Planning for Success at the 2014 Nuclear Security Summit in the Netherlands

17 January 2014 • 
Event
On 9 December, 2013, VCDNP co-hosted a lunch and roundtable discussion.
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Anya Loukianova, Stanley Foundation (left), William Tobey, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, and Elena Sokova, VCDNP, Panel Discussion
Anya Loukianova, Stanley Foundation (left), William Tobey, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, and Elena Sokova, VCDNP, Panel Discussion
Anya Loukianova, Stanley Foundation (left), William Tobey, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, and Elena Sokova, VCDNP,
Panel Discussion

The Vienna Center for Disarmament and Non-Proliferation (VCDNP) and the Stanley Foundation co-hosted a lunch and roundtable discussion on 9 December 2013 titled "Planning for Success at the 2014 Nuclear Security Summit in the Netherlands." William Tobey, senior fellow at Harvard's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs and former deputy administrator for Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation at the Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), served as the featured guest. Further insights were also offered by the event moderators, Elena Sokova, executive director of the VCDNP, and Anya Loukianova, program officer at the Stanley Foundation.

Mr. Tobey, who also gave a luncheon briefing at the VCDNP before the 2012 Nuclear Security Summit in Seoul, expressed his optimism that nuclear terrorism can be prevented; he noted, however, that much work remains to be done identifying and correcting flaws in the current nuclear security system. Mr. Tobey pointed to his recently published Stanley Foundation policy brief in which he describes the July 2012 security breach by three activists (including an 82-year-old nun) of the US Y-12 facility in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, as an "important wake-up call" for nuclear security that raises questions about the security of highly enriched uranium and plutonium. In his view, this breach was not simply one isolated incident—he pointed to several others—but rather a result of a system-wide sense of complacency and failure to create a sufficiently rigorous security culture.

Representatives from diplomatic missions and international organizations in Vienna
Representatives from diplomatic missions and international organizations in Vienna

To fight complacency and otherwise strengthen international nuclear security, Mr. Tobey recommended that the world leaders participating in the 2014 Nuclear Security Summit in the Netherlands pursue the following broad policies:

  1. less material—fissile material stock should be down blended or reduced as much as practicable;
  2. fewer sites—the number of sites using or storing highly enriched uranium (HEU) should be minimized as much as practicable, especially in Russia;
  3. better governance within sites—for example, using a Design Basis Threat to develop nuclear security plans. Additionally, Mr. Tobey suggested that nuclear security assurances should be provided by states to increase international confidence in the effectiveness of a state's nuclear security. Nuclear security assurances, Mr. Tobey argued, would not only reassure publics, but also force governments to more thoroughly examine themselves. Such voluntary assurances could include information sharing and reporting, peer reviews, sharing of best practices, bilateral cooperative measures, regular declarations, and certification of professional competence.

Mr. Tobey conceded that there may be benefit to having a more coherent governance structure for nuclear security, instead of the fragmented structure that currently exists; he expressed his concern, however, that working toward such a super-structure may hamper overall progress. Instead, Mr. Tobey contended that specific incremental improvements should continue, despite their lack of comprehensiveness. Mr. Tobey concluded that the Nuclear Security Summit process has been overwhelmingly positive, particularly for the focus that it has drawn and continues to draw from national leaders to nuclear security issues, though he sensed that there may be a growing "summit fatigue". He recommended that, after the planned 2016 Nuclear Security Summit in the United States, states consider a hybrid process for the future that would feature heads of state meetings at longer intervals, together with under-secretary-level working meetings at shorter intervals.

Representatives from diplomatic missions in Vienna attending the meeting
Representatives from diplomatic missions in Vienna attending the meeting
Meeting attendees engaging in the discussion
Meeting attendees engaging in the discussion
Amb. Filippo Formica (Italy)
Amb. Filippo Formica (Italy)

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