News

USIS Washington 
File

08 September 1998

TEXT: AMB. GREY REMARKS AT CONFERENCE ON DISARMAMENT SEP. 8

(Informs CD of U.S.-Russian Initiative on Plutonium) (1100)



Geneva -- The United States believes the agreement on the management
of plutonium announced by Presidents Clinton and Yeltsin in Moscow
last week should add impetus to talks at the Conference on Disarmament
(CD) aimed at halting the production of fissile material for nuclear
weapons.


Ambassador Robert T. Grey Jr., U.S. representative to the Conference
on Disarmament, said the new agreement goes beyond previous bilateral
initiatives to cease the production of highly-enriched uranium and
plutonium for use in nuclear weapons.


Grey spoke before the Conference on the final day of its 1998 session.
Last month, after a long stalemate on the issue, the CD established a
committee to begin negotiating a fissile material cutoff treaty (FMCT)
which would ban the production of fissile material for nuclear weapons
or other nuclear explosive devices.


Grey told the CD that the new agreement between the U.S. and the
Russian Federation means that each country will remove by stages
approximately 50 metric tons of plutonium from its nuclear weapons
program and convert it so it can never again be used in nuclear
weapons.


"To put this initiative in perspective, the agreement covers nearly 50
percent of total U.S. holdings of such plutonium," he said. "U.S. and
Russian experts have been directed to begin negotiations promptly with
the goal of completing a detailed bilateral agreement by the end of
this year.... The steps the United States and Russian Federation have
outlined and the resulting transparency should add impetus to our
collective efforts in the Conference next year to negotiate a fissile
material cutoff treaty."


Following is the text, as prepared for delivery, of the September 8
statement by Ambassador Robert T. Grey, Jr, United States
Representative to the Conference on Disarmament:


(Begin text)



Mr. President,



May I first of all take this opportunity to bid farewell to our
colleague, Ambassador Krasnohorska of Slovakia. I have greatly enjoyed
working with you, Ambassador, and you have my every good wish for
success in the future.


Mr. President,



Today I want to formally inform you and other CD colleagues about the
agreements my government concluded with the Russian Federation last
week during the meeting between our two presidents in Moscow. Among
the historic accords are four that bear directly on the international
community's collective efforts to move forward toward disarmament and
non-proliferation objectives. I believe that these bold initiatives
will serve to stimulate progress in this Conference, as we seek to
negotiate agreements that will make our world safer, more secure, and
more stable.


Management and Disposition of Plutonium



Mr. President, the United States and the Russian Federation issued a
Joint Statement of Principles dealing with the important issue of
managing and reducing stockpiles of plutonium for weapons. Measures to
manage and reduce such stockpiles are an essential element of
irreversible reductions in nuclear arms, in part to ensure that these
nuclear materials do not become a proliferation risk.


Under this agreement each country will remove by stages approximately
50 metric tons of plutonium from its nuclear weapons program. Each
will then convert this material so that it can never again be used in
nuclear weapons. Mr. President, to put this initiative in perspective,
the agreement covers nearly 50 percents of total U.S. holdings of such
plutonium.


U.S. and Russian experts have been directed to begin negotiations
promptly with the goal of completing a detailed bilateral agreement by
the end of this year. Such an agreement would lay out the timetable
and a number of details necessary to carry out this very ambitious
program. Our two countries will seek to develop acceptable methods and
technology for transparency, including appropriate international
verification measures and stringent standards of physical protection,
control, and accounting for the management of plutonium. The United
States and the Russian Federation fully expect that the comprehensive
effort for the management and disposition of this plutonium will be a
broad-based, multilateral one. Both countries welcome close
cooperation and coordination with other countries.


I want to emphasize, Mr. President, that this agreement goes beyond
previous bilateral initiatives announced in 1995 and 1997 to cease the
production of highly-enriched uranium and plutonium for use in nuclear
weapons. The steps the United States and Russian Federation have
outlined and the resulting transparency should add impetus to our
collective efforts in the Conference next year to negotiate a fissile
material cutoff treaty.


Ballistic Missile Launch Data



Mr. President, in order to minimize further the disastrous
consequences that would result from the launching of missiles based on
the false warning of a missile attack, the two presidents also signed
an agreement committing the United States and Russia to exchange
information on launches of ballistic missiles and space-launch
vehicles on a continuous basis. As part of this initiative, we have
agreed to examine the possibility of establishing a multilateral
pre-launch notification regime for ballistic missile and space vehicle
launches.


This latest agreement follows in the tradition of other important
U.S.-Russian strategic stability measures -- including the
Washington-Moscow hot line, the nuclear risk reduction centers, and
the detargeting accord. It will allow the world to move one more
important step back from the nuclear precipice of the Cold War and
will help make it safer.


Biological Weapons Convention



Mr. President, in an effort to add momentum to the work of the Ad Hoc
Group of States Parties to the Biological Weapons Convention, the two
presidents also issued a joint statement last week expressing strong
support for the legally binding Protocol being negotiated to
strengthen the Convention. They urged the further intensification and
successful conclusion of the negotiations so that the Protocol can be
adopted as soon as possible.


Non-Proliferation Export Controls



Finally, Mr. President, in an effort to strengthen the international
non-proliferation regime, the two presidents announced as part of a
Joint Statement on Common Security Challenges at the Threshold of the
Twenty-First Century their commitment to cooperate further on export
controls, especially those focused on the technologies and delivery
means for weapons of mass destruction. For example, the U.S. and
Russia will establish expert groups on nuclear matters, missile and
space technology, and conventional weapons, as well as dedicated
communications to facilitate the rapid exchange of information.


Fact Sheets



Mr. President, my delegation is working with the Russian delegation to
submit texts and fact sheets on these initiatives and agreements later
in the week to become official CD documents.


Thank you, Mr. President.



(End text)