Within an hour of Pakistan’s nuclear test May 28, 21 IMS
stations automatically reported that data, with 63 stations ultimately
reporting on the event. Even through the CTBT’s IMS is not fully operational,
in its current, incomplete form it was able to provide timely data on events at
nuclear test sites. Through the Prepcom, monitoring stations will be added in
Pakistan, China, Kazakhstan, and elsewhere where they do not now exist.
Funding Needed to Enhance Monitoring
Without U.S. funding, the ongoing installation of the 321-station worldwide
monitoring system could grind
to a halt. Failure to fund the Administration’s fiscal 1998 request of $28.9 million
for the CTBT Prepcom may
|
|
force us to give up improvements in our ability to deter and
detect nuclear tests in areas such as Iran, Libya, and other areas of concern, as well
as in the open ocean by terrorists and rogue nations.
These are complicated, highly sophisticated systems that increase our coverage of a
dangerous world at a quarter of the costs of going it alone. Funding must not stop now,
and simply adding more money into intelligence resources won’t do the job -- key countries
are unlikely to agree to install monitoring stations with U.S. pressure alone. Moreover,
Congress has historically approved funding for arms control treaties prior to Senate
advice and consent, including for the START treaties and the Intermediate Range Nuclear
Forces (INF) treaty, among others. |