After a profitable opening day at the Nuclear Security Summit, President Obama hopes for further gains in promoting an international cooperative effort to secure fissile materials. Yesterday, Ukraine announced that it will remove its entire highly enriched uranium stockpile by 2012. Canada also announced that it would be transferring highly enriched uranium back to the United States. Story by Walter Fick, White House Correspondent
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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.
Story by Walter Fick, White House Correspondent
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Ukraine announced that it will remove all highly-enriched uranium by 2012. The former Soviet republic has at least 90 kilograms of the material, which could be used to produce nuclear weapons. The announcement comes in the midst of a 47-nation Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, D.C.
Story by Walter Fick, White House Correspondent
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Tomorrow marks the first day of the Nuclear Security Summit, but meetings are already planned for today as President Obama tries to reach out to other world leaders. Administration officials hail the summit as part of a global effort to prevent nuclear terrorism and secure vulnerable nuclear materials. Post by Walter Fick, White House Correspondent
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Politics + Foreign Policy / WPRB News Blog
Tags: Frank von Hippel, Homeland Security, Iran, medvedev, North Korea, nuclear security summit, Obama, START, Terrorism, Walter Fick, Washington Bureau
April 10, 2010
Check out the latest posting from the WPRB News Washington Bureau. Here we discuss the recently signed START Treaty, the new US Nuclear Posture Review, and the upcoming Nuclear Security Summit with Princeton professor and long-time nuclear security expert Frank von Hilden.
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