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You are here: Home / Archives for Non-Proliferation

November 29, 2012

Center Quoted on Middle East Nuclear Weapons Free Zone in Mother Jones

Canceled Nukes Meeting: A Setback for Obama? By Dana Liebelson The day after Thanksgiving, when Americans were still digesting on La-Z-Boys and watching football, the State Department quietly announced that the 2012 conference for a Middle East zone free of nuclear weapons had been canceled by the United States. It doesn’t quite qualify as inconvenient […]

Posted in: Center in the News, Nuclear Weapons Free Zones, Press Room

November 15, 2012

Legislation for Two Key Anti Nuclear Terror Treaties Still Stalled in Senate

On November 13 I spoke on a panel at the Hudson Institute titled “Combating Nuclear Terrorism: Overcoming the Senate Impasse”. The event focused on the implementing legislation for two anti-nuclear terrorism treaties – the 2005 Amendment to the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material (CPPNM) and the 2005 International Convention on the Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism (ICSANT) – which has passed the House in the form of H.R. 5889 but is currently stalled in the Senate.

Posted in: Nuclear Weapons, Nukes of Hazard blog

October 25, 2012

Reducing Cooperative Threat Reduction: The End of Nunn-Lugar?

On October 10, Russia announced that it will not be renewing the Nunn-Lugar Act in June 2013. Russian withdrawal from the 1991 Nunn-Lugar agreement does not necessarily signify an end to the agreement, nor to US-Russian cooperation; it does, however, complicate diplomatic processes.

Nunn-Lugar, otherwise known as the Cooperative Threat Reduction(CTR) program, is an innovative, bi-partisan solution to the problem of “loose nukes” that was widespread following the collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1990’s. The original agreement absolved the US of any liability while conducting work in Russia. If any accident were to occur in the process of dismantling Russian weapons, the US and its contractors would not, under any circumstances, be held responsible. In lieu of this and a strengthened Russian economy, a Russian insider now claims “the agreement is thoroughly discriminating. It fails to take into account the changes that took place in the world after its signing in the 1990s.”

At the Act’s inception, the former Soviet states were in disarray – financially and politically. They did not have the resources nor the organizational capacity to dismantle and safeguard weapons of mass destruction, especially for compliance with the July 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START). Cooperative Threat Reduction has been essential in ensuring that Russia holds up its end of the treaty. It was created to make sure dangerous materials, or weapons themselves, do not end up in the hands of terrorists. To date, CTR has deactivated 7,610 warheads and has removed all nuclear weapons from Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Belarus (among other successes).

Despite Russia’s withdrawal, the Cooperative Threat Reduction program will still have opportunities to improve the security of nuclear, chemical and biological materials in other nations. In 2003, Congress passed the Nunn-Lugar Expansion Act; this gave the program the freedom to address proliferation problems outside of the former Soviet Union.  The US can still utilize the program’s bureaucratic know-how to be an effective world steward and stop terrorist acquisition of weapons of mass destruction. Whether Congress will see the importance of this program when it does not include Russia, the nation with the “largest WMD repository in the world”, remains to be seen.

Russia’s rejection of the American proposal comes amidst its recent expulsion of US-led humanitarian aid group, USAID. This trend reflects the tense current relations between the US and Russia, due largely to conflicts about how  to deal with Iran and Syria. However despite any diplomatic conflicts, nuclear security remains a large concern for the United States’ national security. We can only hope that for our sake, and for the world’s, that Russia will follow through with its claims to independently continue the programs associated with Nunn-Lugar and allocate the necessary funding.

“It is now impossible to overlook the “new” realities that look a lot like the old ones from the Cold War,” writes Jeffrey Lewis in his Foreign Policy article “Bar Nunn.” Relations between Russia and the US are certainly more strained than they have been in recent years; luckily, however, Nunn-Lugar has, for 21 years, made the world safer than it was during the Cold War. Though some outdated views from decades ago remain, a reinvigorated Cold War is extremely unlikely.

Our cooperation with Russia has taken a hit, but as William Tobey, of the Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center, notes, there are still many ways the US and Russia can partner to reduce the dangers of weapons of mass destruction in the world. We cannot stop fighting for a safer world, no matter how challenging it is. Russia will  never align with American world views 100%, but it is clear the security of weapons of mass destruction is in all of our best interests.

Posted in: Non-Proliferation, Nuclear Weapons, Nukes of Hazard blog

October 12, 2012

The Presidential Candidates and Iran: 4 Things to Know

Happy Friday, all! Over on the Center’s website, I’ve got a primer on the candidates and Iran. The piece places the candidates’ positions on Iran in context, discussing Romney’s shifting red lines, Obama’s nonproliferation policy, the two candidates’ f…

Posted in: Iran Diplomacy, Middle East, Non-Proliferation, Nuclear Weapons, Nukes of Hazard blog

October 11, 2012

Beyond Treaties: Immediate Steps to Reduce Nuclear Dangers

A new report by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace includes a contribution from Kingston Reif, the Center’s Director for Nuclear Non-Proliferation. The report is entitled “Beyond Treaties: Immediate Steps to Reduce Nuclear Dangers,” and pro…

Posted in: Non-Proliferation, Nukes of Hazard blog

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