July 18, 2005

Shunning The Talks Table

Prospect: Bush's Refusal To Talk Nukes Blocks Negotiations

  • Play CBS Video Video Intel On North Korea

    As intelligence experts say North Korea has the ability to arm missiles with nuclear material, the U.S. is responding with a hard line, David Martin tells Bob Schieffer.

  •  (CBS)

  • Interactive Nuclear Threat

    Learn more about potential dangers to humans in the nuclear age.

  • Interactive Nuclear Armed World

    The world's nuclear weapons powers, missile defense and a history of the nuclear weapons age.

(The American Prospect) 
China, along with Russia, continues to press for talks on outer space. Chinese Ambassador Hu Xiaodi argues, "The practices of only selecting items of concern to oneself while refusing to consider items of high priority to others … are not conducive to the work in [the Conference on Disarmament]."

Support for outer-space talks reflects growing international worries about U.S. missile-defense plans, which envision basing a few missile interceptors in orbit and testing them as early as 2012. At an April missile-defense conference in Washington, the head of the Pentagon's Missile Defense Agency, Lieutenant General Henry Obering, said space-based interceptors have "a lot of attractiveness" and are "worth the experimentation."

Nor is the Bush administration in line with the rest of the world when it comes to an FMCT itself.

In 1995, conference members, including the United States, agreed that a future FMCT should be "effectively verifiable," meaning that the treaty would have provisions to deter and detect violations. But the Bush administration announced last year that it had concluded that it is impossible for a final treaty to meet this standard -- cheaters will cheat is the argument -- so it will oppose the start of negotiations with this as an objective, or that even specifically mentions verification as a topic to be addressed. Instead, Washington wants an agreement "without verification."

Because the proposed agreement would allow countries to possess and produce plutonium and highly enriched uranium for peaceful purposes, most governments and nongovernmental experts see verification as essential for ensuring that such materials are not surreptitiously diverted to weapons. A verification system would also provide greater assurance that permitted materials are less vulnerable to terrorist theft because they would be subject to international supervision.

The Bush administration's resistance to FMCT verification measures may also stem from the Navy's longtime opposition to allowing international inspectors some oversight of the U.S. naval nuclear propulsion program, which some countries say the treaty should require. When asked whether this was the case in a February interview, Chris Ford, the principal deputy assistant secretary of state for verification and compliance, replied, "There are countries that have naval nuclear propulsion programs that would not agree to a treaty that would allow verifiers into all aspects of those programs; countries, plural."

Japanese Ambassador Yoshiki Mine stated June 28, "Issues on verification should be resolved through negotiation, not necessarily before."

Certainly, other hurdles loom for concluding an FMCT, such as whether the treaty should apply only to stopping new production of plutonium and highly enriched uranium for weapons or reducing existing global stockpiles as well. But countries are being denied the opportunity to hash out their differences on these issues because of the Bush administration's obstructionism.

President Bush has said that the greatest danger "lies at the crossroads of radicalism and technology," and that the "only path to peace and security is the path of action." Alas, the administration's action plan does not include talking or negotiating with other governments.


Wade Boese is the research director at the nonprofit, nonpartisan Arms Control Association, which publishes the monthly journal Arms Control Today.



By Wade Boese
Reprinted with permission from The American Prospect, 5 Broad Street, Boston, MA 02109. All rights reserved.
Share:
  • Share
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Mixx
  • MOST POPULAR
Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: