Advancing U.S. Leadership in Nonproliferation and Nuclear Energy through Effective Partnerships
Although
the United States still has the largest number of nuclear power plants
in the world, it does not dominate global nuclear power. While the
United States was the leading nuclear power supplying nation more than
thirty years ago, the reality today is clearly that the U.S. nuclear
industry is only one of several major suppliers. In a new FAS issue brief,
Dr. Charles Ferguson takes a look at options for the United States to
gain back leadership via a cooperative approach. The brief analyzes what
nations could be effective partners for the United States in furthering
nonproliferation while providing for the continued use of peaceful
nuclear energy.
|
|
From the Blogs
When the Administration Asks Itself to Declassify: In
preparing its recent report on the Section 702 surveillance program,
the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board (PCLOB) demonstrated an
unusual mode of declassification, in which one executive branch agency
asks another agency to declassify information. In this case, the process
was remarkably productive, and it may offer a precedent for future
declassification efforts. In what the PCLOB staff termed a “lateral
declassification” model, it was an executive branch agency (i.e., the
PCLOB itself) — rather than Congress or members of the public — that
pressed another government agency (ODNI, NSA, CIA, FBI or Justice) to
declassify specific information.
Russia Declared in Violation of INF Treaty: New Cruise Missile May Be Deploying: The
United States publicly accused Russia of violating the
Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty in the State Department's
2014 Compliance Report which was released on July 29. Russia is accused
of launching a ground-launched cruise missile (GLCM) in 2007. Yet,
there is a lack of details in the unclassified report about the specific
violation. Hans Kristensen writes that the accusation is likely to stir
up calls for the U.S. to abandon the INF Treaty and arms control
efforts, which would undercut benefits from existing and future
agreements.
Identity Intelligence and Special Operations: “Identity
intelligence” is a relatively new intelligence construct that refers to
the analysis and use of personal information to identify intelligence
targets of interest and to deny them anonymity. Recently, an updated
U.S. Department of Defense publication on special operations noted this
month that “Identity intelligence products enable real-time decisions in
special operations worldwide.”
U.S.-Russia Economic Relations and More from CRS: Secrecy
News has obtained recently released CRS reports on topics such as
sanctions on Russia, protecting civilian flights from missiles, measuring the loss of manufacturing jobs and defense surplus equipment disposal.
|
|
FAS in the News
- Aug 1: Newsweek, "Marshall Islands Nuclear Lawsuit Reopens Old Wounds"
- Jul 31: Global Security Newswire, "Pakistani Leader Said Intent On Developing New Nuclear 'Understanding' With India"
- Jul 31: International Business Times, "CIA Director John Brennan Admits Spies Monitored Senate Computers, Apologizes"
- Jul 31: Global Security Newswire, "Russia May Be Deploying Missile Tied To Treaty Violation"
- Jul 31: The Guardian, "CIA Admits To Spying On Senate Staffers"
- Jul 31: Huffington Post, "Ukraine And The Media Drumbeat"
- Jul 30: The Times of India, "The Indian-American Finger On US Nuclear Button"
- Jul 30: Center for Public Integrity, "Unpaid Tax Debts Surprisingly Frequent Among Those With U.S. Security Clearances"
- Jul 28: The Guardian, "Senators Consider Obscure Rule In CIA Torture Report Declassification Debate"
- Jul 25: Huffington Post, "Malaysia Air Flight 17: Let Grief, Not Anger, Guide Us"
|
|
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment