
ACCESSION NUMBER:331612 FILE ID:POL502 DATE:03/11/94 TITLE:INTERNATIONAL CONSENSUS NEEDED TO COMBAT ARMS PROLIFERATION (03/11/94) TEXT:*94031102.POL INTERNATIONAL CONSENSUS NEEDED TO COMBAT ARMS PROLIFERATION (Carter urges strong controls on technology exports) (780) By Jacquelyn S. Porth USIA Security Affairs Writer Washington -- The United States will depend more on voluntary regimes in the future in the effort to reach an "international consensus" on combating the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and other conventional arms systems, says a U.S. official. Ashton Carter, assistant secretary of defense for nuclear security and counter-proliferation, also said March 11 that North Korea's ballistic missile program is becoming "more ambitious" and that U.S. officials are concerned not only about that nation's weapons programs but also its export plans. American allies in the region are increasingly concerned about the ever-extending range of North Korean missiles, Carter said at a meeting convened for specialists on non-proliferation issues. Referring to the rapidly evolving technology related to arms production and the ability of almost any nation to produce many kinds of weapons 1ndigenously, Carter said this puts the burden on the United States and other nations to be more persuasive in counter-proliferation efforts and to do more than simply deny certain kinds of technology exports. The United States, he said, would like to control the export of "everything" to Iran and Iraq, for example. Explaining the Clinton administration's Counter Proliferation Initiative (CPI), Carter said it is a "new mission" for the Defense Department which is being integrated at all policy levels and includes contingency planning for regional commanders-in-chief. Nuclear containment efforts are working quite effectively, he said, but he warned that potential adversaries in future conflicts would be expected to possess chemical and biological capabilities. As a result, the Pentagon is acquiring special technologies and equipment "tailored" to counter-proliferation, Carter said. The new technologies include special munitions to destroy or degrade hardened targets and battlefield sensors to detect the presence of chemical and biological weapons, he said. Another focus of the CPI is to strengthen military intelligence capabilities, Carter said, noting that Defense Secretary Perry and Central Intelligence Agency Director Woolsey will announce soon the new position of a deputy director for military support at the CIA's Counter-Proliferation Center. In the past, he explained, too much of the Pentagon's counter-proliferation focus had been on characterizing and cataloguing individual nations' weapons programs. In the future, the official suggested, the focus will be on what actions to take after certain countries acquire weapons of mass destruction. While the United States has been preoccupied with counter-proliferation issues for some time, the CPI has now been extended to NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Carter said, expressing the view that the issue is a concern that the alliance should be focusing on also. Commenting on export controls, Carter said there has been declining international consensus in this area, and he stressed the importance of creating "an effective replacement" for COCOM (the Coordinating Committee for Multilateral Export Controls). There is "good news" in Ukraine, he said, referring to the recent transfer from that country of strategic nuclear arms to Russia for dismantlement. It is "gratifying," he said, to see the removal of SS-19 and SS-24 intercontinental ballistic missile warheads which were once aimed at the United States. Carter noted that Defense Secretary Perry will visit one of the missile bases in Ukraine in late March during an extended trip which also will take him to Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus. He acknowledged that there is still concern in the Defense Department about the "chain of custody" for safe internal controls of nuclear weapons in Russia. The discipline of Russian nuclear custodians is still good, relatively speaking, Carter said, but he also noted that this is the first time a nuclear power has ever undergone "such fundamental political and economic turmoil." As a result, he said, U.S. concerns will continue until the "bitter end" of the nuclear dismantlement process. Defense conversion also will be on Perry's agenda in Moscow because there are concerns about conventional weapons proliferation as well, Carter said. "We are trying to stimulate U.S.-Russian joint ventures," using a small amount of U.S. financial aid, to produce non-military goods, he said. The idea is to attract private capital and also show the Russians that the United States is willing to help concretely in the counter-proliferation effort. Carter also said an expedited effort is underway in distributing funds to 1ssist Russian nuclear scientists convert to new careers in conjunction with the International Science and Technology Center (ISTC) in Moscow. The ISTC board of directors will meet for the first time next week, he said, and disburse its first 75 grants. NNNN .