Mike Curtiss (21 Dec 2014)
"Unilateral Nuclear Disarmament Obama's Worst Crime"
State Dept: U.S. Nukes Down 85%, From 31,255 to 4,804
'We Still Have More Work To Do'
9:01 AM, DEC 19, 2014 • BY JERYL BIER
The State Department's Rose Gottemoeller, under secretary for arms
control and international security, spoke at the Brookings Institution
Thursday where she reaffirmed the United States' "unassailable"
commitment to putting the nuclear weapons genie back in the bottle.
Gottemoeller told the attendees at the Arms Control and
Non-Proliferation Initiative-sponsored event that "the U.S. commitment
to achieving the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons
is unassailable."
She went on to note that the nation's stockpile of active weapons is
down 85 percent from maximum cold war levels, falling to 4,804 in 2013
from a high of 31,255. But, she said, "We still have more work to do."
As you all might know, I have been traveling quite a bit lately and was
just recently in the Czech Republic for a conference on the Prague
Agenda. I reminded people at that conference that when President Obama
laid out his vision for the peace and security of a world free of
nuclear weapons, he made it clear that it was not a desirable, but
unattainable dream. The Prague Agenda is an achievable long-term goal
and one worth fighting for. I will say here what I said in Prague. There
should be no doubt: the U.S. commitment to achieving the peace and
security of a world without nuclear weapons is unassailable. We continue
to pursue nuclear disarmament and we will keep faith with our Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) commitments, prominent among them,
Article VI. Our responsible approach to disarmament has borne fruit in
the form of major reductions in nuclear weapons, fissile material stocks
and infrastructure. These efforts have led us to reduce our nuclear
arsenal by approximately 85% from its Cold War heights. In real numbers,
that means we have gone from 31,255 nuclear weapons in our active
stockpile in 1967 to 4,804 in 2013. We know we still have more work to
do.
According to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, which is put out by
the Federation of American Scientists, Russia has about the same number
of active weapons now as the U.S., and both countries have several
thousand more warheads awaiting deactivation. Due to security concerns
governments are reluctant to divulge exact numbers, but it's generally
beleived that most of the older nuclear powers (U.S., Russia, the UK,
and France) have reportedly been gradually declining their stockpiles.
Israel, never publicly acknowledging its possession of nuclear weapons,
is believed to be holding steady on its stockpile. China, India, and
Pakistan, on the other hand, are all still believed to be gradually
increasing their numbers. The exact status of North Korea's nuclear
program and stockpile of weapons remains unknown.
Not only is China's stockpile of nuclear weapons believed to still be on
the increase, but this week theWashington Free Beacon reported that
China is continuing to develop delivery systems. This past Saturday,
China conducted a test of an intercontinental ballistic missile capable
of delivering multiple warheads.
A Pentagon spokesman declined to comment on the report.