U.S. delays
chemical weapon destruction
WASHINGTON,
Nov. 21 (UPI) -- For a second time, the U.S. government has extended
its schedule for destroying chemical weapons, this time by 11 years,
USA Today reported Tuesday.
The U.S. Department of Defense had a
2007
deadline under the international Chemical Weapons Convention but got a
5-year extension. Now, in documents seen by the newspaper, the deadline
has been extended until 2023.
There are five sites that are
either incinerating or neutralizing the various nerve gases and
blistering agents, and Pentagon spokesman Navy Cmdr. Chris Isleib said
technological challenges, as well as safety and security issues at the
sites were responsible for the latest extension.
"Destroying these weapons safely is not a fast or simple process,"
Isleib told the newspaper.
The most recent statistics available show the U.S. military has
destroyed 41 percent of its 31,500-ton chemical arsenal.
Craig
Williams of the Chemical Weapons Working Group, a Kentucky-based
coalition of citizen groups from stockpile sites, was critical of the
extension.
"To intentionally put tens of thousands of Americans
at an unnecessary risk by continuing to store these weapons is
reprehensible," Williams told the newspaper.