Netherlands to Host 2014 Nuclear Security Summit
Duyeon Kim | Jan 31, 2012 |The Netherlands has accepted Seoul's request to host the 3rd Nuclear Security Summit in 2014.
In a January 31 (local time) statement, its Foreign Ministry said," The Dutch government regards the request as a sign of trust and has responded positively. The chairmanship will be officially transferred at the 2012 Summit in Seoul in March."
Yonhap News cited (Korean language) similar comments made by Dutch Foreign Minister Uri Rosenthal who, while submitting a report to parliament, said that "the (Dutch) government regards South Korea's request as an expression of confidence based on the Netherlands' contributions to nuclear nonproliferation efforts this year."An official announcement is expected in late March during the 2012 Seoul Nuclear Security Summit, as was case after the first 2010 Washington Summit.
At the 2010 Summit in Washington, Dutch Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende had argued for a new international court or tribunal to investigate countries that provide nuclear material to terrorists, claiming the Hague would be the ideal site.2012 Nuclear Security Summit: Opportunities and Challenges
Duyeon Kim | Nov 29, 2011 |The Nautilus Institute ran a piece on November 22, 2011 written by yours truly on the 2012 Nuclear Security Summit and can be viewed here or here.
The gist of my piece is:
“There are clear ways in which Seoul can capitalize on its strengths to flavor the 2012 [Nuclear Security Summit] with a “Korean twist” as it maintains depth on key substantive issues that ensure the security of nuclear materials, parts, and facilities…The challenge lies in clearly demonstrating that the benefits outweigh the costs, and that states would have a national interest in further investing their political capital in nuclear security."
Click here to read more.
Arms control groups appeal to Obama for help with Congress on Nonpro Budget
Kingston Reif | Nov 02, 2011 |Yesterday Foreign Policy's Josh Rogin wrote a story on a recent letter sent by NGO leaders to President Obama encouraging him to play a more active role in defense of his budget for nuclear terrorism prevention programs.
In the past year nuclear material security and nonproliferation programs have been subject to unprecedented reductions. Given the Congressional mandate for significant cuts in federal spending over the next decade, there is a grave danger that the budget for these programs will continue to be at risk, which is exactly why the President's voice is needed.
The full text of the NGO letter is pasted below the jump. For more on the nuclear terrorism prevention budget, see our resource center here.
Resources on the Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear Terrorism Prevention Budgets
Kingston Reif | Oct 31, 2011 |Over at the mothership we've put together some handy resource centers on U.S. nuclear weapons and nuclear material security spending.
At our nuclear weapons funding resource center you'll find estimates of how much the U.S. spends on nuclear weapons, information on the nuclear triad, charts on Congressional action on the nuclear weapons budget, our own original analysis on the budget, and more.
Likewise, the non-proliferation funding resource center includes information on recent budget cuts to NNSA's nuclear terrorism prevention programs and why these cuts are so short-sighted.
We plan to regularly update and add content to these pages so be sure to visit them often!
Why Adding Money to Nuclear Weapons from Nonproliferation is a Bad Trade
Kingston Reif | Oct 21, 2011 |As Nick Roth and Ulrika Grufman documented last week, House Strategic Forces Subcommittee Chairman Rep. Michael Turner (R-OH) recently sent a letter signed by the Republican members of the Subcommittee to Senate appropriators asking that they fully fund the President’s Fiscal Year (FY) 2012 request for the National Nuclear Security Administration’s (NNSA) weapons activities account. Turner also sent a letter to the Supercommittee with the same message.
Nick and Ulrika have already done a neat and clean job of rebutting many of Turner’s arguments. One area that deserves further exploration, however, is the issue of where exactly money to offset reductions in weapons funding would come from.
I examine this question in a new article over at the mothership. Here's the bottom line: Given the current budget situation, the unintended consequence of seeking more money for weapons activities is that every additional dollar that is added to this account could put the budget for vital nuclear terrorism prevention and nonproliferation programs at risk. Such a result would be reckless and undermine U.S. security.
"Two treaties. One Congress. No time to wait."
Kingston Reif | Sep 15, 2011 |The Center for Nonproliferation Studies' Miles Pomper and yours truly took to the pages of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists today to urge Congress to promptly introduce and approve the implementing legislation for the 2005 Amendment to the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material (CPPNM) and the 20005 International Convention on the Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism (ICSANT). You can read the full article here. Here's an excerpt:
The 2010 Nuclear Security Summit raised international awareness of the need for global cooperation to secure vulnerable nuclear materials and to decrease terrorist threats. The 2012 Nuclear Security Summit in Seoul will provide another high-level push to reduce nuclear risks. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Yukiya Amano will stress the importance of the amendment at the upcoming 55th annual IAEA General Conference, scheduled to take place in Vienna from September 19-23, 2011. The conference will provide an important opportunity to raise awareness about the amendment and encourage states that have yet to ratify it -- such as the United States, South Korea, Japan, France, and Canada -- to do so as soon as possible. With the 2012 summit a mere six months away, the United States is running out of time to make good on its pledge to ratify the CPPNM Amendment and ISCANT.
Congress should demonstrate its continued commitment to nuclear security by swiftly approving and implementing legislation for the two Conventions, thereby paving the way for their ratification in advance of the 2012 summit. Hopefully, there won't be another terrorist attack on US soil. But, if there is, let's make sure it's not nuclear.
Senate Appropriations Committee Version of the FY 2012 Energy and Water Appropriations Bill
Kingston Reif | Sep 12, 2011 |Last Wednesday the Senate Appropriations Committee approved the Fiscal Year (FY) 2012 Energy and Water Appropriations Bill. Head over to the mothership for my full analysis of the bill. Here's the summary:
Senate Energy and Water Appropriations Subcommittee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) and the rest of the members of the subcommittee deserve great credit for prioritizing essential nuclear and radiological material security and nonproliferation programs. While the House cut the budget for the Global Threat Reduction Initiative (GTRI), the key program in the effort to secure and eliminate dangerous nuclear material worldwide at an accelerated rate, by $85 million below the administration’s FY 2012 request, the Senate fully funded it at the FY 2012 request, an increase of $72 million over the FY 2011 enacted level. The Committee should also be applauded for beginning to reign in excessive spending on nuclear weapons programs, while still providing more than enough funds to maintain a safe, secure, and reliable arsenal.
Lt. Gen. Robert Gard Op-Ed in the Baltimore Sun: A funding cut that endangers America
Kingston Reif | Sep 07, 2011 |Center Chairman Lt. Gen. Robert Gard has an op-ed in the Baltimore Sun today on the recent House cuts to vital nuclear material security programs. Here's an excerpt:In a time of great political gridlock, there is at least one issue that both parties still agree on — the urgency to confront and reduce the threat posed by terrorist groups that are actively seeking nuclear weapons.
But Congress reduced the fiscal 2011 funding for nonproliferation efforts by the significant amount of $369 million, and more recently the House slashed an additional $428 million from the president's fiscal 2012 budget request for the nonproliferation account, including $85 million for the Global Threat Reduction Initiative.
Now it is up to the Senate to reverse these cuts.
Fortunately, the Senate appears to have listened, as it is poised to reverse the cuts.
Summary of the Senate Energy and Water Appropriations Subcommittee Mark Up: Good News for Nonpro
Kingston Reif | Sep 06, 2011 |This afternoon the Senate Energy and Water Appropriations Subcommittee approved the Fiscal Year (FY) 2012 Energy and Water Appropriations Bill. The Subcommittee received an allocation of $31.625 billion, approximately $57 million below the FY 2011 enacted level, but $986 million above the FY 2012 House enacted level. The full Appropriations Committee is scheduled to take up the bill tomorrow. No amendments were offered in Subcommittee but amendments are expected to be offered in Committee tomorrow, although probably not on the NNSA portion of the bill. You can read the official Subcommittee summary of the bill here.
According to Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein’s (D-CA) opening statement (the full text of the bill will not be released until tomorrow), the Subcommittee appropriated $11.05 billion for the National Nuclear Security Administration, an increase of $528 million (or 5%) above the FY 2011 appropriation and an increase of $451 million above the FY 2012 House enacted level.
Within NNSA, the Subcommittee appropriated $2.383 billion for the Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Account, an increase of $109 million (or 4.7%) above the FY 2011 enacted level and an increase of nearly $300 million over the FY 2012 House enacted level. The appropriation is $167 million below the President’s FY 2012 request of $2.549 billion.
Sen. Feinstein stated that the Subcommittee’s highest priority within NNSA was to fund nonproliferation and nuclear material security programs in support of the goal of securing all vulnerable nuclear materials within four years. While we will have to wait for the release of the bill text tomorrow for confirmation, the additional funding looks like good news for the Global Threat Reduction Initiative (the key program in the effort to secure vulnerable nuclear materials), which the House cut by $85 million below the FY 2012 request.
On the weapons side, the Subcommittee appropriated $7.190 billion, an increase of $294 million over the FY 2011 enacted level and an increase of $99 million over the FY 2012 House enacted level. The appropriation is $440 million less than the President’s FY 2012 request of $7.63 billion.
The future schedule for the bill is unclear. Most people I talked to at the hearing did not believe the bill would go to the Senate floor, and that final funding levels will be decided in conference between the House and Senate. It’s also not clear whether an agreement can be reached before the end of the fiscal year on September 30.
Stay tuned for more tomorrow when the final bill text is available.
Another Success Story in the Fight to Prevent Nuclear Terrorism
Kingston Reif | Aug 18, 2011 |On August 17 the National Nuclear Security Administration announced the return of 6.3 kilograms of U.S.-origin highly enriched uranium (HEU) spent fuel from a nuclear research facility in South Africa.
Carried out by the Global Threat Reduction Initiative in conjunction with the South African Nuclear Energy Corporation, the removal is yet another key step forward in the effort to eliminate dangerous nuclear materials so that they can never be used to make a nuclear weapon. Such efforts are our first line of defense against the threat of nuclear terrorism.
MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow highlighted the successful removal on her show last night (see the video above). She rightly referred to the Global Threat Reduction Initiative’s employees as “trained badasses.” Her guest, Rep. Ed Markey (D-MA), referred to them as “a peaceful Seal Team Six.” Right on! (The Arms Control Association also received a nice hit in the piece.)
A crude nuclear weapon can be made with as little as 25 kilograms of HEU. Since April 2009, the National Nuclear Security Administration has removed nearly 1000 kilograms of HEU. In total, it has removed over 120 bombs worth of HEU.
However, hundreds of kilograms of HEU still remain in countries such as Ukraine, Belarus, and Vietnam – much of it not adequately secured. And even after the August removal, South Africa still possesses hundreds of additional kilograms of HEU left over from its weapons program.
The removal of HEU from South Africa is but one in a long list of success stories authored by the Global Threat Reduction Initiative, and as Maddow noted last night, makes the House of Representatives' recent reckless cuts to the Global Threat Reduction Initiative almost impossible to understand.
The Senate must restore the cuts to the program when it returns in September, lest future such efforts to secure and eliminate HEU are delayed – or worse – not undertaken, thereby increasing the risk of nuclear terrorism.






