[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 87 (Thursday, June 10, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4841-S4843]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
START TREATY
Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, let me speak for a moment with respect to
the New START treaty. Strategic arms reductions are very important. We
do not think about them very much. We deal with big issues and small
issues in the Senate. Sometimes the small issues get much more
attention than the big issues. But one is coming for sure to the floor
of the Senate that is a very big issue; that is, the Strategic Arms
Reduction Treaty that was negotiated with the Russians. This is really
a big issue and very important. I want to describe why and describe why
I feel so strongly about it. I have spoken on the floor previously
about this, but I want to do it again, describing a Time magazine
article from March 11, 2002. The March 11, 2002, Time magazine article
referred back to 2001, right after 9/11--It said this:
For a few harrowing weeks last fall, a group of U.S.
officials believed that the worst nightmare of their lives--
something even more horrific than 9/11--was about to come
true. In October, an intelligence alert went out to a small
number of government agencies, including the Energy
Department's top-secret Nuclear Emergency Research Team,
based in Nevada. The report said that terrorists were thought
to have obtained a 10-kiloton nuclear weapon from the Russian
arsenal and planned to smuggle it into New York City. ``It
was brutal,'' a U.S. official told Time. It was also highly
classified and closely guarded. Under the aegis of the
Whitehouse's Counterterrorism Security Group . . . the
suspected nuke was kept secret so as not to panic the people
of New York. Senior FBI officials were not in the loop.
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Some while later, Graham Allison, who is an expert on nuclear
proliferation wrote about this incident in a book titled ``Nuclear
Terrorism: The Ultimate Preventable Catastrophe.'' In his book, he
points out:
One month to the day after the attacks of 9/11, a CIA agent
codenamed Dragonfire reported that al-Qaida terrorists had
stolen a ten kiloton Russian nuclear bomb from the Russian
arsenal and may have smuggled it into New York City. Vice
President Cheney moved to a secret mountain facility along
with several hundred government employees. They were the core
of an alternative government that would operate if
Washington, DC were destroyed. President Bush dispatched
Nuclear Emergency Support Teams to New York to search for the
suspected nuclear weapon. To not cause panic, no one in New
York City was informed of the threat, not even Mayor
Giuliani. After a few weeks, the intelligence community
determined that Dragonfire's report was a false alarm.
But as they did the postmortem on this, they understood that no one
claimed it could have been impossible that a nuclear weapon could have
been stolen from the Russian arsenal. No one claimed it would have been
impossible--having stolen a Russian nuclear weapon--to smuggle it into
New York City or a major American city. No one claimed it would have
been impossible for a terrorist group--who wanted to kill several
hundred thousand people with a nuclear weapon--to have been able to
detonate that nuclear weapon.
Now, as I indicated, I describe that as it was described in Time
magazine in 2002, and as it was written about in the book by Graham
Allison, a former Clinton administration official, in his book titled,
``Nuclear Terrorism: The Ultimate Preventable Catastrophe.'' I describe
that and the apoplectic seizure that existed in parts of the U.S.
government when it was thought that 1 month after 9/11 al-Qaida had
stolen a nuclear weapon and was prepared to detonate it in an American
city. And on that day, we wouldn't have had 3,000-plus Americans
murdered, we would have had hundreds of thousands of Americans losing
their lives. Yet that was about one nuclear weapon--one, just one. The
loss of one nuclear weapon.
Now, it turns out it Dragonfire's report wasn't true. The FBI agent
codenamed Dragonfire heard it, passed it along, but it turned out it
was not accurate. But that was just one nuclear weapon. There are about
25,000 nuclear weapons on this planet. This chart shows the Union of
Concerned Scientists' estimate for 2010 estimate that Russia has 15,100
nuclear weapons, the United States has 9,400, China about 240, France
300, Britain 200, and Israel, India, Pakistan, and North Korea each
have some. So 25,000 nuclear weapons, and I have described the terror
of having just one end up in the hands of a terrorist group. If it ever
happens--when it ever happens, God forbid--and hundreds of thousands of
people are killed, life on this planet will be changed forever.
Now, Mr. President, we have a lot of nuclear weapons on this planet
of ours, and we understand the consequences of their use. These
pictures from August of 1945 show the consequences of the dropping of
two nuclear weapons--one in Hiroshima and one in Nagasaki. Those
pictures are, all these years later, still very hard to look at. That
is the consequence of two nuclear weapons.
I was recently in Russia visiting a site that we fund in the Congress
under the Nunn-Lugar program. I want to show some photographs about
what we have been doing to try to back away from the nuclear threat, to
try to see if we can reduce the number of nuclear weapons and the
number of delivery vehicles to deliver those nuclear weapons.
This is a photograph of the dismantlement of a Blackjack bomber. This
Blackjack bomber was a Russian bomber--a Soviet Union bomber prior to
Russia--that would carry a nuclear weapon that would potentially be
dropped on the United States, then an adversary during the Cold War.
You can see that we dismantled that Russian Blackjack bomber, and this
is a piece of a wing strut.
I ask unanimous consent to show a couple of samples.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. DORGAN. This is a piece of a wing strut of a Russian bomber. We
didn't shoot it down. We cut the wing off. I happen to have a piece of
it. This was happening because our colleagues, Senators Nunn and Lugar,
put together a program by which we actually paid for the dismantlement
of Russian bombers.
I also have copper wiring from the ground-up copper of the electrical
wires of a Russian submarine. We didn't sink that submarine. We paid
money to have that submarine destroyed, as part of our agreement with
Russia to reduce that country's nuclear weapons.
This is a hinge from a silo in the Ukraine that previously housed a
missile with warheads aimed at the United States. There is now planted
on that ground sunflowers, not missiles, because we paid the cost of
reducing delivery vehicles and reducing nuclear weapons in the
stockpile of the former Soviet Union.
This is a program that works--a program that is unbelievably
important. And as I and some others viewed these programs in Russia, we
understood again the importance of what we have been doing under the
Nunn-Lugar program: The Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and Belarus are now
nuclear weapons free. That didn't used to be the case. There are no
nuclear weapons in those three countries. Albania is chemical weapons
free. We have deactivated, under the Nunn-Lugar program, 7,500 former
Soviet nuclear warheads. And the numbers of weapons of mass destruction
that have been eliminated, and their delivery vehicles, are 32
ballistic missile submarines--gone, eliminated; 1,419 long-range
nuclear missiles; 906 nuclear air-to-surface missiles, and 155 nuclear
bombers. All of this has been done under a program that very few people
know about--the Nunn-Lugar program. It works. It is a great program.
But, as I have indicated, there are still thousands and thousands and
thousands--it is estimated this year 25,000--of nuclear weapons on this
planet. So what do we do about that? This administration engaged with
the Russians for a new treaty because the old START treaty had expired.
This new treaty--the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty--was
negotiated over a lengthy period of time. It required a lot of
patience, a great deal of effort, but this administration stuck with
it. They negotiated, completed, and signed this treaty.
The President of Russia and our President met in Prague, the Czech
Republic, and signed this treaty. Now it needs to be ratified by the
Senate.
I want to talk just a bit about the need to do that. I think all of
us understand the urgency. There are some who feel strongly that
perhaps we should begin the testing of nuclear weapons. I don't support
that. I don't think we should. I think we need to be world leaders on
these issues. We have stopped nuclear testing. Others have stopped
nuclear testing as well, and we ought to continue that posture.
There are some who feel we should begin building new nuclear weapons.
I don't believe we should. That doesn't make any sense. That is the
wrong signal for us to send to the world.
There are some who believe that we need to make additional
investments in the area of life extension programs and investments in
making certain that the nuclear weapons that do exist in the stockpile
are weapons in which we have the required confidence that those weapons
are available, if needed. The President has asked that funding to do
that be made available.
I chair the subcommittee that funds those programs, and I believe we
will make available what the President requests. It is reasonable, it
seems to me, to not only proceed--hopefully, on a bipartisan basis--to
address something as important as the START treaty, but at the same
time make sure that the programs that we have always had--the life
extension programs and the programs that make sure that we have
sufficient confidence in the weapons that exist--are funded
appropriately. That is what the President has recommended in the budget
that he has sent to the Congress.
It just seems to me there is so much to commend to this Congress the
need to ratify an arms control treaty here. Mr. Linton Brooks, the NNSA
Administrator under George W. Bush, said this, talking about the newly
negotiated treaty and the President's budget request:
START, as I now understand it, is a good idea on its own
merits, but I think for those
[[Page S4843]]
who think it's only a good idea if you have a strong weapons
program, I think this budget ought to take care of that.
Coupled with the out-year projections, it takes care of the
concerns about the complex and it does very good things about
the stockpile and it should keep the labs healthy.
I don't quote Henry Kissinger very often, but Henry Kissinger says it
pretty well when he says:
It should be noted I come from the hawkish side of this
debate, so I'm not here advocating these measures in the
abstract. I try to build them into my perception of the
national interest. I recommend ratification of this treaty.
Henry Kissinger says he recommends ratification of this treaty. And,
finally, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mullen:
I, the Vice Chairman, and the Joint Chiefs, as well as our
combatant commanders around the world, stand solidly behind
this new treaty, having had the opportunity to provide our
counsel, to make our recommendations, and to help shape the
final agreements.
It is not just us, but it is our children and their children that
have a lot at stake with respect to reducing the number of nuclear
weapons, reducing the delivery vehicles. It is the case that the amount
of plutonium that will fit in a soda can, the amount of highly enriched
uranium the size of a couple of grapefruits will produce a nuclear
weapon that will have devastating consequences. So one of our
obligations is to try to make sure nuclear material--the material with
which those who wish to make nuclear weapons can make those weapons--
stays out of the hands of terrorists. That is one of our jobs. We are
working very hard on that. We have programs that work on that
constantly.
Second is to stop the proliferation of nuclear weapons. I described
the countries that we know have nuclear weapons. Now we have to stop
the proliferation and stop other countries from getting nuclear
weapons. That is our responsibility. We have to be a world leader to do
that.
As I said, if, God forbid, somehow in the future--5 years, 10 years,
or 20 years from now--a nuclear weapon is exploded in a major city, and
hundreds of thousands are killed, life on this planet is not going to
be the same. That is why it seems to me that a very important start--
and this is just a start, not a finish--is to take this treaty that has
been negotiated, bring it to the floor of the Senate, and have this
discussion. I would expect there will be Republicans and Democrats who
will come down on the same side of this issue--that it is a better
world, a safer world when we meet our responsibility to lead on the
issues of nonproliferation, when we meet our responsibilities to lead
on the matter of reducing nuclear weapons and reducing delivery
vehicles.
That is what this New START treaty does. It does it in a very
responsible way. So my hope will be that in the coming 2 months or so
that we will have a robust discussion of the START treaty and have the
celebration of having had the debate and had the vote and then
exclaiming to the world that this was a success--that this treaty was a
success. Yes, a first step but a success.
Beyond this treaty, there will be other negotiations that will take
us to other areas in reductions. I think, as a result, if we do what we
should be expected to do, this can be a safer world.
Mr. President, I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a
quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent the order for the
quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Burris). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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