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Valerie Plame Wilson

Valerie Plame Wilson

Posted: November 23, 2010 01:32 PM

For me, the most bittersweet moment watching the new movie Fair Game comes when it shows my clandestine CIA work involving nuclear counterproliferation. I remain passionate about the issue of preventing rogue states and terrorist organizations from ever procuring a nuclear weapon. Since resigning from the agency however, I realize that much of what I had been doing may only have served to delay the inevitable. My thinking on proliferation has therefore evolved considerably, and I now believe that the best way to ensure our national security for the long term is to move to achieve the goal of total, global elimination of nuclear weapons.

Recently, I have read with increasing alarm about possible derailment of the Senate ratification of the new START treaty signed by President Barack Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in April. If a handful of U.S. senators succeed in their efforts to block ratification of the New START treaty this year, it could fray hard-earned Russian support for tough sanctions on Iran and disrupt important strategic initiatives with the Russians to secure all nuclear materials globally so they don't fall into the hands of terrorists.

As a result of my counterproliferation work at the CIA, I believe that nuclear terrorism is the most urgent threat we face and locking down all nuclear materials is a national security imperative. But without Russia's cooperation in those goals, an effective international effort may be impossible to achieve.

Given these stakes -- and the history and the substance of the New START treaty -- opposition to it is perplexing. The treaty continues the arms control process begun by Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush to reduce U.S. and Russian cold war stockpiles. The first START Treaty, signed by President George H.W. Bush, was approved by the Senate in 1992 by a vote of 93 to 6 (including 'aye' votes from eight current Republican senators). The SORT Treaty, signed by President George W. Bush, was completely devoid of any verification provisions and yet was approved 95 to 0 in 2003.

The New START treaty would make modest reductions, cutting both countries' deployed arsenals by 30 percent, down to 1,500 strategic nuclear weapons each. It would also reestablish verification measures. Since the START 1 Treaty expired last December, there has been no monitoring on the ground of either arsenal. New START's verification measures would be stronger than those under START I: more exchange of data on weapons and 18 on-site inspections annually, including checking warheads on individual missiles by direct inspection, which represents a major improvement over the previous treaty.

Contrary to assertions from some opponents of the treaty, it does not limit U.S. options for establishing missile defense programs.

New START is supported by Secretary of Defense Robert Gates; Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen; high-ranking members of the Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, H. W. Bush, Clinton, and W. Bush administrations -- including such national security experts as George Shultz, Henry Kissinger, James Baker and Brent Scowcroft; the current commander and seven former commanders of U.S. Strategic Command and the entire current U.S. military leadership.

Admiral Mullen said the treaty "allows us to retain a strong and flexible American nuclear deterrent.... I believe, and the rest of the military leadership in this country believes, that this treaty is essential to our future security.... I hope the Senate will ratify it quickly."

Perhaps because it is hard to oppose the treaty on its merits, opponents now argue that there is not enough time in the lame duck session to bring it to a vote. But that ignores the fact that the treaty has already been exhaustively vetted. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee conducted 18 hearings and five briefings and the Obama Administration answered 900 submitted questions during the committee's process this summer. In September, with a bipartisan vote of 14 to 4, the committee recommended ratification of the treaty.

It would only take two to three days for the Senate to consider and vote on ratification. The START I treaty had five days of Senate floor debate, the SORT treaty two days, the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty two days and the Chemical Weapons Convention two days.

Given the stakes and urgency for our national security, our Senators should be able to spare two to three days to consider and vote on the New START treaty before they break for the Christmas holiday. Certainly, a ratified new START treaty would be ample reason to celebrate the New Year.

This piece originally was published as an exclusive to the Women's Media Center. The views expressed in this commentary are those of the author alone and do not represent WMC. WMC is a 501(c)(3) organization and does not endorse candidates.

 
 
 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Middle Blue
What's a micro-bio?
07:07 PM on 12/02/2010
I am a fan of yours, but I must ask what bad thing happens to the USA if the treaty just doesn't happen?
10:10 PM on 12/05/2010
Well, I can't speak for Plame, but you have asked a very important question, and one I've been thinking about a lot lately-- chances are her take would be quite different and if she does weigh in, I defer to her.

I don't think Russia is as important as the absence of the USSR. That is to say, I'm not as worried about what Russia will do as I am about what Russia is unlikely to successfully prevent without us there to keep an eye on things. To my mind, the problem is that Russia's weakened condition creates an ideal environment for a black market in nuclear weapons, and that the only reason we've been able to stop that has been the START treaty let us keep observers at Russian (former Soviet) nuclear weapons sites.

So stop thinking "Russian nukes," and think "secondhand Soviet nukes that anyone with enough money can buy." Ahmedinijad won't need secret centrifuges anymore if he can just buy a nuclear weapon from the Russian mob. Not to mention that there are a few non-state actors I really don't want getting ahold of one. I don't know about Plame, but that's what keeps me up at night.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cadawa
03:35 PM on 11/30/2010
To pa104(dis)info. What on earth does a British crime writer who has been dead for 35 years have to do with the fact that our election system sucks, the extreme right represents about as much change as Oliver Twist and that mutually assured destruction is the most pathological idea the human race have ever bought into?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
FZliveson
Beating the Conundrum
10:24 PM on 11/28/2010
This whole debate is almost humorous.
Fifteen Hundred nuclear warheads is 20-times what would be necessary to obliterate the former Soviet Union and cause them to do the same to us. This treaty will mean next to nothing. It is just another distraction from other far more important things. Now, to get things straight, if the treaty was to eliminate all nuclear weapons and it was being proposed for the U.S.A., England, France, China, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea to sign then we could click our ruby red shoes together and celebrate.
10:15 PM on 12/05/2010
Stop thinking of them as "Russian nukes" and think of them as "old Soviet nukes that anyone will be able to buy if we don't get some observers in there and soon." Ahmedinijad won't need his secret centrifuges anymore if he can just buy a nice secondhand model from the Russian mob. Not to mention a few non-state actors I'd rather not see with nuclear capabilities. The Russian mob doesn't ask questions of that kind of money, even if it comes from a 6' Saudi guy with bad kidneys-- and that's not funny at all!
09:54 PM on 11/28/2010
Before you condemn nuclear weapons, consider that the nuclear powers have not gone to war with each other since WWII, one of the longest periods of peace between world powers in history. The point is deterrence, not use.
10:12 PM on 11/28/2010
The treaty only reduces the stockpiles 30%, don't worry we can still blow each other up hundreds of times over. The point that Plame makes though is keeping the weapons out of the hands of terrorists.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
cgeorgan
Proud American-Canadian Libertarian
10:27 PM on 11/28/2010
I could further simplify it for you:

No two democracies have ever met on the field of battle.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Martin Houde
I am no microbe
05:26 PM on 11/29/2010
That's technically false. India and Pakistan have fought many wars, and not all of them occurred while Pakistan was a dictatorship. That's just one example.

The USA-Britain war of 1812-1814.
barrada nicto
Optimism is necessary.
09:13 PM on 11/28/2010
This is what Republicans mean when they say they must win at all costs.

Nothing else matters.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
cgeorgan
Proud American-Canadian Libertarian
10:27 PM on 11/28/2010
Are you serious?  Did you just make that up?  Which "Republican" said these things?
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BlueGreen55
Capitalism w/o Morals is like Faith w/o Works-dead
10:56 PM on 11/28/2010
Dead serious.

Mitch McConnell (R-KY) - 1 week after the 2010 elections:

"The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president."

Can it be interpreted any way other than how barrada nicto said it? NO.
09:05 PM on 11/28/2010
It' up to Reid to allocate sufficient time and resources for the treaty. If he tries to rush it through (a la pass it to find out what is in it) then it's failure will be on his hands
09:17 PM on 11/28/2010
Nope.

If START is not passed before Christmas, everyone will blame the Republicans.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
cgeorgan
Proud American-Canadian Libertarian
10:28 PM on 11/28/2010
Rather, if "START" is not passed before Christmas, our lives will all continue unaffected.
10:14 PM on 11/28/2010
It was signed last April. It's been through committee. It's been vetted. They all know what's in it. Even the Republicans. They are lying. They are simply holding the country hostage to prevent Obama from having a 'win'. It is nothing more than cynical, dangerous, deceptive politics.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pa104inf
01:26 PM on 11/29/2010
The Republicans have asked for the notes of the negotiations which are the understandings and are as important as the treaty itself, and Obama has refused to give it to them.
10:27 PM on 12/05/2010
I think it is more. I think it rises to the level of treason. I know treason is a strong word, but there is no way around it when a foreign-funded cabal is giving material aid to nuclear terrorists.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
enlightenedgirl
the truth will set you free
08:59 PM on 11/28/2010
Kyl is a disgrace to America and the World.  He is playing Politics with Nukes and it is not a good thing, I don't care what the Republican agenda is.  The START Treaty should not to be messed with.  We need more voices speaking out against Kyl, where are the loud voices on this from every corner?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
realitytrumpsbull
two 'alves of coconut!
09:18 PM on 11/28/2010
When you think about the potential here for a select few people to initiate actions that could level the place and bring death and destruction to millions, I think there is a wisdom to be found in discussing the limitation and reduction of nuclear arms. Theoretically, our world is about 30 minutes from becoming a charred, lifeless husk, if the various arsenals of weapons were all to be simultaneously activated and used. Nuclear war with modern weapons in one part of the world would soon see radiation and fallout spreading to other countries in other parts of the world. Today's weapons measure in megatons, making the original bombs dropped on Japan seem like a pocket firecracker in comparison. City-busters have been around since the 1950's and 1960's, when countries like Russia developed something called Tsara Bomba, and finally, it was agreed that above-ground testing was simply too dangerous. In the late 60's and early 70's, the peace movement and wider public awareness helped to push the idea that there was such a thing as too many weapons, and that the need for them had passed.  If we want a future in which nuclear belligerency will be more difficult, then maybe it's important for people to make their voices heard in opposition to more proliferation. It's a big world, not everyone gets along very well, and the bigger a hammer they have to hit each other over the head with, the more likely it is that someone will be tempted to take a healthy swing at their foe or opponent. Nuclear weapons are that 'bigger hammer'.

Will we ever be fully RID of the things? I doubt it, but at least the people that built them and bought them can work directly together to carefully consider their next moves, so they won't end up being our last.
09:55 PM on 11/28/2010
Actually the more damage an opponent can do to you, the less likely you are to attack them. More weapons actually translates into greater safety.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gevan
the pilgrim has landed
11:19 PM on 11/28/2010
When American politicians are allowed to amass unlimited campaign funds from anonymous sources both foreign and domestic we no longer know for certain what country's interests are uppermost on their minds. Senator Kyll now fall into that category of 'maybe' he's working for America, but by his actions it's kinda doubtful.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pa104inf
01:30 PM on 11/29/2010
It is illegal to accept foreign money with or without the McCain/Feingold bill.
10:38 PM on 12/05/2010
The only way I'd differ is that I think Kyl's actions are more in the category of "maybe he's just putting his political party ahead of the country's interests, but you've got to wonder about actions like his from someone who's getting all this money from offshore."
I don't think there's any question of him working for America-- nobody who was even remotely loyal to the country would give material aid and comfort to nuclear terrorists like Kyl is doing. He has already refused to "support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic...[and] bear true faith and allegiance to the same," the only question is which other entity is taking precedence over the one he swore to put first.
08:14 PM on 11/28/2010
Why is there so much obsession about Iran? The START treaty apparently has merit by itself, a kind of win-win for both Russia and US. If this treaty is inducing Russia to go against their interest and signing on to "tough sanctions" against Iran, that otherwise they wouldn't have, the question is what are they getting in return in this agreement. The idea that Iran is developing nuclear weapons is coming from the same worn-out neocon corners that outed Valerie Plame. Are there any evidence over and beyond what is discussed in public, particularly the lap-top that has recently been determined to be a fraud. I am very puzzled by this article.
09:00 PM on 11/28/2010
Apparently, the latest wikileaks show everyone in the ME convinced Iran is developing nuclear weapons.
10:06 PM on 11/28/2010
Except that the 2007 NIE, and what has leaked out of of 2010 NIE (which is being held for months) indicate otherwise.
barrada nicto
Optimism is necessary.
09:15 PM on 11/28/2010
This is too big a "win" for Republicans to hand to Obama.

All politics, all the time.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
melakfilms
07:56 PM on 11/28/2010
Valerie, since you became a target for the Bush admin, I've always wondered what happened to the forged documents regarding Niger uranium. Have they been traced by authorities to a source? Have they gone missing? This is the lynchpin that made everything possible.
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07:31 PM on 11/28/2010
valerie you are so hot....yikes
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
keramos
Who are the brain police?
07:24 PM on 11/28/2010
The unsaid part of this is that both sides would likely demolish their oldest, and probably more problematic, warheads first.  They would then lose the costs associated with maintaining those and be left with more modern weapons with multiple warhead capabilities. 

A lot of this is for show but it's at least worth continuing.  Like it or not, we and Russia must lead. 

Lead is commonly misread by conservileclones as the metal (Pb) which they associate with the matter in their heads and they don't want any more of that.  Leadership is something that is totally without meaning in their limited vocabularies and way beyond their imagination or abilities.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
05:54 PM on 11/28/2010
Not if the repubs have anything to say about it.
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flamflurm
The name's Flurm. Flam Flurm.
06:34 PM on 11/28/2010
I bet they don't even get enough Dems.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dorothy bnks
05:46 PM on 11/28/2010
If it gives President Obama a victory for America, derail it. That's the song and dance of the Tea Party Republicans and their supporters. Consequences can be suffered later.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pa104inf
01:33 PM on 11/29/2010
No, derail a flawed treaty.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cadawa
04:58 PM on 11/28/2010
We're with you on this one Valerie. The problem is logistical. Any ideas?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
faith
04:25 PM on 11/28/2010
Republicans were very quick to call Democrats 'unamerican' when democrats questioned pursuing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Republican politicians should be considered 'unamerican' if they thwart or refuse to ratify the treaty. The United States needs to seek peace.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
cgeorgan
Proud American-Canadian Libertarian
04:40 PM on 11/28/2010
Your logic is...very illogical.
04:43 PM on 11/28/2010
"UnAmerican has always been the GOP way when it comes to reelection. Whether it be blatant demagoguery or nuclear proliferation treaty votes, whatever gets them through their primaries.