
#8
Los Angeles Times
November 12, 2001
U.S. Must Help Russia Diminish Nuclear Risk
By ROSE GOTTEMOELLER
Rose Gottemoeller is a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace. During the Clinton administration, she was assistant
secretary for nonproliferation and national security at the Department of Energy
Nuclear weapons in the hands of Osama bin Laden. A suitcase bomb detonating
in the middle of the Golden Gate Bridge. A radiological bomb spewing plutonium
over the White House, creating a keep-out zone in central Washington to last for
thousands of years. Suddenly, the press is full of scenarios like these, and
people are worried.
The United States has committed funds to responding to these threats, such as
training crack nuclear emergency search teams and deploying good nuclear sensor
systems. But funding for one critical priority is missing: We must stem the
nuclear flow at its source.
The meetings this week between President Bush and Russian President Vladimir
V. Putin provide an excellent opportunity for the two to talk about bolstering
nuclear threat reduction efforts. Nearly a decade ago, we began working with
Russia and other countries in the region to build better fences around nuclear
facilities and to train workers to be reliable custodians of nuclear assets.
These programs are our first line of defense against a nuclear terror attack.
And yet these programs have not seen a penny of increased spending since the
Sept. 11 attack.
Why is this, when the country is sick with worry that the next attack will be
a nuclear one? It seems that ambivalence in the White House may be keeping new
funds from flowing in this direction. The Bush administration has complained
that the Russians shouldn't let us foot the bill for programs that ought to be
their top priority as well.
This issue has peaked over the shutdown of Russia's three plutonium
production reactors. Originally built to pump out plutonium for the Soviet bomb
program, the reactors now provide heat and electicity to the cities of Tomsk and
Krasnoyarsk. In the process, they continue to produce 11/2 tons of weapons-grade
plutonium every year, enough for about 375 new bombs. For this reason, shutdown
of the reactors has been a top priority.
The Bush administration, however, has not been enthusiastic about the
shutdown plan, which involves replacing the three plutonium reactors with
fossil-fuel plants. "We don't build enough energy plants in this
country," I heard one administration official say, "why should we
build them in Russia?"
The Bush team has a point. The Russian Federation is no longer in such
desperate straits as it was a decade ago. Indeed, while the U.S. economy has
ceased growing, the Russian economy is perking along at an annual growth rate of
5%. Russia should therefore, the administration reasons, be in a position to
shoulder more of the responsibility for nonproliferation priorities--such as the
shutdown of the plutonium reactors that the U.S. finds difficult to fund.
We should not take this argument too far because the size of the Russian
economy is still minuscule compared with that of ours.
As one Russian colleague commented when he heard about the $40-billion
post-Sept. 11 supplemental funding, "That's nearly double the entire
Russian defense budget for this year."
Nevertheless, we could take special action to help the Russians finance such
programs.
One good idea is the so-called debt-for-security swaps that have been
proposed. Under this concept, we would forgive Soviet-era debt in exchange for
Russia putting rubles into nonproliferation programs. These swaps would have to
be carefully structured, with firm agreement on what projects and when.
But we need more dollars going into these programs too. We cannot afford to
cut the budget and shunt nuclear threat reduction programs to the back burner.
We need to take urgent steps to further counter theft at Russian facilities.
Every time we go into a Russian nuclear site, we immediately survey it to
decide what quick fixes are needed to upgrade security. Is there a splintered
old door that needs to be replaced? Do windows need to be bricked up or equipped
with bars?
If we began next April, the start of the summer construction period, within
nine months we could complete quick fixes on all of the facilities in the
Russian weapons complex that we so far haven't touched. The Russians would have
to give us access to the sites, and the U.S. government would have to quickly
get all the planning and paperwork in place. But it could be done and would give
a huge boost to the nuclear security of both the United States and Russian
Federation.
Bush and Putin should focus on this cooperation as a critical part of our
fight against terrorism. The next attack on the United States or the next attack
on Russia could be nuclear.
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