THE Bush administration is being forced to consider what would have been unthinkable just a few months ago: giving up on its plans to develop new nuclear weapons, including bunker-busters and mini-nukes, after the US Congress cut funding for such research.
Congressional leaders surprised everyone last week by agreeing to a final government budget that sliced $57 million from nuclear spending in 2005. The decision came after days of frantic horse-trading behind closed doors, and was largely due to the efforts of David Hobson, a Republican representative from Ohio.
As chair of the Energy and Water Subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, Hobson succeeded in cutting spending on two major nuclear weapons projects. He has accused President Bush of having “very provocative and overly aggressive policies that undermine our moral authority to argue that other nations should forego nuclear weapons”.
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Hobson’s stand has been warmly welcomed by nuclear policy experts, who admit to being “flabbergasted” by the funding cuts. “Congress has taken a major step toward nuclear sanity,” said Matt Bunn, a former adviser to the Clinton administration who is now at Harvard University.
The US Congress cut the entire $27 million budget for researching the Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator, a bunker-buster designed to plunge tens of metres into the ground before detonating a nuclear warhead. Funds for new facilities for making plutonium triggers for nuclear warheads have also been slashed from $50 million to $20 million. In addition, Congress instructed the Bush administration not to spend $9 million on “advanced concepts” for nuclear weapons. This would have included research into mini-nukes – low-yield nuclear bombs that could be detonated without causing widespread contamination.
“It would be encouraging if the US administration abandoned its nuclear ambitions, but we can’t count on it”
According to the US National Nuclear Security Administration, the $9 million would also have been used to develop better security systems and weapons that were “more environmentally friendly”. Instead, Congress wants to spend the money improving the reliability of existing weapons. NNSA spokesman Bryan Wilkes told èƵ the cuts and changes imposed by Congress were “very disappointing”. “We could ask for them again in the 2006 budget, or we could give up on them. We are going to have to wait and see,” he said.
The suggestion that the NNSA might drop plans for bunker-busters and mini-nukes received a cautious response from the British American Security Information Council in Washington DC. “It would be tremendously encouraging if the US administration abandoned its nuclear ambitions, but we can’t count on it,” said BASIC’s deputy director, Matt Martin.