Published on Friday, May 8, 2009 by Foreign Policy in Focus
The News on Nukes
It's not on the front pages of what is left of
At the United Nations, representatives from the world's 190 or so nations are meeting (in typical fashion) to prepare to meet. The preparatory meeting of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) is taking place the first two weeks of May to get ready for the Review Conference of the Treaty, which will happen next year. Closer to home this week, Congress heard from its Congressional Commission on the Strategic Posture of the
In all of this nuclear attention, there is good, bad and mixed news, all of which is taking place against the background of President Barack Obama's historic
The Good News
Over the last eight years, the
The NPT regime has been under assault by the slow pace of nuclear disarmament and the spike in nuclear proliferation outside the treaty by
Given all of this, there was palpable relief following Assistant Secretary of State Rose Gottemoeller's presentation at the 2009 preparatory meeting, which began on Monday, May 4th. The head of the
The Mixed News
Congress gave a blue ribbon collection of strategic sages - former lawmakers and nuclear laboratory directors, retired Pentagon and Department of Energy officials, and representatives from research institutions like the National Institute for Public Policy - the task of examining the long-term strategic posture of the United States and making recommendations about what the future shape of that posture should be. Those recommendations were released this week in a 360-page report.
While nothing in the report purports to set policy for the Obama administration, the commission's recommendations will be taken into consideration as the administration begins work on its Nuclear Posture Review scheduled to be released late this year or early next year. Read with an eye towards the future of nuclear policy, against the backdrop of Obama's pledge to seek a world free of nuclear weapons, the report offers up a somewhat confused picture. On the one hand, the commission acknowledges the "final abolition of nuclear weapons" as a goal and asserts that the use of nuclear weapons should be a "defensive last resort." It also observes that the "moment appears ripe for a renewal of arms control." The Bush administration's nuclear posture asserted the possibility of a first use of nuclear weapons, failed to mention abolition, and as a rule took a dim view of arms control regimes.
But on the other side of the ledger, the commission couldn't reach consensus on the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty - seen by the rest of the world as a critical litmus test of the
The Bad News
Secretary of Energy Steven Chu announced his department's budget requests for fiscal year 2010. Amid a lot of fanfare about renewable resources and sustainability was a Bush-like $6.4 billion for the National Nuclear Security Administration's continued work on nuclear weapons technologies, facilities, and designs.
This request is in line with the NNSA's longer term plans for upgrading the nuclear weapons complex over the next two decades, an endeavor that could cost tens and tens of billions of dollars. Besides being expensive, the plan for so-called Complex Transformation was crafted during the Bush administration, and is obsolete now that the Obama administration has pledged to dramatically accelerate the reduction of the
Another Chance
Obama cannot unilaterally get rid of all the
But he can halt these expensive and short-sighted nuclear weapons plans with a stroke of his pen when the budget comes back to him in a few months. In that way, he can reconcile the
And that would be good news from
© 2009 Foreign Policy in Focus
Frida Berrigan [1] is a Senior Program Associate at the New America Foundation's Arms and Security Initiative [2] (ASI). She is a columnist for Foreign Policy in Focus [3] and a contributing editor at In These Times. The recently released Weapons at War 2008: Beyond the Bush Legacy [4], co-authored by Berrigan and William D. Hartung, is an examination of
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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