Continuing and Expanding US-China Cooperation on Nuclear Security
07/10/14
Hui Zhang
Security, China
Since
the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, China has made significant
progress in improving its nuclear security. This effort has benefited
significantly from cooperation between the China Atomic Energy Authority
(CAEA) and the US Department of Energy. This cooperation has included
an extensive series of exchanges, including visits to a range of US
facilities to observe nuclear security and accounting approaches;
in-depth training and workshops on everything from approaches to
protecting against insider threats to the design of physical protection
systems to steps to strengthen security culture; a second joint
demonstration of advanced material protection, control, and accounting
of nuclear materials (MPC&A) technology in 2005; work to strengthen
security and accounting regulations and inspections in China; and, most
recently, cooperation to build a Center of Excellence (CoE) on Nuclear
Security.
Then
Presidents Hu Jintao and Barack Obama announced cooperation on the CoE
at the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington in 2010. In January 2011,
China and the United States signed a memorandum of understanding on the
project. The center will serve as a forum for exchanging technical
information, sharing best practices, developing training courses, and
promoting technical collaboration to enhance nuclear security in China
and throughout Asia. The National Nuclear Security Technology Center of
the CAEA, established in November 2011, is responsible for the
construction, management, and operation of the CoE. The CoE broke ground
Oct. 29, 2013 and will be completed in 2015.
Cooperation on nuclear security in the civilian sector
While
current cooperation focuses mainly on the Chinese civilian sector,
personnel from defense facilities participate too. It is reasonable to
assume that best practices associated with modern MPC&A principles
learned through cooperation will be applied to fissile materials and
facilities in the military sector as well, in part because the CAEA is
responsible for controlling fissile materials nationwide in both
military and civilian stockpiles and can transfer lessons from one to
the other. Thus, it is imperative to maintain and strengthen
cooperation. Future steps should include:
Read full articlehttp://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/continuing-expanding-us-china-cooperation-nuclear-security-10845
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