CNS Reports
Challenges in U.S.-Russian Cooperation
by William C. Potter
Paper presented at the Conference on Cooperative Threat
Reduction in the 21st Century, Oslo, Norway (June 1, 2002)
I. Introduction
It is a great honor to speak before this
distinguished gathering. As one of the co-organizers of the conference, I wish
to express special thanks to my good friend Sverre Lodgaard for hosting us in
this lovely setting. My only concern is that in such an idyllic environment it
may be hard to focus on the dangers of nuclear terrorism and weapons
proliferation.
The topic I have been asked to address is "what are the
challenges in creating and implementing a framework for cooperative U.S.-Russian
nuclear threat reduction?" As a preface to my presentation, I believe it
is useful to recall an important but often overlooked aspect of U.S.-Russian
relations during the Cold War. It involves the often close consultation and
cooperation between the United States and the Soviet Union on nuclear
nonproliferation issues. This cooperation generally persisted across both
Republican and Democratic administrations and served, in many respects, as the
cornerstone of the NPT and related nuclear export control regimes. It also was
an important element of stability in an often-turbulent superpower
relationship.
Ironically, the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of
the Cold War aggravated strains in the nuclear nonproliferation partnership
between Washington and Moscow. To a large extent these strains, evident in
disputes over Russian nuclear exports to Iran and India, conflicting positions
on Iraq, and the lack of sustained cooperation on important regional security
issues in South Asia and the Middle East, were the product of powerful domestic
political pressures in both countries to emphasize short-term economic and
military considerations to the neglect of longer-term, international security
and nonproliferation objectives.
Russia's strong and positive support
for U.S. efforts to counter international terrorism after September 11 provides
a new opportunity to reinvigorate traditional U.S.-Russian cooperation for
nuclear nonproliferation, as does the new spirit of cooperation reflected in
this past week's summit meeting. The challenges to forging a successful
partnership and reducing nuclear dangers in Russia (and abroad), however, remain
very substantial.
II. Challenges Ahead
The good news, as
former Los Alamos director Sigfried Hecker recently noted in Congressional
testimony, is that "nothing really terrible happened in the Russian
nuclear complex in spite of the enormous hardship endured by the Russian
people." Thanks in large measure to the Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat
Reduction (CTR) program, great strides were taken to remove nuclear weapons from
Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine, destroy hundreds of strategic ballistic
missiles and their silos, enhance the security of hundreds of tons of weapons
usable uranium and plutonium, and provide meaningful civilian employment to
thousands of weapons scientists in the former Soviet Union.
As Hecker also
notes, "the bad news is that the problems in the Russian nuclear complex
were much greater and more pervasive than either Russians or Americans realized
ten years ago." What I would like to do in the remainder of my talk is to
highlight some of those problems and then suggest a number of practical steps
one might undertake to address the proliferation challenges they pose.
A. Magnitude of the Problem
I remember a number of years
ago when the movie Titanic was the big Hollywood hit. After it opened in
Moscow there were many jokes circulating which compared Russia to the ill-fated
ocean liner. A Russian friend, however, took exception to the comparison.
Russia, he explained, is not the ship, it is the iceberg, and until we recognize
that point and take corrective action it has the potential to sink the entire
nonproliferation regime.
The nature of the proliferation challenge posed by
Russia stems from many factors, including:
- Its enormous nuclear weapons stockpile, numbering many thousands of nuclear
charges;
- Its vast stocks of highly-enriched uranium (=1100 tons) and plutonium (=160
tons);
- Even larger quantities of highly radioactive nuclear waste;
- A bloated military-industrial complex, including a wide array of closed
nuclear cities inhabited by hundreds of thousands of under employed
individuals;
- The collapse by the early 1990s of the nuclear export monopoly previously
enjoyed by Techsnabexport and the rise of nuclear entrepreneurs prepared to sell
most anything to anyone for the right price; and
- The disappearance almost overnight of a decades-old approach to nuclear
material security which emphasized guns and gates to defend against external
threats without a clear understanding of the new risks posted by
"insider" threats or how to guard against them.
Let me
elaborate slightly on the current state of some of these challenges. Because of
time constraints, I will focus primarily on those challenges which I believe
have not received adequate attention.
B. Nuclear Terrorism
In the
aftermath of September 11, I believe we need to take a long and hard look at the
very different types of threats often lumped together under the heading of
"nuclear terrorism." In addition to the one popularized by
Hollywood screenwriters--the seizure of nuclear weapons by a renegade
military faction--these threats include the theft of fissile material for
the purpose of fashioning a nuclear explosive device, the attack on or sabotage
of civilian nuclear power installations or spent fuel storage sites, and the
matching of highly radioactive nuclear material with conventional explosives to
create radiological dispersal devices or, in common parlance, "dirty
bombs."
To date, U.S. nonproliferation assistance to Russia has tended
to focus almost exclusively on safeguarding fissile material and nuclear weapons
rather than on mitigating the threats of sabotage and radiological dispersal.
Unfortunately, these latter dangers are not hypothetical threats. Although not
widely known in the West, there were at least four episodes in the mid-1990s in
which nuclear power plants in the post-Soviet states were the targets of
terrorist actions. Three of them involved the Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant in
Lithuania and one had to do with the Kursk Nuclear Power station in
Russia.
Although Russian authorities have taken some steps to heighten
security at civilian power plants, many civilian nuclear facilities remain
deficient in such basic defensive elements as intact perimeter fences, more than
token armed guards, vehicle barriers, and surveillance cameras. These gaps in
perimeter defense are compounded by an approach to the terrorist threat that is
fixated on Chechens. As the assistant director of one major Russian nuclear
research center told me, in the past there was little concern about perimeter
defense against terrorists at his facility since "Chechens look different
than us" and would be recognized before they could get close to the
site.
On the nuclear terrorism front, one also needs to guard against
complacency with respect to the progress that has been made in enhancing
physical protection of fissile material. Although security upgrades have been
accomplished at many Russian facilities, they are apt to be effective primarily
against the threats posed by amateur thieves or individual and small group
incursions, but not necessarily against the more sophisticated threats of
terrorist organizations.
Were these individuals or groups to succeed in
acquiring less than 100 kg of highly-enriched uranium, one could not rule out
their ability to manufacture a crude but effective nuclear device--i.e., a
real nuclear bomb. What has changed since September 11th is not that it has
suddenly become easier to fashion a nuclear bomb--it has not--but that
we now must assume that there are organizations that covet fissile material for
the purpose of actually detonating nuclear explosives in our cities. The main
obstacle in their path is obtaining highly-enriched uranium.
C. TNWs
According to conventional wisdom, Russian nuclear weapons are
much more secure than are their fissile material components. Although this
perspective is probably correct, it is worthwhile to recall the candid
acknowledgement last October by General Igor Valynkin--commander of the
Russian Ministry of Defense's 12th Main Directorate--that in the past
year there were two incidents in which terrorist groups were observed carrying
out reconnaissance at Russian nuclear weapons storage facilities [October 25,
2001] Valynkin did not mention the facilities in question. What can be said,
however, is that by far the most vulnerable category of nuclear weapons to
diversion and nuclear terrorist acquisition is tactical nuclear
weapons.
Tactical nuclear weapons (TNW) are the category of American and
Russian nuclear arsenals least regulated by arms control agreements. They are
only subject to an informal regime created by unilateral, parallel declarations
made by George Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev in the autumn of 1991, the latter of
which subsequently was affirmed and expanded upon by Boris Yeltsin in January
1992. Since then, TNW have not figured prominently in the bilateral
U.S.-Russian arms control agenda and have been almost totally ignored by the
current U.S. administration. Significantly, they were not covered by last
week's arms control treaty.
This lack of attention to TNW is
unfortunate and dangerous given their large but unconfirmed number, the risks of
their early and/or unauthorized use, and their vulnerability to theft. The
informal regime itself is increasingly precarious since it is not legally
binding, does not provide for data exchanges, and lacks a verification
mechanism. Neither the United States nor Russia has released official public
information regarding the size or location of their TNW forces, a circumstance
which contributed to the controversy two years ago about possible Russian
redeployments of TNW in Kaliningrad. The absence of a legally-binding accord is
especially worrisome at a time when nuclear weapons designers and some policy
makers in both the United States and Russia display increasing enthusiasm for
new, low-yield nuclear weapons which are perceived as more usable in a broad
range of conflict scenarios. Also disturbing is the comment by a senior U.S.
National Security Council official on May 13, 2002, at a White House briefing on
the planned Moscow arms control treaty. He explained that the Defense
Department intended to convert four Trident submarines to non-strategic nuclear
uses. Were the United States to do so, it would directly contravene President
George Bush senior's 1991 pledge to remove TNW from U.S. naval vessels.
In Russia, the security of TNWs is compromised by the lack of adequate
storage facilities to handle the influx of warheads pending elimination and the
retention of some airbased TNW outside of central storage sites. Another
serious but under-appreciated security problem involves the growing number of
retired officers who previously guarded nuclear weapons sites. Many of these
individuals continue to live within the storage site's outer perimeter
since they are entitled to housing by law, even though they work elsewhere.
There have been cases in which such retirees have assisted local criminal
elements to penetrate several layers of security at nuclear storage sites,
although the target of these activities appear to have been conventional rather
than nuclear arms.
D. Soviet-Origin HEU
The overwhelming
majority of the hundreds of tons of separated plutonium and highly-enriched
uranium produced by the Soviet Union resides in Russia and currently is
scattered over more than 50 sites. A much smaller, but still proliferation
significant quantity of Soviet-origin fissile material also continues to reside
at a variety of facilities in Belarus, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, as well
as Yugoslavia. Although the U.S. Department of Energy long ago held
commissioning ceremonies at the nuclear sites in the non-Russian republics which
were supposed to signify their enhanced safeguards status, HEU and plutonium
remain inviting targets for diversion at a number of these sites. It probably
is not coincidental, for example, that Iraq has appointed an honorary consul
general to represent its interests in a Ukrainian city housing one such nuclear
site, or that the first consular office Iran sought to establish in Kazakhstan
was in the vicinity of hundreds of kilograms of fresh HEU and three tons of
low-irradiated plutonium. At another site in Yugoslavia outside of Belgrade,
nearly 50 kg of Soviet-origin weapons usable HEU reside, remnants of the former
dedicated Yugoslav nuclear weapons program. Hopefully, Russia's plans to
provide a new research reactor to Myanmar (Burma) will not result in more HEU
being delivered to a high risk security zone.
E. Naval Issues
The Monterey Institute first called
attention to the nonproliferation risks posed by naval fuel in the early 1990s
and urged the U.S. government to focus on this danger. The concern was prompted
by two diversions of highly-enriched fuel from Russian naval facilities and by
information we had received regarding dangerous safety and security conditions
at naval bases and shipyards in the Far North and Far East. As my colleague Dr.
Clay Moltz has discovered in his research, there may be as much as 70 tons of
HEU residing in active duty Russian nuclear submarines, ice-breakers, and
cruisers and in the large number of decommissioned submarines that still contain
operating reactors. There also are enormous quantities of spent naval fuel with
high fissile material content.
One of the major success stories of the
Nunn-Lugar CTR program has been U.S. cooperation with the Russian navy to
dismantle strategic submarines and to enhance physical protection of both fresh
and spent naval fuel. Major proliferation, terrorism, and environmental
challenges remain, however, especially with regard to the dismantlement of
cruise missile and attack submarines. To date, no U.S. funds have been provided
to dismantle these naval systems, although some have a fuel enriched to as high
as 90% U-235, [Alphas]. In addition to the dangers posed by the diversion of
HEU and the possible use of spent fuel for radiological weapons, one also should
be concerned that the decommissioned submarines or their reactor technology
might be acquired by countries of proliferation concern. In 1994, for example,
Russian officials caught two North Korean agents in a scheme to purchase
dismantlement schedules for decommissioned vessels in the Pacific Fleet. The
bulk of the Russian Far East's naval fuel cycle and dismantlement
facilities, it should be noted, are located less than 100 miles from the North
Korean border.
Finally, one cannot dismiss either the environmental or
terrorism risks associated with poorly guarded active-duty or decommissioned
submarines that have not been defueled. These dangers were highlighted in
September 1998 when a disgruntled sailor killed eight sailors, barricaded
himself in a torpedo room and threatened to blow up an Akula-class attack
submarine.
F. Illicit Nuclear Trafficking
Since the collapse of the
Soviet Union, there have been frequent reports of thefts, attempted thefts, and
illegal exports of nuclear material from the post-Soviet states. The
overwhelming majority of these incidents involved material that cannot be used
to make nuclear weapons. A careful examination of the available evidence,
however, suggests that there also have been at least 14 confirmed
proliferation-significant cases involving the theft or attempted theft of HEU or
plutonium from nuclear facilities in the NIS (Refer to the table CNS has
prepared on the subject which is on the NTI website,
www.nti.org). The majority of these cases took
place between 1992 and 1995, followed by a lull of three years during which
there were no confirmed cases. Since 1998, however, there have been a handful
of new incidents that suggest the possible emergence of a nearly invisible,
illicit market in nuclear material. Unlike many of the earlier cases which
involved a small number of disgruntled employees and/or sting operations
orchestrated by German intelligence, at least one of the newer incidents
involved an organized group of facility employees, and several involved export
of material to the Caucasus and Southeast Europe.
Regrettably, despite
various summit pronouncements since 1996 to the contrary, to date there has been
little if any meaningful intelligence sharing between Russia and the United
States on illicit nuclear trafficking incidents. There also is reason to
question the reliability and scope of the reports Russia and other NIS states
have provided the IAEA for its illicit trafficking database. Reports provided
by Russia to the IAEA, for example, do not capture all of the incidents
contained in the annual reports prepared for internal use by the Russian nuclear
regulatory body. As a consequence, one cannot exclude the possibility--I
would say strong probability--that additional nuclear diversion incidents
have occurred but have been concealed by NIS authorities. Given the absence of
any comprehensive physical inventory of Russian nuclear material--the
Achilles heel to date in efforts to safeguard Russian nuclear
facilities--Russian officials have no basis for asserting that all fissile
material is accounted for.
G. Human Factor/Sustainability
Even
more difficult than completing physical inventories of nuclear material and of
greater necessity for the long-term sustainability of Russian safeguards is the
transformation of the attitudes or "mind-sets" of Russian nuclear
workers and custodians. In my view, the greatest structural weaknesses of the
current system are the absence of a deeply ingrained safeguards culture and the
lack of an incentive structure to encourage the ongoing maintenance of prudent
safeguards practices. As a result, the considerable safeguards progress made to
date could be reversed.
At the level of high politics, one must be concerned
about the potential impact on safeguards of the erosion during the past decade
of traditional U.S.-Russian cooperation for nuclear nonproliferation. Although
things may change after this past week's summit, one has yet to see the
exercise of political will at the highest levels in either the United States or
Russia that demonstrates that concern for nonproliferation will trump other
political and economic considerations.
Institutional issues in Russia create
additional impediments. Foremost among these are the inadequacy of regulation
and oversight by a financially viable and independent agency, and the absence of
a long-term strategy for implementation and sustainability of nuclear material
protection, control, and accountancy. Resource constraints at the national,
ministerial, and facility levels in Russia also hamper sustainability.
A
final set of impediments within Russia pertains to cultural issues. A penchant
for secrecy and inadequate attention to insider threats are the most serious
problems of this kind. Another cultural impediment is a lingering deference to
authority (allowing senior facility management to circumvent safeguards
procedures).
Impediments to sustainability also result from U.S.
shortcomings, including a narrow definition of MPC&A training, emphasizing
technology to the neglect of broader nonproliferation and safeguards issues.
Insufficient appreciation of Russian concerns over reciprocity and equality,
inadequate use of Russian expertise, and frequent changes of U.S. government and
national laboratory personnel also contribute to the problem of
sustainability.
What Is to Be Done?
There is no shortage of good
recommendations about what needs to be done to address these pressing
proliferation challenges. Some actually have been adopted as U.S. and Russian
policy. I will limit my remarks to some additional steps that might usefully be
taken.
A. Assess the Full Range of Nuclear Terrorist Threats
There is an urgent need to assess the full range of
nuclear terrorist threats and to invest limited resources where they can have
the greatest impact. It is my impression that at this moment there is no
consensus within the U.S. government about the relative risks posed by
radiological dispersal devices, sabotage of nuclear facilities, theft of an
intact nuclear charge, or terrorist acquisition of HEU for use in a crude
nuclear device, or an action plan to allocate resources commensurate with the
probability and consequences of these very different threats. During the next
six months CNS plans to undertake an unclassified assessment of those risks and
to share its findings with U.S. and international policymakers.
Without
prejudicing that study, I believe it is fair to say that nuclear power plants in
the Soviet Union were not designed to confront current terrorist threats which
could lead to catastrophic accidents with global consequences. More attention,
therefore, should be given under the Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction
program to enhance reactor security as part of the larger effort to strengthen
the national nuclear safeguards system. At a minimum, current physical
protection efforts need to be coordinated with work to upgrade the safety and
security of the four dozen nuclear power reactors currently operating in four
post-Soviet states (Armenia, Lithuania, Russia, and Ukraine). The threat of
nuclear sabotage, however, is by no means confined to the post-Soviet states,
and requires much more attention from the world community than has been given to
date.
B. Consolidate Soviet-Origin HEU
The United
States and Russia also should seek to reduce the quantity of fissile material
which must be protected and the number of sites where fissile material is
stored. As part of a program of consolidation and elimination, the United
States should undertake to negotiate as soon as possible the purchase of all HEU
known to reside at research facilities in the non-Russian successor states.
Given the relatively small, but nevertheless significant, quantities of
weapons-usable material at sites in Belarus, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, and
Uzbekistan, a uranium "buy-up" approach to the non-Russian republics
represents a low cost, high return nonproliferation strategy. A similar HEU
purchase plan might usefully be applied to other sites outside of the former
Soviet Union such as Vincá in Yugoslavia where Soviet-origin fissile
material is stored under inadequate safeguards and is vulnerable to theft and/or
misuse. After many false starts, modest funds to support such an initiative are
now available, and hopefully will soon lead to implementation of an HEU
repatriation effort, most likely beginning with material in Uzbekistan and then
Yugoslavia.
To the extent that HEU is actually being used by research
facilities, assistance should be provided to convert Soviet-origin research
reactors to run on low-enriched uranium. The United States has long supported
such an international conversion program for U.S.-supplied reactors (RERTR).
Ideally, the United States and Russia should launch a joint global campaign to
convert all research reactors to run on low-enriched uranium as part of a new
phase of U.S.-Russian nonproliferation cooperation. A useful related initiative
would involve the two states' taking the lead in promoting a world-wide
effort to down-blend most stocks of HEU to low enrichment levels.
Building
on the CTR successes and lessons of Project Sapphire, which removed over 500
kilograms of HEU from Ust Kamenogorsk, Kazakhstan and Project Auburn Endeavor,
which airlifted out a much smaller quantity of HEU from a site in Georgia, the
United States and Russia could contribute significantly to the goal of combating
nuclear terrorism by working together to eliminate high risk civilian stockpiles
of HEU throughout the world. This kind of creative nonproliferation action
could be facilitated by the efforts of both international organizations such as
the IAEA and by non-governmental bodies such as the Nuclear Threat
Initiative.
C. Reduce TNWs
Ironically, at a time when we are
celebrating headway in nuclear arms control, there is silence from both
Washington and Moscow about reduction of tactical nuclear weapons--the
category of nuclear arms most vulnerable to theft. Although it would be
desirable to initiate negotiations on a legally-binding treaty to reduce such
arms, this approach does not appear to have much prospect for success. As a
consequence, one should focus attention on two alternative means to reinforce
the informal and fragile TNW regime.
- Reaffirm 1991/92 Declarations
Among the most important steps
that could be taken would be the reaffirmation by the United States and Russia
in a joint statement of their continued commitment to the 1991/92 parallel
unilateral declarations. Failure of Presidents Bush and Putin to issue such a
statement last week represents an important missed opportunity.
- Utilize CTR
The United States also needs to explore the
feasibility of utilizing the Nunn-Lugar CTR program as a vehicle for
safeguarding TNW and enhancing their transparency. Although this is a complex
matter, which will not necessarily be embraced at first by Russia, I believe the
objective is consistent with the intent of the Nunn-Lugar program. Among the
potential gains from the expansion of the CTR mandate would be the acceleration
of the pace of TNW dismantlement, greater likelihood of Russian receptivity to
further arms reductions including TNW, increased transparency for TNW
dismantlement (since accountability and transparency are part of the CTR
process), and more safeguards for the fissile material byproducts of the TNW
dismantlement process. Given the growing interest on the part of a number of
countries in TNW disarmament, including Norway, it would be highly desirable for
other states to join the United States in this expanded CTR effort.
D. Expand CTR Efforts in the Naval Sphere
I will say very
little about how to advance cooperation in the naval sphere since my Norwegian
colleague on this panel will also address this topic. I only would like to
emphasize the need to extend U.S. assistance to the dismantlement of cruise
missile and attack submarines. Given the high priority Russia places on
submarine dismantlement, such an approach has the potential to boost greatly
Russian enthusiasm for nonproliferation cooperation with the United States and
also to achieve meaningful disarmament.
E. Utilize Education as a Nonproliferation Tool
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has
observed correctly that "education is quite simply, peace-building by
another name." Neither the United States nor Russia, however, has
adequately appreciated how education might be used as a nonproliferation tool.
A tremendous gap therefore exists between government statements about the
dangers of WMD proliferation and the paucity of funds allocated to train the
next generation of nonproliferation specialists. Given this lack of support, it
is not surprising that the United States, Russia, and the international
community repeatedly fail to anticipate proliferation developments or to devise
adequate nonproliferation strategies.
One useful step that could be taken to
redress this problem would be passage of legislation to create a National
Nonproliferation Education Act. Such legislation--perhaps modeled after
the National Defense Education Act or the National Security Education
Program--could among other things provide fellowships to U.S. and/or
selected foreign graduate students for advanced multidisciplinary training in
nonproliferation. Alternatively, private foundations such as NTI might provide
funds for such fellowships.
The Department of Energy also needs to devote
more resources to broadly based nonproliferation education and training. In
Russia, the education and training component of an effective safeguards
sustainability program should concentrate on two distinct but related
approaches: (1) giving a short introduction to the basic elements of
nonproliferation and international safeguards to the widest possible audience in
the Russian nuclear sector; and (2) giving extended nonproliferation training to
a select number of highly motivated individuals who can serve as agents of
change within organizations responsible for nuclear material control.
As a
UN Experts Group on Disarmament and Nonproliferation Education will soon
recommend, more attention also needs to be given to the use of new information
and communication technologies to provide nonproliferation training via distance
learning to a much larger global audience. This territory is largely uncharted,
but offers an unusual opportunity for the United States and Russia to share
their considerable technical and pedagogical experience in pursuit of common
nonproliferation objectives.
IV. Conclusion
Winston Churchill
is reported to have observed that "Man will occasionally stumble over the
truth, but usually will pick himself up hastily and carry on without regard to
it." Senators Nunn and Lugar are remarkable in not only having stumbled
over the truth, but having persisted over ten years in shining an international
spotlight on it. Due to their foresight and persistence, the world is a safer
place.
Their task and ours, however, is far from complete and the battle
against "Mega-Terrorism" has just begun. If we are to be successful
in this long-term enterprise, both Russia and the United States will need to
adjust old patterns of thinking to new political realities. Hopefully, this
conference will contribute to that
process.