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15 June 2004
Bolton Tells Senators G8 Summit Advanced Anti-WMD Agenda
Progress made in five specific areas, arms control
official says
State Department official John Bolton reported to the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee June 15 that the recent meeting of the
Group of Eight (G8) endorsed five Bush administration proposals to
combat the spread of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and the means
to deliver them.
Bolton, the under secretary of state for arms control and
international security, said in remarks prepared for delivery that
the administration had scored "significant achievements" at the G8
Sea Island, Georgia, summit. Those achievements included G8
endorsement of:
-- U.N. Security Council Resolution 1540, which calls on member
states to criminalize nuclear proliferation, enact strict export
controls, and secure all sensitive materials within their
borders.
-- The Proliferation Security initiative (PSI), concerning which
the G8 said in its Sea Island Action Plan on Nonproliferation: "We
will further cooperate to defeat proliferation networks and
coordinate, where appropriate, enforcement efforts ... in accordance
with national legal authorities and legislation and consistent with
international law."
-- Closing loopholes in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
(NPT), specifically those by which would-be proliferators are able
to advance toward a nuclear weapons program under the ostensible
claim of developing a peaceful nuclear power capability. The G8 and
made a commitment to put in place, by its summit next year, specific
measures to close this loophole. Meanwhile, G8 leaders "agreed to
refrain from new initiatives involving transferring enrichment and
reprocessing technologies to additional states," Bolton said.
-- Adoption of the International Atomic Energy Agency's [IAEA's]
Additional Protocol, in the G8 Action Plan on Nonproliferation. All
states were urged to ratify and implement the Additional Protocol as
soon as possible. According to the Action Plan, the Additional
Protocol "must become an essential new standard in the field of
nuclear supply arrangements." G8 leaders pledged accordingly to
strengthen Nuclear Suppliers Group guidelines "by the end of
2005."
-- Strengthening IAEA governance, for which President Bush
proposed both to create a Special Committee of the IAEA Board of
Governors to focus intensively on safeguards and verification, and
to preclude countries under investigation for violating nuclear
nonproliferation obligations from serving on the IAEA Board or the
new Special Committee. Bolton said the G8 leaders endorsed the
creation of the Special Committee and went as far as calling for
recusal of countries under investigation from decisions regarding
their own cases. Bolton termed this "a step forward, although more
needs to be done on this point."
Bolton also made extensive remarks about the Global Partnership,
which was a creation of the G8 two years ago and involves a
commitment to spending $20 billion over a 10-year period for
nonproliferation, disarmament, counterterrorism, and nuclear safety
projects in the states of the former Soviet Union.
Following are Bolton's remarks, as prepared:
(begin text)
TESTIMONY BY UNDER SECRETARY OF STATE FOR ARMS CONTROL AND
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY JOHN R. BOLTON
to the SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE STATUS REPORT ON
THE SEA ISLAND G8 SUMMIT AND THE GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP
June 15, 2004
June 15, 2004 (As prepared for delivery)
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee, thank you for the
opportunity to appear before the Committee today to discuss our
progress on the United States' nonproliferation agenda. I will
report in some detail on the significant achievements at the G8
Summit at Sea Island last week.
President Bush set out the next steps in the administration's
nonproliferation agenda in a comprehensive speech on February 11 of
this year at the National Defense University. He made a number of
specific proposals that formed the core of the United States
approach at the Sea Island Summit. The president clearly highlighted
the nightmare scenario presented by the possibility of terrorists or
their state sponsors acquiring weapons of mass destruction (WMD),
which would have no hesitation in using against civilian
targets.
The danger the president addressed is not new, and this Committee
and its chairman have been in the forefront of international efforts
designed to reduce the risk that such a horrific event might ever
occur. It is a testimony to the vision of this Committee's
leadership that the Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR)
legislation dates to 1991, when the collapse of the Soviet Union
left a legacy of awesome weapons at the mercy of chaotic events and
vulnerable to loss, theft or misuse. The work that has been
accomplished under that legislation has gone a long way toward
preventing hostile states and terrorists from acquiring such
weapons. It has helped transform a relationship of mutual hostility
into one of cooperation. Rising to the occasion of an emergency
response to crisis, our CTR programs have expanded in scope and
enlisted the cooperation of friends and allies from around the
world. Indeed, it is impossible to conceive of the Global
Partnership as it now stands, without a clear line of paternity
leading back to Nunn-Lugar over a decade ago.
It is also a credit to the vision of your leadership, Mr.
Chairman, that we cannot rest on the accomplishments of these
programs thus far. Significant though they are, there is still a
great deal of work to be done to move forward on the task that was
begun over a decade ago. Let me describe what the Sea Island Summit
committed us to accomplishing over the next decade.
The President's Speech and the Sea Island Summit
1. On February 11, the president recalled that he had proposed
during his address to the U.N. General Assembly that the United
Nations Security Council adopt a new resolution requiring all states
to criminalize proliferation, enact strict export controls, and
secure all sensitive materials within their borders. As you know,
the Security Council unanimously passed this resolution on April
28th. The G8 Partners commended Resolution 1540 as follows in the
Sea Island Action Plan on Nonproliferation:
"We strongly support U.N. Security Council Resolution 1540,
calling on all states to establish effective national export
controls, to adopt and enforce effected laws to criminalize
proliferation, to take cooperation action to prevent non-state
actors from acquiring weapons of mass destruction, and to end
illicit trafficking in such weapons, their means of delivery, and
related materials. We call on all states to implement this
resolution promptly and fully, and we are prepared to assist them in
so doing, thereby helping to fight the nexus between terrorism and
proliferation, and black markets in these weapons and related
materials."
A copy of the Sea Island G8 Action Plan on Nonproliferation is
attached to this testimony.
2. The Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI) passed its first
anniversary last month. On May 31-June 1, the government of Poland
hosted an important conference of nations supporting PSI in Krakow,
Poland, where the president first announced the initiative to
address the growing challenge of weapons of mass destruction
proliferation. It was gratifying to see so many countries -- 62 in
all -- represented at this anniversary, and we know of other
supporters who could not attend. We like to say that "PSI is an
activity, not an organization," and we believe this spirit and
flexibility are among the keys to PSI's success. In developing PSI,
our main goal has been a simple one -- to create the basis for
practical cooperation among states to help navigate the increasingly
challenging arena of proliferation. Our goal is based on an equally
simple tenet -- that the impact of states working together in a
deliberately cooperative manner would be greater than states acting
alone in an ad hoc fashion.
This past year, we learned just how far proliferation networks
had advanced. PSI addresses that threat. And President Bush proposed
in February that the work of PSI be broadened beyond interdicting
shipments and transfers, to include greater cooperation in law
enforcement.
Our G8 partners backed us at Sea Island. All eight participants
reiterated their commitment to PSI and its Statement of Interdiction
Principles as a global response to a global problem. The G8
Nonproliferation Action Plan spoke in detail to PSI activities:
"We will further cooperate to defeat proliferation networks and
coordinate, where appropriate, enforcement efforts, including by
stopping illicit financial flows and shutting down illicit plants,
laboratories, and brokers, in accordance with national legal
authorities and legislation and consistent with international law.
Several of us are already developing mechanisms to deny access to
our ports and airports for companies and impose visa bans on
individuals involved in illicit trade."
3. President Bush also made a bold and sweeping proposal to
address the problem of proliferant states seeking nuclear weapons
under false pretenses. Several countries have pursued programs to
produce weapons-grade nuclear material under cover of civilian
nuclear programs, while asserting a right under NPT [Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty] Article IV to pursue sensitive nuclear
technologies, such as enrichment and reprocessing. President Bush
proposed closing that loophole in a manner that allows for the safe
development of peaceful nuclear power programs without adding to the
danger of weapons proliferation.
The president called on all members of the Nuclear Suppliers
Group (NSG) to refuse to sell enrichment and reprocessing
technologies to any state that does not already possess full-scale,
functioning enrichment and reprocessing plants. At Sea Island, the
G8 leaders recognized the danger of the spread of enrichment and
reprocessing technologies, and made a commitment to put in place --
by the time of the G8 Summit next year -- specific measures to close
this loophole, while allowing the world to safely enjoy the benefits
of peaceful nuclear energy. For the next year, the G8 leaders agreed
to refrain from new initiatives involving transferring enrichment
and reprocessing technologies to additional states, and called on
other states to adopt the same approach. Over the next year we will
work to achieve the president's objective of staunching the
indiscriminate spread of these sensitive technologies. I spoke to
the NSG's annual plenary session in Goteborg, Sweden, last month,
where I urged the other members to work with us to close this
loophole in the nuclear nonproliferation regime. The endorsement of
the G8 leaders is an important step in this effort.
4. The Sea Island Summit also gave strong support to the
president's proposals concerning the IAEA [International Atomic
Energy Agency] Additional Protocol. The president proposed that, by
next year, only states that have signed the IAEA Additional Protocol
be allowed to import equipment for their civilian nuclear program.
We have introduced that proposal into the NSG, urging amendment of
the Nuclear Suppliers Guidelines to make the Additional Protocol a
condition of supply for all "trigger list" items. In the G8 Action
Plan on Nonproliferation, the leaders urged all states to ratify and
implement the Additional Protocol as soon as possible, and said that
the Additional Protocol "must become an essential new standard in
the field of nuclear supply arrangements. We will work to strengthen
NSG guidelines accordingly. We aim to achieve this by the end of
2005." Implementing this agreement, we believe, would achieve the
president's goal.
5. The president also affirmed that we must ensure that the
International Atomic Energy Agency is organized to take action when
action is required. To this end, he suggested two steps to
strengthen IAEA governance: the creation of a Special Committee of
the IAEA Board of Governors to focus intensively on safeguards and
verification; and second, that countries under investigation for
violating nuclear nonproliferation obligations should be precluded
from serving on the IAEA Board or the new Special Committee.
These proposals drew close interest from our G8 partners. We
found much agreement with the idea that safeguards and verification
need more concerted attention. At Sea Island, the G8 leaders
endorsed this approach:
"To enhance the IAEA's integrity and effectiveness, and
strengthen its ability to ensure that nations comply with their NPT
obligations and safeguards agreements, we will work together to
establish a new Special Committee of the IAEA Board of Governors.
This committee would be responsible for preparing a comprehensive
plan for strengthened safeguards and verification. We believe this
committee should be made up of member states in compliance with
their NPT and IAEA commitments."
G8 partners also agreed with the principle, as the president
expressed it, that those actively breaking the rules should not be
entrusted with enforcing the rules. To this end, we sought to limit
the opportunity for IAEA Board members, which are in violation of
their nonproliferation obligations, to act on Board business that
addresses their own violations. At Sea Island the G8 leaders
endorsed recusal of countries under investigation from decisions
regarding their own cases. This is a step forward, although more
needs to be done on this point.
These issues will be addressed at the IAEA Board of Governors
meeting that began yesterday, June 14. We will be raising the
question of the Special Committee, and the question of denying Board
and Special Committee membership to those in violation of their
nonproliferation obligations. We will describe terms of reference
for the Special Committee, with attention to how we can better
understand, and respond to, trade in black market equipment and
technology. We will urge the IAEA to use the full breadth of its
authorities to verify declared activities, and to ferret out
undeclared nuclear activities.
Each and every one of the foregoing initiatives reinforces the
Global Partnership, to which I now turn.
Global Partnership
At their June, 2002, Summit in Kananaskis, [Canada,] G8 Leaders
pledged to raise up to $20 billion to be spent over 10 years for
nonproliferation, disarmament, counterterrorism, and nuclear safety
projects in the states of the former Soviet Union. This commitment
attempts to prevent terrorists or states that support them from
acquiring or developing weapons of mass destruction, missiles, and
related materials, equipment and technology.
The Global Partnership accomplished a great deal in the past two
years, making progress towards its commitment to raise up to $20
billion, expanding participation, laying solid groundwork for
cooperation, advancing current programs, and launching new projects.
This United States initiative attempts to leverage our G8 partners
to match our own billion-dollar-per-year programs.
To date, the seven other G8 states and the European Union have
pledged about $6.5 billion. In addition, Russia plans to spend $2
billion of its own funds. Six new donors that joined in 2003 --
Finland, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Switzerland, and Sweden --
have committed about $210 million. Concrete results are now
appearing in projects underway or about to begin with funding
mobilized from the Partnership. The United States considers the $20
billion goal of the Global Partnership to be a floor and not a
ceiling. We made this position quite clear at Kananaskis and
subsequently, and more recently in the president's February NDU
speech. We hope to persuade our G8 colleagues to consider it the
same.
Another component of President Bush's initiative was to expand
the Global Partnership to involve additional donor countries. Last
week, at the Sea Island Summit, G8 Leaders welcomed seven new donor
countries: Australia, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Ireland,
the Republic of Korea, and New Zealand. While many of these new
donors are in the early stages of the process of designating funds
and considering projects, they nonetheless increase the Global
Partnership's political impact, and broaden its capability to make
it a truly global effort to prevent the proliferation of weapons and
materials of mass destruction.
President Bush also proposed expanding the Global Partnership to
new recipient countries. The United States has substantial
nonproliferation projects underway in several former Soviet states,
which count toward our Global Partnership pledge, as have some other
G8 countries. We are actively encouraging the G8 to accept new
recipient countries such as Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and
Georgia, and will continue to do so. We discussed participation with
Ukraine, and will do so with other former Soviet states.
At Sea Island, the G8 took an important step to make the Global
Partnership truly global, agreeing to use the Global Partnership to
coordinate efforts to address proliferation challenges worldwide.
For example, we will pursue the retraining of Iraqi and Libyan
scientists involved in past WMD programs.
Through the launch of the Global Partnership initiative the
leading industrialized countries of the G8 committed to greatly
expanded nonproliferation cooperation, that far exceeds their
engagement in the preceding 10 years. Some have criticized the
progress made to date in implementing these commitments. However,
many donor countries started from scratch to negotiate implementing
agreements with Russia that include essential sound business
practices such as tax exemption, access to work sites, and
transparency in financial transactions. For example, Canada and
Russia signed at Sea Island last week a bilateral agreement that
will allow Canada's projects in Russia to go forward; this welcome
step required negotiations that began shortly after Kananaskis and
took two years to complete. Unfortunately, the work of putting in
place the necessary agreements, which requires close coordination
and support from the recipient countries, has taken longer than we
would like, as does the development of sound project designs that
will ensure that taxpayer money does not go to waste. I can assure
you that donor countries are readily pressing for timely conclusions
of these arrangements.
Since the U.S. already had implementing frameworks in place, we
have forged ahead. The United States is on track in fulfilling its
$10 billion pledge, with annual funding commitments at about $1
billion. The planned United States activities will represent a
substantial increase over the preceding 10 years' efforts. The $10
billion pledged from June 2002 through 2012 will be some $3 billion
greater than the United States spent on nonproliferation efforts
from 1992 to June 2002. Our funding commitments are being translated
into concrete actions as considerable amounts of funds are flowing
to Global Partnership projects.
Global Partnership cooperation spans the full range of
nonproliferation and nuclear safety cooperation. I am submitting for
the record the G8 Global Partnership's Annual Report and annex, the
Consolidated Report of Global Partnership Projects, which provide a
record of Global Partnership activities and project commitments to
date. These reports were released by the G8 Leaders last week at the
Sea Island Summit, and are available on the Sea Island web site. The
reports reflect funding since the establishment of the Global
Partnership in 2002. Thus, U.S. FY 1992-2002 funding of almost $7.2
billion for nonproliferation and threat reduction programs in the
former Soviet Union are not included therein.
The broad level of support for the Global Partnership goals is
reflected in the wide degree of participation in the Global
Partnership projects. My colleagues from the Departments of Energy
and Defense will elaborate on their agencies' significant work and
accomplishments, including in the areas of nuclear and radioactive
materials security, chemical weapons destruction, bio-security and
bio-safety, and redirection of former weapons scientists. It is
worth noting that these efforts enjoy a substantial degree of
support from other Global Partnership participants.
Chemical weapons (CW) destruction: Russia's stockpile of 40,000
metric tons of chemical weapons -- the largest in the world by far
-- is a substantial security concern. We need only think back to the
1995 attack by the Japanese cult Aum Shinrikyo on the Tokyo subway
system to recall the consequences of terrorist use of chemical
weapons. Canada, the European Union, Finland, France, Germany,
Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Russia, Switzerland, and the
United Kingdom are committed to projects assisting Russia at sites
including Gorny, Shchuch'ye, Pochep, and Kambarka.
Russia is responsible for fulfilling its obligations under the
Chemical Weapons Convention to destroy its CW stockpiles, but
assistance provided by Global Partnership partners will
substantially facilitate and accelerate the destruction of CW in
Russia. The U.S. is by far the largest donor in this project, with
funding over $830 million since 1992, mostly for the nerve agent
destruction facility at Shchuch'ye.
Nuclear submarine dismantlement: The United States is completing
a multiyear effort to dismantle Russian decommissioned strategic
nuclear submarines, with $372 million funded to date. In addition,
to assist our Global Partnership colleagues, we have authorized the
use of equipment belonging to the U.S. program by other countries to
dismantle Russia's general-purpose nuclear-powered submarines. Under
the Global Partnership, Canada, the European Union, Finland, France,
Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, and the
United Kingdom are or will soon be providing substantial
contributions for nuclear submarine dismantlement and related
activities for the safe handling and storage of their associated
nuclear and radioactive waste.
Securing nuclear materials: Disposing, securing and preventing
the further production of fissile materials is key to our global
efforts to keep terrorists or threatening states from acquiring or
manufacturing a nuclear weapon. This area is a priority for the
United States, Canada, the European Union, Finland, Germany, Norway,
Sweden, and the United Kingdom.
DOE [the U.S. Department of Energy] has for some time been
engaged in a high-priority effort to increase the protection of
nuclear material in Russia. To date, with U.S. assistance,
approximately 45 percent of fissile material in Russian is secure.
By 2008, Russia and the U.S. plan to have all fissile material
facilities secure. Funding for these programs has increased 50
percent over the last four years, from $622 million (for FY96-00) to
$928 million (for FY01-04).
DOD [U.s. Department of Defense] has recently completed the
construction and certification of the fissile material storage
facility at Mayak in Russia. This modern and highly secure facility
will allow Russia to consolidate and safely store more than 25 tons
of Russian plutonium from their nuclear weapons program.
In addition, Secretary [of Energy Spencer] Abraham announced the
Global Threat Reduction Initiative (GTRI) on May 26. We are
committing over $450 million to GTRI. Its overall objective is to
secure, remove or dispose of a broad range of nuclear and
radiological materials around the world that are vulnerable to
theft. Important components of the program are to repatriate U.S.
and Russian-origin research reactor fuel, and to convert research
reactors from HEU [highly enriched uranium] to LEU [low enriched
uranium]. In his announcement Secretary Abraham committed the United
States to return all fresh Russian-origin HEU material to Russia by
the end of 2005, and to complete the repatriation of all
Russian-origin spent fuel by 2010. On the following day the United
States and Russia signed an implementing agreement that will permit
this program to move forward with accelerated fuel shipments from
Russian-origin research reactors in at least 12 countries.
Increasing the Security of Russian Nuclear Warheads: There are
also ongoing efforts by the Departments of Defense and Energy to
increase the security of Russian nuclear warhead facilities.
Considerable effort has been devoted to difficult access issues for
these sensitive facilities, and work is now ongoing in order to
increase the security of warhead storage sites throughout Russia. My
DOE colleagues will have more to say about these programs.
Securing Dangerous Pathogens: Cooperative biosecurity and
biosafety projects in the former Soviet Union, including securing
dangerous pathogens, are being pursued not only by the U.S. but also
by France and Sweden. The DOD biosecurity programs are aimed at
increasing the safety and security of dangerous pathogen collections
in Russia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Georgia. Meanwhile, we are
working with these countries to become partners in global efforts to
prevent biological terrorism. Funding for this program is $54
million for FY 2003 and FY 2004.
Redirection of former weapons scientists. One of the biggest
proliferation challenges we face today is preventing the spread of
the knowledge and expertise necessary to make weapons of mass
destruction. A key priority for the United States is to redirect
former weapons scientists to productive civilian employment, so they
do not leave to work for terrorist groups or dangerous states. These
programs share a common strategy: to access high-risk former weapon
institutes and to help them "graduate" into self-supporting,
transparent civilian endeavors. Besides the United States, the
European Union, individual European states, the United Kingdom, and
Canada are working to implement several programs to engage WMD
scientists.
The United States is engaged in the permanent redirection of
former weapon scientists worldwide, through long-standing programs
such as the Science Centers and Bio-Chem Redirection programs. Newer
efforts are underway, such as the scientist redirection initiatives
in Iraq and Libya and the Bio Industry Initiative in Eurasia.
Improving Export Control: Working with other governments to
ensure that they have the necessary awareness, authorities, and
capabilities to prevent transfers of proliferation concern is a
critical component of nonproliferation objectives. We are continuing
to expand our efforts to help other countries to bring their export
control systems up to international standards. These efforts are
what the president urged in his September 2003 speech to the U.N.
General Assembly, and as now embodied in Security Council Resolution
1540, through our Export Control and Border Security (EXBS)
program.
While the EXBS program initially focused on the Former Soviet
Union, the program has adapted to meet the changing proliferation
threat. It is now active in over 30 countries, including potential
WMD "source countries" in South Asia and in regions that are
producers of weapons-related items, and key transit and
transshipment states in regions such as Southeast Asia, the Middle
East, the Mediterranean and Central Europe. The EXBS program draws
on expertise from a number of U.S. agencies and private contractors
to provide training and equipment to address all areas of a
comprehensive export control system.
For example, through the EXBS program we have helped other
countries draft and pass new export control laws, establish special
customs enforcement teams, improve inspection/detection capabilities
that have led to seizures of suspect shipments at border crossings,
and screen license applications and cargo shipments for transfers of
proliferation concern. We have also placed EXBS program advisers at
our embassies in a number of countries to help implement the program
and coordinate with the efforts of other programs and
governments.
Stopping Nuclear Material Smuggling: We are working closely with
our allies to detect, track, and prevent nuclear material smuggling.
Furthermore, we encourage governments to prosecute those involved
and to take steps to protect WMD material. The IAEA Illicit
Trafficking Database Program, in which we participate, contributes
to our efforts to combat smuggling by having governments confirm
illicit trafficking. This program will help member countries verify
sometimes incomplete press reporting of illicit trafficking, as well
as allow better follow-up on nuclear and radiological material that
is not appropriately controlled.
Access: Access to sensitive Russian facilities has been a
significant issue. Indeed, at the time of the Kananaskis Summit,
several of our G8 partners reported that lack of access was a major
factor preventing the implementation of significant programs in the
Russian Federation. One of our major objectives in implementing the
Global Partnership was to break through these barriers. Today, we
conclude substantial progress has been made toward this major
objective. For the vast majority of facilities where cooperative
work is ongoing, we have sufficient access to perform both security
upgrades and audit such work after completion. There are, however, a
few nuclear facilities that are so sensitive to the Russians that
they have been reluctant to provide the access necessary to pursue
cooperative projects to increase their security.
NDF: The State Department's Nonproliferation and Disarmament Fund
(NDF) continues to take advantage of unanticipated opportunities to
tackle unusually difficult and high-priority projects. The NDF is
particularly useful in our efforts in both Libya and Iraq. Most
recently, NDF assisted State and Energy officers with the packaging
and shipping of more than 1,500 tons of centrifuge parts, nuclear
material and related items from Libya, completely removing its
uranium enrichment program. NDF has also supported the redirection
of former Iraqi WMD scientists, technicians and engineers to
civilian employment. This redirection effort is a critical program
that prevents the global spread of weapons expertise and helps
rebuild Iraq. Other less high-profile but significant projects that
benefit from NDF funds and guidance are the ongoing dismantling of
the BN-350 [nuclear] reactor in Kazakhstan and security upgrades of
sensitive WMD sites in the Balkans. Faced with persistent areas of
concern, we will continue to deploy NDF as a critical tool to halt
the proliferation of nuclear, biological, chemical and advanced
conventional weapons.
Conclusion
As you see, the Global Partnership encompasses a wide variety of
projects. These projects are funded by 21 countries and carried out
in Russia and a number of other states. The Global Partnership
oversees coordination of these projects in order to take advantage
of each other's experience, avoid duplication and overlap, and steer
donor countries towards uncovered priority needs. As the pace of
project activities increases and the number of participating
countries grows, the importance of this coordinating function will
increase.
While a great deal remains to be done, the Global Partnership is
making good, steady, financially sound progress toward the goal of
implementing projects that will keep weapons and materials of mass
destruction out of the hands of those who would do us harm.
Mr. Chairman, we believe that the Sea Island Summit, and the G8
Action Plan on Nonproliferation will be important milestones in the
fight against the spread of weapons of mass destruction. We look
forward to working with you and other members of this Committee.
Thank you again for the opportunity to testify here today, and I
look forward to answering your questions.
(end text)
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