With the government set to shutdown this Friday and the House and Senate still miles away on from reconciling their differences on spending levels for the rest of the fiscal year, the House last week proposed a short-term CR to fund the government for …
Quote of the Day: Fissile Materials Edition
“If we are serious about reducing the possibility that fissile material could fall into terrorists’ hands, then we must reduce the amount of such material that is available.”
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Remarks at the Conference on Disarmament, Geneva Switzerland, February 28, 2011
Right on, Madam Secretary.
I suppose it’s safe to assume that if the White House is serious about preventing fissile material from falling into terrorists’ hands, then it’s pulling out all the stops to persuade Congress to fund critical nuclear security programs to lesson the likelihood that fissile material falls into terrorists’ hands. Right?
New START’s Nuclear Compromise
The residents of Nevada County California woke up yesterday morning to an op-ed on New START’s recent entry into force by yours truly. I’m sure it changed their lives. Here’s an excerpt:In a political climate paralyzed by partisanship on ot…
House lays waste to Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Budget
As feared, the GOP-controlled House introduced a Continuing Resolution (CR) on Friday to fund the federal government for the last seven months of the year that erases (and then some) the critical increases in NNSA’s FY 2011 budget request for threat reduction and nonproliferation programs. The CR actually reduces funding for NNSA’s Defense Nuclear Non-Proliferation account below FY 2010 appropriations, which were already far too low to achieve NNSA’s nuclear security goals.
Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation
Even NNSA’s weapons activities account was not exempt from cuts.
Aware of the writing on the wall, House Energy and Water Appropriations Subcommittee Ranking Member Pete Visclosky (D-IN) reminded his colleagues of what’s at stake earlier this week:
I’d remind my colleagues that almost half of the monies that flow through the Energy and Water Subcommittee are defense-related. A lot of that is our nuclear programs, as well as nonproliferation. We went to war in 2003 because it asserted Saddam Hussein had materials of weapons of mass destruction.
It would be so much better for the world and our country, and so much more cost-effective, if we made an investment up front on nonproliferation so we did not face those types of draconian decisions in the future and do hope in all of our subcommittees in this committee, we do recognize we have to make that investment and we make wise choices as we do make cuts.
We’ll have more to say about this in the coming days and weeks as the CR moves through the House floor and ultimately to the Senate.
It’s now up to Senate Democrats and Republicans, primed by a strong, strong push from the administration, to ensure that the effort to secure all vulnerable nuclear materials within four years doesn’t get derailed.
Quote of the Day: Lugar edition
I’ve been working systematically for 20 years going to Russia trying to help direct a situation in which we’re taking warheads off of missiles every day, destroying missiles that were aimed at us; destroying submarines that carried misslies up and down…