Statement by
Assistant Secretary of State John S. Wolf
Representative of the United States of America
To the Second Session of the Preparatory Committee for The 2005
Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons
April 28, 2003
(As delivered)
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, it is an honor to appear as the Representative
of the United States to this second meeting of the Preparatory
Committee for the 2005 Review Conference of the Parties to the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). I congratulate
you on your selection. We appreciate deeply the effort you have
made to ensure a constructive outcome for this meeting.
At the outset, I have the honor to deliver a message from the
Secretary of State Colin Powell:
I begin his message:
"I extend my personal best wishes to participants at the
2003 session of the Preparatory Committee for the 2005 Review
Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). We meet at a time of considerable challenge
to the NPT and to international peace and security.
In recent months, one state declared its withdrawal from the
Treaty. Another party admitted to construction of secret nuclear
facilities. Others are procuring technologies that would enable
them to produce clandestinely the fissile material needed for
a nuclear weapon.
NPT Parties -- weapon states and non-weapon states alike -- must
take strong action to deal with cases of noncompliance and to
strengthen the Treaty's nonproliferation undertakings. We cannot
allow the few who fail to meet their obligations to undermine
the important work of the NPT.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) must be relentless
in pursuing suspected cases of noncompliance. The IAEA needs our
full financial and political support to do its job. Universal
adoption of the IAEA Additional Protocol must remain a high priority
objective.
The United States remains firmly committed to its obligations
under the NPT. We are pursuing a number of avenues that promote
the goal of nuclear disarmament. The Moscow Treaty and other U.S.
actions are based on a desire and an intention to reduce our reliance
on nuclear weapons and eliminate surplus stocks of weapons-grade
material.
The NPT reflects our common realization that the spread of nuclear
weapons would gravely destabilize our world. An NPT to which all
states adhere and fully comply would serve to protect against
the prospect of regional nuclear competition and to reduce the
risk of nuclear war.
The NPT can only be as strong as our will to enforce it, in spirit
and in deed. We share a collective responsibility to be ever vigilant,
and to take concerted action when the Treaty, our Treaty, is threatened.
Let us act promptly and effectively to meet the challenges to
the NPT. By doing so, we can help ensure that it remains an effective
instrument of global security. "
And that is the end of the message of the Secretary of State.
The Chair this morning called for a comprehensive assessment
of the current state of the health of this treaty. I agree with
the Chairman. While we meet here in Geneva, home of the Conference
on Disarmament, our job is broader. We need to look at the Treaty
on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. I say this because
more than ever before, proliferation is on the front page of newspapers
all over the world and worry about its threat is on the minds
of all of our citizens. Many observers are too quick to write
the epitaph for the NPT and for our common efforts. Let me say,
as the Secretary said, up front, that the United States of America
rejects that view. Like the Chairman, we note the remarkable record
of achievements and we congratulate and we affirm the over 180
nations which live by their Treaty commitments. For thirty-three
years, we have come together to address the unique challenge of
preventing the proliferation of nuclear weapons.
Much has happened since this group gathered last year in New
York. While we have made important progress on some aspects of
the Treaty's implementation, we also face significant new problems.
The NPT's core purpose is preventing the spread of nuclear weapons.
It's in the title. While the Treaty has been largely successful
in this respect, irresponsible NPT parties are taking actions
that pose fundamental challenges to the Treaty.
Today, each of us must make a choice. The time for business as
usual is over. The time for resolute action is here. Without full
compliance by all states, the security benefits of the Treaty
will erode. Without strict enforcement, the international confidence
that has underpinned the Treaty will dissolve, and the basis for
peaceful sharing of nuclear technology will be destroyed. The
world will become a far more dangerous place as more nations contemplate
their future amid growing numbers of nuclear weapon states (NWS).
We must choose to strengthen our political commitment to the
NPT. We must build stronger barriers against those who try to
violate the Treaty's fundamental obligations. One part of that
choice requires dealing firmly with countries whose nuclear programs
today pose a serious threat to the NPT. By doing so, we send a
clear message to stop any other Treaty party that would seek to
acquire or spread nuclear weapons or nuclear weapons technologies.
In October 2002, North Korea admitted to a secret uranium enrichment
program as part of its nuclear weapons program. It is not just
that this program compounded previous DPRK violations of the NPT
and several other international agreements. But it also happened
even as my country and others were engaged in nearly a decade
of good faith efforts under the Agreed Framework and other international
agreements.
I need not repeat the sequence of events since that revelation
or say more than how deeply regrettable it is that North Korea
decided first to further violate the Treaty and then withdraw.
Its withdrawal action was both cynical, in light of its long-standing
breach of the Treaty, and dangerous in its impact on security
in Northeast Asia. The international community is determined to
see the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. It is only by
eliminating its nuclear weapons program that North Korea can hope
to improve its international standing and obtain the cooperation
it needs for economic development. If NPT withdrawal and threats
to acquire nuclear weapons become the currency of international
bargaining, our world will be in chaos.
While all our options remain available, we are determined to
end North Korea's threat through peaceful, diplomatic means. We
met in Beijing last week for multilateral talks with China and
North Korea. There were no breakthroughs, but we were able to
make clear to North Korea our resolve in achieving the verifiable,
irreversible dismantlement of its nuclear weapons program. It
is important for every country represented here to send the same
message to the DPRK: abandon your nuclear weapons ambitions and
return to compliance with the NPT.
Iran provides perhaps the most fundamental challenge ever faced
by the NPT. This is a country that professes to be in full compliance
with its safeguards obligations. It is a country that has been
one of the largest beneficiaries of IAEA technical cooperation
for peaceful purposes. But, as recent revelations have made all
too clear, Iran has been conducting an alarming, clandestine program
to acquire sensitive nuclear capabilities that we believe make
sense only as part of a nuclear weapons program.
How many other NPT non-nuclear weapon states built an enrichment
plant before their first power reactor was finished? None. What
responsible country would or could commit to building a production
scale plant without extensive research and development? None.
How many other NPT non-nuclear weapon states with nuclear programs
based solely on light water reactors have also built large-scale
heavy water production plants? None. Why has Iran sought clandestinely
to acquire laser enrichment technology? Iran has not answered,
nor even admitted to this effort.
Recent revelations by private groups and the IAEA raise profound
doubts about Iran's intentions. Despite the professions of transparency
and peaceful intent, Iran is going down the same path of denial
and deception that handicapped international inspections in North
Korea and Iraq. We have seen the pattern of cheat and retreat
before - of begrudging compromises on process but obstinacy on
real disclosure. It is hardly reassuring to us that, eleven years
after it was first issued, Iran has only belatedly accepted the
IAEA's 1992 call on all states to declare new facilities prior
to construction. Iran was the very last state to accept this call,
and then only after its new facilities were made public by others.
The IAEA, which is following up the revelations made during Director-General
Elbaradei's February visit, undoubtedly has its own extensive
list of questions. Some of these may relate to small issues and
others to more fundamental matters. But the answers the IAEA is
seeking are critical, are critical, to determining whether Iran
is in compliance with its safeguards agreement -- and therefore
meeting its fundamental NPT obligations.
I want to make this clear: this is not, this is not, a bilateral
issue between Iran and the United States. This is an issue between
Iran and the rest of the world. Every NPT party has a stake in
seeing the veil of secrecy lifted on Iran's nuclear program. Many
countries have concerns and questions about Iran's intentions
and the capabilities that must be addressed. The IAEA needs to
ask the hard questions and it deserves, it needs to get complete
answers. It needs to go wherever necessary to find the truth;
and it needs to measure each answer against the pattern to date
of denial and deception. Member states of the IAEA will need to
know how Iran has responded to requests for access. Iran has repeatedly
asserted that its nuclear program is "completely transparent"
and that it is "fully cooperating with the IAEA." Now
is the time for Iran to provide full disclosure. IAEA members
will be satisfied with nothing less than the truth. We look forward
to the Director General's comprehensive report on Iran at the
June Board of Governors meeting.
Our experiences with Iraq, Iran and North Korea reveal an objective
message. We must constantly be mindful that an irresponsible NPT
party may use its "declared" peaceful nuclear program
to mask its development or acquisition of nuclear weapons capabilities.
What is presented as "compliance" may in fact not be
real. Only genuine commitment, true transparency, and rigorous
verification can lead to genuine confidence.
Some argue that, absent a formal finding of noncompliance with
safeguards, that non-nuclear-weapons states have a "right"
to acquire nuclear technology for peaceful purposes. Article IV
certainly provides for cooperation among NPT parties in pursuing
peaceful nuclear programs. And many NPT parties have benefited
from Article IV assistance over the life of the Treaty. But, underpinning
and fundamental to this cooperation are the nonproliferation obligations
in Articles II and III. These obligations require that nuclear
material and facilities be used solely, solely, for peaceful purposes
as set forth in the Treaty and the IAEA safeguards agreement.
Nuclear commerce must not continue when there are questions, even
if those questions have not yet resulted in formal findings of
noncompliance. Recent history demonstrates that suppliers need
to exercise far greater caution with countries of concern. Some
may argue they must see the "smoking gun." Unfortunately,
the smoking gun for clandestine nuclear programs may well be the
mushroom cloud above an exploding weapon.
Today, we also face another risk - that of terrorist access to
nuclear materials. The tragic lesson of September 11 is that terrorists
are looking for ways to kill or injure large numbers of civilians,
innocent civilians, and they are looking to create panic and economic
dislocation. Nuclear and radioactive material offer terrorists
a tempting means to those ends. Lest anyone think this is a problem
only for the United States, or perhaps a few western countries
- think again. Remember, the economic tidal wave spawned by the
September 11 terrorist actions is still, still, crashing down
all across the world, causing economic losses in the trillions
of dollars and misery and economic deprivation for millions all
around the world. Use of a stolen nuclear weapon, or even a radiological
dispersion device could cause far more extensive damage for all
of us.
Many here already have spoken to the key importance of disarmament
and the need to match the Treaty's disarmament and nonproliferation
obligations. And I quite agree with that. Balance, balance, is
an inherent part of the Treaty. The Treaty has three pillars:
nonproliferation, disarmament, and peaceful nuclear cooperation.
But the fact is, today, the Treaty is dangerously out of balance.
Disarmament continues, and in fact took a significant step forward
with the signing of the Moscow Treaty. We are leading that process,
and we will continue to do so. In the past 15 years, huge strides
have been made in reducing and eliminating nuclear weapons. The
United States has dismantled over 13,000 nuclear weapons. We have
eliminated more than a dozen different types of warheads and we
have reduced the number of nuclear weapons by about 60%. Under
the Moscow Treaty we will cut the number of strategic weapons
again by two-thirds to 1,700 to 2,200 by the year 2012. In two
decades, the United States will have eliminated or decommissioned
three-quarters of its strategic arsenal. We have also given up
whole classes of tactical nuclear weapons, and we have withdrawn
remaining stocks from almost every overseas site.
We also are making progress under the U.S.-Russia agreement that
ensure excess fissile material can never be used in nuclear weapons.
Over their lifetime, these agreements will contribute to the irreversibility
of nuclear reductions. They will ensure that fissile material
capable of manufacturing over 30,000 nuclear weapons is no longer
available for such use. And that's not all.
We are purchasing from Russia low-enriched uranium for reactor
fuel that has been down-blended from hundreds of tons of highly
enriched uranium, uranium from dismantled warheads. The United
States and Russia have agreed to permanently dispose of 34 tons
each of weapons usable plutonium.
We spend about a $1 billion a year on a variety of nonproliferation
and threat reduction programs in Russia and other states of the
former Soviet Union. And much of this effort is to reduce nuclear
material stocks and secure that which remains. We, we, fostered
last year's decision by G-8 Leaders to launch a Global Partnership
and commit up to $20 billion over ten years for nonproliferation
assistance. The United States' share of that $20 billion is $10
billion.
Some may debate whether this pace is fast enough - but it is
not credible to argue that we are not on a steady downward path
toward the goals of Article VI.
Yet, the path for nuclear proliferation is spiraling upward.
And what must we do?
IAEA safeguards play an indispensable role in the process of
ensuring confidence in NPT compliance, but safeguards need further
strengthening. We rely on the IAEA to safeguard peaceful nuclear
programs around the world and to look for evidence of clandestine
activities. It must have the resources and the resolve necessary
to ensure that peaceful nuclear programs are not mere facades.
The work of this unique international organization advances our
collective security. We need to respond positively to the IAEA's
chronic shortfall in regular budget safeguards funding. At the
same time, at the same time, we must recognize that it will take
more than additional funding for the IAEA to meet its maximum
verification potential under the NPT. NPT parties must recognize
the dangers that exist, and they must summon the political will
to support a more assertive IAEA safeguards system. More resources
must be matched with strengthened enforcement.
We need to take the next big step by substantially increasing
the political momentum behind the Additional Protocol. In May
of last year, President Bush transmitted the U.S.-IAEA Additional
Protocol to the U.S. Senate for its advice and consent to ratification.
In doing so, the President made clear his support for universal
adoption of the Additional Protocol.
Since we met last year, there has been some progress globally
in acceptance of the Additional Protocol. But the pace should
intensify. Some states with significant nuclear programs have
yet to bring a Protocol before the Board. The 2005 NPT Review
Conference offers a target date for action. All NPT parties, including
my government, should exert a maximum effort to have a Protocol
in force in 2005.
Sustained and rapid progress over the next two years in completing
both Protocols and the 48 NPT safeguards agreements that are not
yet in force would represent a solid achievement in support of
the NPT and global security. Even NPT parties with no civil nuclear
programs can contribute. Every safeguards agreement and Protocol
that is concluded reinforces the fabric of the NPT and assists
the IAEA in verifying that nuclear programs are genuinely peaceful.
There is a task for members of the Nuclear Suppliers Group and
for the Zangger Committee as well. They should continue to search
for ways to ensure that items under their control do not find
their way into nuclear weapon programs. Information sharing among
NSG states is critical to this goal. But members must act on this
information by recognizing the increased risk of diversion and
they must act to deny nuclear-related items to states of concern.
We applaud the recent action by the NSG to address the threat
of terrorism. These supplier groups can provide a boost to the
Additional Protocol by adopting it as a condition of supply, perhaps
by 2005.
And strong national export controls are essential to enforcing
the goals of the NSG and the NPT. There should be severe penalties
for those who violate the law. And supplier governments must have
authority to stop items not on the control lists. We should consider
incorporating the concept of "catch-all" controls as
an explicit NSG requirement. We all need to reflect on the fact,
on the fact, that North Korea and Iran obtained proven enrichment
technologies largely undetected, even though, even though, suppliers
increased their scrutiny of enrichment transactions more than
a decade ago.
The ongoing effort to amend the Physical Protection Convention
will strengthen international standards for protecting nuclear
material and facilities used for peaceful purposes. A resolution
adopted at last fall's IAEA General Conference noted with concern
the lack of progress and called for the early completion of negotiations
on an amendment. The drafting group convened by the IAEA Director-General
completed its work in March without reaching a consensus. It is
time, it is time, for parties to set aside political agendas and
to realize our common goal. The need for an amended Convention
is as critical as ever.
International cooperation in securing and regulating radioactive
sources was given a boost last month at a conference in Vienna
co-sponsored by Russia and the United States. And more than 120
countries joined the call for stronger national and international
security over radioactive sources, especially the kind that can
be used in "dirty bombs." Among the key recommendations
were the need for national plans, national plans, to manage sources
throughout their lifetime, as well as to locate, recover and secure
high-risk radioactive sources. This is not an issue on which interests
of developed and developing countries differ. Virtually no state
is immune from the risk posed by these sources. Here is another
opportunity for us to work together. The U.S. will be active in
helping.
There are many opportunities for every state to make a difference
in achieving nuclear nonproliferation objectives. It starts with
robust support for the NPT. But declaratory statements must be
backed up with political resolve to confront those who undermine
nuclear nonproliferation and to take direct action to strengthen
the barriers against possible future offenders. There must be
serious consequences for those who violate their NPT commitments.
U.S. support for the goal of universal NPT adherence remains
undiminished. We do not support any change to the NPT that would
accord a different status to states currently outside the Treaty.
The 2000 NPT Review Conference recognized that universality would
depend, would depend, on successful efforts to enhance regional
security in areas of tension such as the Middle East and South
Asia. We continue to recognize the validity of the goal of the
1995 resolution on the Middle East, and we are committed to helping
the parties of the Middle East to achieve peace.
In closing, let me reinforce that the NPT is more important today
than ever before. As we prepare for the 2005 Conference, we should
recognize the new proliferation challenges we face and attach
a higher priority to strengthening the Treaty. The vast majority
of parties, parties in this room, honor their obligations. Yet,
the Treaty's value to future generations depends on what we do
to preserve the Treaty as an effective instrument against the
spread of nuclear weapons. I am confident that working together
with strong resolve we can ensure the NPT and other multilateral
approaches continue to play a critical role in the fight against
the security threats of the 21st century.
Thank you.