Former Senators James Exon, Mark Hatfield and George Mitchell urged the
Senate to act on the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty without delay. The three Senators
co-sponsored the landmark legislation which mandated an end to U.S. nuclear testing
in 1992, and directed the executive branch to seek a CTBT. The Senators wrote today
in The Washington Times of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty:
“Two crucial tasks remain: securing approval by the Senate and working with our
friends and allies to persuade such current non-signatories as India and Pakistan
that the treaty is in their national interest as well. The two tasks are inextricably
linked. History shows the cause of peace and security around the world is best served
when the United States leads. The CTB has since last September awaited the advice and
consent of the Senate. Until the United States has ratified, our standing in urging
the few remaining holdouts to join will be undercut, and the treaty will not enter into
force.
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“We urge the Senate to act on the treaty this year, as the president urged in his
State of the Union address. And that, in turn, means the committee with primary
jurisdiction over treaties -- the Foreign Relations Committee -- should hold hearings
on CTB without further delay. ...
“We are confident that when hearings are held and
the arguments pro and con the treaty are carefully weighed, the overwhelming majority
of senators will reach the same conclusions -- as have four former chairmen of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, the current Joint Chiefs of Staff, the directors of our three nuclear
labs, and the secretaries of state, defense and energy.
“We urge the Senate to act on the treaty this year.... And that, in turn, means the
committee with primary jurisdiction over treaties -- the Foreign Relations
Committee -- should hold hearings on CTB without further delay.”
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