Tag Archives: START

Blog: Complete Story of Ukraine's Plans to Remove Uranium by 2012

Walter Fick
White House Correspondent
WPRB News

WASHINGTON – Ukraine agreed today to remove its entire highly enriched uranium stockpile by the time of the next Nuclear Security Summit in 2012.  The announcement came early on the first day of an unprecedented gathering of world leaders to discuss means of securing vulnerable nuclear materials.  This year’s Nuclear Security Summit includes 47 nations and is being held Monday and Tuesday in Washington, D.C.

Ukraine’s announcement came as a relief to the Obama administration, which has been pressuring participating nations to announce concrete measures to improve the security of weapons-grade nuclear materials.  Ukraine currently has enough highly enriched uranium to make several nuclear bombs.

The announcement came immediately after a bilateral meeting this afternoon between Obama and President Victor Yanukovich of the Ukraine.  White House officials hailed it as “a landmark decision” and praised the Ukraine’s “leadership” in securing nuclear materials.

“This is something that the United States has tried to make happen for more than ten years,” White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said.

In order to remove the highly enriched uranium, the Ukraine will convert its civil nuclear research facilities to using low enriched uranium, which cannot be used for weapons.  Plans for what to do with the removed uranium have not been finalized, but a likely outcome is that the United States will accept custody of the material.  Ukraine announced that it plans to begin removing “a substantial part of those stocks” by years end.

Princeton University Professor and long-time nuclear security expert Dr. Frank von Hippel called the announcement “very good news.”  ”The Ukrainians have been very ambivalent about letting go of this highly enriched uranium,” he said.  ”[This is] just the kind of fall-out from the Summit that was hoped for, but uncertain.”

Chile made a similar decision to remove its significantly smaller stockpile of highly enriched uranium earlier this year.  Last month it was successfully transferred in secret to the United States for secure storage.

Ukraine has a long history of pursuing nuclear non-proliferation.  The former Soviet republic, along with Kazakhstan and Belarus, agreed in 1994 to remove all the left over Soviet nuclear munitions from its territory.

“Ukraine has been an international leader on disarmament and nuclear non-proliferation and a valued partner in the implementation of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) since its historic 1994 decision,” a White House statement said.

Obama hopes for other nations to make similar announcements about steps they plan to take to secure vulnerable nuclear weapons.  Yesterday, the President called nuclear terrorism the single greatest threat to national security.

“If there was ever a detonation in New York City, or London, or Johannesburg, the ramifications economically, politically, and from a security perspective would be devastating,” he said.  ”We know that organizations like al Qaeda are in the process of trying to secure a nuclear weapon — a weapon of mass destruction that they have no compunction at using.”

Administration officials have stressed for the past week the need for an international consensus on the threat of nuclear terrorism.  Relatively small amounts of fissile material could allow terrorists to create either a dirty bomb — a device that could contaminate an area with radioactivity — or an outright nuclear bomb.  According to US intelligence sources, many terrorist organizations have been actively seeking these materials for years.

“The threat of nuclear terrorism is real, it is serious, [and] it is growing,” said John Brennan, the Assistant to the President for Counterterrorism and Homeland Security.  ”Over the past there has been indisputable evidence that dozens of terrorist groups have actively sought some type of weapon of mass effect.”

Whether other nations will listen to and take action to prevent this threat, however, remains to be seen.  Obama appeared Monday afternoon, however, to remain hopeful.

“I think it (the Summit) is an impressive indication of how deeply concerned everybody should be with the possibilities of nuclear traffic,” he said.  ”I think and the end of this we’re going to see some very specific, concrete actions that each nation is taking that will make the world a little bit safer.”

Blog: Frank von Hippel on Nuclear Security

Frank N. von Hippel

Frank N. von Hippel

By: Walter Fick
White House Correspondent
WPRB News

WASHINGTON – President Obama signed the new START Treaty on Thursday with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in Prague.  The agreement expands on the limits enforced by the original START Treaty, which expired in December.  The new agreement cuts the number of operationally deployable nuclear warheads down to 1,550, which is about a two-third reduction from previous levels.

The treaty also limits the number of deployable and non-deployable intercontinental ballistic missile launchers, submarine-launched ballistic missile launchers and heavy bombers to 800.  700 of these can be in a deployed status at any given time.

“When one surveys the many challenges that we face around the world, it is easy to grow complacent, or to abandon the notion that progress can be shared,” Obama said on Thursday.  ”But I want to repeat what I said last year in Prague: When nations and peoples allow themselves to be defined by their differences, the gulf between them widens.  When we fail to pursue peace, then it stays forever beyond our grasp.”

Last week President Obama also issued a new Nuclear Posture Review.  In it, he pledged for the first time that the United States would not use nuclear weapons against a non-nuclear state.  Exceptions were included, however, for rogue nations like Iran and North Korea that are in violation of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

“Those nations that follow the rules will find greater security and opportunity,” Obama said.  ”Those nations that refuse to meet their obligations will be isolated, and denied the opportunity that comes with international integration.”

This week, Obama will continue with his nuclear security agenda by hosting the Nuclear Security Summit.  The Summit will include 47 nations.  It will be held Monday and Tuesday at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center.  Administration officials say the primary focus will be the threat of nuclear terrorism and the need for securing vulnerable nuclear materials.

To gain further insight on these matters, WPRB News sat down with Dr. Frank von Hippel.  Von Hippel is a Professor at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs and the Co-Director of the Program on Science and Global Security.  He has over thirty years experience specializing in nuclear security, nuclear arms control and nuclear nonproliferation.  A portion of his interview was broadcast as a Special Report on Sunday, April 11.

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