The Moscow Summit
While the Russian economic
and political crisis has recently overshadowed all other US-Russian issues,
the Moscow summit meeting will address a number of important nonproliferation
and arms control issues. CNS has assembled background material on these
issues drawing from its databases and ongoing research.
START II and START III
The START II Treaty lies at the center
of US-Russian arms control efforts, yet its ratification looks increasingly
uncertain as the political crisis in Russia unfolds. CNS Senior Research
Associate Nikolai Sokov analyzes the current status of the START process
in his research brief,
"Current Prospects for START
II Ratification and START III Talks." CNS has also compiled a
chronology of the START II ratification process,
based on excerpts from the
NIS
Nuclear Profiles Database.
Russian Support for Iranian Nuclear and Missile Programs
One of the major points of contention
between Russia and the United States is Russia's provision of nuclear reactors
for Iran's Bushehr nuclear power plant. Allegations that Russian
firms have been covertly assisting the Iranian missile program have also
appeared in the Western and Russian press, prompting Russian investigations
and US sanctions, as summarized in
Institutions
Suspected by the Russian Government of Violating Export Control Regulations.
Two excerpts from the NIS Nuclear Profiles Database provide overviews of
Russian-Iranian Nuclear Cooperation and
Russian
Missile Exports to Iran. More information on the Iranian nuclear
program may be found in the fact sheet
"Iran's
Nuclear-Related Facilities" compiled by the CNS
Monitoring
Proliferation Threats Project. The Iranian missile program is examined
in more depth in Aaron Karp's article
"Lessons
of Iranian Missile Programs for U.S. Nonproliferation Policy," (
PDF format) from
the Summer 1998 issue of
The Nonproliferation
Review.
Safeguarding and Reducing Russian Plutonium Stockpiles
Under the Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat
Reduction Act (CTR) the United States has provided over a billion dollars
for the dismantling of former Soviet nuclear weapons and the enhancement
of security for fissile materials. One of the largest projects is
the Fissile Material Storage Facility at the Mayak Chemical Combine, which
when completed will store the fissile material from up to 12,500 dismantled
nuclear warheads. For more details, see the
profile
of the Fissile Material Storage Facility excerpted from the NIS Nuclear
Profiles Database. New initiatives to prevent the theft of fissile
material from the NIS are proposed in
"Making
the World a Safer Place," an Op-Ed written for MSNBC by Dr. William
Potter and Dr. Scott Parrish.
Last Updated: 31 August 1998