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Balm for the Chinese Threat

Security: Senate should ratify nuclear test ban treaty barring nations from experimentation.

Commentary

October 07, 1999|RICHARD L. GARWIN and KURT GOTTFRIED, Richard L. Garwin served on the Rumsfeld Commission, which assessed the ballistic missile threat to the United States for this Congress; a physicist, he is a senior fellow with the Council on Foreign Relations. Kurt Gottfried is a physics professor at Cornell University and chairman of the board of the Union of Concerned Scientists

Remember the Chinese nuclear spying flap? The one that took Washington by storm earlier this year and led to a major reorganization of the Energy Department and strained U.S.-China relations? Well, it appears that many Washington senators have forgotten all about it. For if they had not, they would be throwing their support behind the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty instead of threatening to defeat it.


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To actually damage U.S. security, nuclear weapons information that may have been lost (or that may be lost in the future) must be turned into weapons, and the treaty would create a very high barrier against this. Whatever information on thermonuclear weapons China may have obtained, it is not credible that Beijing would deploy weapons that incorporate this information without first conducting nuclear explosive tests outlawed by the treaty. China signed the pact in 1996 and has not conducted any nuclear explosive tests since. But the treaty cannot enter into force--and the verification system cannot be fully implemented--until the U.S. Senate provides its advice and consent to the president.

The report of the House Select Committee led by Rep. Christopher Cox (R-Newport Beach) states that "If [China] violates the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty by testing surreptitiously, it could further accelerate its nuclear development." An even more serious problem is that without the treaty, China would be entitled to conduct nuclear tests openly and make gains that could in no way be redressed by the resumption of testing by the United States.

The Senate has the power to help prevent this from happening. With the treaty in force and its verification system operational, China and other nations would be unable to conduct clandestine nuclear tests of even the triggers for smaller and lighter thermonuclear warheads for use on long-range ballistic missiles. This is the central security value of the treaty, and one the Senate cannot afford to ignore.

We may never know whether Chinese nuclear weapons development benefited significantly from espionage. According to the April 21 damage assessment prepared by the U.S. intelligence community and reviewed by an independent panel chaired by Adm. David Jeremiah, "China's technical advances have been made on the basis of classified and unclassified information derived from espionage, contact with U.S. and other countries' scientists, conferences and publications, unauthorized media disclosures, declassified U.S. weapons information and Chinese indigenous development. The relative contribution of each cannot be determined."

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