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Bellona supports the nomination of the peace prize to nuclear safety

Tidligere Senator Sam Nunn (venstre) og Senator Richard Lugar.
Foto: Thomas Nilsen

Publish date: June 11, 2002

Written by: Thomas Nilsen

For their intensive efforts to secure radioactive material in Russia and former Soviet republics, Bellona supports nomination of the two American senators Richard Lugar and Sam Nunn for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Nobody has done more for securing radioactive material in Russia over the last decade than the two American Senators Sam Nunn (D) and Richard Lugar (Rep.). In the autumn of 1991, while the Soviet Union was on the brink of collapse, the two Senators took the initiative to establish an international co-operative effort to reduce the global threat from weapons of mass destruction held in the former Soviet Union. At that time, the administration of President George Bush was not supportive of Nunn and Lugar’s proposal to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on non-proliferation in the USSR. But Nunn and Lugar prevailed in pushing through the legislation in late November 1991, creating the programme named Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR). President Bush signed the Nunn-Lugar initiative into law in December 1991, the last month of the existence of the Soviet Union.


$2 billion to nuclear security

Since the start in 1991, the United States has spent more than $2 billion through its CTR programme on dismantlement of nuclear missiles, submarines and securing fissile material. The programme also includes provision of financial support to approximately 20,000 former Soviet weapons scientists and engineers who have been given employment in research projects of potential benefits to the civilian economy. CTR has also initiated projects for securing Russia’s huge arsenal of withdrawn chemical weapons.


Most successful cooperation with Russia

Bellona argues that Nunn-Lugar’s CTR programme has been the most successful in the work of decommissioning of nuclear submarines in the Russian Arctic. Economical and technical support has been provided to the shipyards in Severodvinsk and the Nerpa shipyards at the Kola Peninsula. So far 21 strategic submarines are decommissioned with aid from the Nunn-Lugar programme. By 2007, this number will increase to 41.

896c3996dadb6999dcdcf608adc62f49.jpeg Photo: Foto: Thomas Nilsen

Kola and Severodvinsk in focus

CTR has invested $75 millions in cutting equipment at the naval yard Zvezdochka in Severodvinsk and Nerpa at the Kola Peninsula. Another $140 million are spent on the actual decommissioning work. CTR has also spent $57 million on various equipment and containers for handling and storing of fissile materials such as spent nuclear fuel from the submarines.


Monday’s news on an al-Quaida terrorist’s plan to make and detonate a radiological bomb in the United States shows clearly the importance of the work on securing the various sites where radioactive material can be obtained. Around Russia, hundreds of sites with radioactive waste and different fissile materials have bad physical protection.


A threat with new aspects

The involvement of senators Sam Nunn and Richard Lugar against the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction should, in Bellona’s view, represent an example to be followed by other countries. The aftermath of September 11th has with clarity proved that terrorist groupings with relatively sparse resources are capable of creating massive security challenges to the world society.


When terrorist groupings such as Al-Quaida make plans for taking radiological weapons into use, the world must take the responsibility of securing these materials. Bellona refers to the initiative of Nunn and Lugar, which in a very explicit way demonstrates that decommissioning and environmental initiatives are two sides of the same issue. The best way to support this issue is to further acknowledge the work through awarding the Nobel Peace Prize to Sam Nunn and Richard Lugar.


The Nobel Committee positive towards issues of the environment

By awarding the Nobel Peace Prize to Nunn and Lugar, Bellona believes that other countries will improve their aid to Russia regarding security of radioactive materials. If that were to be the case, both world peace and the environmental battle would be considered winners.


Last year, the head of the Nobel Committee, Gunnar Berge, expressed himself in positive terms concerning the possibility to consider the criteria of the Nobel Peace Prize somewhat differently in the future.


— The Nobel Committee does not operate within a vacuum. We are subject to a constant influence from the society surrounding us. Global heating and increasing water levels seems to strike those already less fortunate. This may be the source of new conflicts. It is therefore only natural to more closely connect the two issues of peacekeeping and environmental battle, Gunnar Berge said to the Norwegian daily VG.


CTR programme

  • established during the dissolution of the Soviet Union, and initially contributed to Kazakhstan, Ukraine, and Belarus returning their nuclear warheads to Russia.

  • Financed the decommissioning of 435 intercontinental nuclear missiles, 410 missile silos, 88 long-range bombers, 483 cruise missiles with nuclear warheads, 640 submarine missiles, 21 strategic nuclear submarines. In total, 5,728 deployed nuclear warheads are withdrawn by means of support from the CTR programme. This figure constitutes more nuclear weapons than Great Britain, France and China hold together.

  • Development of technology in Russia for the securing and destruction of chemical weapons.

  • Improved security of fissile materials at more than 50 locations in Russia, the Kola Peninsula and Severodvinsk included.


  • Financial support to more than 20,000 researchers formerly employed at different Russian manufacturers of nuclear weapons, allowing them to employ their knowledge in the civil society rather than to sell their services to other countries or networks of terrorism.


    Richard Lugar is still in the position of Senator, whereas Sam Nunn withdrew from his position in 1996. Today Nunn is the chairman of the board of the centre for international studies in Washington, and spends much of his time on the organisation Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI), which he founded together with the founder of CNN, Ted Turner. NTI works to prevent the dissemination of weapons of mass destruction, and focuses particularly on Russia.