2. US Nonproliferation Programs in Russia
US President George Bush said "We want to make sure that any money that is being spent is being spent in an effective way," referring to a review of the roughly $800 million a year the US spends to help Russia reduce its nuclear forces and improve security over its nuclear materials. A senior administration official said the review will take several months and will include representatives of the departments of State, Energy and Defense, and of the Office of Management and Budget. A senior administration official stated that programs deemed ineffective will likely be cut. The review will report on how well each program serves the national interest, whether Russia and other countries should shoulder a larger share of its cost, how supportive Russia has been of the program, and whether the program should have a "sunset" provision to ensure it does not continue after its objectives have been met. Former US Senator Howard Baker told the Senate Foreign Relations committee Thursday that there are "all sorts of arguments about why our programs are not totally cost-efficient in Russia." But, Baker said, "If we don't do it, no one will -- not even the Russians -- partly because they don't have the resources and partly because they don't have the same sense of danger that we have."
"U.S. Is Reviewing Aid for Russia's Nuclear Programs"
"U.S. Reviewing Aid Meant to Contain Russia's Arsenal"
"U.S. Reviewing Aid Meant to Contain Russia's Arsenal"
"Transcript: Bush Press Conference at White House, March 29, 2001"
RANSAC released an interim report discussing the Bush administration's proposal to cut funding for US nonproliferation programs that target Russia's nuclear weapons industry. The analysis describes the current debate within the administration and compares the recent, current, and proposed budgets for a large number of US nonproliferation programs operating in Russia.
"Interim RANSAC Report:Proposed Federal Budget Cuts for Nuclear Security Efforts in Russia"
"Text Only"
In a speech to the Nuclear Security Decision-makers second annual forum in New Mexico, Republican US Senator Pete Domenici, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, said, "Russia's nuclear stockpile is the most serious national security threat we face today." He also advocated the spending of "billions of dollars to fix the problems and modernize" US nuclear weapons facilities to prevent an infrastructure crisis.
"Excerpts: Domenici Says Russian Nuclear Stockpile Serious Threat"
Russian social scientist Valentin Tikhonov writes in a report for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace on the living and working conditions of Russia's weapons experts working within the Russian nuclear and missile complexes. The results suggest an increasingly difficult situation, and illustrate the high potential that a significant percentage of Russia's weapons experts might sell their services to would-be proliferators. Tokhonov notes that more than 62% of employees earn less than $50 per month. Of those surveyed in the missile industry, 25% would like to immigrate to another country and 21% said they would work in the military complex of another country.
"Russia's Nuclear and Missile Complex: The Human Factor in Proliferation"