
Former Senator Sam Nunn
Co-Chairman, Nuclear Threat Initiative
Statement
on Nuclear Weapons Policy
House Committee on Foreign Affairs
May
10, 2007
Chairman Lantos, it is a mark of
I thank the Committee for the
opportunity to discuss
In 1948, at the
dawn of the nuclear age, General Omar Bradley said, “The world has achieved
brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical
infants. We know more about war than we
know about peace, more about killing than we know about living.”
If he were alive
today, it might surprise General Bradley to know that we have made it 62 years
since
We do have
important preventive efforts underway -- including the Nunn-Lugar threat reduction
programs, the Global Threat Reduction Initiative, the G8 Global Partnership,
the Global Initiative to Combat
Nuclear Terrorism, the Proliferation Security Initiative, the rollback of
President Bush has said we should do “everything
in our power” to keep nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons out of
terrorist hands. The 9/11 Commission
called for a “maximum effort” to prevent terrorists from acquiring weapons of
mass destruction.
I welcome these urgent
words, but by any threat-based measure, our words far exceed our actions.
In my view, the
risk of a nuclear weapon being used today is growing, not receding.
o A
number of additional countries are considering developing the capacity to
enrich uranium to use as fuel for nuclear energy – giving them greater capacity
to move quickly to a nuclear weapons program if they choose to do so.
o Stockpiles
of loosely guarded nuclear weapons materials are scattered around the world,
offering inviting targets for theft or sale.
We are working on this, but I believe that the threat is outrunning our
response.
o Because
of an explosion of knowledge and information throughout the world, the know-how
and expertise to build nuclear weapons is far more available.
o Terrorists
are seeking nuclear weapons for the same reasons terrorists seized airplanes on
9/11 – to use them to inflict on the world the greatest possible human
suffering, economic loss, and geopolitical chaos.
o Some
nations that have had nuclear weapons since the signing of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) are increasing their reliance on nuclear weapons.
o Some
nations that have gained nuclear weapons outside of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty seek to legitimize their nuclear status.
o Both
the
In light of these
rising threats, and with eroding confidence in deterrence as we have known it,
George Shultz, Bill Perry, Henry Kissinger and I published an article in January
in The Wall Street Journal. We called
on the
Those
of us who wrote and endorsed The Wall Street Journal piece believe that
in order to deal effectively with this new and dangerous era, the United States
and the international community must reaffirm the vision of a world free
of nuclear weapons enshrined in the NPT and pursue crucial actions toward
achieving that goal and reducing nuclear
dangers. We believe that without the
bold vision, the actions will not be perceived as fair or urgent. Without the actions, the vision will not be
perceived as realistic or possible. This
is a step-by-step process. It is not
unilateral, but it must have leadership, and it must begin.
Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, we recommend the
following specific steps:
1.
We
must secure nuclear weapons and materials around the world to the highest
standards.
2.
We
should eliminate short-range “tactical” nuclear weapons, the bombs most likely
to be targeted for theft or purchase by terrorists. In my view, we should start with transparency
and accountability of these weapons between the
3.
Nuclear
weapons, deployed and stockpiled, should be reduced substantially in all states
that possess them.
4.
We
must redouble efforts to resolve regional confrontations and conflicts. This will not be easy, but it is essential if we
are to reduce incentives for acquiring nuclear weapons in places like the
Middle East, southwest
5.
We
should work to bring the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty into force – in the
6.
The
a.
I
would note that former President Gorbachev, who has recently published his own
essay in support of our Wall Street
Journal piece, has also advocated these two steps I just mentioned: ratification of the CTBT and removing nuclear
weapons from hair-trigger alert. I
believe that the world should take up President Gorbachev’s challenge.
b.
To remove
our nuclear weapons from hair-trigger alert, I urge the two Presidents to order
the military and defense officials of each country to present to them a set of
options to increase warning time on both sides.
c.
These
officials should jointly determine which threats might justify keeping
thousands of nuclear weapons on hair-trigger status, and then recommend steps
to eliminate those threats and thus end the justification. The Presidents, in close consultation with
the Congress and the Duma, should then jointly adopt an approach and a
timetable to get the job done, and challenge other nuclear nations to follow
this lead.
d.
Each
day we should ask ourselves: “Is it in
the
7.
We
must enhance our verification capabilities, policies and agreements, once again
restoring and elevating President Reagan’s maxim of “trust but verify” as an
essential component of our national security policy. In my view, we should put at least as much
effort into verification as we do into missile defense.
8.
Finally,
we must get control of the uranium enrichment process for civil nuclear fuel
production, halt the production of fissile material for weapons and phase out
the use of highly enriched uranium in civil commerce.
Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, as you know, today
-- around the world – there is a rising interest in using nuclear power to
generate electricity. Experts have predicted
that energy demand will grow by 50 percent in the next 20 years, even more in
developing countries. As energy needs
rise, as the pace of global warming increases, nations will look more and more
to nuclear power.
Right now, there are 435 nuclear power plants operating in
30 countries. An additional 28 are under
construction, and more than 200 are planned or proposed. I am a strong supporter of nuclear power,
but we cannot ignore the security challenge: how can we spread nuclear power
without also spreading nuclear weapons capabilities? This is a pivotal question of global security
in the 21st century.
As this Committee knows, the process by which one can enrich
uranium to make nuclear fuel is the same process by which one can enrich uranium
to make weapons-usable nuclear material.
The more uranium enrichment and reprocessing facilities there are in the
world – and the more countries that house these facilities – the more likely it
is that the number of nuclear weapons states will increase, and the more likely
it is that weapons-usable material will find its way into the hands of
terrorists.
It is therefore profoundly in our national security
interests to give countries every incentive to import low-enriched nuclear fuel from one of the current global
suppliers, rather than to build their own fuel cycle facilities. A country’s decision to rely on imported fuel
may pivot on one point: whether there is
a mechanism that guarantees an assured international supply of nuclear fuel on
a non-discriminatory, nonpolitical basis to states that are meeting their
nonproliferation obligations.
That is why, last September in Vienna, on behalf of the
Nuclear Threat Initiative and with the financial backing of Warren Buffett, I
advanced a proposal for establishing an international fuel bank – as a
last-resort fuel reserve for nations that choose to develop their nuclear
energy based on foreign sources of fuel supply services. This
NTI proposal is contingent on other countries matching our $50 million pledge
with an additional $100 million for start-up costs.
Mr. Chairman, you have sponsored legislation here in the
House that commits the
As you know, the NTI-Buffett fuel bank is one of several proposals
now being made to discourage the building of more enrichment facilities by
assuring the supply of nuclear fuel. The
good news: these approaches do not compete with each other; they complement
each other. Together, they amount to a
progressively phased approach. The first
tier, of course, is the international market for nuclear fuel services.
As a second tier, the six major international fuel suppliers
– the
The international fuel bank that NTI has proposed would be a
final tier, backing up and reinforcing these other mechanisms. It will not be managed by the
Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, I have been gratified
that since I announced the NTI offer last September in
There are obvious risks and sensitivities and possible
roadblocks to this and other proposals actually being put in place. Global cooperation on nuclear security
is being strained and seriously tested today by mounting tensions over the
three areas of consensus and commitment that created the NPT and have held it
together for nearly 40 years.
All three of these “legs of the stool” are being
eroded. Many countries – including a
number of our key friends and allies – are adamant that they will not approve
or participate in any international program that divides the world de jure into have and have-not enrichers,
as the NPT divides the world into have and have-not weapons states. The theory of the NPT was that this nuclear
weapons divide would go away, but it has not, and many around the globe believe
that it will not.
We do not see an IAEA fuel bank as abridging sovereign rights or requiring a potential user to forswear or forsake their future ability to enrich uranium. We must make it clear that access to the fuel reserve does not require beneficiaries to limit or abridge their sovereign rights to technology under Article IV of the NPT. On the other hand, we must not lose touch with our fundamental assumption and essential objective in establishing such a reserve. A nation choosing to develop its own enrichment capacity would not need to depend on a fuel bank, and it would be inconsistent with our purpose for enriching nations to become the beneficiaries of this proposal. The IAEA will have to work this out carefully and sensitively. To me, the bottom line is that eligibility for the fuel bank should be judged by current capabilities, rather than a forswearing of sovereign rights. This bank is also not intended to offer a substitute to the generally reliable international fuel market or to compete with current fuel service suppliers.
Rather, we see this fuel bank as an incentive to bolster
national decisions to rely on international fuel markets in pursuing nuclear
energy. The IAEA will need to design
decision-making techniques that reinforce the transparent and nondiscriminatory
character this bank will require. The
IAEA fuel bank will need to be small enough to reflect the anticipated rarity
of its use but large enough to provide reliable back-up assurance for potential
users. The diversity of potential users
argues against storing actual fabricated fuel, which is reactor-specific, in
favor of storing low enriched uranium in the most flexible form of uranium
hexafluoride.
The NTI version is a last-resort fuel bank, but Mr. Chairman,
by moving it to reality, as you propose to do by sponsoring this legislation, I
believe that you will generate the action and momentum that will move the other
assurances into place as well. These
assurance tiers are mutually compatible and complementary, but we believe none of
the tiers will be fully credible without the final tier of an IAEA-custody
reserve.
The idea of an international framework for enrichment
services has been circulating since the 1970s, but for decades nothing has been
done. Sometimes people and nations need
to see action, before they take action. Mr.
Chairman, I hope that you can find a way to pass this legislation out of the
House this summer – to show
One more important point on this legislation, if I may, Mr.
Chairman. I understand the urge in
Congress to place conditions on this legislation, so that we’re sure that we
are enabling the right countries with this initiative. However, I urge you to give the President and
the Secretaries of Energy and State latitude to negotiate terms and conditions
acceptable to the international community. The
Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, this fuel bank
initiative – and the effort to gain control of the uranium enrichment process –
is one of the key steps we authors of the Wall
Street Journal piece endorse in order to make the world safer in the short
and long-term.
But these steps must go together with a parallel vision.
We cannot defend America without taking these actions; we
cannot take these actions without the cooperation of other nations; we cannot
get the cooperation of other nations without embracing the vision of a world
free of nuclear weapons – which every president from Richard Nixon to George W.
Bush has reaffirmed through our nation’s commitment to Article VI of the
Nonproliferation Treaty.
This cannot happen overnight. It will be a long process, done in
stages. The
To me, the goal of a world free of nuclear weapons is like the peak of a very tall mountain. It’s tempting and easy to say: “We can’t get there from here.” Today, we can’t see the top of the mountain, but we can see that we’re headed down instead of up. We can see that more countries enriching and reprocessing creates great dangers. We can see that unsecured nuclear materials around the globe are an invitation for catastrophic terrorism. We can see that our current policy is not working well. We can see that we must change direction and find trails and pathways that lead upward. We can see that we must seek higher ground. We can see that we can’t do it all at once and that we can’t do it alone. We can see that we have to build confidence and set an example if others are going to move with us to higher ground.
This is a pivotal moment for our country and the world. It’s time to turn around, change direction, and
head for the mountaintop. We owe it to
our children and grandchildren.
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