Information Paper from the United States
Concerning Article VI of the NPT
Provided to the Second Session of the Preparatory Committee
for the 2005 NPT Review Conference
Geneva, Switzerland May 1, 2003
Article VI
The United States is pleased to offer information on its policies
and actions that contribute to the goals of Article VI. we believe
that regular exchanges of information among NPT
parties during the review process are a useful means to facilitate
our discussions. This paper addresses both ongoing actions and
offers clarification on certain issues.
A. U.S. COMMITMENT TO ARTICLE VI
1. The Moscow Treaty
On May 24, 2002, President George W. Bush and President Vladimir
Putin signed the Moscow Treaty on Strategic Offensive Reductions.
Under this Treaty, the United States and Russia will reduce their
strategic nuclear warheads to a level of 1,700 to 2,200 by December
31, 2012. The United States Senate unanimously approved the Treaty
on March 6, 2003.
The Moscow Treaty will require a two-thirds decrease in both
countries' strategic nuclear warheads by 2012. This decrease will
bring their nuclear arsenals to the lowest levels in decades.
In the U.S.-Russian Joint Declaration on the New Strategic Relationship,
agreed upon at the same time as the Moscow Treaty, the United
States and Russia agreed to 'seek broad international support
for a strategy of proactive non-proliferation, including by implementing
and bolstering the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons ..." The Moscow Treaty represents an important contribution
toward this goal.
Following the successful completion in 2001 of reductions under
START from over 10,000 deployed strategic warheads to under 6,000,
the Moscow Treaty represents another major step in U.S. fulfillment
of its NPT Article VI obligations. In two decades, the United
States and Russia will have eliminated or decommissioned more
than three-quarters of their strategic nuclear warheads. United
Nations General Assembly Resolution 57/68 of November 22, 2002,
recognized that the agreed strategic reductions in the Moscow
Treaty advance the NPT commitment of the United States and Russia.
The Moscow Treaty reflects a new era and a strengthened U.S.-
Russian strategic partnership. Because of this partnership, it
was not necessary to incorporate hundreds of pages of cumbersome
rules and procedures into the Treaty. A Bilateral Implementation
Commission will be established and will meet at least twice a
year. The START Treaty - which will remain in force in accordance
with its terms - will also provide a foundation for confidence
regarding the strategic relationship.
Our two countries also have established a Consultative Group
on Strategic Stability that will serve as a broader forum to discuss
issues of strategic importance and to enhance mutual transparency.
This Group is chaired by the Foreign and Defense ministers of
both countries and includes other senior officials. Working Groups
have already begun to meet. The discussions to date have focussed
on transparency in both strategic and non-strategic nuclear weapons,
and on cooperative efforts in missile defense. We believe the
activities of this Consultative Group will further strengthen
openness and cooperation across a broad range of U.S.- Russian
security issues.
2. Clarifying the Moscow Treaty
In 2001, the Bush Administration decided to proceed with strategic
nuclear reductions based on the dramatic changes taking place
in the international security environment, including in our relationship
with Russia. The President announced that the United States would
unilaterally reduce its strategic nuclear forces to the lowest
possible level consistent with our national security requirements
and invited Russia to reciprocate. President Putin made a similar
statement and the two leaders eventually decided to make the reductions
legally binding.
Our countries took an approach that led quickly to a treaty cutting
operationally deployed strategic nuclear warheads deeper than
anything proposed previously. In less than six months, the Administration
was able to accomplish what had proven impossible for almost a
decade -- to agree with Russia on deep strategic nuclear reductions.
In the post-Cold War international security environment, the
Administration is confident that it is unnecessary to attach strict,
inflexible or overly detailed requirements to strategic arms control
agreements. The new mutual trust and openness in the U.S.-Russian
relationship, along with the various means of inspecting and monitoring
already available to both Parties, and our commitment to pursue
additional transparency, will provide the necessary confidence
in implementation of the Moscow Treaty.
By any measure, this Treaty is a meaningful accomplishment. It
does not require the destruction of nuclear warheads; but no arms
control treaty has ever done that. Some warheads removed from
operational service will be stored in active status, others will
be stored but disabled and not available for quick redeployment,
and some will be designated for retirement and dismantling.
The absence of treaty constraints on warhead disposition allows
the United States and Russia to proceed with warhead elimination
in a manner that is unhindered by artificial requirements. The
Moscow Treaty's flexibility regarding warhead disposition recognizes
that the United States and Russia have fundamentally different
stockpile maintenance practices. Key to the difference is that
Russia continues to produce new warheads while the United States
currently has no capacity to manufacture nuclear weapons.
The Treaty does not preclude the redeployment of strategic warheads
removed from operational service. However, the United States has
no plans to do so. It does not seek to rearm. Barring unforeseen
changes in the global security environment, there is no reason
we would want to reverse these reductions. Still, there is a nuclear
safety and reliability reason to maintain the right to redeploy.
The United States has not manufactured a new nuclear weapon in
more than a decade. If an operationally deployed warhead is found
to be unsafe or unreliable, we must have the ability to replace
it.
We have already begun reductions under the Moscow Treaty. Our
50 Peacekeeper intercontinental ballistic missiles at Warren Air
Force Base in Wyoming are being retired. All 50 missiles should
be deactivated within two years. As part of this process, the
missiles will be disassembled. Two of a planned four Trident submarines
have been removed from strategic service, with the next two scheduled
for removal by October 2004. The entire B-1 bomber force is dedicated
to conventional missions, and is no longer considered nuclear-capable.
These actions will leave the United States with approximately
1,100 fewer warheads in operationally deployed status by late
2007 than in May 2002. After 2007, we plan to reduce further by
decreasing the number of warheads on ballistic missiles and reducing
the number of operationally deployed weapons at heavy bomber bases.
These plans will evolve over time.
The Moscow Treaty is a new approach for a new time. The United
States believes that the deep cuts in its nuclear arsenal called
for in the Moscow Treaty further demonstrate its ongoing commitment
to the NPT.
3. Dismantlement
The United States has dismantled over 13,000 U.S. nuclear weapons
over the past 15 years. The pace of dismantlement has slowed in
recent years due in part to elimination of the backlog from retirements
in the 1990s and to the complexity of some weapon dismantlements.
However, the Department of Energy is seeking to accelerate dismantlement
efforts already underway at the Pantex facility prior to the onset
of major refurbishment work later this decade. Currently, the
W56 Minuteman II warhead is being disassembled. All B-53 strategic
bombs and some B-61 non-strategic bombs have been retired awaiting
dismantlement.
A significant milestone was reached in January of this year when
the United States finished dismantling the nuclear weapons that
it pledged to dismantle under the 1991 Presidential Nuclear Initiative
of President George H.W. Bush. The last warhead type to be disassembled
under that initiative was a nuclear artillery round.
4. Fissile Material Measures
Measures related to fissile material get little public attention,
but can have a substantial impact on the irreversibility of nuclear
weapon reductions. They involve efforts to halt the production
of fissile material for nuclear weapons and to dispose of excess
defense material, including that removed from dismantled nuclear
weapons.
The United States has not produced fissile material for nuclear
weapons in over a decade. The United States supports the negotiation
in the Conference on Disarmament of a multilateral Fissile Material
Cutoff Treaty that would advance U.S. security. Moreover, we entered
into the bilateral Plutonium Production Reactor Agreement (PPRA)
with Russia in 1997 that codified the shutdown of 14 U.S. plutonium
production reactors, along with 10 such reactors in Russia. Further
progress was made recently on this agreement through an amendment
signed in March 2003 that calls for the complete shutdown of Russia's
last three plutonium production reactors and replacement of the
reactors' energy production with fossil
fuel sources. The United States will assist in this replacement
effort. Moreover, unprecedented monitoring activities have begun
under the PPRA to provide confidence that Russia will not use
any weapon-grade plutonium produced after 1994 in nuclear weapons.
The United States and Russia continue cooperation toward disposing
of some 700 tons of fissile material declared in excess to defense
needs, including material removed from nuclear weapons. Disposing
of this highly enriched uranium (HEU) and plutonium will advance
critical nonproliferation and threat reduction goals, as well
as contribute to the irreversibility of the nuclear arms reduction
process.
More than 170 tons of Russian HEU has been converted to non-weapons
grade material for use in the United States pursuant to the 1993
U.S.-Russian agreement on the conversion of 500 tons of Russian
HEU. This material comes from dismantled Russian nuclear weapons
and literally represents a conversion of once deadly weapons-grade
material into a form usable in civilian applications. The United
States has identified 174 tons of excess U.S. HEU and is unilaterally
converting this material to peaceful uses. Thus far, approximately
30 tons have been converted with another 33 tons expected to be
converted by 2007.
The conversion of plutonium to a non-weapons usable form is a
much more difficult and expensive process. The United States is
actively pursuing implementation of the 2000 U.S.-Russian agreement
that calls for each side to dispose of 34 tons of weapons plutonium
into forms no longer useable in nuclear weapons. Additional excess
material can be placed under this agreement by either side as
the material becomes available. Among current priorities is to
establish financial arrangements and related organizational mechanisms
for multilateral support of Russia's disposition program, to allow
the U.S. and Russian programs to go forward roughly in parallel.
The vast majority of the 700 tons of excess fissile material
is subject to verification or to transparency measures pursuant
to U.S.- Russian negotiated arrangements. Both sides have also
worked with the IAEA to develop practical measures for IAEA verification
of excess material. This 1996 Trilateral Initiative addresses
novel techniques for verifying materials still in classified or
sensitive forms. It also includes the development of a model verification
agreement. The United States, Russia and the IAEA concluded last
year that they had fulfilled the initial tasks established under
this initiative.
Work is proceeding between U.S. and Russian experts on developing
measurement equipment and standards.
The United States has unilaterally placed some of its excess
material under IAEA safeguards. Notably, early last month the
IAEA conducted its 100th inspection of DOE facilities at Oak Ridge,
Tennessee and Hanford, Washington that contain excess HEU and
plutonium, respectively. The United States has 12 tons of excess
plutonium and HEU under safeguards. The conversion of 63 tons
of excess HEU to power reactor fuel is being done under the auspices
of the IAEA.
All of this work represents progress toward nuclear disarmament.
These measures help ensure that neither the United States nor
Russia would be able to rebuild their nuclear weapon stockpiles
to previously high levels. To date, the quantities of excess fissile
material removed from the military stockpiles of both sides and
slated for disposition are equivalent to eliminating irreversibly
well over 30,000 nuclear weapons.
Pursuant to the May 2002 Moscow Summit, the United States and
Russia have been looking at ways to increase the amount of excess
material that could be eliminated.
4. Cooperative Threat Reduction
The United States has allocated over $8 billion for all nonproliferation
and threat reduction assistance to states of the former Soviet
Union since 1992, with about $1 billion requested for FY 2004.
This represents an enormous investment in a safer world through
cooperative programs designed to eliminate the threat of weapons
of mass destruction.
This effort includes more than 30 programs operated by the Departments
of Defense, Energy and State. They provide assistance in the dismantling
of bombers, missiles and launchers for the delivery of nuclear
weapons; in reducing nuclear materials and infrastructure; and
in increasing security for the storage in Russia of nuclear warheads
and fissile material. U.S. assistance has helped eliminate almost
900 ballistic missiles, more than 100 bombers, and nearly 50 ballistic
missile submarines. Security has also been upgraded at more than
60 sites in the states of the former Soviet Union where weapons-grade
fissile material is stored or used. Through the science centers
in Moscow and Kiev, we have also engaged former WMD scientists
and engineers in civilian research projects at more than 850 institutes.
Other recent activities include the removal of HEU fuel from
Serbia and the destruction of missiles in Bulgaria. We are also
helping some 30 countries to establish effective export controls
and border security. These programs offer training and detection
and enforcement equipment. Program advisers serve overseas and
directly engage foreign officials on these matters.
Since September 11, there has been a new sense of urgency in
nonproliferation as nations around the world recognize the huge
risk presented by weapons of mass destruction in the hands of
terrorists or their state sponsors. Last June at Kananaskis, Canada,
President Bush and other G-8 leaders launched the Global Partnership
Against the Spread of Weapons and Materials of Mass Destruction
to address this risk. They pledged to raise up to $20 billion
over ten years for nonproliferation, disarmament, counter-terrorism,
and nuclear safety projects, initially in Russia.
Since the June Summit, the G-8 have devoted much time and attention
to implement the initiative. We expect significant progress to
be reported at the Evian Summit in June 2003. Other countries
have been invited to participate through contributions to projects
under the scope of the Partnership. Several countries have expressed
strong interest and we hope others will do so. The Global Partnership
builds upon the decade-long U.S. CTR program.
In the Global Partnership statement, G-8 leaders also endorsed
six nonproliferation principles to prevent terrorist access to
WMD. Principle six invites states to manage and dispose of excess
fissile material, to eliminate chemical weapons, and to minimize
stocks of dangerous biological pathogens and toxins. Fulfillment
of this principle will help to reduce the threat of terrorist
acquisition of these items.
B. INTERACTION
Based on concerns- raised by others, we offer the following views
on a few issues related to Article VI. We believe this information
is responsive to those delegations that commented last year on
the need for more interaction among delegations on key questions.
1. Thirteen Steps
Some countries have expressed concern over what they believe
to be a lack of progress on the 13 steps from the Final Document
of the 2000 NPT Review Conference. Some of them also view these
steps as a rigid framework within which all nuclear disarmament
activities must take place.
We believe it is important to recognize that the step-by-step
process inherent in Article VI implementation will take place
amidst changes, such as in the security environment or in governmental
policies. No country believed it would be possible to implement
all those steps by 2005 and none believed that all NWS would make
identical progress. However, what does not change is the legal
undertaking in the NPT related to Article VI.
While the United States no longer supports all 13 steps, we unambiguously
support Article VI and the goal of nuclear disarmament. This goal
will not be reached quickly or without enormous effort by all
NPT parties. It can be achieved only through a step-by-step approach.
Article VI of the NPT reflects this reality and sets no timelines
or specific milestones. We think it is a mistake to use strict
adherence to the 13 steps as the only means by which NPT parties
can fulfill their Article VI obligations. The fundamental test
is whether the United States or any other state is moving in the
direction set out in Article VI.
For example, one of the 13 steps calls for implementation of
START II and conclusion of START III. START II/III were attempted
during the 1990s, but neither was successful. The Moscow Treaty
calls for reductions beyond those in START II and comparable to
those for START III. And the Moscow Treaty was completed in a
few months. Had we pursued a START III Treaty using the traditional
approach to arms control, it could have been several years before
the two sides reached agreement. The Moscow Treaty has mandated
real results - a decrease to 1,700-2,200 strategic nuclear warheads
- where the START II and START III processes had failed.
2. Diminished Role of Nuclear Weapons
The new nuclear policy adopted by President Bush is specifically
directed toward a reduced reliance on nuclear weapons. The United
States adopted a new strategic posture with three elements: offensive
systems (nuclear and non-nuclear), active and passive defense
systems, and a revitalized defense infrastructure.
Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld's transmittal letter to the Congress
last year for the Nuclear Posture Review makes clear that this
"New Triad" will reduce our dependence on nuclear weapons
for deterrence through modernization of conventional forces, the
addition of missile defenses, and other measures. This approach
means that the United States will no longer be as heavily dependent
on nuclear forces for deterrence as it was during the Cold War.
This represents a very significant change. It is based on the
realization that the Cold War is over and the international security
environment is very different than it was before the breakup of
the Soviet Union. New threats today, particularly from state sponsors
of terrorism, require new approaches. Some of these threats may
not be deterred by our traditional Cold War posture -- and thus
the need for a new range of capabilities.
The Department of Defense has not identified any requirements
for new nuclear weapons. We have not produced a nuclear warhead
in over a decade. Certainly, cost and feasibility studies related
to possible nuclear modernization are undertaken. Such studies,
however, in no way represent a decision to proceed with development
of a new warhead.
Secretary Rumsfeld and Secretary Powell have stated publicly
that there has been no change in U.S. nuclear declaratory policy
and that the United States has not lowered the threshold for nuclear
weapons use. Indeed, by strengthening non-nuclear forces, specifically
in the area of high-accuracy and precision strike, we will be
able to hold targets at risk with an advanced conventional system
that heretofore required a nuclear weapon. The result is an increase
in the threshold for nuclear use. There has been no change in
U.S. negative security assurance policy. In addition, the United
States does not target any country on a day-to-day. basis.
While the United States will not pursue ratification of the CTBT,
we continue to support the current moratorium on nuclear testing.
The United States has not conducted a nuclear explosive test since
1992. We also support the establishment of the International Monitoring
System for detecting nuclear tests.
Proposals exist to decrease the time that it would take to resume
nuclear testing, were that ever to be necessary. But that fact
says nothing about the likelihood of a nuclear test. Nor does
it relate to the development of a new nuclear weapon.
The current test readiness would be more than adequate for that
purpose. For the foreseeable future, we believe that the stockpile
stewardship program can ensure the safety and reliability of our
nuclear stockpile, and that no nuclear tests will be required.
All states examine possible future threats, do contingency planning,
and study ways to respond to new threats. Such activities are
necessary to protect national security. The United States is no
exception. However, published reports that studies or contingency
planning may be ongoing do not in any way represent a change in
policy. Nuclear policies, in particular, are decided at the highest
levels of any U.S. Administration.
Since the nuclear age began, all U.S. Presidents have demonstrated
prudence with regard to nuclear weapons. The United States has
an unparalleled conventional capability to defend our security.
President Bush's policies are further reducing the extent to which
we need to rely on nuclear weapons.
3. Non-Strategic Nuclear Weapons
A third concern is the view that Non-Strategic Nuclear Weapons
(NSNW) should be a priority and be subject to legally-binding
agreements.
The United States and NATO long ago decided that reductions in
NSNW were appropriate. Over the past decade, the United States
eliminated all but one of its nuclear delivery systems
from Europe. Overall reductions in the number of U.S. NSNW have
reached nearly 90%. The Army, Marine Corps, and surface and air
components of the Navy have been denuclearized. The only remaining
U.S. nuclear weapons in Europe -- air delivered bombs--- have
been greatly reduced. This progress in NSNW reductions comes from
unilateral action.
NATO's nuclear-capable delivery aircraft used to be able to launch
in minutes. That readiness time has been lengthened to months.
NATO has considerably reduced its reliance on nuclear weapons.
In recent years, the United States has looked at the prospect
of formal arms control treaties on NSNW and concluded that such
an approach is not possible. The nature of these weapons and their
delivery systems make it far more difficult to have confidence
in treaty implementation than is the case for strategic systems.
Delivery systems for NSNW are often dual-use, i.e. for conventional
and nuclear roles, which makes it very difficult to have confidence
that they have been retired from a nuclear role.
The United States is committed, however, to the pursuit of transparency
related to NSNW. The issue has been raised with Russia in the
bilateral consultative group established at last year's Moscow
summit. The NATO-Russia Council is also discussing confidence-building
measures related to NSNW.
CONCLUSION
The preamble of the Moscow Treaty notes that the United States
and Russia are "mindful of their obligations under Article
VI of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons of
July 1,1968." President Bush's signature on this Treaty provides
a clear demonstration at the highest level of the commitment of
the United States to its Article VI undertakings.
This paper has provided some details of U.S. actions that implement
Article VI. Moreover, we have tried to clarify some issues where
there is a potential for misunderstanding of U.S. policy. It is
clear from the foregoing that the United States is prepared not
only to take measures that reduce reliance on its own nuclear
weapons, but also to assist others in concrete efforts to move
toward Article VI goals. We continue to expend enormous resources
and effort to reduce the risk to all nations from weapons of mass
destruction. The totality of these efforts represents a solid
record of achievement in implementation of Article VI.