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<classification authority="sudocs">GA 1.13:NSIAD-97-101</classification>
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 <subject>Defense industry</subject>
 <subject>Defense conversion</subject>
 <subject>Nuclear weapons</subject>
 <subject>Funds management</subject>
 <subject>Federal aid to foreign countries</subject>
 <subject>Nuclear proliferation</subject>
 <subject>International cooperation</subject>
 <subject>International relations</subject>
 <identifier>DOD Cooperative Threat Reduction Program</identifier>
 <identifier>Defense Enterprise Fund</identifier>
 <identifier>Polish-American Enterprise Fund</identifier>
 <identifier>Hungarian-American Enterprise Fund</identifier>
 <identifier>Belarus</identifier>
 <identifier>Kazakhstan</identifier>
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<titleInfo>
 <title>Cooperative Threat Reduction: Status of Defense Conversion Efforts in the Former Soviet Union</title>
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<abstract>Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the Department of
Defense&apos;s (DOD) program to help convert defense industries in the former
Soviet Union to commercial enterprises, focusing on: (1) the effect of
defense conversion efforts on the elimination or reduction of military
activities and production capabilities in former Soviet weapons of mass
destruction enterprises; (2) the status of defense conversion projects
and funding; and (3) conformance of the Defense Enterprise Fund&apos;s
management practices to its grant agreement and the Fund&apos;s operating
expenses.&lt;p/&gt;GAO noted that: (1) given the vast size of the former Soviet Union&apos;s
weapons complex and the numerous variables involved in trying to assess
and quantify military production capacity, including unknown factors
such as possible modernization or consolidations at other locations, GAO
was unable to confirm that the defense conversion projects GAO reviewed
had any direct impact on eliminating or reducing weapons of mass
destruction or other military production capacity in the former Soviet
Union; (2) nonetheless, of the 24 projects GAO reviewed, 20 had
indigenous partners that DOD identified as firms that had been engaged
in producing weapons of mass destruction, and one project involved
converting resources that were still engaged in producing weapons of
mass destruction; (3) GAO&apos;s analysis also showed that at least 11
projects had directly used buildings formerly engaged in activities
related to weapons of mass destruction, and at least 8 projects had
employed former workers from weapons of mass destruction-related
activities at the newly established enterprises; (4) according to DOD
officials, the defense conversion projects are providing assistance to
firms that have large numbers of underutilized and often unpaid
employees; (5) DOD officials hope that the projects will become
commercially viable and that the indigenous parent firms will invest
additional resources that might have otherwise been used for producing
weapons of mass destruction or other military hardware; (6) five of the
24 defense conversion projects were no longer operating at the time of
GAO&apos;s review; (7) the remaining 19 projects have made varying degrees of
progress in setting up commercial businesses, but eight of the projects
had not begun production; (8) four of the projects that had reached
production were moving forward, and for one of these projects the U.S.
partner bought the Russian partner&apos;s share of the joint venture; (9)
three of the four housing projects are nearly complete but have not
established commercial enterprises; (10) two of the housing projects
were construction projects and were not intended to generate ongoing
businesses; (11) as of March 1997, DOD had notified Congress that it
planned to spend a total of $179.7 million on defense conversion
projects and had disbursed $143 million, including $51.7 million granted
to the Defense Enterprise Fund (DEF); and (12) the DEF has complied wit*</abstract>
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<identifier type="preferred citation">GAO/NSIAD-97-101</identifier>
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<note>Letter Report</note>
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<subject>
 <topic>Defense industry</topic>
 <topic>Defense conversion</topic>
 <topic>Nuclear weapons</topic>
 <topic>Funds management</topic>
 <topic>Federal aid to foreign countries</topic>
 <topic>Nuclear proliferation</topic>
 <topic>International cooperation</topic>
 <topic>International relations</topic>
 <topic>DOD Cooperative Threat Reduction Program</topic>
 <topic>Defense Enterprise Fund</topic>
 <topic>Polish-American Enterprise Fund</topic>
 <topic>Hungarian-American Enterprise Fund</topic>
 <topic>Belarus</topic>
 <topic>Kazakhstan</topic>
 <topic>Russia</topic>
 <topic>Ukraine</topic>
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