
#2
Russia: Unlike Iraq, Moscow's Aging, Poorly Secured
Weapons Easily Found
(Part 1)
By Jeremy Bransten
UN inspectors continue to scour sites in Iraq, looking for evidence of
weapons of mass destruction. So far, in the words of chief weapons inspector
Hans Blix, no "smoking gun" has been found, furthering debate among
America and its allies about how the standoff with Baghdad should be resolved.
Away from the media glare, however, there is another country where weapons of
mass destruction -- many aging and some poorly secured -- abound by the ton.
That country is Russia. And should those chemical and nuclear stockpiles fall
into the wrong hands, many experts believe they would pose a far greater threat
to world security than anything Iraq may possess. In the first of a two-part
series, RFE/RL examines international efforts undertaken so far to help Russia
clean up its Cold War weapons graveyard and the daunting challenges that still
lie ahead.
Prague, 5 February 2003 (RFE/RL) -- The fact that United Nations weapons
inspectors have not found a "smoking gun" in their search for weapons
of mass destruction in Iraq means one of two things: either Baghdad no longer
possesses such weapons, as it claims, or they are so well hidden that inspectors
have yet to discover them, as the U.S. administration believes.
Either way, many experts believe the situation in Iraq is less immediately
threatening than the dangers that exist in Russia and some of the former Soviet
republics.
More than a decade after the end of the Cold War, Russia -- by its own
admission -- possesses some 40,000 tons of chemical weapons -- the world's
largest quantity -- and some 1,000 tons of weapons-grade nuclear material in
scores of storage sites around the country. Basic information about the location
of these sites is available to anyone with access to the Internet. Many are far
from adequately secure.
That fact was demonstrated last year when Sergei Mitrokhin, a State Duma
deputy, accompanied by two Greenpeace activists and three television cameramen,
broke into a reprocessing plant in Siberia where spent nuclear fuel was being
stored.
And it is one of the central points of a four-volume study recently published
by the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).
The study, entitled "Protecting Against the Spread of Nuclear, Biological
and Chemical Weapons," assesses international efforts to help Russia secure
and reduce its chemical- and nuclear-weapons stockpiles over the past 10 years.
The study warns that much more must be done if the world is to avoid the risk of
some of these weapons falling into the wrong hands.
Lists of "hot" sites located on Russian territory fill page after
page of the CSIS report. While UN inspectors comb Iraq for evidence of a single
chemical-laced warhead, for example, 5,400 tons of nerve agent already packaged
in thousands of portable artillery shells and hundreds of missile warheads are
stored at Shchue, just north of Kazakhstan -- a potential "one-stop
shop" for terrorists in the market for such material.
Robert Einhorn, a former U.S. assistant secretary of state for
nonproliferation and co-editor of the CSIS study, said much of Russia's chemical
stockpiles are kept in such "ready-to-use" fashion. "A lot of
these chemical agents were loaded into munitions of various sorts, including
artillery shells, that would be used to deliver those agents to their targets.
So you still have a lot of the agents in munitions and those have to be
demilitarized and destroyed," Einhorn said.
Under the Chemical Weapons Convention, which former Russian President Boris
Yeltsin signed in 1997, Russia pledged to abolish its entire chemical-weapons
stocks by the year 2007. So far, it has destroyed about 1 percent. For
comparison, the United States -- also a party to the convention, with an initial
declared capacity of 31,500 tons of chemical weapons -- has so far
decommissioned 25 percent of its arsenal.
Since 1992, the United States has spent $7 billion, under the so-called
Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, to help Russia and the former Soviet
states dismantle and secure their weapons sites. There have been notable
successes, including the de-nuclearization of Belarus, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan,
the destruction of 815 ballistic missile silos, and the scrapping of 97 heavy
bombers -- to cite a few statistics.
But much remains to be done, and progress on the non-nuclear front has moved
at a glacial pace. The 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks against the United
States may have finally galvanized Western countries to pay greater attention to
the issue. Meeting in Canada last year, the G-8 industrialized states pledged to
raise $20 billion over the next 10 years to support nonproliferation
initiatives, especially in Russia. But the task ahead is enormous.
Einhorn said: "This is a huge amount of material, and progress in
getting rid of it has been very, very slow. Much of that difficulty has come
from the inability of the Russians to allocate sufficient resources, and now
that is changing. Russia has contributed its own resources to the problem, and
the U.S. and a number of European countries are also prepared to fund the
destruction process. So they've made a slow start, but they've begun. But this
is going to take quite a while -- well over a decade -- to finish this
task."
And the Russian authorities, he adds, will have to remove some internal
roadblocks to cooperation if the program is to be successful. "Both
President Yeltsin and President [Vladimir] Putin have been supporters of these
Cooperative Threat Reduction programs, but problems have developed in Russian
implementation of these projects in Russia. These problems existed under
Yeltsin, and they currently exist under Putin. These are bureaucratic
difficulties that arise. It involves the failure of Russia to exempt these
assistance programs from local taxation. It's a failure so far to provide
protections to contractors working in Russia from liability and so forth. These
have hindered these projects from going forward, and it's important that these
implementations be removed if Russia wants contributing countries to increase
their commitments," he said.
The exact degree of risk posed by Russia's decaying stocks of chemical and
nuclear weapons remains open to debate.
John Eldridge is editor of "Jane's Nuclear, Biological and Chemical
Defense Guidebook," an annual survey of global weapons of mass destruction.
Eldridge cites the example of the 1995 Tokyo subway attack, in which the
Japanese Aum Shinrikyo cult attempted the mass murder of commuters using the
deadly gas sarin.
Twelve people died in the attack, but as Eldridge notes, given the quantities
of sarin the group had at its disposal and its preparation work, its
"effectiveness" cannot be compared to terror strikes using more basic
methods. "[Aum Shinrikyo] had a major operation in Tokyo, and when the
police moved in, there was a vat of something like 50 tons of precursor chemical
boiling away, waiting to be created into sarin. So theirs was a huge operation,
but even then, it wasn't as successful in terms of a weapon of mass destruction,
comparing the result, as 9/11 was, where much more simple methods were
used," he said.
Nevertheless, Eldridge believes Russia's massive stocks of weapons of mass
destruction do represent a significant threat, which he compared to the former
Soviet Union's aging civilian nuclear reactors. "It's as much a threat as
the aging nuclear-power-generation reactors in Russia and the [former]
satellites -- the old RBMK reactors. That poses an equal threat. We've seen a
Chornobyl already, and there are several of those waiting in the wings, I feel
sure. But the straying of chemical weapons and indeed expertise and radiological
materials over the borders, particularly in the south of Russia and the
southwest of Russia, is a huge problem. And certainly it's not a case of if, but
when, they fall into the hands of terrorists. We need to be able to deal with
this," Eldridge said.
The human element -- the thousands of underpaid scientists across Russia and
the former Soviet Union who could potentially supply their weapon-making
knowledge to terror groups or regimes across the globe -- is an equally
important factor in this equation, which we will examine in Part 2 of this
series.
(The four-volume CSIS study entitled "Protecting Against The Spread of
Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Weapons is available online at http://www.csis.org.)
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