Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
Back to NPT Statements &
Documents
The NPT PrepCom 2003: Acronym Special Coverage
Nuclear Disarmament (Cluster 1: Article VI)
US Fact Sheet, May 1
'US actions in support of its NPT Article VI obligations
related to nuclear disarmament', US Mission to the UN in Geneva,
May 1.
Moscow Treaty
- Reductions under START Treaty {Strategic Arms Reductions)
completed December 2001. Level went from 10,000 US strategic
warheads to less than 6,000.
- Moscow Treaty reduces to 1,700-2,200 by December 31, 2012 - the
lowest level in decades. Senate approved March 6.
- US reductions have already begun. 50 Peacekeeper missiles to be
deactivated in next two years. Two Trident missile submarines have
been removed from strategic service; two more to follow.
- Warheads removed from operational service will be stored,
disabled and not available for quick redeployment, or
retired/dismantled. Spares are needed if a warhead is found to be
unreliable/unsafe.
- Under START and Moscow Treaty, US will have eliminated or
decommissioned more than three-quarters of its strategic nuclear
warheads over two decades.
Fissile Material
- US has dismantled more than 13,000 nuclear weapons over the
past 15 years. Dismantling continues.
- US has not produced fissile material for nuclear weapons for
more than a decade.
- US supports a Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty that would advance
US national security. This Treaty would ban new production of
fissile material for nuclear weapons.
- US-Russian 1997 Plutonium Reactor Agreement codified the
shutdown of 24 plutonium production reactors. Recent amendment
calls for shutdown of last 3 Russian reactors.
- US and Russia will dispose of more than 700 tons of excess
fissile material so that it is no longer useable in nuclear
weapons. Contributes to irreversibility of nuclear reductions. This
quantity could be used to manufacture more than 30,000 nuclear
weapons. For example, more than 170 tons of Russian weapons-grade
uranium has been converted under a 1993 agreement to peaceful uses.
US has identified 174 tons for this purpose.
- A 2000 US-Russian agreement calls for each side to dispose of
34 tons each of excess plutonium.
Cooperative Threat Reduction
- Since 1992, US has provided $8.2 billion in nonproliferation
and threat reduction assistance in the former Soviet Union.
- US has helped eliminate almost 900 ballistic missiles, over 100
strategic bombers, and nearly 50 ballistic missile submarines.
- US has assisted in removing nuclear weapons from Kazakhstan,
Ukraine and Belarus.
- US is working at more than 850 institutes to redirect former
Soviet scientists working on weapons of mass destruction to
civilian programs.
- US has export control assistance programs in more than 30
countries that involve training and providing equipment.
- G8 Global Partnership pledged up to $20 billion over next 10
years for nonproliferation, disarmament, counterterrorism and
nuclear safety. Priorities include CW destruction and plutonium
disposition in Russia.
Nuclear Weapons Policy
- US is reducing reliance on nuclear weapons. Placing more
emphasis on conventional deterrence and missile defense.
- US is not developing, testing or producing any nuclear warheads
and has not done so in more than a decade.
- There is no current requirement for a new nuclear warhead; the
President has not directed such an action.
- US maintains its moratorium on nuclear testing. It has no plans
to conduct nuclear tests.
- We do not target any countries with nuclear weapons. There has
been no change in US negative security assurances policy toward NPT
parties.
Non-Strategic Nuclear Weapons (NNSW)
- The total of US NSNW has been reduced nearly 90 percent. In
January 2003 US completed dismantling of all NSNW under the 1991
Presidential Nuclear Initiative.
- Nuclear weapons have been removed from the Army and Marines
Corps, as well as from the surface and air components of the
Navy.
- The only remaining US nuclear weapons in Europe are gravity
bombs, the numbers of which have been greatly reduced.
- NATO has considerably reduced its reliance on nuclear weapons.
Alert status of delivery aircraft lengthened to months.
- US committed to pursuit of transparency on NSNW. Issue has been
discussed with Russia in bilateral consultative group established
at Moscow Summit, and within NATO-Russia Council.
Source: Fact Sheet - Moscow Treaty Nuclear Cuts Tops
List of US NPT Support, US Department of State (Washington
File), May 5.
Back to the Top of the Page
© 2003 The Acronym Institute.
|