Highlights
Overview
Technical Background
The Threat
Interdicting Nuclear Smuggling
Stabilizing Employment for Nuclear Personnel
Monitoring Stockpiles
Ending Further Production
Reducing Stockpiles

 

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Funding for U.S. Efforts to Improve Controls Over Nuclear Weapons, Materials, and Expertise OverseasFunding for U.S. Efforts to Improve Controls Over Nuclear Weapons, Materials, and Expertise Overseas: Recent Developments and Trends

February2007

Readthe Full Report (1.5M PDF)

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Securing the Bomb 2006Securing the Bomb 2006
The latest report in our series, from May 2006, finds that even though the gap between the threat of nuclear terrorism and the response has narrowed in recent years, there remains an unacceptable danger that terrorists might succeed in their quest to get and use a nuclear bomb, turning a modern city into a smoking ruin. Offering concrete steps to confront that danger, the report calls for world leaders to launch a fast-paced global coalition against nuclear terrorism focused on locking down all stockpiles of nuclear weapons and weapons-usable nuclear materials worldwide as rapidly as possible.
Read the Executive Summary (379K PDF)
or the
Full Report (1.7M PDF)

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Securing the Bomb 2005Securing the Bomb 2005:
The New Global Imperatives

Our May 2005 report finds that while the United States and other countries laid important foundations for an accelerated effort to prevent nuclear terrorism in the last year, sustained presidential leadership will be needed to win the race to lock down the world’s nuclear stockpiles before terrorists and thieves can get to them.
Read the Executive Summary (281 K)
or the Full Report (1.9M PDF)

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Securing the Bomb: An Agenda for Action
Building on the previous years' reports, this 2004 NTI-commissioned report grades current efforts and recommends new actions to more effectively prevent nuclear terrorism. It finds that programs to reduce this danger are making progress, but there remains a potentially deadly gap between the urgency of the threat and the scope and pace of efforts to address it.
Download the Full Report (1.2 M PDF)
Выписки из доклада по-русски (423K PDF)

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Controlling Nuclear Warheads and Materials:
A Report Card and Action Plan

2003 report published by Harvard and NTI measures the progress made in keeping nuclear weapons and materials out of terrorist hands, and outlines a comprehensive plan to reduce the danger.
Download the Full Report (2.7M PDF)

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Securing Nuclear Weapons and Materials: Seven Steps for Immediate Action
2002 report co-published by Harvard and NTI outlines seven urgent steps to reduce the threat of stolen nuclear weapons or materials falling into the hands of terrorists or hostile states.
Read the Full Report (516K PDF)

Securing Nuclear Warheads and Materials

International Nuclear Material Security Upgrades

Status

[ click here for larger photo ]
HEU secured with international assistance in Yugoslavia
In addition to the U.S.-funded Material Protection Control and Accounting (MPC&A) program – which is by far the largest international cooperative effort to improve security and accounting for nuclear materials, but has concentrated primarily on the former Soviet Union – the United States and other donor countries are funding security and accounting upgrades at a number of sites around the world, and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is both providing help in improving security and accounting directly to member states and coordinating some of the efforts of donor countries. While these efforts have been accelerated since the attacks of September 11 – particularly the IAEA-led activities – they remain small, far smaller than needed to effectively address the threat as rapidly as that could be done.

Donor State Security and Accounting Upgrade Efforts

United States. The MPC&A program itself is now seeking to expand beyond the former Soviet Union, to provide help with needed security and accounting upgrades in other countries. Senior program officials have publicly identified Pakistan, India, and China as countries that they would like to cooperate with in upgrading security and accounting for nuclear material,[1] and have had discussions with the IAEA about cooperating more broadly in the implementation of the IAEA's Action Plan to combat nuclear terrorism (discussed below).[2]

In addition, since the passage of the 1978 Nuclear Nonproliferation Act, the United States has had legislative requirements to confirm that nuclear material in countries that it supplies is adequately protected. Toward that end, it sends out teams to review the physical protection arrangements in recipient countries. These reviews focus primarily on whether the arrangements generally conform to IAEA recommendations; actual vulnerability assessments designed to determine key security weaknesses, and what kinds of threats a physical protection system would likely be able to protect against, are not typically performed.[3] This is a very small effort, in the range of $200-$300,000 per year – typically it is many years between one such visit to a recipient state and the next. (Typically such teams review 1-2 countries in an average year.) In some cases, such reviews identify weaknesses that should be corrected, and if this occurred in a developing

 

country with limited resources, the United States might provide financial and technical assistance in upgrading security at the relevant site or sites. In addition, when similar (though more extensive) reviews are done in the IAEA's International Physical Protection Advisory Service (IPPAS, described below), the United States is among the countries that frequently provides assistance in carrying out the security upgrades identified as being needed.[4] For upgrades outside the former Soviet Union arising from both of these types of reviews, the United States reportedly spends approximately $2 million per year.[5] Both the review efforts and these upgrade funds come from the Department of Energy's (DOE's) International Safeguards budget line. That program also provides separate funding for continuing support for MPC&A in the non-Russian states of the former Soviet Union, also at a rate of approximately $2 million per year.[6] [ click here for larger photo ]
Security fencing at a Czech nuclear power plant
[ click here for larger photo ]
Security inspection — reviewed by international experts— at a Czech nuclear facility
Other Donors. A wide range of other countries – mainly Western European countries, but also including Japan and Australia, among others – have made technical and financial contributions to upgrading either security or accounting for nuclear material, in the former Soviet Union and in other countries. The European Union (EU) has also contributed, through its Technical Assistance to the Commonwealth of Independent States (TACIS) program. In most cases, these countries and organizations have coordinated their efforts through the IAEA (see discussion below). Non-U.S. contributions have been crucial in installing and maintaining improved security and accounting systems in the non-Russian states of the former Soviet Union and in Eastern Europe, in particular.

There have also been non-U.S. contributions to MPC&A within Russia (such as assistance in MPC&A regulations and legal infrastructure, MPC&A training, and help in establishing a national accounting system, among other projects), at a small scale. All told, these non-U.S. contributions to security and accounting for weapons-usable nuclear materials probably amount to a few million dollars per year, on average. Like the United States, other nuclear supplier states require countries they supply to meet at least minimum standards of security for their nuclear materials (indeed, the Nuclear Suppliers Group has agreed that all of its members will do so),[7] but most other nuclear suppliers do not actually conduct independent reviews of the security arrangements in nuclear recipient states, as the United States does.[8]

A few illustrative examples of non-U.S. contributions to international cooperative MPC&A improvements include:[9]

The G-8 Global Partnership: A New Departure? At their summit in Canada in June, 2002, the leaders of the Group of Eight industrialized democracies agreed on a new "Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons and Materials of Mass Destruction," and committed to provide $20 billion over 10 years -- $10 billion from the United States, and an equivalent amount from the other partners combined – to carry out projects to control and reduce weapons of mass destruction.[14] The founding statement of the partnership included a commitment to provide "appropriate" and "effective" security and accounting for nuclear material, and to "provide assistance to states lacking sufficient resources to account for and secure these items." While the initial focus was on projects in Russia, the statement made clear that "any other recipient countries" who were prepared to adopt the partnership's guidelines were also eligible for assistance. Given the very large quantities of money involved, if this initiative is fully and appropriately implemented, it could represent a dramatic sea-change in the resources available to carry out urgent security and accounting upgrades around the world. The jury is still out, however, on how effective this initiative will be, and how rapidly its goals will be accomplished.

IAEA-led Efforts

Nuclear Terrorism Action Plan. In the aftermath of the attacks of September 11, the IAEA put together an "Action Plan" for actions the agency could take to prevent nuclear terrorism, including steps to help member states improve security for nuclear materials, prevent sabotage of nuclear facilities, and better control radioactive materials that could be used in a "dirty bomb."[15] The plan included a wide range of activities, from developing more stringent and effective international standards, to reviewing security at individual sites and helping to find donor states who would fund needed security upgrades, to assisting in searches for lost radioactive sources. The plan in effect pulled together, integrated, and expanded on steps the IAEA had already been taking – including the work on physical protection upgrades and nuclear material accounting upgrades described below. The estimated cost of the plan, which was approved at the IAEA's November, 2001 Board of Governors meeting, was $12 million a year for the agency itself, and an additional $20 million per year from donor states to implement the security upgrades identified as being necessary at individual nuclear sites. Unfortunately, the IAEA has been forced to rely on voluntary contributions rather than regular budget financing for this effort, and as of September 2002, less than $8 million had been pledged from all sources[16] – much of it in multi-year pledges, so that this total should not be compared to $12 million but to several times that figure. In short, substantial parts of the Action Plan have become unfunded mandates: the IAEA simply does not have the money to carry out many of the actions needed to prevent nuclear terrorism. As a result of the funding issue and other factors, progress on improving security and accounting for nuclear material under this effort has been slow: in the year following September 11, IAEA-coordinated teams reviewed security in four countries,[17] but for the vast majority of the nuclear material in the world, the only improvements in nuclear security and accounting that have been made since September 11 were those made by individual states, acting on their own.[18]

Physical Protection Reviews, Upgrades, and Training. Since 1995, the IAEA has had a small effort to help states improve their physical protection systems and regulations. This effort includes a wide variety of work related to improved international standards for nuclear security (see Global Nuclear Security Standards), as well as efforts directly related to reviewing and improving nuclear security in individual countries.

The central element of the effort is the International Physical Protection Advisory Service (IPPAS).[19] Under the IPPAS program, when a member state asks for help with physical protection, the IAEA pulls together a group of physical protection experts from IAEA member states. This IPPAS team then visits the requesting country, reviews its legislation and procedures for securing nuclear material and facilities, and reviews the actual implementation of security at particular sites designated by the requesting state. The team then draws conclusions and makes recommendations for improvement, if needed, to the state that requested the visit. The IPPAS team reports are only available to the IAEA physical protection office and the state that requested the visit. If the IPPAS team recommends upgrades to the security systems they reviewed, the IAEA works with donor countries to arrange financing and technical support for the needed upgrades – but the IAEA has no budget of its own to carry out such upgrades, and after the initial IPPAS review, the progress of the upgrades is largely up to the state where the upgrades are taking place and the states contributing the funds and technical assistance needed to carry them out. Thus the IAEA has only incomplete information on the effectiveness of upgrades that result from IPPAS missions.

As of September 2002, there had been 16 IPPAS missions since the program's inception in 1995, covering 12 countries (4 countries had received a second IPPAS mission to review progress some years after the first).[20] Prior to the attacks of September 11, IPPAS had been carrying out 2-3 missions each year; four missions were conducted in the year after September 11 (to Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Lithuania and Romania), and the IAEA may now be in a position to roughly 6 missions per year. (The staff of the IAEA's physical protection effort has increased from 1.5 to 7 people as part of the nuclear terrorism action plan.)[21] Roughly 50% of the IPPAS missions have resulted in donor states providing either training or equipment (or both) to upgrade physical protection.[22] In the four cases where a second team reviewed the situation several years after the first team had visited, substantial improvements in security were observed, apparently resulting from the recommendations of the earlier IPPAS teams.[23]

It is important to understand what IPPAS is, and what it is not. IPPAS is the international community's principal approach to international reviews of security at nuclear sites, and identifying areas where improvement is needed – but it is no panacea. First, IPPAS typically does not involve a full vulnerability assessment of the facilities reviewed, identifying all their most important vulnerabilities: rather, the missions are focused on comparing the state's approaches to those in the IAEA recommendations for nuclear material and facility security,[24] which are rather general and rule-based in nature. (See Global Nuclear Security Standards) Second, as already noted, an IPPAS mission is just a review – if it determines that upgrades are needed, a separate effort is required to round up donor states willing to support such upgrades. Third, an IPPAS mission is only one visit – a snapshot in time. No follow-up is carried out unless the state requests it, and there are no efforts specifically focused on ensuring the sustainability of improvements that the state may carry out itself, or that may be implemented with assistance from donor states. Thus, whether the improvements in security resulting from IPPAS recommendations will be sustained over the long haul is an open question. In short, just because a facility has undergone an IPPAS review does not necessarily mean it has been effectively secured.

In addition to IPPAS, the IAEA provides a number of other important physical protection services to member states. The International Training Course on Physical Protection of Nuclear Facilities and Materials has been provided under IAEA auspices at Sandia National Laboratories since 1978.[25] Hundreds of participants from scores of countries all over the world have been trained in how to assess the vulnerability of a facility to insider and outsider attempts at theft or sabotage; how to design physical protection systems to detect, delay, and respond to such insider and outsider threats; and what kinds of equipment are available for physical protection systems. Data from a participant survey suggests that a very large fraction of the participants remain professionally involved with physical protection after taking the course, and that many of them are responsible for operating or regulating physical protection systems in their countries.[26]

More recently, the IAEA and Sandia, working with experts from several other countries as well, have developed a workshop designed to help countries develop and implement their own "design basis threats" – the threats that nuclear security systems in their country are required to be able to defeat, in order for facilities to maintain their nuclear operating licenses.[27] Many security experts consider having such a design basis threat specified in regulations, and appropriately enforced, to be an essential element of an effective program to secure nuclear materials. Since September 11, these "Design Basis Threat Workshops" have been given in six states – Armenia, Kazakhstan, Russia, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Ukraine.[28] In addition, a number of other types of workshops and courses relating to different aspects of physical protection – from security culture to regulation – are being offered or developed.

Nuclear Material Accounting and Control Reviews, Upgrades, and Training. In addition to providing and coordinating assistance with physical protection, the IAEA has also provided and coordinated assistance in improving nuclear material control and accounting. In particular, when the Soviet Union collapsed, most of the newly independent states (NIS) had fledgling governments with no previous experience in national-level accounting and control of nuclear materials. Yet these new states all joined the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) as non-nuclear-weapon states, requiring them to put in place state systems of accounting and control (SSACs) that could support the IAEA safeguards system. Hence, the IAEA coordinated a substantial effort, involving more than half a dozen donor states, to assist these countries in putting effective nuclear material control and accounting systems in place.[29] This effort, known as the Coordinated Technical Support Program (CTSP), has been highly successful – all of the NIS states with nuclear activities now have functioning SSACs, and safeguards agreements in force with the IAEA. There is still much to be done, however, to improve nuclear material accounting in these states and to meet the requirements of the Additional Protocol to IAEA safeguards agreements. The IAEA and donor states have worked together to improve nuclear material control and accounting in support of safeguards in a number of other states around the world as well, but no other state or region has received the intensive, coordinated effort that was devoted to the NIS. The CTSP could be a model for similar upgrades elsewhere around the world.[30]

Budget

Comprehensive data on what the United States has spent on MPC&A upgrades in the rest of the world outside the former Soviet Union, or what other donor states have spent, in the former Soviet Union and elsewhere, is not publicly available. All that can be done is to estimate totals on the basis of the magnitudes of some of the larger known projects. All told, the United States likely spends some $2-$4 million per year on various efforts to improve either physical protection or control and accounting of nuclear material outside its own territory and that of the former Soviet Union – a dramatically smaller investment than the effort within the former Soviet Union. All other donor states probably contribute roughly a comparable amount, for both sites in the former Soviet Union and sites in other parts of the world. Thus, the total international effort on cooperative MPC&A upgrades beyond the U.S.-funded MPC&A program in the former Soviet Union likely amounted to $40-$80 million over the last decade.

Key Issues and Recommendations

Slow Pace and Limited Coverage. In the aftermath of September 11, the current pace at which security and accounting for nuclear material are being improved around the world is simply not commensurate with the threat. Much more must be done to ensure that all the world's stockpiles of plutonium and HEU are secure and accounted for, as rapidly as practicable. With over 130 operating research reactors fueled with highly-enriched uranium (HEU) in scores of countries, and dozens of facilities with substantial quantities of weapons-usable plutonium, an international pace of reviewing a half-dozen facilities a year, and spending perhaps $4-$8 million a year improving them, will take far longer than the terrorists will take to find and strike at the weakest points. At this rate, we will lose the race to keep the essential ingredients of nuclear weapons out of terrorist hands.

No Comprehensive Plan, and Lack of Information Needed. Neither the U.S. government nor any other government or international organization has a comprehensive, prioritized plan for securing the most vulnerable bomb material worldwide as rapidly as possible. Pulling together the best available information would be crucial to the development of such a plan: as of mid-2002, while different parts of the U.S. government had substantial amounts of information about the many nuclear facilities with nuclear material in countries around the world, there was no one anywhere in the U.S. government (or in any other government or international organization) that had a comprehensive database of what was known about where the plutonium and HEU in the world is, how much is at each site, in what forms, and under what standards of security and accounting. As a result, while a number of sites had been identified as high priorities for removal of nuclear material or security upgrades, there was no way to determine comprehensively which sites in the world should be given highest priority.

Material Should be Removed Entirely From Some Sites. There are a substantial number of sites in the world where it makes more sense to remove the weapons-usable nuclear material entirely – thereby eliminating completely the risk of theft from that site – than to attempt to secure it in place. This is a choice that needs to be made on a case by case basis; obviously, the decision needs to be made by the operators of facilities and their governments, but the United States and other governments can help provide incentives to remove nuclear material where this seems appropriate. (See Removing Nuclear Material From Vulnerable Sites)

Links

Key Resources
“Global Cleanout and Secure: Eliminating or Securing Stockpiles of Weapons-Usable Material,” excerpt from John Holdren, Matthew Bunn and Anthony Wier, Securing Nuclear Weapons and Materials: Seven Steps for Immediate Action, May 2002.
Download 190K PDF
  Chapter of 2002 report focused on the need to either eliminate entirely or at least secure several important stockpiles of weapons-usable fissile material around the world.
   
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Page on Combating Nuclear Terrorism.
  This IAEA site provides texts of a range of papers from the IAEA's November 2, 2001 international meeting on preventing nuclear terrorism, a quick summary of how much has been contributed to fund the agency's Action Plan on nuclear terrorism, and related documents.
   
U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on International Relations, Subcommittee on International Operations and Human Rights, hearing on "The Role of the International Atomic Energy Agency in Safeguarding Against Acts of Terrorism," October 3, 2001.
  Provides testimony from U.S. government officials on the role the IAEA can play in preventing nuclear terrorism, including ensuring that nuclear material around the world is secure and accounted for. Includes the full text of the IAEA's Action Plan on nuclear terrorism ("Protection Against Nuclear Terrorism," GOV/2001/50, November 14, 2001, starting from p. 41 of the hearing transcript), which is not available on the IAEA's own website.
   
IAEA, "Nuclear Security – Progress on Measures to Protect Against Nuclear Terrorism," GOV/INF/2002/11-GC(46)/14 (Vienna, Austria: IAEA, August 12, 2002).
  Provides a detailed update on progress in implementing the Agency's Action Plan on preventing nuclear terrorism, including helping states improve security and accounting for nuclear materials, security against sabotage for nuclear facilities, and control of radioactive sources that could be used in dirty bombs.
   
"Nuclear Security and Safeguards," IAEA Bulletin 43, no. 4 (2001).
  Includes articles discussing the IAEA's efforts to help states improve security for nuclear material, a description of the effort to help the states of the former Soviet Union put in place adequate accounting and control for nuclear material, and commentary on what needs to be done to prevent nuclear terrorism.
   
IAEA, "Upgrading Nuclear Security: IAEA Efforts Aim to Bridge Key Gaps," IAEA Newsbriefs, January 2002.
  Provides a summary, from shortly after the September 11 attacks, of the IAEA's planned activities to improve nuclear security, and discussion on the subject at the international symposium the IAEA sponsored in early November, 2001.
   
Guidelines for IAEA International Physical Protection Advisory Service.
  These guidelines provide specifics on the approach used by the physical protection review teams coordinated by the IAEA under the IPPAS program.
   
Center for Nonproliferation Studies, summary of Weapons Protection, Control, and Accounting
  This page in NTI's Research Library provides a brief overview of warhead security projects. See also the page on Russian warhead security developments.
   
"Security of Material," excerpt from IAEA Annual Report for 2001.
  Provides a brief overview of the IAEA's activities relating to securing nuclear material, including the very modest budget ($1.6 million) for all of the IAEA's worldwide efforts to secure nuclear or radioactive materials in 2001 (prior to the creation of the IAEA's nuclear terrorism Action Plan).
   
Matthew Bunn, “Ensuring Security for Weapons-Usable Nuclear Material Worldwide: Expanding International Cooperation, Strengthening Global Standards,” in Proceedings of Global '99: Nuclear Technology- Bridging the Millennia, a conference held in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, 30 August - 2 September 1999. La Grange Park, IL: American Nuclear Society, 1999.
  The paper reviews current progress and status in expanding international cooperation in securing weapons-usable material and strengthening international security standards, and outlines a series of recommended further steps to move toward the goal of a world in which all weapons-usable nuclear material is secure and accounted for, with sufficient transparency that the international community can confirm that this is the case.
 
Agreements and Documents
"The G-8 Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons and Materials of Mass Destruction," Kananaskis, Canada, June 27, 2002.
  In this statement from June, 2002, the leaders of the Group of Eight industrialized nations commit themselves to spend $20 billion over 10 years on projects to control and reduce weapons and materials of mass destruction, initially in Russia, but also in any other potential recipient state prepared to agree to the principles of the partnership. Those principles include a commitment by each participant to provide "appropriate" and "effective" security and accounting for all their weapons-usable nuclear material, and to assist other states in doing the same. This statement could be built on to forge an effective global effort to ensure that all nuclear weapons and materials worldwide was secured and accounted for to stringent, agreed standards as rapidly as practicable.
   
  International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), The Physical Protection of Nuclear Material and Nuclear Facilities, INFCIRC/225/Rev.4 (Corrected)
  The IAEA’s recommendations on physical protection are the basis for IPPAS missions. The most recent revision (Rev. 4, dating from 1999) includes a recommendation that each state develop a “design basis threat” and require those licensed to have nuclear material to put in place security systems able to defeat that threat. (It does, not however, recommend any minimum level for what this threat should be.) This revision also treats protection from sabotage for the first time, though that treatment is quite brief.
FOOTNOTES
[1] See Jack Caravelli, Kenneth Sheely, and Brian Waud, “MPC&A Program Overview: Initiatives for Acceleration and Expansion,” in Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Institute for Nuclear Materials Management, Orlando, Florida, June 23-27, 2002 (Northbrook, IL: INMM, 2002).
[2] Unfortunately, however, the first U.S. assistance, nylon ballistic blankets for protecting nuclear weapons from small-arms fire during transport, did not arrive until after the initial mission of moving all the tactical nuclear weapons out of the non-Russian republics had been completed. See, for example, Handler, "U.S.-Russian Efforts to Improve WPC&A," op. cit.
[3] Information in this paragraph from interview with DOE official, April 2002, unless otherwise noted.
[4] As of late 2001, the United States had helped provide IPPAS-recommended physical protection upgrades in five states: the Czech Republic, Hungary, Lithuania, Poland, and Romania. See testimony of Steven Black, National Nuclear Security Administration, before the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on International Relations, Subcommittee on International Operations and Human Rights, hearing on "The Role of the International Atomic Energy Agency in Safeguarding Against Acts of Terrorism," October 3, 2001.