WHITE HOUSE SEEKS TO RATIFY NUCLEAR PROTECTION POLICY
To submit an international arms control agreement to the U.S. Senate
for ratification has not always been the Bush Administration's first
instinct. But last month the White House asked the Senate to ratify a
2005 Amendment to the 1980 Convention on the Physical Protection of
Nuclear Material.
"This Amendment is important in the campaign against international
nuclear terrorism and nuclear proliferation," President Bush wrote in
his transmittal letter.
"It will require each State Party to the Amendment to establish,
implement, and maintain an appropriate physical protection regime
applicable to nuclear material and nuclear facilities used for peaceful
purposes."
The pending Amendment along with a State Department overview and
related materials were recently printed for the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee. See "Amendment to Convention on Physical
Protection of Nuclear Material," submitted by the President of the
United States to the U.S. Senate, September 4, 2007:
http://www.fas.org/nuke/control/nucmat/text/amend.pdf
International progress on ratifying the Amendment "remains slow,"
lamented Mohamed El Baradei, director general of the International
Atomic Energy Agency, in a September 10 statement. Of the 128 States
that are party to the 1980 Convention, only 11 have approved the 2005
Amendment, he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment