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Commentary
Avoiding a Russian Arms Disaster
by
Ted Turner/Stanley A. Weiss
Hurricane
Katrina drove home the staggering devastation that disastersnatural
or man-madecan inflict. Meanwhile, July's attacks on the London
Underground reminded us terrorists can still strike major world cities.
Now imagine the two joined together: terrorists, armed with weapons of
mass destruction, unleashing Katrina-scale chaos and death in the heart
of a U.S. city.
Such attacks are hardly unthinkable. Roughly half of Russia's weapons-grade
nuclear materials are poorly protected. In the small Russian town of Shchuch'ye,
nearly 2 million shells of VX and sarin nerve gaseach lethal enough
to kill 85,000 peoplelay stacked in chicken coop-like structures.
The September 11 commission said al Qaeda has pursued getting and using
these weapons as a "religious obligation" for more than a decade.
Fortunately, unlike hurricanes, much can be done to prevent this nightmare
from becoming real. One of our first and best lines of defense is the
Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) program, created by former U.S. Sen.
Sam Nunn, Georgia Democrat, and Sen. Richard Lugar, Indiana Republican.
Since 1992, the program has eliminated thousands of Russian nuclear warheads,
missiles, submarines and bombers.
But in recent years, a set of burdensome congressional restrictions has
marred the program and led to a series of disruptive stop-and-start cycles.
Key projects vital to America's security have ground to a halt for months
on end because, for example, Russian human-rights obligations were not
met or the paperwork to waive them was not completed.
Congress now has the chance to end such dangerous disruptions once and
for all. Mr. Lugar, decrying those misplaced priorities, introduced language
to repeal all the restrictions, which the Senate embraced by an overwhelming,
bipartisan 78-19 vote in July. But until the full Congress approves it,
CTR's vital efforts remain in danger, from both a national security and
a business perspective.
Danger of delay: Current restrictions carry real costs on the ground.
In mid-2002, all new CTR projects - including security upgrades at 10
nuclear weapons storage sites - stalled for four months because the conditions
could not be certified. Destruction of the Shchuch'ye stockpile was delayed
some 15 months from 2001 to 2003 for similar red-tape reasons.
Such stoppages not only prolong threats to America, they also endanger
the hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars already invested in Shchuch'ye
and other projects. So long as the conditions remain, these dangerous
disruptions are inevitable.
Wasted resources: In a yearly drama, defense staffers and intelligence
analysts must spend thousands of hours assessing Russian compliance with
CTR restrictions - even when it is immediately clear Russia cannot meet
them. Nor can the president simply waive the conditions without first
submitting to this annual exercise in foregone conclusions.
Abetting such delays or allowing concerns like human rights, however important,
to threaten human existence massively is the height of folly. We not only
agree with Mr. Lugar that, during a war on terror, these artificial barriers
"are destructive to our national security"; we see them undermining
one of the best investments our country can make.
CTR, simply is good security on the cheap. At an annual cost of as little
as one-tenth of 1 percent (0.001) of the Pentagon budget, the program
has deactivated and helped guard 6,760 Russian nuclear warheads. It has
upgraded security to the Shchuch'ye depot and similar sites. It also helped
remove all nuclear weapons from Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan.
Today, CTR continues upgrading security and aiding accounting of nuclear
weapons transportation and storage. It also works to destroy biological
weapons production facilities and lock down pathogen collections in Russia
and the former Soviet republics.
CTR's largest current project, eliminating the Shchuch'ye stockpile, will
rid us of all 2 million of those weapons - and cost each American roughly
the same as a large latte.
Nor is this money "foreign aid": More than 80 percent of CTR
funds go to five U.S. prime contractors that dismantle and destroy these
weapons.
The risk of a Katrina-scale terrorist attack with Russian weapons is too
critical to tolerate any delays to these crucial efforts. Congress must
act and free us to meet what President Bush calls "the greatest threat
before humanity today."
Ted Turner
is chairman of Turner Enterprises in Atlanta. Stanley A. Weiss is chairman
of Business Executives for National Security, of which Mr. Turner is a
member.
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