By Cheryl Pellerin
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON – Work taking
place under the 16-month-old new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty between the
United States and Russia fosters transparency and predictability for the
world's two largest deployed nuclear arsenals, federal officials told a Senate
panel today.
Among those testifying before the Senate
Committee on Foreign Relations were Rose Gottemoeller, acting undersecretary of
state for arms control and international security, and Madelyn R. Creedon,
assistant secretary of defense for global strategic affairs.
“Our experience so far demonstrates that
the New START's verification regime works and will help push open the door to
new and more complicated verification techniques in the future,” said
Gottemoeller, who led the U.S. treaty negotiating team as assistant secretary
of state for verification and compliance.
The Senate approved the treaty in 2010, and
the related legislative process produced a federal commitment to spend $185
billion over 10 years to modernize nuclear warheads and delivery systems.
“When the treaty is fully implemented,
it will result in the lowest number of deployed nuclear warheads since the
1950s, the first full decade of the nuclear age,” Gottemoeller said, “and 1,550
warheads deployed on or counted on 700 delivery vehicles -- that is,
intercontinental ballistic missiles, submarine launch ballistic missiles and
bombers.”
When the first START treaty was signed
in 1991, she added, the United States and the Soviet Union each had deployed
about 10,550 nuclear warheads.
During the first year of the new treaty,
the United States and Russia kept pace with each other in conducting
inspections, she said, both completing the yearly maximum of 18 inspections.
Today, each side can make 25 short-notice inspections a year, and inspections
have taken place involving intercontinental ballistic missiles,
submarine-launched ballistic missiles, heavy bombers at their operating bases,
storage facilities, conversion or elimination facilities, and test ranges.
“Through inspection activities, we have
acquired new and valuable information,” Gottemoeller told the panel. “For
example, New START includes intrusive reentry vehicle inspections that are
designed to confirm the exact number of re-entry vehicles, or warheads, on
individual missiles selected for inspection. We are now able to confirm the
exact number of warheads on any randomly selected Russian ICBM and SLBM --
something we were not able to do under the 1991 START treaty.”
The exhibition process, another aspect
of treaty implementation, gives both parties a chance to see new kinds of
strategic offensive arms, view distinguishing features and confirm declared
data.
“The United States and Russian
Federation have also been sharing a veritable mountain of data with each
other,” the undersecretary said.
“Since entry into force we have
exchanged over 2,500 notifications through our Nuclear Risk Reduction Centers,”
she added. “They help track movement and changes in the status of systems on a
day-in, day-out basis.
“That,” Gottemoeller continued, “combined
with the databases that we exchange every six months, gives us an opportunity
to have a kind of living database -- a truly real-time look at what is going on
inside the Russian strategic forces.”
Testifying on the implications for U.S.
nuclear forces and policy of the new START treaty, Creedon said implementation
is proceeding successfully and the Defense Department is fully engaged in
meeting its treaty obligations.
DOD has hosted multiple inspection
activities at U.S. strategic facilities and has participated in reciprocal
activities at Russian strategic facilities, the assistant secretary added.
“The United States is on track to
complete the reductions necessary to comply with the New START treaty's central
limits by February 2018,” Creedon said, adding that DOD plans to retain 240
deployed Trident SLBMs on Ohio-class submarines, up to 60 deployed heavy
bombers and up to 420 single-warhead Minuteman III ICBMs.
“To meet the treaty's central limits,”
she said, “the Obama administration plans to convert or eliminate a
yet-to-be-determined combination of ICBM launchers and SLBM launchers [and] our
nuclear-capability heavy bombers.”
The service life of the department’s
Trident II D5 SLBMs is being extended to 2042, and construction of the first
Ohio-class replacement submarine is scheduled to begin in 2021, she added.
The administration plans to sustain
Minuteman III ICBMs through 2030, and the United States will maintain two
nuclear-capable B-52H strategic bomber wings and one B-2A wing.
The department also is working to
complete a comprehensive drawdown plan, a substantial portion of which will be
completed to support the fiscal 2014 budget request, Creedon added.
“As the president's budget request for
fiscal year 2013 makes clear, DOD is committed to modernizing the delivery
systems covered by the New START treaty that underpin nuclear deterrents,” the
assistant secretary said.
Maintaining strategic stability, assuring
allies and sustaining a safe, secure and effective deterrent requires a
partnership between the executive branch and Congress, she added.
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