USA is not known to abide by treaties or agreements, and this shows again...
Patrick
Malone
Wired, June 18, 2019
In a maze
of tunnels 900 feet beneath the Nevada desert, US nuclear weapons scientists
have since the 1990s beenintermittently
agitating flecks of plutonium with chemical high explosives, carefully trying
to push them to the brinkof a chain
reaction capable of yielding nuclear force.
In a
separate network of underground tunnels about 4,800 miles away, in the northern
Russian archipelago of Novaya Zemlya in the Arctic Circle, Russia conducts its
own such experiments, meant to model the key chemical and physical actions that
occur in the run-up to a full-blown nuclear explosion, without actually causing
one.
Experiments
at the two sites are used by both nations to help ensure their nuclear arsenals
remain viable but conducted under a blanket of secrecy. And so they’ve given
rise to suspicions—and accusations— that they violate a 1996 global treaty
designed to stymie nuclear weapons innovations by barring any nuclear
explosions.
Because the
experiments are designed to closely simulate such explosions, 33 Latin American
and Caribbean countries in 2016 called them violations of the “spirit and
letter” of the treaty, “thereby undermining its impact as a measure of nuclear
disarmament.”
Washington
dismissed that claim, but on May 29, the Trump administration abruptly leveled
similar accusations at Russia, when a top intelligence official vaguely accused
its scientists of transgressing the test ban treaty by conducting experiments
meant to be barred.
The irony
of the recent charge is that it comes just as the US Energy Department’s
National Nuclear Security Administration is about to step up the pace of the
country’s complex and costly nuclear simulation experiments, the Center for
Public Integrity has learned. The frequency will specifically be increased from
an average of one every year and a half to two, and possibly to three per year,
using a decade-long budgetary infusion of $1 billion meant to expand and
improve the underground Nevada site.
In making
the new allegation, the Trump administration did not say exactly what Russia
was doing, and its statementcontained a
qualifier, making it fall short of a direct cheating claim. “The United States
believes that Russia probably is not adhering to the nuclear testing moratorium
in a manner consistent with the zero-yield standard,” saidLt. Gen.
Robert Ashley, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, during a May 29
forum on arms control at theHudson
Institute, a conservative think tank. “Our understanding of nuclear weapon
development leads us to believeRussia’s
testing activities would help it improve its nuclear weapon capabilities,” he
added. “The United States, by
contrast,
has forgone such benefits by upholding a zero-yield standard.”
The Defense
Intelligence Agency subsequently reasserted its claim on June 13, issuing a
stronger statement in response to questions about Ashley’s remarks. It said that
“the US government, including the Intelligence Community, has assessed that
Russia has conducted nuclear weapons tests that have created a nuclear yield.”
The White
House, the State Department, and the Pentagon have since declined to provide
details or any corroborating evidence. Ashley's claim that the US, in its own
experiments, has “foregone” any benefits to its nuclear arsenal appears to be
contradicted by publicly available planning documents for the upgrades at the
Nevada test facility, which state that new equipment and increased work will
provide “vital data supporting future stockpile options.”
Pushback to
Ashley’s assertion has come from multiple sources, including the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty Organization, a Vienna-based international agency that monitors
more than 300 sites around the world with dedicated seismic sensors designed to
detect even small nuclear yields at sites like Novaya Zemlya.
Kirsten
Gregorich Hansen, the organization’s spokeswoman, said in an email two days
after Ashley’s statement that the agency has not observed anything indicating
that Russia conducted a test that achieved a nuclear yield.
Ashley’s
claim was also disputed by independent arms control experts, including Jeffrey
Lewis, director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at the James Martin
Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Monterey, California, and his colleague
Anne Pellegrino, a research associate there.
The two of
them have long been monitoring satellite imagery of the Russian site, and say
nothing they’ve observed indicates Russia has recently undertaken new
activities at its experiment site. The imagery shows that a tunnel into the
site’s craggy cliff face appeared in 2013; then, two years later, four
rectangular buildings were erected at the opposite end of the complex near the
steep, at times winding road that serves as the only apparent route in or out.
But they
said they haven’t detected any external changes since 2015. “Some people in the
US intelligence community have been making this same claim since the late
1990s,” Lewis wrote in an email. “There has never been any evidence provided to
substantiate it.”
Frank von
Hippel, a physicist and professor at Princeton who has written extensively on
nuclear testing, said similarly that the US has a history of making vague
allegations of Russian cheating. He pointed to claims in May 2002 by the Bush
administration that Russia was preparing for improper tests at Novaya Zemlya,
based on the delivery of certain canisters there. No evidence to back up the
claim was ever publicly presented, he said, and the dispute disappeared from
view.
In Moscow,
a Russian Foreign Ministry statement carried by the state-run media called the
latest American accusation “unfounded,” and speculated that the allegation was
contrived to justify the possible resumption of explosive nuclear testing by
the US.
President
Bill Clinton signed the test ban treaty in 1996, but the Senate failed to
ratify it on a 48-51 vote. The country has nonetheless agreed as a matter of policy
to abide by a moratorium on nuclear tests. Russia has similarly agreed to abide
by a moratorium; it even ratified the treaty in 2000, a year after Vladimir
Putin ordered experiments to resume at Novaya Zemlya.
The
experiments at issue are known as subcritical tests, because when neutrons from
fissile materials interact fiercely enough to initiate a self-sustaining
nuclear reaction, they’ve achieved a critical state. Subcritical experiments
nudge plutonium right up to the point of achieving a critical state, without
quite initiating a nuclear charge.
They are
conducted within beachball-sized steel vessels, while high-speed cameras record
the plutonium’s reaction in fraction-of-a-second intervals and then feed the
results into computers that extrapolate what they’ve seen to analyze the
potential performance of nuclear weapons designs.
The test
site upgrade in Nevada is meant to add faster and more precise photo capabilities,
giving scientists the closest look yet at plutonium’s response during its
deliberate implosion at the outset of a blast, and a better glimpse of a
blast’s late stages. The new capability is technically called “enhanced capabilities
for subcritical experiments,” but nicknamed “Scorpius” after the stinger-tailed
constellation that emits more x-rays visible from Earth than any other source
except the Sun.
The upgrade
got started during the Obama administration in 2014, after science advisers to
the weapons program suggested new ways to analyze plutonium’s behavior. The
Trump administration accelerated the construction so the upgraded facilities
can be operated in 2025 and be used for the next 30 years, according to
National Nuclear Security Administration documents.
“These
capabilities will help to train the next generation of experimentalists and
weapon designers, ensuring the strength of our deterrent for decades to come,”
Dave Funk, a chemist from Los Alamos National Laboratory in charge of enhanced
subcritical experiments at the Nevada site, said in an in-house lab publication
that featured his work. Their utility has been controversial, with some
American officials saying that the data can’t be used to improve the lethality
of US warheads, and non-nuclear weapon states fretting that they can.
Those
involved in the 1996 test ban treaty negotiations say the secrecy that gives
rise to accusations and counteraccusations was deliberately orchestrated by the
US and Russia, which resisted efforts at the time by Princeton's von Hippel and
others to include language in the treaty requiring reciprocal inspections of
such experiments and to force them above ground. Both nations have also
declined voluntary mutual inspections suggested by the Vienna monitoring agency.
Jean du
Preez, who led external communications and international cooperation for the
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization from 2009 to 2016 and is now a
senior manager at the James Martin Center, said that even in the last decade,
“my personal beliefs then and now are that the [Latin and Caribbean nation]
concerns are valid: These types of experiments are against the spirit and the
letter of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and undermine the treaty.”
The
organization would itself have the authority to inspect the experiments and to
resolve any cheating claims if the treaty had entered into force and a
significant majority of participating nations were suspicious that illicit
testing had occurred. But eight holdout nations—the US, China, North Korea,
Egypt, India, Iran, Israel, and Pakistan—have not yet ratified it, blocking it
from formally taking effect and keeping the organization from conducting any
verification efforts.
“The
potential impact of the low-yield testing spat is that it undermines support
for staying in the [testing] moratorium,” said Hans Kristensen, director of the
Nuclear Information Project at the nonpartisan Federation of American
Scientists in Washington. "If President Trump were to assert in response
that ‘you cheated, therefore I’m going to pull out,’ then we could see both
countries slide back into large yield testing” and possible new, more
effective, nuclear weapons designs.
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