WMD: US Restarts Nuclear Program

by:   Wire Services

http://www.republicons.org/view_article.asp?RP_ARTICLE_ID=920


4/24/2003

 The Los Angeles Times reported Wednesday
in its article "After 'Decline,' U.S. Again Capable
of Making Nuclear Arms," that the United States
has restarted production of plutonium components
for nuclear bombs at its Los Alamos National
Laboratory for the first time in 14 years. The paper
referred to the restarting as "an important symbolic
and operational milestone in rebuilding the nation's
nuclear weapons complex."

American scientists working for the National
Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) have
started producing the plutonium "pits" that are
at the core of nuclear weaponry. (Conventional
explosives encase a hollow plutonium sphere,
or pit, and trigger a chain reaction when detonated.)

Under a program put forward by the White House,
the United States is also working on a new factory
to supply components for hundreds of weapons each
year, according to the report.

The US Department of Energy, which oversees the
NNSA and runs America's weapons program,
could not be reached for comment late Wednesday.
But the Times quoted unnamed department officials
as denying that they are actually producing nuclear
weapons -- only ensuring the reliability of exiting
weapons.

But nuclear scientists in both Russia and the United
States disputed this claim.

"Pits are empty spheres of plutonium, they cannot
age," said a senior nuclear expert at one of Russia's
leading institutes, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

"Such production cannot be justified by the need to
maintain the safety of the existing stockpile of US
weapons. First of all, it could mean that America
has restarted the production of nuclear warheads and
that it is supporting the industry," the expert said.

"In Russia, such workshops are being closed down."

Arjun Makhijani, an acclaimed nuclear scientist who
runs the Institute for Energy and Environmental
Research in Tacoma, Washington, agreed: "There is
absolutely no need in my opinion to do this. On the
contrary, it is very dangerous," Makhijani said by
telephone.

"This is just the beginning of pit manufacturing.
The US has a capacity to eventually make 50 to
80 pits a year, but the Department of Energy has
proposed to build a new pit facility where they
will be able to make up to 500 pits per year.
The United States does not need any more nuclear
warheads."

Igor Ostretsov, the deputy director for science
of the All-Russia Research Center of Nuclear
Machine-Building, said that while the United States
may need new parts to maintain the efficiency
of its warheads, it looks as if it is also moving
to improve its nuclear arsenal.

"If they are making pits, it may be linked to
making new [nuclear warhead] models," he said.

The move may also violate the Nonproliferation
Treaty that the United States, Russia and other
nuclear nations signed in 2000, in which they
pledged to undertake an "irreversible reduction"
of their nuclear arsenals.

Under Article 2 of the treaty, signatories are
forbidden from manufacturing or otherwise
acquiring nuclear weapons or other nuclear
explosive devices.

"I don't know whether it will reignite the arms
race, but it is certainly in line with the U.S.
strategy of continuing to use nuclear weapons as a
central part of its military strategy," Makhijani said.

Some military experts also said that the real aim
of the program appears to be boosting the United
States' nuclear complex -- a costly move that makes
no strategic sense.

"It is a sign that after a long period of decline,
the weapons complex is back and growing," Jon
Wolfsthal, deputy director of the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace and a former Energy
Department weapons expert, told the Times.

"To the average US citizen, it would be accurate
to say we have restarted the production of nuclear weapons."

Ivan Safranchuk, a Moscow-based researcher for the
Center for Defense Information in Washington, said
by telephone that it would be senseless militarily for the
United States to improve its nuclear warhead arsenal,
"which is excessive anyway and is supposed to be reduced."

Makhijani said "US policy is a provocation to proliferation
because it raises the question that if the most powerful
country in the world by far, in conventional, or
non-nuclear terms, still needs to build more nuclear
weapons, what about everybody else?

"It is a dangerous policy because the United States
and Russia continue to have between them about
4,000 nuclear weapons that can be fired in a few
minutes."




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