.

The most immediate challenges to world security arise from long-standing conflicts in the Middle East, South Asia, and on the Korean Peninsula, where states already possess or are pursuing nuclear weapons. George Perkovich of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace argued that the "operational objective" in dealing with all nonproliferation cases is to prevent the use of nuclear weapons, followed closely by the need to make sure nuclear materials are not passed or leaked to terrorists. Robert Gallucci, Robert Einhorn, and Daniel Poneman all offered proposals on how to accomplish these goals for North Korea and Iran.

Senator Biden warned that Washington must not simply focus on other states' behavior. He said that U.S. research into new nuclear weapons sends the wrong message to other capitals. Biden declared, "Our search for new nuclear weapons has an aura of mindless devotion to nuclear war."

General Eugene Habiger, who was formerly responsible for all U.S. nuclear forces, urged that more must be done to get all current nuclear-weapon states involved in negotiations to reduce their arsenals. He criticized as too slow U.S. and Russian efforts to cut their nuclear forces and recommended, "It's time for us to get down to lower levels."

Although these tasks appear daunting, UN Under-Secretary General for Disarmament Affairs Nobuyasu Abe said past experiences promise hope. He asserted that the nuclear nonproliferation regime accomplished a "significant achievement" by preventing the world from becoming home to tens of nuclear-weapon states as had been predicted in the early 1960s. Still, Abe said it's time for states to "revitalize the arms control process, expand our common search for the practical means to achieve disarmament and nonproliferation goals, and to strengthen the ability to verify and secure compliance with nonproliferation and disarmament commitments."

Some Bush administration officials, however, have dismissed arms control as outdated and ineffective. Senator Reed argued otherwise, "Our nation must pursue comprehensive and practical efforts to deal with the shortcomings and unfinished parts of the global nuclear, chemical, and biological arms control regime in order to adapt to the new threats and the new technologies of the post-Cold War world. Let us expand and improve arms control, not condemn it."

The Arms Control Association, Georgetown University's Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, and its Center for Peace and Security Studies sponsored the Jan. 28 conference in honor of the late Paul C. Warnke. A member of the Arms Control Association Board of Directors for nearly two decades, Warnke was a leading architect of U.S. arms control policy as a former director of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency under President Jimmy Carter.

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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. Established in 1971, the Association publishes the monthly journal, Arms Control Today.

 

Arms Control Today Interview with David Kay on Iraq Inspections and Absence of Prohibited Weapons One Year After U.S. Invasion

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For Immediate Release: March 15, 2004

Press Contacts: Daryl Kimball, Executive Director, (202) 463-8270 x107;
Paul Kerr, Research Director, (202) 463-8270 x102

(Washington, D.C.): One year after the United States and Britain bypassed ongoing United Nations weapons monitoring and disarmament efforts and invaded Iraq, U.S.-led teams scouring the country have failed to uncover any prohibited Iraqi weapons stockpiles. In an Arms Control Today interview published this week, David Kay, the former head of the U.S. post-war weapons inspection effort-the Iraq Survey Group (ISG), reiterated his view that there were no significant chemical, biological, or nuclear weapons in Iraq. He suggested that previous, underrated UN weapons inspections played a vital role in constraining Iraq's weapons programs. When asked if going to war with Iraq was wise if "it was just a WMD-based decision," Kay replied, "It was not worth it."

Kay also addressed a range of other questions about his findings in Iraq. These include: the reasons why no significant prohibited weapons stockpiles have been uncovered, what the Iraq episode tells us about U.S. intelligence, and why the Iraqis failed to fully account for their past arms activities. Kay was interviewed March 5, 2004 by Arms Control Today editor, Miles Pomper, and Arms Control Association research analyst, Paul Kerr.

Kay noted, "Most intelligence reports from around the world said that the Iraqi chemical and biological programs had already been restarted and that they had weapons. Turns out, I think, those reports were wrong, and now we know they were wrong because inspections were more of a hindrance, and [the Iraqis] feared them more in the mid-90s than we anticipated."


Kay also commented on Vice President Dick Cheney's recent claims that there might still be weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Kay said, "I think most others at the working level recognized the correctness of the assessment that those weapons don't exist. … What worries me about the vice president's statements is, I think people who hold out for a Hail-Mary pass … delay the inevitable: looking back at what went wrong. I think we have enough evidence now to say that the intelligence process, and the policy process that used that information, did not work at the level of effectiveness that we require in the age that we live in."

Asked whether he thought the UN-mandated monitoring and verification system would have been effective if allowed to continue after March 2003, Kay responded that continued UN efforts may not have led to a fuller Iraqi disclosure. Still, he added, "I think in retrospect it is obvious that rigorous inspections and accompanying sanctions played an important role in limiting the possibilities of the Iraqis to restart their [prohibited weapons] program."

In the lead-up to the March invasion, UN weapons inspectors could not find evidence of active programs or stockpiles of prohibited chemical, biological, or nuclear weapons and were dismantling ballistic missiles that exceeded UN-mandated range limits. Although the inspectors could not account for discrepancies in Iraq's declaration on its programs and previous stockpiles, chief inspector Hans Blix warned against equating unaccounted-for stockpiles with existing weapons.

Kay told Arms Control Today that Iraq did not fully account for the destruction of their prohibited stockpiles because "some were destroyed in ways that the Iraqis were embarrassed to admit" and "some disappeared in the normal chaos and accidents that occurred" since the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s and the 1991 Persian Gulf War. Kay said the final ISG report would document that some weapons material and biological agents were disposed of in ways that were not approved of by the regime and dangerous to the health of people in Baghdad.

"I actually have come to the conclusion that international inspection is even more important now than it ever was. The on-the-ground examination of what's going on is irreplaceable as to what it can do," Kay said. He added, "the good news part of the story is: I think if there is effective inspection, the need for unilateral preemptive action becomes much less critical."

Excerpts from the Kay interview will appear in the April issue of Arms Control Today. The full transcript and other Arms Control Association resources on Iraq are available online at: <http://www.armscontrol.org/country/iraq/default.asp>.

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Arms Control Today is the monthly publication of the Arms Control Association (ACA). ACA is an independent, nonprofit membership organization dedicated to promoting public understanding of and support for effective arms control policies.

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Arms Control Experts Comment on Bush Nonproliferation Proposals

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Call Issued for a More Comprehensive Preventive Strategy to Devalue and Dismantle Nuclear Weapons

For Immediate Release: February 11, 2004

Press Contacts: Daryl Kimball, (202) 277-3478 x107; Wade Boese, (202) 463-8270 x104; Paul Kerr, (202) 463-8270 x102

(Washington, D.C.)—Today, Arms Control Association (ACA) experts praised President George W. Bush for focusing attention on the need to strengthen efforts to prevent the spread of dangerous weapons, but they called on the United States to pursue a more comprehensive and consistent approach to prevent, not preempt, proliferation and end its own "do-as-I-say, not-as-I-do" nuclear weapons policies.

"U.S. nonproliferation policy cannot simply be limited to the 'rogue' states and terrorists that seek nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons," said Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association. "It must also address the full scope of dangers posed by these weapons in all countries. So long as one state continues to possess nuclear weapons, the danger that they will be stolen or deliberately or accidentally used will persist. In addition, other states will feel compelled or justified to seek nuclear, chemical, or biological weapons and the means to deliver them," added Kimball.

ACA Research Analyst Paul Kerr stated, "The most logical and easiest route for proliferators to acquire nuclear weapons is to go to those states that already possess them, such as Pakistan or Russia. The president missed the opportunity to announce a significant increase in funding for efforts to secure WMD materials in the former Soviet Union and to help reduce the danger of nuclear war in South Asia."

"As President Bush suggested, it is time for the international community to consider new ways to restrict access to dangerous nuclear technologies," said Kimball. Decades of nuclear trade done under the auspices of peaceful and civilian programs has led to the broad diffusion of nuclear technology worldwide and has allowed states to acquire uranium enrichment or plutonium production facilities useful for weapons. The nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty guarantees its non-nuclear-weapon states-parties access to peaceful nuclear technology.

Today, President Bush proposed strengthening the 40-member Nuclear Suppliers Group to further restrict access to items that could be used to develop nuclear weapons and outlined efforts to improve interdiction of shipments of dangerous items under the Proliferation Security Initiative.

"Though important, tightening nuclear export controls and bolstering interdiction efforts are only part of the solution," stated Kimball. "The long-term success of efforts to stop the spread of highly enriched uranium and plutonium production technologies requires the involvement of all states, not just a coalition of the willing. As IAEA Director-General Mohamed ElBaradei has suggested, one potentially useful model could be a new protocol to the NPT that would continue to guarantee access to nuclear technology for health, agriculture, medicine, and power reactors but would restrict plutonium reprocessing and uranium enrichment capabilities," Kimball said.

"The President also failed to reaffirm U.S. support for negotiating a global, verifiable treaty-known as a fissile material cutoff treaty-to end the production of uranium and plutonium for nuclear weapons. The entire concept is now 'under review' by his administration," noted Kimball. Negotiation of such a treaty, which the United States has advocated for over a decade, could help bring key states, including Pakistan, India, and Israel into the global nonproliferation system.

"As the President suggested, the United States should help build global support for expanded nuclear inspections under the IAEA by ratifying its Additional Protocol," said Kimball. The Protocol was only recently delivered to the Senate.

"But it is vital that the U.S. help strengthen international monitoring and inspection capabilities in other areas, which can aid U.S. intelligence and provide the basis for collective action against noncompliance," Kimball stated. "The United States must also support the creation of a permanent weapons monitoring and inspection organization under the authority of the Security Council or the UN Secretary-General to help deal with difficult biological, chemical, and missile proliferation cases. U.S. support for the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty would help block the development of dangerous new weapons through the implementation of the treaty's valuable monitoring system to detect and deter nuclear explosions and to allow short-notice, onsite inspections."

"The evolving nature of the nuclear threat requires a more comprehensive and robust global nonproliferation strategy than outlined by President Bush," argued Kimball.

"All forms 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," argued Kerr.

"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," Kerr explained.

"The United States and other nuclear-weapon states must lead by example and do far more to reduce the role of nuclear weapons in their own security policies to diminish the importance and lure of such weapons to others," said Wade Boese, research director at the Arms Control Association.

"Instead of exploring new nuclear weapons for new missions, a more sensible policy would be for the United States to reaffirm past assurances that it will not use nuclear weapons against countries that do not possess them and declare that the United States will not be the first to use nuclear weapons in a conflict," Boese added.

"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," said Kimball.

 

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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. Established in 1971,the Association publishes the monthly journal, Arms Control Today.

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Intelligence and Arms Control Experts Analyze Powell's UN Speech, CIA Estimates on Iraqi Weapons One Year Later

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For Immediate Release: February 5, 2004

Press Contacts: Daryl Kimball, (202) 277-3478 x107

(Washington, D.C.): On Feb. 5, 2003 Secretary of State Colin Powell went before the UN Security Council using U.S. intelligence to make the case that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in defiance of its UN disarmament obligations. Almost one year later and ten months after the United States launched an invasion to disarm Iraq, no WMD have been found and the head of the U.S.-led postwar weapons search, David Kay, has resigned, stating that he does not believe that Iraq had stockpiles of prohibited weapons prior to the invasion. This morning CIA Director George Tenet spoke at Georgetown University to defend his agency's performance.

On Tuesday, Feb. 3, the Arms Control Association (ACA) hosted a one hour conference call for reporters on these issues with Greg Thielmann, former director of the Office of Strategic, Proliferation, and Military Affairs in the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research; Joseph Cirincione, director of the Non-Proliferation Project of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; and ACA Executive Director Daryl Kimball. Thielmann is also a new member of the ACA Board of Directors.

The transcript of the event is now available at:
<http://www.armscontrol.org/pressroom/2004/Briefing_2_04.asp>

Key points made during the conference call include the following:

THE ADMINISTRATION'S FAILURE TO CONSIDER UN INSPECTORS' FINDINGS:

Cirincione and Thielmann noted that U.S. policymakers and intelligence agencies failed to take into consideration on-the-ground intelligence gathered after U.N. inspectors returned to Iraq on November 27, 2002 after a nearly four-year absence. The inspectors' findings should have led to a reconsideration of U.S. intelligence assessments made in the fall of 2002.

"Much of [the UN inspectors'] intelligence we simply ignored. The inspectors were making up for our lack of human intelligence. We had tremendous surveillance capabilities, but we didn't have people on the ground. Well, after November 27th, there were people on the ground. And these inspectors went to many of the facilities where there had been said there was suspicious activity, in the nuclear and chemical areas in particular, and they reported back that they found nothing. So we had new intelligence coming in, but it was ignored," said Cirincione.

Thielmann noted, "Within one month [of the return of UN inspectors], we were actually getting information which would resolve a lot of the prudent concerns that the intelligence community had about what was happening with new construction activity at sites previously associated with chemical weapons or nuclear weapons production. Almost without exception, those worst-case suspicions were found to be unfounded by taking a look at the equipment, by talking to people on the ground, by comparing things that the inspectors had seen before but had been blind to for a period of four years."

"So even at the time of the president's State of the Union address in January, there was already a lot of important information which we had acquired that would change the assessments that some of the intelligence professionals had been comfortable with in October," Thielmann added. He further stated, "There was no request in January, as far as I know, for the intelligence community to say, to itself and to the president, "What have we learned as a result of the return of the U.N. inspectors?"

"At the time of the president's speech, the IAEA had already delivered an interim judgment that the aluminum tubes account of the administration was incorrect. In February, a full month before the U.S. invasion, they arrived at a definitive judgment the aluminum tubes were not going into the nuclear weapons program," Thielmann noted. "We knew at that point, more than a month before the invasion, that the document on which the uranium in Africa was based was a forgery. The two most important legs, then, of the nuclear reconstitution theory had just collapsed," Thielmann said.

SENIOR OFFICIALS MISCHARACTERIZED THE PRE-WAR INTELLIGENCE ASSESSMENTS ON IRAQ:

Thielmann and Cirincione noted that the intelligence community clearly made some errors in judgment, but senior Bush administration officials mischaracterized the intelligence assessments still further.

"The Bush administration did not provide an accurate picture to the
American people of the military threat posed to Iraq. I said that some of the fault lies with the performance of the intelligence community, but most of it lies with the way senior officials misused the information they were provided," charged Thielmann.

"The intelligence professionals made mistakes. There's no doubt about that. And that includes the intelligence professionals in my own office in the State Department's Intelligence Bureau. We made some assumptions based on the things that come as close to facts as exist in the intelligence world...," explained Thielmann.

However, Thielmann took issue with some of the characterizations in the October 2002 intelligence estimate, which were repeated by senior Bush officials before the war, and in today's speech by CIA Director George Tenet. Thielmann said, "I have a serious problem with a box in the [October 2002 National Intelligence] Estimate on confidence levels. That box says that there was only moderate confidence of the nuclear program status. It said that there was high confidence of the existence of biological and chemical weapon stocks. I cannot account for that statement of confidence on BW [biological weapons] and CW [chemical weapons] as being consistent with the detailed classified presentation, which is now part of the public record."

"It is the senior leadership of the CIA and the National Intelligence Council that has much to answer for in how they were characterizing the work of the intelligence professionals. They essentially slanted the intel to make the case against Iraq, to beef up the justification for a war against Iraq. There are a lot of examples ... from the detailed estimate to the summary statements in the estimate that show that many of the qualifications are already dropping away, the certainty level is rising, even going from the interior of the estimate to the key judgment summary," suggested Thielmann.

The ACA Web site includes important facts and analysis on Iraq's weapons programs, including:

-- A July 9, 2003 press conference transcript in which Thielmann, Cirincione, and former Vice Chair of the National Intelligence Council Gregory Treverton, discussed U.S. intelligence and Bush administration claims regarding Iraq's WMD capabilities
<http://www.armscontrol.org/pressroom/2003/iraq_july03.asp>

-- A September 2003 article, "What Happened to Saddam's Weapons of Mass Destruction" by former UN inspector Frank Ronald Cleminson on the lack of weapons finds in Iraq and the successful performance of the UNMOVIC and IAEA inspectors <http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2003_09/Cleminson_09.asp>

-- Detailed chronologies of UN inspections and their record in Iraq
<http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2003_07-08/inspectors_julaug03.asp>, as well as the administration's charges about Iraq's weapons programs
<http://www.armscontrol.org/pressroom/2003/adminstmtsiraq_july03.asp>

-- Commentary on the misjudgments on Iraq's proscribed weapons activities and the failure to pursue effective international inspections in Iraq <http://www.armscontrol.org/country/iraq/#editorial>

ACA's online Iraq resource section also contains additional authoritative "Arms Control Today" interviews with former weapons inspectors and detailed news reports on Iraq's weapons programs and disarmament dating back to 1997. All of these resources are available at:
http://www.armscontrol.org/country/iraq/

 

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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. Established in 1971,the Association publishes the monthly journal, Arms Control Today.

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Intelligence and Arms Control Experts Analyze Powell's UN Speech, CIA Estimates on Iraqi Weapons One Year Later

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Press Contacts: Daryl Kimball, (202) 277-3478 x107

(Washington, D.C.)—On Feb. 5, 2003 Secretary of State Colin Powell went before the UN Security Council using U.S. intelligence to make the case that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in defiance of its UN disarmament obligations. Almost one year later and ten months after the United States launched an invasion to disarm Iraq, no WMD have been found and the head of the U.S.-led postwar weapons search, David Kay, has resigned, stating that he does not believe that Iraq had stockpiles of prohibited weapons prior to the invasion. This morning CIA Director George Tenet spoke at Georgetown University to defend his agency's performance.

On Tuesday, Feb. 3, the Arms Control Association (ACA) hosted a one hour conference call for reporters on these issues with Greg Thielmann, former director of the Office of Strategic, Proliferation, and Military Affairs in the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research; Joseph Cirincione, director of the Non-Proliferation Project of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; and ACA Executive Director Daryl Kimball. Thielmann is also a new member of the ACA Board of Directors.

The transcript of the event is now available at:
<http://www.armscontrol.org/pressroom/2004/Briefing_2_04.asp>

Key points made during the conference call include the following:

THE ADMINISTRATION'S FAILURE TO CONSIDER UN INSPECTORS' FINDINGS:

Cirincione and Thielmann noted that U.S. policymakers and intelligence agencies failed to take into consideration on-the-ground intelligence gathered after U.N. inspectors returned to Iraq on November 27, 2002 after a nearly four-year absence. The inspectors' findings should have led to a reconsideration of U.S. intelligence assessments made in the fall of 2002.

"Much of [the UN inspectors'] intelligence we simply ignored. The inspectors were making up for our lack of human intelligence. We had tremendous surveillance capabilities, but we didn't have people on the ground. Well, after November 27th, there were people on the ground. And these inspectors went to many of the facilities where there had been said there was suspicious activity, in the nuclear and chemical areas in particular, and they reported back that they found nothing. So we had new intelligence coming in, but it was ignored," said Cirincione.

Thielmann noted, "Within one month [of the return of UN inspectors], we were actually getting information which would resolve a lot of the prudent concerns that the intelligence community had about what was happening with new construction activity at sites previously associated with chemical weapons or nuclear weapons production. Almost without exception, those worst-case suspicions were found to be unfounded by taking a look at the equipment, by talking to people on the ground, by comparing things that the inspectors had seen before but had been blind to for a period of four years."

"So even at the time of the president's State of the Union address in January, there was already a lot of important information which we had acquired that would change the assessments that some of the intelligence professionals had been comfortable with in October," Thielmann added. He further stated, "There was no request in January, as far as I know, for the intelligence community to say, to itself and to the president, "What have we learned as a result of the return of the U.N. inspectors?"

"At the time of the president's speech, the IAEA had already delivered an interim judgment that the aluminum tubes account of the administration was incorrect. In February, a full month before the U.S. invasion, they arrived at a definitive judgment the aluminum tubes were not going into the nuclear weapons program," Thielmann noted. "We knew at that point, more than a month before the invasion, that the document on which the uranium in Africa was based was a forgery. The two most important legs, then, of the nuclear reconstitution theory had just collapsed," Thielmann said.

SENIOR OFFICIALS MISCHARACTERIZED THE PRE-WAR INTELLIGENCE ASSESSMENTS ON IRAQ:

Thielmann and Cirincione noted that the intelligence community clearly made some errors in judgment, but senior Bush administration officials mischaracterized the intelligence assessments still further.

"The Bush administration did not provide an accurate picture to the
American people of the military threat posed to Iraq. I said that some of the fault lies with the performance of the intelligence community, but most of it lies with the way senior officials misused the information they were provided," charged Thielmann.

"The intelligence professionals made mistakes. There's no doubt about that. And that includes the intelligence professionals in my own office in the State Department's Intelligence Bureau. We made some assumptions based on the things that come as close to facts as exist in the intelligence world...," explained Thielmann.

However, Thielmann took issue with some of the characterizations in the October 2002 intelligence estimate, which were repeated by senior Bush officials before the war, and in today's speech by CIA Director George Tenet. Thielmann said, "I have a serious problem with a box in the [October 2002 National Intelligence] Estimate on confidence levels. That box says that there was only moderate confidence of the nuclear program status. It said that there was high confidence of the existence of biological and chemical weapon stocks. I cannot account for that statement of confidence on BW [biological weapons] and CW [chemical weapons] as being consistent with the detailed classified presentation, which is now part of the public record."

"It is the senior leadership of the CIA and the National Intelligence Council that has much to answer for in how they were characterizing the work of the intelligence professionals. They essentially slanted the intel to make the case against Iraq, to beef up the justification for a war against Iraq. There are a lot of examples ... from the detailed estimate to the summary statements in the estimate that show that many of the qualifications are already dropping away, the certainty level is rising, even going from the interior of the estimate to the key judgment summary," suggested Thielmann.

The ACA Web site includes important facts and analysis on Iraq's weapons programs, including:

-- A July 9, 2003 press conference transcript in which Thielmann, Cirincione, and former Vice Chair of the National Intelligence Council Gregory Treverton, discussed U.S. intelligence and Bush administration claims regarding Iraq's WMD capabilities
<http://www.armscontrol.org/pressroom/2003/iraq_july03.asp>

-- A September 2003 article, "What Happened to Saddam's Weapons of Mass Destruction" by former UN inspector Frank Ronald Cleminson on the lack of weapons finds in Iraq and the successful performance of the UNMOVIC and IAEA inspectors <http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2003_09/Cleminson_09.asp>

-- Detailed chronologies of UN inspections and their record in Iraq
<http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2003_07-08/inspectors_julaug03.asp>, as well as the administration's charges about Iraq's weapons programs
<http://www.armscontrol.org/pressroom/2003/adminstmtsiraq_july03.asp>

-- Commentary on the misjudgments on Iraq's proscribed weapons activities and the failure to pursue effective international inspections in Iraq <http://www.armscontrol.org/country/iraq/#editorial>

ACA's online Iraq resource section also contains additional authoritative "Arms Control Today" interviews with former weapons inspectors and detailed news reports on Iraq's weapons programs and disarmament dating back to 1997. All of these resources are available at:
http://www.armscontrol.org/country/iraq/

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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. Established in 1971,the Association publishes the monthly journal, Arms Control Today.

 

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Conference call for reporters with Greg Thielmann, Joseph Cirincione, and Daryl G. Kimball

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Arms Control Experts Welcome Iran's Latest Move But Caution That Much More Needs to Be Done

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For Immediate Release: December 18, 2003

Press Contacts: Daryl Kimball: (202) 463-8270 x107; Paul Kerr, (202) 463-8270 x 102


(Washington, D.C.): Iran's signature today of an additional nuclear inspections agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is "a significant step toward ensuring that Iran lives up to its commitment under the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) to forswear nuclear weapons," according to the nonpartisan Arms Control Association (ACA). However, ACA experts point out that the additional inspections agreement, known as the Additional Protocol, is "vital but insufficient."

Over the last year, troubling revelations make it clear that Iran is now closer to a nuclear weapons-making capability than previously believed. An IAEA investigation and inspections earlier this year led the Agency to report Nov. 10 that Iran had for many years pursued nuclear activities in violation of its NPT obligations. Although the IAEA report did not say that Tehran had an illegal nuclear weapons program, it strongly condemned Iran's secret nuclear activities and the IAEA said its investigation would continue. In response, the international community demanded that Iran take steps to redress concerns about its nuclear intentions, which Tehran began to meet today by signing an Additional Protocol. This document provides the IAEA with more measures, such as expanded inspection rights, to make sure that Iran is not cheating on the NPT.

ACA Executive Director Daryl Kimball said Iran's signature of the Additional Protocol is "vital but insufficient and Iran must now promptly ratify the agreement and fully cooperate with the IAEA in resolving questions about its past nuclear activities."

"Tehran should also maintain its suspension of uranium enrichment activities until international concerns about its nuclear program are resolved," added Paul Kerr, research analyst at the Arms Control Association. Iran is legally permitted to conduct uranium enrichment but this process can be used to develop nuclear weapons.

Even with greater transparency under the Additional Protocol and strict compliance with the NPT, it is still possible that Iran might someday decide to withdraw from the treaty and pursue nuclear weapons.

"In the long run, turning Iran away from nuclear weapons will require a new and more sophisticated joint U.S.-European-Russian strategy to reduce Iran's incentives to acquire nuclear weapons and increase the benefits of openness and compliance," Kimball noted. "An important element of such a strategy would be for the United States and Israel to reassure Tehran that it does not have to fear an attack by either country if Iran drops its pursuit of nuclear weapons, ends its support of terrorism, and stops threatening the existence of Israel."

"The United States should also make clear that it does not support the possession of nuclear weapons by other countries, including Israel, India, and Pakistan, which are not party to the NPT. Leaders in Tehran cannot be allowed to justify their nuclear weapons ambitions by pointing to the nuclear bomb arsenals and activities of other countries," Kimball said.

Nevertheless, Kimball underscored that it is ultimately up to Iran to abide by its commitments not to develop nuclear weapons and that Tehran should not use the behavior of others as a pretext for activities that go against its own security interests and threaten its neighbors.

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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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ACA Executive Director Daryl Kimball's Prepared Remarks for the November 13, 2003 Workshop on "The Implications of a New Era in

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Sponsored by the Institute of Nuclear Materials Management

For Immediate Release: November 13, 2003

Press Contacts: Daryl Kimball, Executive Director, (202) 463-8270 x107;


I want to thank the members of the Institute for putting this session together and for inviting me to provide some perspectives and observations on the subject of arms control in a new era of international relations and security. This panel is focused on the future of U.S./Russian arms control, which I believe remains of vital importance. I would also like to note that the Arms Control Association's concept of and program focus on arms control goes beyond U.S. and Russian strategic nuclear weapons to cover the full range of conventional, chemical, biological, and nuclear arms challenges, as well as the strategies to deal with them.

Adjusting and Redoubling Arms Control and Nonproliferation Efforts

Let me start by sketching out a diagnosis of and prescription for dealing with today's nuclear security challenges.

While there remain substantial, festering Cold War nuclear dangers, it is abundantly clear that today's Russia is certainly not yesterday's Soviet Union and the major threats to U.S. security are, as President George W. Bush has said repeatedly, international terrorism and the acquisition of nuclear weapons, nuclear material, and other WMD by additional states or non-state actors. We certainly are in a post-post Cold War era of international relations that requires a recalibration of our approaches to dealing with WMD threats and responses.

In my view-and of many in the broader arms control community-the situation demands renewed dedication to arms control and nonproliferation strategies that were pioneered and championed by the United States over the course of the last several decades. The historical record shows that these strategies have been highly successful, though they are clearly not foolproof. We and other states have not met every challenge with appropriate determination. Nor have we and other states been consistent in our pursuit of nonproliferation objectives. Nevertheless, they have been and continue to be an indispensable tool in our national security toolbox. While the new, immediate concern is the possession of dangerous weapons in the hands of dangerous states and terrorists, the problem we face is not simply the intersection of WMD and terrorism, but ultimately it is the very existence of these weapons and the capability to build them, whether by so-called "friendly" or "unfriendly" actors.

As a consequence, I would summarize the overall nuclear security agenda over the next few years along the following lines:

· One set of key tasks involves making much more rapid progress on finishing the task of eliminating Cold War nuclear dangers, including the verifiable elimination of excessive and costly U.S. and Russian strategic and tactical arsenals and delivery systems, as well as expediting and improving our cooperative efforts to safeguard and dispose of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons assets in the former Soviet Union, and, where and when we can in other places, such as the recent U.S.-Russian announcement regarding efforts to retrieve spent HEU fuel from Eastern European states;

· Another priority must be to reinforce key elements of the still evolving nuclear nonproliferation regime, such as improved IAEA safeguards, better physical protection of nuclear facilities and accounting for nuclear materials worldwide, achieving agreement on a global halt to fissile material production for weapons, establishing more stringent controls over the nuclear fuel cycle to limit the proliferation of the most weapons-relevant technologies, and improved monitoring and verification capabilities and institutions in a range of areas.

All of these efforts and more are needed to prevent the emergence of new nuclear-armed states and are essential to impeding terrorist acquisition of nuclear weapons and materials.

Our nonproliferation strategies must also take into account that proliferation and arms racing is invariably motivated and driven by the existence of underlying political and security problems and the perception that nuclear weapons are credible and legitimate tools of foreign and military policy. Consequently, the United States must reconsider and truly diminish the role of nuclear weapons in our own foreign and military policies and strategies and refrain from developing a new class of nuclear weapons and reinforce, not erode, the global nuclear test moratorium. A "do as I say, not as I do" nuclear doctrine and nonproliferation policy is not a prudent long-term strategy.

To me this represents a monumental arms control agenda that requires vigorous U.S. commitment to achieving arms control and nonproliferation results. I do not claim that arms control and nonproliferation measures can address every security threat, nor is it likely that all of these initiatives can be achieved in the near term. But to meet today's proliferation challenges, the nonproliferation regime must be strengthened, not abandoned.

Arms Control Is Dead Because the Cold War Is Over? Wrong.

Nevertheless, it is fashionable these days in some circles to declare arms control, and strategic nuclear arms control in particular, a dead strategy because strategic nuclear arms control was a response to the U.S.-Soviet Cold War nuclear rivalry and the Cold War is over.

With Russia now listed for now in the "friendly state" category, and with new threats from new enemies on the horizon, the argument goes, the United States needs a more flexible approach to nuclear arms control that allows us to re-size, reconfigure, and possibly add new nuclear weapons capabilities.

That approach was outlined rather cogently by Linton Brooks and has been codified, so to speak, with the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT), the 2002 Nuclear Posture Review, and recent congressional authorization and appropriation decisions to allow research on new and modified nuclear warheads that could, at some future stage, lead to design engineering, development, testing, and production of new nuclear weapons.

Let me turn briefly to SORT, which is also known as the Moscow Treaty, and the pursuit of new U.S. nuclear capabilities, which have become the defining elements of the U.S./Russian strategic arms relationship.

The Moscow Treaty

In my view, it is simplistic and shortsighted to consider arms control a strategy of the past and to believe that the Moscow Treaty allows us to check off the strategic arms control box from the foreign policy to do list.

The Moscow Treaty is useful for what it is: a short statement that binds the United States and Russia to reduce operationally deployed nuclear weapons within a decade. It requires each side to reduce their deployed strategic warheads from about 5,000-6,000 today to no more than 2,200 by 2012.

The administration is to be commended for committing to force reductions that have been delayed for years. But beyond that, the Moscow Treaty is significant not so much for what it is, but what it isn't. In contrast to past agreements, such as START I, it does not restrict or mandate the destruction of strategic missiles and bombers.

The new treaty does not require the destruction of a single nuclear warhead. The new agreement does not even outline a timetable for withdrawing deployed strategic warheads from service. As a result, the treaty allows each side to store warheads withdrawn from service, making them more readily available for redeployment on strategic delivery systems.

At a July 9, 2002 Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, Secretary of State Colin Powell admitted that the United States could increase its deployed strategic forces from 2,200 warheads to 4,600 warheads within three years of the treaty's 2012 deadline, which expires the same day that it enters into force.

As Senator Richard Lugar (R-IN) has noted, if Russia follows the U.S. storage policy, this will increase the long-term burden of safeguarding Russia's already vast and insecure nuclear weapons complex and require additional U.S. and European financial and technical assistance.

Quite simply, the United States should pursue its past goal of verifiably dismantling excess nuclear warheads and provide greater U.S. funding for assistance to Russia to do so.

In stark contrast to past agreements, the Moscow Treaty contains no additional verification provisions. The White House asserts that this "trust without verification" formulation suits the more amicable U.S.-Russian relationship. To ensure compliance, the Bush team suggests that our national technical means of intelligence gathering and existing START verification provisions will suffice. However, the START agreement is due to expire in 2009, three years before each side is due to comply with the terms of the new treaty. As a result, U.S. intelligence experts cannot assure that the United States can, with high confidence, verify Russia's warhead totals after 2009.

Though proposals to expand data sharing and improve confidence in compliance with the agreed force reductions were considered by U.S. and Russian negotiators, the two sides failed to close a deal on such measures.

President Bush has made the bold and erroneous claim that the treaty "will liquidate the legacy of the Cold War." But in reality, the proposed size of the deployed U.S. arsenal ten years from now would be roughly the same as the 2,000-2,500 levels of the proposed START III framework approved by the U.S. Strategic Command in 1997.

Though the United States and Russia are no longer enemies, the force size allowed by the new treaty and dictated by the Pentagon's recent nuclear posture review is still very much based on Cold War requirements to counter Russia's nuclear and conventional military forces.

Absent such requirements, I challenge anyone in the administration to describe the future threat scenarios that require the deployment of more than a few hundred survivable nuclear warheads, let alone 2,200 warheads with thousands more available for rapid redeployment.

In sum, the agreement's emphasis on flexibility detracts from its predictability, lessening its value in building a more stable and secure U.S.-Russian relationship.

There is much left to be done. There are few signs at the moment that there is much interest doing them.

The False Promise of New Nukes

The Bush administration's vision for the role of nuclear weapons also includes the expansion of U.S. nuclear weapons capabilities designed to counter emerging nuclear and non-nuclear threats.

The pursuit of new nuclear weapons capabilities, now in the research phase, also represents an unnecessary and ultimately counterproductive response to the post-9/11 security threats to our nation. Expanding or adapting the U.S. nuclear arsenal to try to dissuade and deter new adversaries from pursuing, acquiring, and using chemical, biological, or nuclear weapons provides little or no additional military value while it risks undermining vital efforts to prevent proliferation and mobilize international support against proliferators.

As President John F. Kennedy noted in 1963, "A nation's security does not always increase as its arms increase…and unlimited competition in the testing and development of new types of destructive nuclear weapons will not make the world safer." The pursuit of new nuclear weapons erodes the nonproliferation norms established over the last four decades and will likely encourage other states to match or counter the U.S. bid.

Proponents argue that, by reducing the weapons' explosive yields, collateral damage can be minimized to the point that they become "usable." But a "small" nuclear blast, with just 1/13 the power of the Hiroshima bomb, detonated at a depth of 20-50 feet, would eject more than a million cubic feet of radioactive debris. If used to target chemical or biological weapons, nuclear strikes would probably spread, rather than destroy, the deadly material.

It is possible to improve the depth of penetration of weapons to destroy deeper targets, but these weapons are hardly "usable." The "robust" bunker-busting nuclear warheads types now under study-the B61 and B83-are not small, but rather high-yield, city-busting behemoths with yields capable of exceeding 100 kilotons.

A nuclear weapon, however big or small, is still a weapon of mass destruction. So long as nuclear weapons exist, their role should be limited to deterring their use by others. The key to holding a potential adversary's buried chemical or biological weapons at risk is better intelligence and more effective conventional munitions, not the threat of nuclear attack.

During his 2000 election run, President Bush aptly called nuclear weapons "obsolete weapons of dead conflicts." He's right. How is the W88 warhead going to help us hunt down Osama? How will the B61 Mod. 11 help us deal with Russia's nuclear cooperation with Iran? How will a new round of nuclear testing help us restrain Indo-Pakistani nuclear and missile competition that could increase the risk of a nuclear war in that region?

While the Cold War conflict may be gone, the weapons that grew out of that age are still with us and our decades-long addition to them has not yet ended. The role of nuclear weapons can and should be limited to deterring nuclear attacks by others, and with the likelihood of nuclear attack by Russia as low as it is today, our nuclear arsenal, and that of Russia can and should be irreversibly and verifiably reduced.

In sum, writing off nuclear arms control as a key element in U.S. national security in the interest of keeping open our nuclear weapons options is a losing strategy that shortchanges our security.

Thank you for your attention.

* Delivered remarks may have differed slightly from this text.

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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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