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REQUIRED IMAGE

REQUIRED IMAGE

Testimony

Non-Proliferation Regime After the Elections

Link Copied
By Joseph Cirincione
Published on Nov 10, 2000

Source: Carnegie

Joseph Cirincione, Senior Associate

Monterey Institute International Studies, Washington DC November 15, 2000

There is broad agreement in the expert community on the national security challenges the next president will face as he works to stem the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. The president's policies, however, will be conditioned heavily by congressional considerations. In a November 15 presentation at the Washington office of the Center for Nonproliferation Studies of the Monterey Institute of International Studies I outlined the ten key challenges the next president will face. Please click on the link below to view the slides I presented during the talk. For more detail, please click on the titles of the articles and briefs listed below.

The five most pressing regional issues will likely involve North Korean missile and nuclear programs, Russian nuclear reductions and security, the relationship with China overall, freezing South Asian nuclear programs, and Iranian nuclear and missile ambitions. The five top international treaty issues are restarting the nuclear weapons reduction process, resolving the missile defense dilemma, continuing the ban on nuclear weapons tests, negotiation a verification regime for the Biological Weapons Convention, and kick-starting negotiations for a Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty.

My top four recommendation to the new president are to:

  • Forge a new strategic consensus for dramatically lower numbers of nuclear weapons and their reduced role in national defense doctrines;

  • Secure independent technical evaluation of missile defense technologies to help build agreement on the feasibility, schedule and relative value of active missile defenses;

  • Seize the historic opportunity to reach an agreement with North Korea, halting the test and export of missiles; and,

  • Triple efforts to secure nuclear materials in Russia, closing off the key potential source for would-be proliferants.

Both Al Gore and George Bush will likely seek substantial reductions in nuclear weapons, (Bush unilaterally and Gore through negotiations) and neither is likely to abrogate the Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty. Republican leaders in Congress, however, may press for retaining higher numbers of nuclear weapons, for rapid deployment of a national missile defense system, and some may push for new nuclear tests. Democrats may well regain one or both of the congressional houses in the 2002 election, while deaths in the Senate could shift control of that body even sooner. Democratic influence would encourage deeper nuclear reductions, moderate missile defense programs and seek ratification of the nuclear test ban treaty.

Historically, a Republican president with a Democratic Congress has proven to be the best combination for reducing nuclear dangers. My presentation includes a matrix outlining the possible political formations over the next four years (ranked 1-4 for favorable impact on stemming proliferation) and the policies each might produce. Domestic and international events will obviously influence policy, but the presentation offers a basic method for analyzing the possibilities and is adaptable to individual variations.

Links:

Presentation

Proliferation Brief: The Election Matrix

Still Kicking: A Forecast of the Post-Clinton NMD Debate Disarmament Diplomacy, Sepember 2000, Issue 50

The Next Wave: Urgently Needed New Steps to Control Warheads and Fissile Material
Carnegie Endowment Working Paper

Chapter One of Repairing the Regime:  On Overview of the State of the Non-Proliferation Regime

Presentation on North Korea from Arms Control Association press conference, 20 October 2000

Back to Carnegie Non-Proliferation News and Resources

About the Author

Joseph Cirincione

Former Senior Associate, Director for NonProliferation

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Joseph Cirincione
Former Senior Associate, Director for NonProliferation
Joseph Cirincione
Foreign PolicyNuclear PolicyUnited States

Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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