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Push to guard arms in Russia at risk



Push to guard arms in Russia at risk

By David Filipov and Anna Dolgov, Globe Staff And Globe Correspondent  |  

April 26, 2004

http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2004/04/26/push_to_guard_arms_in_russia_at_risk?mode=PF





MOSCOW -- In 2002, the United States and other leading industrial nations 

announced ''a global partnership against the spread of weapons and materials 

of mass destruction" and with it, an unprecedented $20 billion pledge to 

help Russia prevent its nuclear, chemical, and biological materials from 

falling into the hands of terrorists.



Two years later, tons of lethal Russian stockpiles remain as vulnerable as 

ever, and the global partnership is in danger of collapse, Russian and 

Western weapons specialists warn.



Only a fraction of the funding pledged by the Group of Eight nations in June 

2002 has materialized, the specialists said over the weekend. Much of the 

money has been held up by legal disputes, bureaucratic hang-ups, Russia's 

reluctance to allow access to sensitive sites, and public resistance in 

Russia to cooperation with the United States and the West.



As a result, Russians, many of whom think Western assistance in securing and 

eliminating weapons of mass destruction is just a pretext for spying, are 

considering doing without the aid.



''The partnership is on the verge of a breakup," said Vladimir Orlov, a 

nonproliferation specialist at the Center for Policy Studies in Moscow. ''It 

is high time for Russia to start thinking about how to get off the habit of 

dependence on donors."



The trouble is how to pay for the security upgrades that Orlov said are 

required immediately at some 30 highly vulnerable nuclear sites across 

Russia. Other facilities containing as much as 600 tons of weapons-grade 

plutonium and uranium are protected ''by little more than a chain-link fence 

and a guard," said Laura Holgate of the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a US 

group dedicated to securing the former Soviet nuclear arsenal.



Russia has said it cannot pay for these upgrades alone, despite President 

Vladimir V. Putin's statement at the G-8 summit in 2002 that terrorists 

armed with weapons of mass destruction are ''the main security threat of the 

21st century." The G-8 responded by pledging to contribute $20 billion over 

10 years.



But Orlov said that in the first two years only $48 million has been spent 

in Russia.



''We cannot put off upgrades to physical security," Orlov said a Moscow 

conference aimed at raising the issue before G-8 leaders meet next month in 

Sea Island, Ga. ''Terrorists don't think in terms of 10-year programs."



Terrorist networks were seeking out ''facilities with lower levels of 

security," Orlov said. Two years ago, Chechen rebel fighters were discovered 

spying on supposedly top-secret nuclear sites.



Moscow and Washington link Chechen separatists to Al Qaeda, and rebel 

leaders have warned that they might attack a nuclear facility. Two years ago 

41 heavily armed Chechens were able to seize a Moscow theater -- a force 

that could easily overwhelm any of Russia's remote and poorly protected 

nuclear sites, said Maxim Shingarkin, a former major in the force that 

guards Russia's strategic arsenal.



Since 1992, Washington has spent more than $7 billion to secure nuclear 

materials and destroy thousands of missiles in the former USSR. The G-8 

partnership was intended to broaden efforts and let leading European nations 

and Japan accept a share of the burden.



But of the $200 million Japan pledged, it has provided less than $2 million, 

Orlov said. France, which promised $750 million, has yet to donate any 

money.



Alain Mathiot of France's Atomic Energy Commission said ''if 2003 was the 

time of thinking, for us 2004 will be the time of action."



British funding to help build a Siberian chemical weapons destruction 

facility, which Russia needs to eliminate its 40,000-ton arsenal, cannot 

begin until disputes that have held back US funding are resolved, said James 

Harrison of the British Defense Ministry.



A $25 million Canadian project to build an 11-mile railway to carry chemical 

weapons to the same facility has been on hold for five months over ''a 

procedural impasse" with Moscow, said Canada's ambassador, Christopher 

Westdal. Russia's inability to deliver ''extensive information" about 

project sites is holding up Canada's overall $750 million contribution.



A dispute over whether Russia should protect Washington from liability in 

the unlikely event of sabotage by a US worker has stalled programs to 

dispose of 34 tons of weapons-grade plutonium for four years.



''Bureaucracy -- not a shortage of resources -- is thwarting attempts to 

reduce the spread of weapons of mass destruction," Holgate said.



Disputes over access to sites have delayed the installment of half of the 

security upgrades the United States has pledged to implement at Russian 

nuclear facilities. As a result, multilayer fencing and intrusion detectors 

intended for dozens of sites have been lying in warehouses since they were 

delivered to Russia four years ago.



''It's essential, at the outset of a project, for the host nation to be 

completely open and tell us about the full scope of the project," said Rear 

Admiral John Byrd, head of the US Defense Threat Reduction Agency. 

''Revealing these details has not always been the case."



Moscow has also been reluctant to open its military sites to US visitors 

unless Washington permits equal access for the Russians, said Colonel 

General Yevgeny Maslin, who from 1991 to 1997 commanded Russia's strategic 

arsenal.



The sides are seeking a compromise under which US contractors would 

designate a trusted Russian firm to represent it at sensitive sites.



But choosing Russian subcontractors can be tricky. A US-funded project to 

transport SS-18 ''Satan" intercontinental ballistic missiles to a 

dismantling facility that was to begin yesterday has been delayed ''because 

the firm that got the contract is simply incapable of doing this kind of 

work," said Nikolai Shumkov of the Russian Aviation and Space Agency.



The use of Russian subcontractors has not eliminated suspicions that US aid 

in Russian disarmament is somehow intended to harm, not help.



''There is public opinion, environmental activists, . . . and especially 

politicians, who play up these concerns, saying, 'They are shipping 

who-knows-what from America, something that Americans aren't using at home 

but are giving to us,' " Shumkov said.



Public protests halted US funding for a program to dispose of rocket fuel, 

he said. Similar concerns have held up the construction of chemical weapons 

destruction sites.



''Half the people think this is all a plan to spy on Russian sites," Holgate 

said.



Security concerns have led Russia to ban donor countries from sharing any 

information they obtain about Russian military sites.



But this has sometimes led to donor countries weakening one another's 

projects, Holgate said.



In one recent case, Russia wanted the United States to build a fence around 

a nuclear facility, but could not guard the barrier around the clock. The 

United States refused, saying an unguarded fence could provide shelter for 

possible attackers. Another donor country, unaware of the US concerns, built 

the fence.



''Now, as a result, you might have a reduction in physical security," 

Holgate said.









Gerry Blackwood

New York, New York



"Insanity is defined as doing the same thing over and over, but continually 

expecting a different result."  -- Sigmund Freud



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