http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=41186

GEOSTRATEGY-DIRECT INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
U.N.'s proliferation failures alarm U.S.
Disarmament agency unable to reach agreement for 8th year
Posted: October 30, 2004
1:00 a.m. Eastern
C 2004 WorldNetDaily.com

The Bush administration is growing increasingly concerned about the
failure of the international community to reach agreement on arms
control and the elimination of weapons of mass destruction, reports
Geostrategy-Direct. the global intelligence news service.

Officials said the U.N. has failed to achieve progress in negotiating
international arms control and disarmament agreements -- in both
conventional and nonconventional weapons -- over the past two years.

U.S. officials said the United Nations have not made progress toward
arms control treaties. They said the exposure in late 2003 of a
nuclear smuggling network that helped such countries as Iran, Libya
and North Korea has not accelerated the pace of arms control efforts.

"The end of Libya's nuclear program also led to the public revelation
of the clandestine Khan network, and the United States, the United
Kingdom, and many other governments have shut it down," said Stephen
Rademaker, assistant secretary of state for arms control. "These
developments made clear that additional measures are needed to
strengthen the NPT [Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty] and the larger
nuclear nonproliferation regime."

The U.N. Conference on Disarmament in Geneva was said to have
represented the latest failure by the international community.

Officials said that for the eighth year in a row the conference was
unable to negotiate arms control and disarmament agreements, the
essential function of the U.N. group.

The Bush administration has been pressing the U.N. disarmament group
to ban the sale and export of land mines as well as conclude
negotiations on a Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty, or FMCT. The
administration has urged these goals to be reached by 2005.

The State Department has sought FMCT approval without provisions for
verification. The department has concluded that an effective
international verification of the FMCT could not be achieved by May
2005, when the NPT Review Conference was scheduled to be held,
officials said.

"If we are serious about ending the production of fissile material
for nuclear weapons, we should agree to a normative, legal ban as
soon as possible, while such a ban could still have important,
practical meaning in curbing the growth of nuclear weapon
stockpiles," Rademaker said. "The United States believes that we have
identified an approach that can shorten this period considerably."

Rademaker told the U.N. General Assembly's First Committee on Oct. 8
that the failure of international arms control efforts appeared worse
at the U.N. Disarmament Commission. He said the UNDC could not even
reach a consensus on its agenda for 2004.

Last year, the commission failed to meet. The United States has
called on the General Assembly to instruct the commission to dedicate
its 2005 session solely to identifying ways to improve the panel's
effectiveness.

Rademaker said the United States wanted to impose stronger controls
on land mines. He said the U.N.'s Conference on Disarmament could
address the issue despite the activities of the Convention on
Conventional Weapons, whose focus has also been on land mines.

"It will complement, not compete with, other agreements or proposals,
and we urge our negotiating partners in Geneva to consider this
proposal on its merits," Rademaker said.








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