New
Defense Threat Reduction Agency Takes the Lead
By Linda D. Kozaryn
American
Forces Press Service
BRUSSELS,
Belgium – In the past, the Defense Department's mission was clear-cut:
maintain strong forces capable of defeating any and all challengers.
Today, its mission extends far beyond simply preparing for the battlefield.
Threat
reduction now represents a primary defense mission, Deputy Defense Secretary
John Hamre said, and this fall, a new agency will lead DoD's threat
reduction program. This relatively new mission involves preventing potential
foes from developing the means to challenge the United States. Just
as preventive medicine aims to stop the spread of disease, preventive
defense aims to stop the spread of weapons of mass destruction.
The
Soviet collapse started in 1989 and created a need for threat reduction,
Hamre explained at the Defense Special Weapons Agency's 7th Annual International
Conference on Controlling Arms in Philadelphia, in June.
Soviet
military knowledge and tools suddenly became available to others in
an unsettling way, he said. The prospect of rogue states and terrorists
obtaining former Soviet nuclear weapons and technology concerned U.S.
officials. They foresaw nations trying to level the field with stronger
neighbors by turning to nuclear, chemical and biological weapons.
Hamre
said this scenario created "a scary picture for everyone, not just the
United States." Proliferation would be detrimental to Russia's security,
as well as to others in the region, he said.
U.S.
Senators Sam Nunn and Richard Lugar sponsored a bill that launched the
Cooperative Threat Reduction program, also known as the Nunn-Lugar
Program, in 1991. Congress allocated funds to help dismantle and remove
nuclear warheads in Russia and three other former Soviet states. Kazakhstan
became nuclear free in 1995, followed by Belarus and Ukraine in 1996.
With U.S. help, Russian defense officials safely dismantled and moved
more than 24,000 warheads to a central storage site. The Cooperative
Threat Reduction Program also helped find nonmilitary jobs for some
15,000 former Soviet weapons scientists and engineers. The program also
linked former Soviet defense companies with American partners to make
commercial products.
Several
Defense Department offices and agencies became involved in aspects of
the program over the years. Last fall, Hamre said, as defense leaders
set out to streamline the department, they realized no national security
mission would be more important over the next decade than threat reduction.
And, he said, they concluded the department was poorly organized to
deal with it. "We were not organized in an integrated way to deal with
this comprehensive problem."
Hence,
he said, the Defense Threat Reduction Agency will merge the following
DoD offices and agencies:
o Defense
Special Weapons Agency.
o On-Site
Inspection Agency.
o Defense
Technical Security Administration.
o Office
of the Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Nuclear, Chemical and
Biological Defense Programs.
o Office
of the Deputy Director Arms Control Implementation and Compliance.
o Office
of the Director, Strategic and Tactical Systems.
The
agency is slated to become operational Oct. 1, Hamre said. "It's going
to take a little bit of time to make the transition … because we're
going to consolidate into a single space, and that does entail relocation
and turmoil."
The
agency will have three primary missions. First, it will maintain the
current nuclear deterrent capability. "That is still one of the most
important challenges we face," Hamre noted. "We still have, and always
will have, a large infrastructure of nuclear capability. We have to
husband that, and we have to maintain the intellectual infrastructure
to support it."
Whereas
the best and the brightest sought to work with the Defense Special Weapons
Agency in the past, Hamre said, there has been a significant loss of
interest in this career field over the last eight years or so. "Nuclear
weapons aren't going away, as much as we would wish it," he said. "We
can't afford to lose our intellectual competence in dealing with it."
The
agency's second mission is to reduce the nuclear threat. This includes
monitoring arms control treaties and supporting ongoing confidence-building
measures established over the last 10 years by the On-Site Inspection
Agency. "It's on that root stock, as it were, we're going to graft the
Cooperative Threat Reduction program, for example," Hamre said.
The
third mission is to counter the threat from chemical and biological
weapons. "We do not have the intellectual infrastructure for chemical
and biological threats the way we have for nuclear threats," Hamre said.
"We spent a long time thinking about nuclear weapons."
The
department is somewhat further along dealing with chemical weapons than
biological ones because of its chemical weapons protection program in
the mid-1980s, Hamre noted. But "we still have a long way to go" in
both areas, he said. The Defense Threat Reduction Agency will become
"the central nervous system for America's counterproliferation plans
and preparation," Hamre concluded. "We have to have an organization
that can … study the threat, what it will look like, and how you deal
with it."
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