Columbia Basin Media
"We put the Middle Columbia River
Basin into words."
Chem demil could lose $Millions
CWWG obtains documents, reveals Pentagon plans for possible
cuts
January 21, 2005
Story by Frank Ellsworth Lockwood, AKA Columbia Basin Media
(Based on press release by CWWG's Dec. 19 release. Responses invited.)
The Pentagon has targeted new "alternative" chemical weapons programs for
budget cuts, disappointing anti-incineration groups which view "alt-tech"
as cleaner, safer, faster and cheaper than the present technologies.
Anti-incineration groups such as Chemical Weapons Working Group, GASP, Sierra
Club and Oregon Wildlife Federation had hailed the new programs in Colorado
and Kentucky as proof that the Army had now approved and accepted other methods
of destruction besides so-called "baseline incineration" which they believe
is dangerous to health and the environment. CWWG indicated the budget
changes will eliminate disposal activities at sites important for demonstrating
that alternative technologies are indeed viable.
The reports should be credible if the past is any indication: CWWG has at
times been even better at projecting such things as cost overrides and scheduling
changes than the Army's own press relations department. Pentagon documents
showed that for 2006 the Pentagon is planning to allocate only $30 million
for both Colorado and Kentucky, although those programs had been estimated
to cost at $250 million or more. CWWG says completion of weapons disposal
at Colorado and Kentucky would require $2 billion between 2006 and 2011,
but that the Pentagon plans to cut funding for these programs down to a little
more than $300 million for that time period.
Cuts of that size would likely halt alternative demolition of chemical weapons
at storage sites in Richmond, Kentucky and Pueblo, Colorado. The Army apparently
had the budget cutting plans before Christmas. Along with local, state and
federal elected officials, the CWWG distributed a Pentagon decision document
dated 21 December 2004, which referred to the possible delay of the program
at both sites due to "external constraints the program must address." The
same document is also being circulated in Colorado now. CWWG's Director,
Craig Williams, denounced the planned cuts, calling them the Defense Department's
“blatant disregard for the safety of tens of thousands of Americans due to
extremely poor funding priorities.
The plans, if implemented, have international implications. "This funding
approach makes compliance with the 2012 Chemical Weapons Convention deadline
impossible, and is an admission by the United States that it is backing off
its obligations regarding the Treaty," said Williams. Williams also questioned
what he termed an Army “flip-flop” in regard to safety and security of communities
living near the Kentucky stockpile. "Communities ... have been told for 20
years that the military will do whatever it takes to get rid of these weapons,
because the risks (of continued storage) are so high,” Williams said, “And
now that they (the Pentagon) are in a financial crunch we are being told
that they have to let the weapons sit."
Williams also said that a 2002 classified report to Congress by the Secretary
of the Army indicated Kentucky is considered to be the chemical weapons stockpile
site at the highest risk for terrorism after 2007. Already, in 2004,the Pentagon
pulled funds for chemical weapons disposal in Pueblo, Colorado, although
Congress, fearing that the weapons sites could be terrorist targets, had
requested the Army to accelerate the weapons disposal process, CWWG reported.
Pueblo resident and environmental activist Ross Vincent today said, "These
funding cuts are a slap in the faces of our elected officials and the citizens
of Colorado, who are working together for a safe disposal of these weapons.
To the Pentagon we may be a number on a defense budget line item, but this
is a real community facing real problems and risks."
Kentucky Senior Senator Mitch McConnell, in a prepared statement read by
his representative at a press conference in Kentucky said, "The Department
of Defense has an obligation to the citizens of Central Kentucky to dispose
of chemical agents at the Blue Grass Army Depot in a safe and expeditious
manner, and I will continue to devote my energy to ensuring that it lives
up to that obligation."
Other presenters at Wednesday's press conference echoed the Senator's resolve,
committing to fight for the funds necessary to move forward and not allow
these weapons of mass destruction to languish in their community for another
decade.
The cuts come twenty years after Congress ordered the U.S. Army to destroy
its stockpile of obsolete chemical weapons, and at a time of concerns about
terrorist threats. The Pentagon plans if implemented would cut funds for
disposal of more than 3,134 tons of chemical weapons, according to CWWG,
and this number represents 15 percent of the U.S. stockpile that remains
to be destroyed.
For more information, see Chemical Weapons Working Group <www.cwwg.org>.
Author's note: Columbia Basin Media welcomes reactions to the above report
and offers equal space to counter arguments by writing to <frank@columbiabasinmedia.com>.
Please visit Columbia Basin Media <http://www.columbiabasinmedia.com>http://www.columbiabasinmedia.com>.