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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

13 February 2003

U.S. Committed to Multilateralism, Rademaker Says

(Rademaker addresses Conference on Disarmament in Geneva) (4120)
The United States is "profoundly multilateralist," and in a number of
recent instances "we have chosen to provide the leadership -- the
backbone -- required for multilateralism to succeed," a key State
Department official says.
Assistant Secretary of State for Arms Control Stephen Rademaker told
the Conference on Disarmament (CD) in Geneva February 13 that the
United States has "stayed the multilateral course" over the last three
months "even as Iraq has attempted to pick and choose the terms of its
compliance (with U.N. Security Council Resolution 1441) and throw sand
into the collective eyes of the United Nations."
He said the United States has provided U.N. weapons inspectors with
intelligence, analysis, personnel, and logistical support, but the
inspectors themselves have stated to the Security Council that Iraq
"appears not to have come to a genuine acceptance -- not even today --
of the disarmament that was demanded of it."
In the case of North Korea, Rademaker said the United States has
consistently supported referring to the Security Council the issue of
Pyongyang's efforts to develop nuclear weapons and its announced
intention to withdraw from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which
Washington considers to be "a serious challenge to the
non-proliferation regime and a threat to regional and international
security." For this reason, he said, "we are pleased" that the
International Atomic Energy Agency has "lived up to its
responsibilities" by making a determination of North Korea's
non-compliance and reporting it to the Security Council.
Rademaker cited other examples of the U.S. commitment to
multilateralism, including its efforts over the last year to
strengthen the Chemical Weapons Convention and pursue "innovative
strategies to retard the proliferation of biological and toxin
weapons," and the signing in May 2002 of the U.S.-Russian Treaty on
Strategic Offensive Reductions.
"I reject any suggestion that the United States is not committed to
multilateral means of achieving policy goals," the U.S. arms control
official said. "If current U.S. policy differs at all from U.S. policy
in the past, it is a result of our recognition that, in the post-Cold
War era, multilateralism is more important than ever, and that without
leadership -- without backbone -- multilateralism is predictably
condemned to failure. ... Our insistence that multilateralism be
effective may not always make us popular, but it hardly makes us
'unilateralist.'"
Rademaker said that for the past six years, the CD "has not been an
instrument of effective multilateralism." He said the CD has "failed
to agree on how to move forward to address the dangers of weapons of
mass destruction -- or any other arms control challenges for that
matter. ... The question before us today is whether it can be made
effective."
He called on the CD to approve a "clean" resolution establishing
negotiations on a Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty "that effectively and
verifiably bans the production of fissile material for use in
weapons."
"If this body is to have a future," he said, "the practice in the CD
of holding vital international security initiatives hostage to win
approval for dubious, unpopular or outdated proposals must end."
On Iraq's possible assumption of the CD presidency in March, Rademaker
said, "Let me be clear. Iraq's assuming the presidency of the CD is
unacceptable to the United States. It should be unacceptable to all
supporters of the CD, as it threatens to discredit this institution to
a much greater degree than even the past six years of inactivity."
Following is the text of Rademaker's statement:
(begin text)
STATEMENT
by Stephen G. Rademaker
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Arms Control
"The Commitment of the United States to Effective Multilateralism"
to the Conference on Disarmament
Geneva, February 13, 2003
It is a great pleasure for me to appear before the Conference on
Disarmament for the first time. Let me begin by extending my best
wishes to the President, Ambassador Sood, for a productive term of
office.
In this, my first speech before this body, I intend to lay out my
government's vision of the role of multilateralism in promoting
international peace and security.
No one here needs to be reminded that we live in perilous times,
confronting dangers that multilateral institutions such as the
Conference on Disarmament are uniquely adapted to address. These
dangers are not just on the minds of diplomats here in Geneva, and in
New York and Vienna. A casual glance at today's headlines demonstrates
that these dangers are the great preoccupation of our age. They
include, to name just a few, the development and concealment of
weapons of mass destruction programs in Iraq, nuclear weapons programs
in North Korea, terrorism such as we witnessed on September 11, 2001,
and perhaps the biggest fear of all, the risk that terrorists may one
day soon acquire weapons of mass destruction of their own.
Regrettably, the CD has for six years failed to agree on how to move
forward to address the dangers of weapons of mass destruction -- or
any other arms control challenges for that matter. It has become
fashionable in some circles to criticize the United States for
pursuing a policy of what is referred to as "unilateralism." Those who
make this charge, of course, counsel my nation to follow instead the
path of "multilateralism". Obviously, if they are referring to
multilateralism of the kind we have seen here at the CD for the past
six years, the United States can be forgiven for wanting to try
something different. Indeed, I would suggest that if multilateralism
of the type we have witnessed here were to persist within the CD and
spread to other multilateral institutions, we would all soon be
unilateralists, or at least something other than multilateralists.
On behalf of my government, however, I reject any suggestion that the
United States is not committed to multilateral means of achieving
policy goals. To the contrary, properly understood, our policies are
profoundly multilateralist. If current U.S. policy differs at all from
U.S. policy in the past, it is a result of our recognition that, in
the post-Cold War era, multilateralism is more important than ever,
and that without leadership -- without backbone -- multilateralism is
predictably condemned to failure. In a number of recent instances
where we thought it necessary, we have chosen to provide the
leadership -- the backbone -- required for multilateralism to succeed.
Our insistence that multilateralism be effective may not always make
us popular, but it hardly makes us "unilateralist."
Take, for instance, the matter of Iraq. For almost 12 years, the Iraqi
regime has defied the United Nations Security Council. In 1991, the
United Nations deployed weapons inspectors to Iraq, and for years the
work of the inspectors was obstructed and the mandate of the Security
Council defied. Iraq's work on weapons of mass destruction may have
been slowed down, but it never stopped. United Nations sanctions were
supposed to prevent this from happening, but over time those
sanctions, like the inspectors themselves, increasingly came to be
viewed in some quarters as part of the problem rather than as part of
the solution. Iraq finally ceased all cooperation with inspectors in
December 1998, effectively terminating their mission in Iraq.
This is not a record that any true supporter of multilateralism can
point to with pride, and certainly it is not a record that can give
comfort to anyone concerned about the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction. It was not until this past November, after increasing
pressure initiated by the United States, that the United Nations
finally decided to squarely confront Iraq's defiance of the
international community. Almost two months of difficult negotiations
-- working closely with our Security Council partners -- culminated in
the unanimous passage of Resolution 1441, which declared Iraq in
material breach of its obligations, strengthened inspectors'
authorities, and warned that Iraq should seize its final opportunity
to disarm or risk facing "serious consequences."
Five days after Resolution 1441's passage, Iraq accepted the return of
inspectors and the terms of the Resolution. It was not a sudden change
of heart or a strategic decision to disarm on the part of Saddam
Hussein that prompted Iraq to acquiesce. Rather, it was the unified
resolve of the Security Council to confront Iraq and threaten the use
of force if Iraq continued to defy its responsibilities.
In spite of the Security Council's will and the resumption of
inspections, Iraq continues to evade its disarmament obligations. To
date, it has failed both key tests laid out in Resolution 1441: to
provide a current, accurate and complete declaration of its WMD
programs and to cooperate fully and actively with inspectors. Iraq
remains and, indeed, is in further material breach of its
international obligations.
The United States has stayed the multilateral course over the last
three months even as Iraq has attempted to pick and choose the terms
of its compliance and throw sand into the collective eyes of the
United Nations. We have provided the inspectors intelligence,
analysis, personnel, and logistical support. We have urged them to
utilize the full range of their authorities so as to improve the
chances of verifiable and peaceful Iraqi disarmament. Regrettably, as
the inspectors themselves have stated to the Security Council, and I
quote, "Iraq appears not to have come to a genuine acceptance -- not
even today -- of the disarmament that was demanded of it and which it
needs to carry out to win the confidence of the world and to live in
peace."
The United States and other like-minded nations were essential in
creating the conditions that allowed Iraq a final opportunity to
disarm. In its warning of "serious consequences," the Security Council
knew precisely that the moment might come to deliver on the threat of
force. It was as true in November as it is now that the United States
understands the importance of a unified, multilateral approach to
Iraq. We want the UN process to work, but in order for it to do so,
words must be fully backed by concrete action. We want a peaceful
solution in Iraq, but we also recognize that Iraq cannot be allowed to
indefinitely flout the will of the Council and thus undermine its
credibility. Like our Security Council colleagues, we have the
responsibility to face up to the challenges set before us and
demonstrate the relevance of the United Nations in maintaining
international peace and security.
We are well aware of the debate within the Security Council on how to
proceed with Iraq. Today we hear many voices arguing that so much
progress has been made since last November that we should give the
inspections process more time, months or years if necessary. This
argument assumes, of course, that the United States can be counted on
in the months and years ahead to continue providing the backbone that
has finally forced Saddam Hussein to take the United Nations more
seriously than he has in years.
The United States appreciates the confidence that others appear to
have in our staying power. It is important to remember, however, that
the United States is a volunteer in this matter. The United Nations
does not usually turn away volunteers. Indeed, the United Nations
typically has too few volunteers, not too many -- witness the problems
the United Nations encounters whenever it considers setting up a new
peacekeeping operation. As a volunteer, our patience is limited, to
say nothing of the resources and the willingness of the American
people to sustain the current level of commitment to solving what is
only one of many serious problems of this nature. It therefore is time
for the United Nations to take a stand, to demonstrate its relevance
to the international community's collective security.
Having come this far, the United States will not turn back. But we
cannot wait much longer to conclude this matter, and when we conclude
it, we expect to be in coalition with a large group of like-minded
nations. No doubt words will be found to describe those who remain
aloof from this coalition, but one term that most assuredly will not
be used to describe them is "multilateralist."
Another example of the commitment of the United States to effective
multilateralism is the approach we have taken to the problem of
nuclear proliferation on the Korean Peninsula. The United States
considers the efforts of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea
(DPRK) to develop nuclear weapons, and its announced intention to
withdraw from the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons
(NPT), to be a serious challenge to the non-proliferation regime and a
threat to regional and international security. The international
community speaks in one voice in calling for a denuclearized Korean
Peninsula. We are working closely with our friends and allies,
including the ROK (Republic of Korea), Japan, Australia, the EU
(European Union), Russia and China, as well as with the IAEA
(International Atomic Energy Agency), to find a peaceful resolution to
this problem. The DPRK must visibly, verifiably and irreversibly
dismantle its nuclear weapons program.
As Secretary of State Powell told the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, resolving this situation is going to be a long and
difficult process and will take the entire international community
working together. We do not want an incomplete solution that seems to
solve the problem but in fact just covers it over so it can surface
later on. We will also not provide quid pro quos to the DPRK to
convince it to live up to its existing obligations.
For this reason, the United States has consistently supported referral
of this matter to the United Nations Security Council -- the
institution vested with "primary responsibility for the maintenance of
international peace and security" under Article 24 of the United
Nations Charter. Others initially resisted such a referral. They
suggested instead that the United States should undertake to solve the
problem through a direct dialogue with the DPRK. Surely this is one of
the supreme ironies of our times -- the supposedly unilateralist
United States seeking to refer a threat to international peace and
security to the United Nations Security Council, while others urge
that, notwithstanding our reservations, the United States should take
it upon itself to solve this problem for the international community.
The premise of those who want the United States to solve this problem
unilaterally is that it is primarily our problem and our
responsibility. Nothing could be further from the truth. A
nuclear-armed DPRK threatens the stability of all of Northeast Asia.
Given the DPRK's history of marketing the weapons it produces, it also
threatens to spread nuclear weapons rapidly to dangerous regimes
around the world.
It has been an article of faith within the arms control community for
decades that the norms established by the NPT cannot be allowed to
unravel, for if they ever do there may be no logical end to the
process. North Korea's nuclear weapons program challenges the
international community to uphold these norms. We all know that other
regimes are watching the international response, waiting to decide
whether it will profit them to follow the path pioneered by the DPRK.
The international community must make sure these interested observers
decide against following that path. In order to ensure that the
nonproliferation regime remains strong and the IAEA remains credible,
the IAEA Board had to make a determination of non-compliance and
report this to the United Nations Security Council. The IAEA Board met
yesterday (February 12) in Vienna and lived up to its
responsibilities. We are pleased the IAEA Board of Governors took this
action.
The commitment of the United States to effective multilateralism can
also be seen in our efforts to strengthen implementation of the
Chemical Weapons Convention over the past year. Our decision to seek
reinvigorated leadership for the Organization for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons (OPCW) was not calculated to make my government
popular. The expedient course for us would have been to look the other
way while the OPCW slowly atrophied. Indeed, many other governments
urged us to do precisely that -- including governments that are often
more outspoken in their support of arms control than the United
States.
We judged the dangers associated with chemical weapons to be so great,
however, that we were not prepared to allow polite multilateralism to
stand in the way of effective multilateralism. Accordingly, we chose
to invest significant political capital in a campaign to revitalize
the OPCW, and we are very pleased with the results that have been
achieved. The new Director-General, Rogelio Pfirter, has done an
outstanding job during his first months in office, and both he and the
OPCW have the full support of my government.
As an indication of our faith in the future of the OPCW, Secretary of
State Powell decided to significantly upgrade our diplomatic
representation by assigning Ambassador Eric Javits to The Hague. This
decision was not taken lightly, and it reflects our commitment to
support and promote the work of the OPCW, an international
organization that is successfully promoting international security by
combating the spread of weapons of mass destruction. As we have made
clear from the moment this decision was announced, we will appoint a
replacement representative to the CD.
When we look at our accomplishments over the past year, I must also
highlight the U.S.-Russian Treaty on Strategic Offensive Reductions,
also called the Moscow Treaty, which we signed on May 24, 2002. While
not strictly speaking a multilateral arms control matter, the Moscow
Treaty does reflect the willingness of my government to work with
other countries to enhance international security. This treaty puts
into legal form the respective commitments of the United States and
Russia to reduce by approximately two­thirds the number of strategic
nuclear warheads deployed by each side, to 1,700 to 2,200 by the end
of 2012.
This major step by the United States and the Russian Federation
represents the largest reduction ever in deployed nuclear forces. It
reflects our commitment to Article VI of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty.
It also is a step that many predicted would be impossible if the
United States proceeded with plans to terminate the Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty. Many warned that the ABM Treaty was the cornerstone of
strategic stability, and that if the United States exercised its legal
right to withdraw from it, the inevitable consequence would be a new
arms race. The conclusion of the Moscow Treaty just five months after
President Bush announced his decision to terminate the ABM Treaty
proves that such predictions were ill founded.
Not only have we amicably terminated the ABM Treaty, signed the Moscow
Treaty, and established a new strategic framework with Russia, but we
also have begun the process of deploying missile defenses in
cooperation with our traditional allies, as well as Russia. The
success of our efforts to date, and the multilateral character of our
planning with regard to missile defense, should reassure those who
originally questioned our approach to the ABM Treaty.
The United States has also worked hard over the last year to combat
the biological weapons threat. The agreed outcome of the Fifth
Biological Weapons Convention Review Conference last November
demonstrated our commitment to pursue innovative strategies to retard
the proliferation of biological and toxin weapons. It also reflected
our determination not to accept half-measures that would give a pass
to rogue states that have in place robust programs to develop these
weapons.
The point that emerges from the cases I have mentioned is that the
United States supports multilateralism when it is effective, and in
appropriate cases is prepared to provide the leadership required to
make multilateralism effective. For the past six years, the Conference
on Disarmament has not been an instrument of effective
multilateralism. The question before us today is whether it can be
made effective.
The United States would like the CD to transform itself into a more
effective multilateral forum. We continue to favor the negotiation
here of a Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty (FMCT) that effectively and
verifiably bans the production of fissile material for use in weapons
and advances our national security. So far as we know, no country
represented here disagrees with the basic concept of an FMCT. But so
far in the CD, that has not been sufficient to commence a negotiation.
The CD operates on the principle of consensus, and for good reason.
This principle gives every participant a veto, which helps ensure
universal, or near-universal, support for any agreement that might
emerge from this forum. However, the evolution of this principle in
the CD over the last several years clearly demonstrates how even a
good principle can be corrupted in practice. Consensus has in the CD
become synonymous with hostage taking and obstruction. It has allowed
a few states to make demands that are unrealistic and unobtainable --
to insist on negotiations on subjects that are not ripe for
negotiation as a condition for commencing work on subjects where
progress might be possible.
The result has been to cast this, the only standing multilateral arm
control negotiating body in the world, into such disrepute that
responsible governments, including mine, are questioning whether it
can retain relevance to the security environment we face today. We
must all recognize that the CD as we have known it will not long
survive if this malaise continues.
The solution to this problem is obvious: consensus must be preserved,
but the states represented here must abandon their tolerance for
comprehensive linkages, in which nothing is agreed until everything is
agreed. We should negotiate on matters that all agree are ripe for
negotiation, while informally exploring other issues until CD members
can reach some common ground that could lead to further progress on
those issues.
Accordingly, let us agree at this session to approve a "clean"
resolution establishing FMCT negotiations. By "clean" I mean a
resolution unencumbered by linkages to unrelated proposals about which
there is no agreement in this body. The practice in the CD of holding
vital international security initiatives hostage to win approval for
dubious, unpopular or outdated proposals must end if this body is to
have a future.
If, however, we remain gridlocked on the agenda items that have in the
past been the focus of attention in the CD, we should explore whether
consensus exists to take up other items where progress might be
possible. Could we not agree, for example, that the dangers posed by
the prospect of terrorists getting access to weapons of mass
destruction deserve to be addressed seriously? Would it not be
possible to agree on restrictions on the export of all
non­self-destructing landmines that have caused untold civilian
suffering on virtually every continent? Or will ideas like these also
fall victim to the hostage taking that has come to characterize work
at the CD?
The CD can also contribute to international peace and security by
redoubling efforts to ensure compliance with treaties banning weapons
of mass destruction once they have entered into force. Too often
states seem eager to negotiate such agreements and then lose interest
in their implementation. This is understandable: it is easier and more
exciting to negotiate new treaties than to work on the tedious details
of implementation and compliance. This may be explainable, but it is
not acceptable. Too many rogue states have signed such treaties and
have covert programs to build these terrible weapons. We call on all
parties to treaties banning weapons of mass destruction to honor their
commitments.
Focusing on implementation also gives rise to occasions where some
parties to a treaty have to call others to task for non-compliance.
Few states like to make such accusations, not least because this can
lead to the question of imposing penalties for non-compliance.
Nevertheless, if multilateral arms control is to have a future, treaty
parties must face up to their responsibilities. They must decide that
they will not tolerate non-compliance.
One final matter that I cannot avoid mentioning is Iraq's possible
assumption of the CD presidency next month. Let me be clear. Iraq's
assuming the presidency of the CD is unacceptable to the United
States. It should be unacceptable to all supporters of the CD, as it
threatens to discredit this institution to a much greater degree than
even the past six years of inactivity.
In conclusion, Mr. President, the United States hopes that this will
be the year in which the CD reestablishes itself as an effective
multilateral institution. We look forward to working with you and the
other delegations to achieve this result.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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