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| Arms Control Today |
December 2004
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Albania to Receive Nunn-Lugar Assistance
Michael Nguyen
With a key U.S. lawmaker calling for more such projects, Albania has become
the first country outside the former Soviet Union slated to receive assistance
from the Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) program. The United States will
help the southeastern European state destroy its small stockpile of chemical
weapons.
According to Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Richard Lugar
(R-Ind.), the United States will provide Albania with about $20 million over
two years to eliminate 16 tons of chemical agents. So far, U.S. funds from
a different program have helped the Albanian government install a security
fence and cameras around a storage barn containing the chemical agent.
The assistance is possible after President George W. Bush signed the
Nunn-Lugar Expansion Act last December. The law, authored more than a decade
ago by Lugar and former Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.) was initially designed to safeguard
and destroy Cold War stockpiles of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons
and related delivery systems. It allows the president to use up to $50 million
in CTR funds for nonproliferation activities outside of the former Soviet
Union.
Lugar introduced legislation Nov. 16 that would further broaden the
use of such funds. The legislation would eliminate the $50 million cap on
programs outside of the former Soviet Union and transfer the authority for
approving funds in this manner from the president to the secretary of defense.
“The Nunn-Lugar Program has established a deep reservoir of experience
and talent that could be applied to non-proliferation objectives around the
world,” said Lugar in an Oct. 21 press release highlighting the Albanian action.
He noted that the area surrounding Albania has “witnessed tremendous violence
and Muslim extremism over the last decade,” making it critical that the Nunn-Lugar
program move quickly to destroy the chemical agents as soon as possible.
Lugar visited Albania Aug. 27-28 to meet with the nation’s prime minister
and foreign and defense ministers and urge the leaders to accept U.S. assistance.
While there, he also visited the storage barn where the chemical agents, currently
in canisters, were being stored.
The president authorized the use of Nunn-Lugar funding in Albania
Oct. 20, and the Department of Defense’s Defense Threat Reduction Agency
will lead the U.S. effort. A draft implementation agreement has already been
prepared by the United States and is under review by the Albanians. The groundwork
for additional assistance was laid last year in the May 2003 agreement between
the United States and Albania increasing military relations and efforts to
prevent weapons of mass destruction proliferation.
The Albanian government claims to have discovered the chemical agent
stockpiles in several locations while canvassing the country for weapons caches
hidden by the previous former Communist government. It is believed the chemical
agents were imported during the 1980s.
The current location and nature of the stockpile was not revealed
for security reasons, but it is widely believed that the canisters contain
a mustard agent. Photographs taken by Lugar’s office show Chinese labels
on the sides of the canisters, indicating that some are possibly of Chinese
origin.
Albania did not declare its small stockpile to the Organization for
the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) until March 2003 (See ACT, June 2003), although it had ratified
the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) in 1994. By then, several interim deadlines
for destroying portions of the chemical weapons stockpiles had passed. In
July, the OPCW Executive Council recommended granting Albania extensions
to three interim deadlines. The recommendation requires final approval from
the Conference of the States Parties in December, which is considered likely.
The U.S. assistance is designed to allow Albania to destroy its entire stockpile
by the final CWC deadline in April 2007.