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Snuffysmith
Bush Calls on Baltics, Russia to Move On

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D59310:2F72C9D

President Bush says Americans will never forget "the Baltics' painful
history"

From left: Lithuania's President Valdas Adamkus, George W. Bush,
Latvia's President Arnold Ruutel and Estonia's President Vaira
Vike-FreibergaPresident Bush is trying to soothe tensions between
Russia and the Baltic states over celebrations marking the anniversary
of the end of the Second World War in Europe.

President Bush began his day in Riga, reviewing troops alongside
President Vaira Vike-Freiberga. Mr. Bush was awarded the country's
highest honor, and laid a wreath at Latvia's Freedom Monument.

Ceremonial duties complete, President Bush and President
Vike-Freiberga met privately, before joining Estonian President Arnold
Ruutel and Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus for a working lunch.

The Lithuanian and Estonian leaders are boycotting Monday ceremonies
in Moscow marking the Allied defeat of Nazi Germany, because the end
of the Second World War in Europe was the beginning of more than four
decades of Soviet rule in the Baltics.

At a joint news conference following their lunch, President Bush said
Americans will never forget what he called "the Baltics' painful
history."

"I recognize that, in the West, the end of the Second World War meant
peace, but in the Baltics, it brought occupation and Communist
oppression," said George W. Bush.

Russia says Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia willingly joined the Soviet
Union, after Soviet troops liberated them from Nazi rule. The
president's stop in Latvia, and a visit later in this trip to the
former Soviet republic of Georgia, drew a letter of protest from the
Kremlin.

President Bush says Monday's anniversary is an opportunity for all
involved to look to the future.

"This moment in history will give everybody a chance to recognize what
took place in the past, and move on," he said. "I fully understand
there is a lot of anger and frustration involved in the three Baltic
countries about the occupation. I have expressed that to President
Putin, but he didn't need me to tell him. He fully understands there
is a lot of frustrations and anger about what took place. My hope is
that we are now able to move beyond that phase of history into a phase
that is embracing democracy and free societies."

President Bush says he will tell President Putin as clearly as he can
that it is in Russia's interest to have democracies on its border,
because democracies, Mr. Bush says, are good, peaceful neighbors that
do not fight each other.

During their talks in Riga, the four leaders discussed the political
situations in the former Soviet republics of Georgia, Ukraine, Moldova
and Belarus.

In interviews before his trip, President Bush called Belarus the "last
dictatorship in Europe." Russia backs the country's president,
Alexander Lukashenko. At the press conference in Riga, Mr. Bush said
the people of Belarus should be allowed to express themselves in free
and open and fair elections.

Outside the talks, Latvian police arrested a dozen members of the
radical pro-Russian National Bolshevik group, who had earlier staged
an authorized protest outside the city center, but then marched on the
secure zone around the presidents' meeting, and threw several smoke
bombs.

Up next for President Bush on this five-day, four-nation tour is the
Netherlands, where he will speak at a cemetery holding the bodies of
more than 8,000 Americans killed during the Second World War.
Snuffysmith
Putin: Soviets 'Liberated' Eastern Europe During WWII

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D59311:2F72C9D

Russian president says Soviet people "liberated 11 European states"
during course of their war against Nazi Germany

Vladimir Putin looks on as honor guards lay wreath during unveiling of
new World War II memorial in Moscow, Saturday

Russian President Vladimir Putin has praised the Soviet Union's heroic
actions in hastening the end of World War II, in a pointed rebuttal to
critics who say the Kremlin was responsible for decades of oppression
that followed the war across eastern Europe.

Taking part in the opening of a new war memorial at Poklonnaya Hill in
Moscow Saturday, Mr. Putin said the Soviet people "liberated 11
European states" in the course of their war against Nazi Germany.

In Mr. Putin's words, "Never before had the world seen such mass
heroism" as the Soviet Union displayed in the battles that shattered
the Nazis' military machine.

The presidents of the Baltic states - Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia -
are among those say their nations were not liberated by Soviet forces.
They have denounced the Kremlin's failure to apologize for annexing
their territory and incorporating it into the Soviet Union.

The Lithuanian and Estonian presidents are boycotting World War II
Victory Day ceremonies in Red Square on Monday. Latvia's President
Vaira Vike-Freiberga is expected to try to raise the annexation issue
in the Russian capital.

In a commentary appearing Saturday in the French daily Le Figaro, Mr.
Putin says he thinks the Baltic states are trying to attract attention
for themselves and justify their discriminatory treatment of
ethnic-Russian residents.

Some information for this report provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.
Snuffysmith
Pakistan Denies Reports of Musharraf Assassination Plot

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D59314:2F72C9D

Report claims seven suspected Islamic militants arrested late last
month were planning an assassination attempt against President Pervez
Musharraf

Abu Farraj al-LibbiThe Pakistani government is denying reports that
seven suspected Islamic militants arrested late last month were
planning an assassination attempt against President Pervez Musharraf.

Interior Minister Aftab Sherpao says there is no truth to the media
reports, which quote Pakistani intelligence officials.

Those officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that
security forces arrested the seven suspects in late April in eastern
Punjab province. The officials said the plot's mastermind was a
militant who was freed from prison in Afghanistan several months ago.

The reports come after Pakistani authorities on Wednesday announced
the capture of Abu Farraj al-Libbi, whom they describe as the
third-in-command of the al-Qaida terrorist network.



Pakistan accuses him of orchestrating two unsuccessful attempts to
assassinate President Pervez Musharraf in December 2003.

Some information for this report provided by AFP, AP and Reuters.
Snuffysmith
US-Indonesia Relations Take Turn for the Better

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D59315:2F72C9D

US will give country $73 million in aid, and has invited Indonesian
leader to visit later this month

U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick (l) is greeted by
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono Indonesian President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has met with visiting U.S. Deputy Secretary
of State Robert Zoellick in another sign of rapidly warming ties. The
United States is giving some $73 million in aid, and has invited the
Indonesian leader to the United States later this month. This appears
to be a new positive chapter in ties with Indonesia - home to the
world's largest Muslim population.

For years, the relationship between Washington and Jakarta has been
cool, with the United States worried about Indonesia's track record on
human rights, and Jakarta worried about the United States' armed
interventions in Muslim nations: Afghanistan and Iraq.

Both sides now seem to want to try to move on.

Saturday, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick was in
Jakarta for the signing of a $73 million U.S. economic aid package.
Hundreds of millions of dollars are expected to follow to help
Indonesia's tsunami-devastated Aceh Province.

Mr. Zoellick met with the Indonesian president to discuss the agenda
for the leader's visit to the United States on May 25.

This is expected to include talks on restoration of full military
ties. Cooperation was suspended in 1991 because of human rights abuses
by Indonesia's armed forces in East Timor.

Although Deputy Secretary Zoellick was quick to praise the advances
made by the Indonesian army in recent years, he said that full
restoration of military relations would depend on greater
accountability by those responsible for the East Timor violence, and
further advances in investigating the murders of two American teachers
in the province of Papua three years ago.

"We would like to expand the efforts, and I think they would be very
timely, given the efforts of this government with the reform, but we
need to do so in a context of where we deal with some of these
legacies, while we also look to the future." Mr. Zoellick said.

The U.S. military provided massive help in response to the December 26
Indian Ocean tsunami, which devastated Indonesia's Aceh Province, and
left 165,000 people dead there. Since then, momentum has been building
for full military ties, which the United States has argued will also
help combat terrorism. Indonesia has suffered major attacks by its
homegrown Islamic terrorist group, Jemaah Islamiyah.

Deputy Secretary of State Zoellick will visit Aceh Sunday, and will
wrap up his Asian tour early next week with visits to Malaysia and
Singapore.
Snuffysmith
European, Asian Foreign Ministers: North Korea Must Talk; Burma Must
Democratize

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D59316:2F72C9D

North Korea's nuclear weapons program dominated talks amid news of
missile test this week and reports it is preparing for its first
nuclear test Asian and European foreign ministers are calling on Burma
to democratize and North Korea to return to disarmament talks
immediately. North Korea's nuclear programs dominated the two-day
meeting in Kyoto, Japan after North Korea test-fired a missile and
reportedly looks like it may be preparing to conduct its first nuclear
test.

Foreign Ministers from 38 Asian and European nations wrapped up
meetings Saturday in Kyoto, Japan, calling on Burma and North Korea to
live up to promises.

The European Union is pressing Burma's military rulers to implement
long-awaited democratic reforms.

Europe and the United States, both with heavy sanctions in place
against Burma, have threatened to boycott meetings of the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations if Burma assumes the rotating chairmanship
next year.

Asian nations, which advocate engagement rather than sanctions, have
been consulting on how to deal with the situation.

Still the meetings in Kyoto did play host Friday to the first
ministerial-level talks between Burma's military and the European
Union.

Benita Ferrero-Waldner (l) and Japan's Foreign Minister Nobutaka
Machimura EU external relations commissioner, Benita Ferrero-Waldner,
told VOA this is positive in itself.

"The fact, per se, that this meeting took place and we could put our
message across, was already, I think, a step forward," said Benita
Ferrero-Waldner.

But it was North Korea's nuclear weapons program that dominated the
talks amid a North Korean missile test this week and reports it is
preparing for its first nuclear test.

South Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon spoke at the end of the
meetings.

"So the situation seems to be troubling and serious at this time,"
said Ban Ki-moon. "Many ministers have expressed their views that the
room for negotiation still remains."

The ministers strongly urged North Korea to make a strategic decision
to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula and to return to negotiations
without delay.

Japan's Foreign Ministry Spokesman Hatsuhisa Takashima says Japan is
joining South Korea, the United States and the United Nations in
warning against a nuclear test.

"We would like to tell North Korea that the best way for them … to
settle this is not to escalate this kind of threat and security
environment, but to settle it with peaceful means, through dialogue,"
said Hatsuhisa Takashima.

North Korea has boycotted talks with China, South Korea, Russia, Japan
and the United States since June.

Japan and the United States say they will consider referring North
Korea to the U.N. Security Council for action unless talks resume.

North Korea is insisting on massive aid and specific security
guarantees, before it will consider honoring its agreements to be
nuclear free.
Snuffysmith
Volcker Demands Return of UN Oil for Food Documents

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D59317:2F72C9D

Head of UN investigation says lives are at risk

Former U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker, chief of the
investigation probing the UN oil-for-food program in IraqFile PhotoThe
U.N. appointed commission probing the Iraq Oil-For-Food scandal is
demanding the return of investigative files given to a U.S.
Congressional Committee. Commission chairman Paul Volcker warned that
release of the files could place the lives of witnesses in grave
danger.

At a hastily-called news conference Friday, Mr. Volcker said he had
telephoned the chairmen of three Congressional panels to urge them not
to interfere with his U.N. authorized probe of the oil-for-food
program. "These are matters, I know, of great and legitimate interest
to the public at large, in other countries as well as the United
States. In the limited time ahead, our aim remains to provide a full
and accurate story of the management and results of the Oil-for-Food
program. That work must not be impeded," he said.

Two of the Congressional committees this week subpoenaed documents in
the possession of former Volcker Commission investigator Robert
Parton. Mr. Parton, a lawyer and former U.S. FBI agent, has already
turned the files over to the House International Relations Committee.

Mr. Parton resigned from the Volcker team last month, contending that
an interim report on the oil-for-food program had downplayed U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan's role in the scandal.

Mr. Volcker Friday charged Mr. Parton's release of the documents had
violated the terms of his employment contract. He demanded that all
files be returned to his independent inquiry committee, or IIC. "That
the IIC files, that may include confidential interviews and raw staff
drafts, be promptly returned to the IIC, which is the rightful owner.
This is critical to the Committee's continued work with witnesses,
governments and organizations who have placed their trust in our
confidentiality," he said.

Mr. Volcker offered to release Mr. Parton from his pledge of
confidentiality and allow him to air his grievances about the
conclusions of the investigation once the documents are returned.

He suggested the Congressional subpoenas are illegal, and should be
withdrawn. But said his main concern in asking for return of the files
was the safety of people in Iraq and elsewhere who have provided
sensitive information to investigators. "I do not limit that concern
to Iraqis, but that is a simple rather glaring and obvious example. I
mean, we're not playing games here, we're dealing, and let me just
emphasize this, in some cases with lives," he said.

But the chairman of the U.S. House international relations committee,
Illinois Republican Henry Hyde, reportedly rejected Mr. Volcker's
demand. The Associated Press late Friday reported that Congressman
Hyde issued a statement saying he appreciated the gravity of Mr.
Volcker's concerns, but that his committee was obligated to continue
its inquiry.

The U.N. oil for food program was set up in the mid-1990s to provide
food and medicine to help Iraqis cope with United Nations sanctions
imposed after Saddam Hussein seized Kuwait. But investigations have
documented how Saddam manipulated the program, using billions of
dollars in oil profits to reward friends and to buy influence,
including at the United Nations.
Snuffysmith
World War II Victory in Europe 60th Anniversary Remembered

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D59318:2F72C9D

Sunday, May 8, marks 60th anniversary of Victory in Europe Day, when
Allied forces announced surrender of Germany and the end of World War
II

The New National WWII Memorial in Washington DCSunday, May 8, marks
the 60th anniversary of Victory in Europe Day, when Allied forces
announced the surrender of Germany and the end of the World War II in
Europe, a conflict that cost tens of millions of lives. VOA's Adam
Phillips gathered some remembrances of that conflict from visitors to
the new National World War II Memorial in Washington D.C.

Washington's blue skies and springtime blossoms offer a poignant
contrast to the solemnity of the memorial. The large granite plaza
commemorates the sacrifices made during World War II, and honors the
generation that won it. Garland Lloyd, one of several hundred tourists
wandering among the memorial's granite pillars and soaring fountains,
seems both moved and impressed.

"It's just amazing that the nation has seen fit to build this memorial
to those who fought to win freedom for all of us," he says. "It just
brings you almost to tears to see it." Mr. Lloyd, who is from Bedford
Virginia, felt the loss of those soldiers personally. "The people from
Bedford, Virginia, lost so many soldiers in one community," he says.
"It's just very emotional and very touching to see this."

James Renschler and his wifeJames Renschler of North Dakota is old and
somewhat gray today. But he was a young soldier fighting in Okinawa,
Japan, on May 8th, 1945, when the Allied victory in Europe was
declared. "We took heavy losses over there. It was brutal," he says,
'"but it was something that we thought we had to do at the time. That
was our responsibility."

When asked whether he still thinks about those years, Mr. Renschler
lowers his voice and looks away. "Well, I don't even like to talk
about it. I don't think you ever get over that kind of stuff when you
are doing killing. You never get over that part."

Norma Craig was a girl in rural North Carolina during World War II,
yet she continues

Norma Craigto be deeply moved by her memory of the era. "It's sort of
sad for me to think about being so young and innocent and having such
a horrible thing going on in the world at the same time," she says.
"The boys that fought in the war, I feel for them very much. And this
memorial here is for them."

When asked whether the many young people in attendance today had a
sense of the magnitude of the war, she says, "They may to a certain
degree, but they'll never feel it like we do, our generation," shs
says. "They'll never feel it like we do."

That certainly seems to be case for some teenagers from the western
state of Montana, who are visiting the nation's capital with their
high school class. They are mostly unfamiliar with World War II and
its meanings - historical and emotional.

"I don't know anything about it," one girl comments. "I know some
stuff, but I can't think of stuff just off the top of my head!" All of
the teenagers know World War II was a big war, and one boy says he
believes it was fought for a good cause.

12 year-old JakeHowever, there are other young people at the Memorial
who have a more visceral sense of the suffering caused by World War
II. Jake, 12, from Canfield, Ohio, stands by the fountains inside the
Memorial's Plaza, seemingly lost in thought, then says: "I think it's
absolutely beautiful. The fountains kind of mean something. They
represent, to me, the battles at sea. They are kind of dramatic, but
they gave us something beautiful, like freedom. It makes me feel a
little sad just to know so many people died, but happy at the same
time to be free."
Snuffysmith
Europeans look again at life in WWII
Europeans are taking a fresh look at the choices they made in the face
of Nazi evil more than 60 years ago.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0509/p01s04-woeu.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Blair's reelection: Pyrrhic victory?
British Prime Minister Tony Blair won a third term Thursday, but his
support is now weaker than ever. By Sophie Arie
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0509/p06s01-woeu.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Dressing for Afghan success
Do the clothes make the man? Our reporter finds that his sartorial
selections make a difference. By Ben Arnoldy
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0509/p07s01-wosc.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Two German soldiers come to grips with their past
Fighting for Hitler not only left scars but forever changed the way
they were allowed to publicly recall their battles. By Andreas Tzortzis
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0509/p10s01-woeu.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
http://jang.com.pk/thenews/may2005-daily/0...05/world/w3.htm

'Post Soviet states have no choice except democracy.'
Snuffysmith
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/commo...55E2703,00.html

EU split on Islamic terror threat
Cameron Stewart, Prague
Snuffysmith
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/s...sp?story=636840

Kabul blast signals return of forgotten Taliban insurgency
Snuffysmith
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml.../09/ixhome.html

Vote for EU constitution or risk new Holocaust, says Brussels
David Rennie in Brussels
Snuffysmith
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml...08/ixworld.html

Truth drug fails to get al-Qaeda No. 3 to talk
Massoud Ansari in Karachi
Snuffysmith
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2005-05...prisoners_x.htm

Sharon: No more prisoner releases
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/a...ast_afp/mideast

Palestinian fury after Sharon freezes prisoner releases
Snuffysmith
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/573378.html

PM leaning toward razing evacuees' Gaza homes
Snuffysmith
--------------------
Bush Gets Tough Queries From Youths in Holland
--------------------

Amid war ceremonies, president holds a round- table where he is asked about anti-terrorism measures and impact of combat on U.S. public.

By Peter Wallsten
Times Staff Writer

May 9 2005

MAASTRICHT, Netherlands; At home, President Bush regularly travels the nation for "conversations" with hand-picked audiences who routinely shower him and his policies with praise. But abroad on Sunday, some youths in Holland had a rare, unscripted opportunity to ask questions that some Americans might want to pose if given the chance.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...0,2511422.story
Snuffysmith
--------------------
Bush, Putin Set Aside Feuds at Talks in Russia
--------------------

Leaders focus on areas of agreement, such as backing Israel's Gaza pullout. Rapport is on display as they ready to mark victory over Nazis.

By Peter Wallsten and David Holley
Times Staff Writers

May 9 2005

MOSCOW; After months of feuding, President Bush and Russian President Vladimir V. Putin met Sunday and emphasized harmony and personal chemistry, a reflection of common policy goals as they prepared to mark the 60th anniversary of the defeat of the Nazis.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...0,1990627.story
Snuffysmith
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8 U.S. Troops Killed in Iraq
--------------------

Insurgent violence rages. The government fills five more Cabinet posts, three with Sunnis.

By Louise Roug and Patrick J. McDonnell
Times Staff Writers

May 9 2005

BAGHDAD; Eight U.S. troops were killed in action during a 48-hour period as insurgent violence raged in the Sunni Arab heartland of western and central Iraq, the U.S. military reported Sunday.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...0,4591298.story
Snuffysmith
--------------------
Sharon Ends Prisoner Release, Tells Abbas to Curb Militants
--------------------

Amid the growing political clout of armed groups, Palestinian officials say Israel is reneging on promises it made at a summit.

By Ken Ellingwood
Times Staff Writer

May 9 2005

JERUSALEM; Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said Sunday that Israel would not free more Palestinian prisoners until the Palestinian leadership took tougher action against armed militants.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...0,1886006.story
Snuffysmith
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German Neo-Nazis Rally but Drop March
--------------------

From Associated Press

May 9 2005

BERLIN; About 3,000 supporters of an extreme-right party rallied Sunday on the 60th anniversary of Nazi Germany's surrender to Allied forces in World War II, but at least 5,000 counterdemonstrators kept them from marching in downtown Berlin.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
http://www.wpherald.com/storyview.php?Stor...08-031456-1049r

Japan seeks China approval for Security Council seat
Snuffysmith
The Rice Touch

By Jackson Diehl

The election of Jose Miguel Insulza as secretary general of the Organization of American States last week was widely portrayed as a defeat for the United States, and in one obvious sense it was: Insulza, a Chilean socialist, won out after two successive U.S.-backed candidates failed to gain...

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
FRUS ON SOUTH ASIA CRISIS, 1971

The latest volume of Foreign Relations of the United States
(FRUS), the official record of U.S. foreign policy, documents
Nixon Administration policy immediately prior to and during the
Indo-Pakistan War of 1971.

The full text of the volume, published last week, is here:

http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ho/frus/nixon/xi/
Snuffysmith
ESTIMATIVE PRODUCTS ON VIETNAM, 1948-1975

The National Intelligence Council has published a collection of
declassified U.S. intelligence estimates concerning Vietnam "from
the post-World War II breakup of colonial empires to the
Communist takeover of Saigon in 1975."

For more information about the collection, much of which is
available online, see:

http://www.cia.gov/nic/NIC_foia_vietnam.html
Snuffysmith
Foreign fighters, Iraqi jihadists now higher priority than 'former regime elements'.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0509/dailyUpdate.html
Snuffysmith
Putin, Guests Salute Sacrifice of Russia's WWII Veterans

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D5D05C:2F72C9D

Russian President Vladimir Putin stood tall as he reviewed more than
7,000 troops along with more than 50 world leaders Russian President
Vladimir Putin says the 60th anniversary of the Allies' victory over
the Nazis at the end of World War II in Europe is a triumph of good
over evil and he vowed to help see that the world never again faces
such a conflict. Mr. Putin made the remarks during an elaborate
Victory Day parade on Red Square watched by more than 50 world
leaders.

President Putin stood tall as he reviewed more than 7,000 troops
marching across the vast expanse of Russia's Red Square over the
course of an hour. Aging veterans too old to make the trek on foot
were transported in trucks reminiscent of the Soviet-era.

Under threatening skies, Mr. Putin remembered the sacrifice millions
of Russian soldiers and civilians were called to make. He also paid
tribute to Western allies, among others, whom Mr. Putin said Russia
would always remember.

President Putin said Russia never divides the victory of 1945 into
ours and theirs. He said it is a common victory for all who shouldered
grief with courage.

Mr. Putin also reiterated that the world must always remember the
brink on which it found itself and never allow civilization to return
there.

In the days leading up to the 60th anniversary celebrations, Mr. Putin
has linked Nazism to today's fight against international terrorism. He
did so again on Monday, saying it is the world's collective duty to
defend a world order based on security and justice.

Mr. Putin said there must be a new culture among nations that will not
allow a repeat of any war, as he put it, "neither cold, nor hot."

Leaders of the world's main democracies, including President Bush,
listened to Mr. Putin's remarks from a stage next to the mausoleum
where the founder of the Soviet Union, Vladimir Lenin, lies embalmed.

At parade's end, Russian MIG and Sukhoi fighter jets streaked through
the sky above Red Square, leaving a trail of red, white and blue smoke
to match the colors of the Russian flag. President Putin and visiting
world leaders later visited the tomb of the unknown soldier, before
attending a banquet at the Kremlin.

Ordinary Russians, who view the holiday as one of the most sacred of
the year, are spending it at picnics well outside the city. Moscow has
been virtually shut down in an unprecedented security detail
comprising more than 20,000 police. No immediate disturbances were
reported.

The past two years, bomb blasts blamed on rebel Chechen separatists
have disturbed Victory Day celebrations in Chechnya. Last year,
Moscow-backed Chechen President Akhmad Kadyrov was killed in a bomb
blast in a stadium in the capital, Grozny, as he reviewed a similar
military parade.
Snuffysmith
Ivory Coast Foes Fail to Agree on Disarmament Timetable

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D5D063:2F72C9D

Military leaders of Ivory Coast's rebel New Forces and top-level
officers from the Ivorian army promise to continue discussions on
disarmament next week Representatives of the opposing sides in Ivory
Coast's civil war have failed to come to an agreement on a timetable
for disarmament following five days of talks. Rebels say important
details still need to be finalized.

Military leaders of Ivory Coast's rebel New Forces and top-level
officers from the Ivorian army left the talks in the administrative
capital, Yamoussoukro, late Saturday, promising to continue
discussions on disarmament next week.

Both sides agreed to restart discussions on disarmament as part of a
new South African-brokered peace deal, aimed at ending hostilities and
preparing the country for elections scheduled for October.

The two warring factions had been expected to decide on whether to
accept a proposal to begin handing in weapons on May 14.

A spokesman for the National Committee for Disarmament, Demobilization
and Reinsertion, Alain Donwahi, said Saturday that, although no
agreement on a timetable was reached, discussions were positive and,
in his words, 90 percent of the work was done. He said he expected a
start date for the process to be finalized when talks resume Friday.

Under the terms of disarmament agreed to in past peace treaties,
rebels and pro-government militias would turn in weapons. Soldiers
recruited by the Ivorian army since the beginning of the civil war in
late 2002 would be demobilized. And, former government soldiers now
serving with the New Forces would be reinserted in the Ivorian army.

Ivorian military officials say they will not comment until final talks
are competed. But a spokesman for the New Forces, Cisse Sindou, says
he thinks both sides are now committed to ending the war, but there
are still important details that need to be worked out. One of them,
he says, is how to pay for the process.

"The only key question is not even dependent on the two forces," said
Mr. Sindou. "It depends some on the actions of the prime minister.
Some of it depends on the national commission, which is supposed to be
going and finding out where the money is."

Mr. Sindou says, though the problem of dismantling pro-government
militias has yet to be dealt with, the rebels remain dedicated to
going through with disarmament. But, he says, whether the process
succeeds or fails is still largely up to Ivory Coast President Laurent
Gbagbo.

At the request of South African President Thabo Mbeki, President
Gbagbo agreed last month to use his constitutional power of decree to
allow the candidacy of his chief rival, popular northern opposition
leader Alassane Ouattara, whose status had been in doubt due to a
controversial nationality requirement.

But Mr. Sindou says, Mr. Gbagbo's decision to continue to use the
special power, granted under constitutional Article 48, is blocking
the way for peace.

"If the Article 48 is still the way it is, it's very sure there will
not be elections, and maybe we will not disarm. But we think that
everybody is conscious of that. This is not our job. This is President
Thabo Mbeki's job, and the prime minister's job."

Efforts to launch the disarmament process under previous peace deals
have failed, largely due to mutual distrust.

Last month, in a show of good faith, rebels and loyalist forces began
pulling heavy weaponry back from the edges of a U.N.-patrolled buffer
zone that divides Ivory Coast between a rebel-held north and
government-controlled south.
Snuffysmith
Central African Republic Reports Smooth Presidential Run-Off Elections

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D5D064:2F72C9D

Voters are choosing between presidential candidates Martin Ziguele and
incumbent Francois Bozize, as well as 87 members of the national
assembly

Francois Bozize who presides over the Central Africa Republic, casts
his vote in BanguiIn the Central African Republic, people lined up
early Sunday to vote in the second round of presidential and
legislative elections. Poll monitors say the voting was smooth and
fair. Results are not expected for several days.

Voters are choosing between presidential candidates Martin Ziguele and
incumbent Francois Bozize, as well as 87 members of the national
assembly, who failed to gain more than 50 percent of the vote in the
first round.

A local journalist, Maka Gbosso Koto, who was at a voting center in
the Galadaja district of CAR's capital, Bangui, said he believes the
elections are open, and says the atmosphere is not at all tense.

Mr. Koto says people are voting very quickly, and the second round of
elections was well organized.

Security forces were visible on the streets, but keeping a low
profile.

An election monitor for presidential candidate Martin Ziguele, Manuel
Bonbetouma, said that turnout is not as high as the first round.

Speaking from a voting center in Galadaja, Mr. Bonbetouma said that,
the voting has been smooth. He said he believes his candidate, Mr.
Ziguele, has a good chance of winning.

A former prime minister, Mr. Ziguele won 23 percent of the vote in the
first round of voting in March, while incumbent Francois Bozize led
with 43 percent. Sunday's elections are set to end two years of
military rule under Mr. Bozize, a former army general who came to
power in a coup in 2003.

Mr. Bozize, who cast his vote Sunday morning, accompanied by his wife,
said democracy has been restored in his country, and called the
elections a unique occasion.

Many hope that fair elections will help stabilize the mineral rich,
but poor country, which has had multiple coups since independence.

Over 300 national and international election monitors are in the
country to observe the second round of elections. The opposition said
voting and vote-counting in the first round was marred by fraud.
Snuffysmith
US Official Pledges New Tsunami Aid for Aceh

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D5D065:2F72C9D

US signs a pledge to rebuild a vital road, which will cost
approximately $240 million

Robert Zoellick U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick has
visited the Indonesian province of Aceh, where more than 165,000
people lost their lives and 600,000 were made homeless in last
December's earthquake and tsunami. Mr. Zoellick unveiled another huge
U.S.-funded aid project, to add to the help the United States has
already provided for the victims of the disaster.

The United States has been among the leading providers of assistance
to the hundreds of thousands of survivors of the Indian Ocean
earthquake and tsunami, and in Indonesia Sunday, Deputy Secretary of
State Robert Zoellick vowed to continue the help.

He signed a pledge to rebuild the vital road that runs along the
northwestern coast of Indonesia's Sumatra Island, a project the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers estimates will cost in the region of $240
million.

The project is just part of the $1 billion in public and private funds
pledged by the United States for the worst-hit countries around the
Indian Ocean. Aceh, which accounts for more than half the total
tsunami dead, will get the bulk of those funds.

But there have been concerns about money being lost to Indonesia's
endemic corruption. In meetings over the past two days, including a
visit with Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, officials
have sought to reassure Mr. Zoellick, pointing out the extensive
measures they have put in place to ensure accountability.

Mr. Zoellick says the world is watching.

"I certainly have a sense the Indonesian government is highly
sensitive to the fact that the eyes of the world will be on it. The
money needs to be well spent," he said.

More than four months after the original 9.1 magnitude earthquake and
tsunami hit, Aceh is starting to rebuild.

The road the United States has promised to repair will be a lifeline
for many of the hardest-hit villages in Aceh, which are currently
being supplied by boat and helicopter.
Snuffysmith
Lessons Not Learned: Problems with Western Aid for Law Reform in Postcommunist Countries
Carnegie Paper # 57

Summary

The fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 and the subsequent breakup of the Soviet Union presented an unparalleled opportunity for fundamental political and economic change in more than two dozen countries. As postcommunist countries sought to attain the economic development of their Western neighbors, it became clear that the existing framework of laws and institutions would not support the desired growth. Reformers and development experts soon identified a panoply of gaps and shortcomings in financial resources, human resources, and organizational capacity, all of which appeared ripe for outside assistance.

About the Author

Wade Channell is an independent consultant specializing in legal reform and economic development issues in developing and transition countries. Since graduating from Southern Methodist University Law School in 1985, he has lived in Eastern Europe, Western Europe, Latin America, Africa, and the United States, and has worked in more than thirty-five countries. He is currently based in Brussels.
Snuffysmith
It's OK to Scold the Backslider
Los Angeles Times, May 9, 2005
McFaul writes that Bush must praise the region's emerging democracies but spank Putin (in private)

Before George W. Bush touches down in Moscow this week, he should reread his second inaugural address. In that speech, Bush made clear that advancing freedom and liberty around the world is going to be the foreign policy focus of his second term. His legacy in foreign affairs will now be defined by his success in advancing democracy. Russia presents the greatest challenge.

Lots of ruthless dictators have remained in power during Bush's tenure, but they were in power before Bush came to the White House. Russia is the only major country in the world that has, during Bush's time in office, moved from "partly free" to "not free" (as determined by Freedom House, the leading institution in the democracy assessment business). Vladimir V. Putin is also one of the few leaders in the world with whom Bush has developed a close relationship. If Russian democracy completely breaks down while Bush is still in office, Bush's decision to invest so much time and energy in Putin will look like a strategic mistake.

The prospects for democratic renewal inside Russia do not look encouraging for the remainder of Bush's second term. Boris N. Yeltsin did not leave Putin with a democratic system of government. And since becoming president in 2000, Putin has done little to strengthen democracy and much to weaken it. He has undermined the autonomy of every political institution in Russia except one. The Federation Council and the State Duma (Russia's two houses of parliament) are weaker today than they were four years ago. So are independent media, regional governors, the prime minister's office, independent political parties and civil society. The presidency is now the only meaningful center of decision-making in the country.

Under Putin, this centralization of power may have helped advance economic reform and helped restore the state (though even this cause-and-effect relationship is debatable). But a leader could also use this centralized regime to pursue an anti-reform agenda or create a repressive dictatorship. The struggle to replace Putin in 2008 has already begun, and none of the likely scenarios look promising for democracy.

Putin's currently favored successor, Defense Minister Sergei B. Ivanov, has demonstrated little proclivity for advancing the democratic cause. And many Russian election experts believe that Ivanov can win only through a fraudulent vote.

In a truly competitive election, however, a nationalist-socialist coalition is likely to produce a more popular candidate than anyone put forth from Russia's democratic movement.

In a third scenario, Putin supporters would amend the constitution, allowing their candidate to run for a third term. Or they'd give the prime minister's office more power, and Putin would assume the post.

One of these scenarios will unfold on Bush's watch. None will bolster Bush's legacy. Nor does Bush have any good tools in his diplomatic arsenal to alter Russia's political trajectory. Putin is too popular and Russia is too big for external actors to play more than a marginal role in influencing internal developments.

At the same time, Bush cannot ignore Russia's democratic backsliding and must instead use his remaining meetings with Putin, including their meeting in Moscow on Monday, to discourage his friend in the Kremlin from making Russia even more autocratic. Bush alone cannot bring back Russian independent television, reverse the carnage in Chechnya or roll back Putin's decision to appoint governors. But he can make clear that the future of Russian democracy will be a central issue in U.S.-Russian relations for the remainder of his term.

The 60th anniversary of the end of what the Russians call the Great Patriotic War (and what we call World War II) is not the time to lecture Putin publicly about his democratic deficits. At the same time, Bush can signal his commitment to assisting democratic development in Russia in several, more subtle ways.

In private meetings with Putin, Bush must make clear that a democratic transfer of presidential power in 2008 is a precondition for cooperative relations with the United States and for Russia's continued membership in the G8 group of industrialized nations.

To demonstrate his commitment to a free and fair election in 2008, Putin must state publicly that he will allow domestic and international monitors to observe the vote, that he will not limit the opposition's access to national television (including the ability to buy ads on the state-run channels) and that his government will not harass or jail business people who contribute to opposition candidates.

Bush must also tell Russia's democrats that he is committed to their cause. Bush has pledged his support to democrats in Iran. Why not do the same to democrats in Russia? He can bolster the meaning of these words by meeting directly and often with Russian human rights activists, civic leaders and business people.

And the Bush administration has to speak with one voice. When unnamed "senior officials" speak on background to journalists, they contend that pushing Putin toward democracy is a lower priority than winning his cooperation on Iran and North Korea, and some White House aides suggest that Russia's backsliding on democracy is less dramatic than it seems.

Bush must end these mixed messages and his administration also must work harder to get our Europeans allies on message as well. Putin has successfully cultivated relationships with his counterparts in France, Germany and Britain, undercutting what should be a united Western opposition to Russia's democratic backsliding. In addition, the Bush administration must reconfigure its foreign aid package to Russia to give greater support to those activities and organizations dedicated to making Russia's 2007 parliamentary election and 2008 presidential election free and fair.

In Serbia in 2000, Georgia in 2003 and Ukraine in 2004, monitoring organizations carried out exit polls and parallel vote tabulations that proved critical to exposing voter fraud. Similar technologies and organizations must be developed in Russia. Finally, Bush must sustain what his visit to Georgia on Tuesday will begin: a show of moral and economic support for the countries in the region that have recently experienced democratic breakthroughs.

The project of building democracy is far from over in either Georgia or Ukraine. In contrast to Russia, however, leaders in both of these countries want to work with the United States to consolidate their democratic gains. Assisting them in this must be Bush's priority.

The failure of democracy in Georgia or Ukraine will bolster anti-democratic groups inside Russia, while success will aid Russia's democratic forces.

Getting serious about Russian democracy does not mean isolating or containing Russia. Nor does a new strategy for promoting Russian democracy mean that other issues in U.S.-Russian relations need to be neglected. During the Cold War, U.S. presidents worked toward arms control with their Soviet counterparts and promoted freedom within the communist world at the same time.

Bush can work with Putin to fight terror and prevent proliferation of weapons of mass destruction while seeking to foster democracy in Russia. There need not be tradeoffs or linkage between these agendas. But let's be clear. The Russian president has worked with the United States in the war on terrorism or international nonproliferation efforts only when he thought that cooperation advanced Russian national interests, and never to do Bush a favor. Less talk about democracy is not going to make Putin more eager to cooperate on Iran or North Korea.

Even if Bush fails to help the cause of Russian democracy, he should at least signal clearly and boldly whose side he is on. At least then, when historians assess his legacy, they will give him credit for trying.

Michael McFaul is a Hoover fellow and political science professor at Stanford University, and a nonresident associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. With James Goldgeier, his latest book is "Power and Purpose: U.S. Policy Toward Russia After the Cold War."
Snuffysmith
The NPT at 35: A Crisis of Compliance or a Crisis of Confidence?

The international system to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons is based on a basic premise: increasing the number of countries in possession of nuclear weapons will directly increase the risk that such weapons will be used. Thus, the vast majority of countries in the world—over 180 of them—have pledged not to acquire nuclear weapons and to allow inspections to ensure their nuclear assets are used only for peaceful purposes. This regime, which also includes five acknowledged nuclear weapon states, is further premised on the pledge that those five countries will work to lower the nuclear threat and that they are unequivocally committed to nuclear disarmament. Thus, the regime, and the treaty at its heart—the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT)—rests on three equally important pillars: nonproliferation, disarmament, and the right to peacefully use nuclear technology.

This piece was originally published as a policy brief by the United Nations Association of the United States of America(UNA-USA).



Introduction


The international system to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons is based on a basic premise: increasing the number of countries in possession of nuclear weapons will directly increase the risk that such weapons will be used. Thus, the vast majority of countries in the world—over 180 of them—have pledged not to acquire nuclear weapons and to allow inspections to ensure their nuclear assets are used only for peaceful purposes. This regime, which also includes five acknowledged nuclear weapon states, is further premised on the pledge that those five countries will work to lower the nuclear threat and that they are unequivocally committed to nuclear disarmament. Thus, the regime, and the treaty at its heart—the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT)—rests on three equally important pillars: nonproliferation, disarmament, and the right to peacefully use nuclear technology.



These pillars held in heavy weather for over three decades, but are now starting to show signs of age. 35 years after its entry into force, the NPT is about to be reviewed for the seventh time. One would think, with the end of the cold war, the global war against terrorism, and the high level of attention paid to proliferation, that the Treaty members would be poised to reaffirm the NPT’s vital importance and take action to enhance it for the years ahead. Yet, it is now clear that the Treaty is in crisis and the three-week long review conference slated to begin May 2 could be the most contentious in history.



US officials have repeatedly stated that the NPT is facing a crisis of compliance. From Washington’s perspective treaty violations by Iran and North Korea, and the unwillingness of other states to punish those cases of non-compliance has put the treaty at risk. For their part, many non-nuclear weapon states believe that the nuclear states have not complied with their commitments to disarmament. They think that the US and other countries working to modernize their nuclear arsenals are not, and have never been, serious about full nuclear disarmament. Thus, the real challenge to the nonproliferation system is not only the crisis of compliance with the treaty, but also the crisis of confidence in it.


“Cornerstone of Global Security”


Over time, the NPT has proven its worth. In 1960, John F. Kennedy famously prophesied a world with some twenty nuclear nations by the mid 1970s. Yet today, more than 60 years after the invention of nuclear weapons, only eight states have the bomb. More than a little credit should be given to the NPT for this state of affairs. Thus far, it has lived up to its promise and has enhanced the security of all nations. It remains the most widely subscribed security treaty in world history and the only legal document committing states to nuclear disarmament.



Since the treaty came into force, more nations have given up nuclear weapon programs than have begun them. In fact, four states, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Ukraine and South Africa, have given up possession of actual nuclear weapons altogether. In 1970, the treaty had 64 member-states, and only 3 of the 5 nuclear-weapon states were members. Since then, both France and China have signed on, along with 122 other nations, giving the NPT 188 member-states. Only three, Israel, India, and Pakistan, have refused to join.



During this same period, only one member-state, North Korea, has successfully evaded the controls of the NPT and emerged as a nuclear capable state. Pyongyang spent decades developing a nuclear weapons program and, after a confrontation with Bush administration officials in late 2002, announced that it was no longer bound by its NPT obligations.

Yet despite its progress, the most controversial aspect of the NPT remains in the area of disarmament. Even here, however, much progress has been made in the past 35 years. In 1970, the United States and the Soviet Union had a combined nuclear arsenal of nearly 38,000 nuclear warheads. In 1985, the combined total was, incredibly, over 62,000 warheads. Today, after years of arms limitation and arms reduction treaties, as called for under Article VI of the NPT, that total has been reduced to roughly 26,000 warheads. While one can debate whether this rate of reduction is sufficient given the currently benign state of American-Russian security relations, it is clear that the disarmament pillar of the NPT can be proud of its record. The concern today is that the trend toward nuclear reductions may be soon reversed, as states including the United States and Russia look to nuclear weapons as increasingly viable tools for military missions beyond strict deterrence.



The NPT reached a pinnacle in 1995 when all of its member-states agreed that the Treaty should remain in force indefinitely. While not everyone concurred on what steps needed to be taken moving forward, all recognized the fundamental strength of the treaty—that everyone is far better off with it than without it. Sustaining this faith in the treaty must be a fundamental objective in the years ahead. The NPT will enjoy continued success only as long as all member-states buy into the notion that it makes them more secure.


The “Twin Crises of Compliance”


The world has changed dramatically since 1995, and the NPT has been dealt a series of six body blows, each of which presents new challenges and new opportunities for the international community.



The first major blow came, ironically, from outside the treaty. In 1998, India and Pakistan engaged in dueling nuclear tests, marking the first time ever that anyone besides the five nuclear powers overtly tested a nuclear weapon. This tremor shook the nonproliferation regime, but was certainly not enough to topple it, and the NPT member-states came together in 2000 to not only rebuke India and Pakistan but also to break new ground in their commitments to the treaty.



The second and third blows were delivered in quick sequence in late 2002. First, in October the United States confronted North Korea, claiming that Pyongyang had broken the terms of their agreement by pursuing a clandestine program to produce highly enriched uranium for nuclear bombs. North Korea reacted with hostility, eventually delivering the most powerful shock to the treaty by announcing its controversial withdrawal in January 2003.



Shortly after the war of words broke out between Washington and Pyongyang, it was revealed that Iran was also pursuing clandestine uranium enrichment and plutonium reprocessing programs. Though the mullahs in Tehran claimed their efforts were within their Article IV rights to use nuclear technology for research and power generation, Iran had violated the treaty by hiding its program. Many fret that in the coming years the treaty will allow Iran to come to the brink of a nuclear weapon capability, at which point Tehran would withdraw and declare itself a nuclear power a la North Korea.



The fourth major hit absorbed by the NPT came veiled in the success of Libya’s disarmament. It was not until Libya renounced its nuclear weapons program in December 2003, opening all of its facilities to international inspection, that the black market proliferation network of A.Q. Khan was brought to light. Khan employed a number of contacts and front companies in more than a half dozen countries to illegally sell massive amounts of nuclear technology. This non-state challenge is an entirely new one for the treaty. It is unique to the “globalization era,” and it will be difficult to tackle.



The same factors that facilitated Khan’s proliferation have fueled a much more overt challenge to the NPT: the diffusion of nuclear technology. Ironically, this threat is also a product of the treaty’s success. The treaty’s mandate to spread peaceful nuclear technology has led to a world in which thirty-five or forty countries have the know-how to develop nuclear weapons. All that is stopping them is political will. In the words of IAEA Director-General Mohammed ElBaradei, “The margin of security in the current non-proliferation regime is becoming too close for comfort.” This diffusion of the knowledge and materials needed to build nuclear bombs is particularly concerning in an era where nuclear terrorism has been consistently identified as the primary threat to both national and global security.



The final challenge to the NPT comes from an entirely different source: the nuclear-weapon states. While it is true that nuclear arsenals are vastly reduced from even fifteen years ago, there is great concern that the nuclear-weapon states have not taken their obligation to disarm seriously enough. For example, the United States is currently pursuing new types of nuclear weapons, hopes to shorten the time necessary to resume nuclear testing, and has espoused a new policy that envisions nuclear first-use in certain situations. According to NPT expert Rebecca Johnson, “When one of the nuclear club is regarded by others as going too far towards taking the disarmament obligations seriously, it is viewed as breaking ranks.”


Review Conference 2005: The Need for Universal Compliance


While often tumultuous, previous NPT Review Conferences have enjoyed varying degrees of success. In the context of the upcoming debate, it is important to note that the most successful sessions have been products of balance—balance in addressing all three pillars of the treaty: nonproliferation, peaceful sharing of nuclear technology, and disarmament. The treaty has emerged strongest when all states have acknowledged the challenges to all three pillars and have made difficult compromises to address each of those challenges. As the President of this year’s Review Conference, Sergio Duarte of Brazil, has stated, we cannot “give exclusive weight to one of the elements to the detriment of the others.” Sometimes that strengthening has come in the form of a final consensus document as in 2000. Other times, it has come as a statement of principles and objectives as in 1995 at what is considered the most successful NPT Review Conference ever.



The debate in New York will inevitably be framed by the three pillars, and will center around the six blows recently absorbed by the treaty, with the delegates searching for agreement on ways in which those challenges can be addressed. The most important development will be to what extent the member-states recognize that Universal Compliance and a balance of obligations must drive their thinking.



Nonproliferation. The United States, and its fellow nuclear-weapon states, will likely harp on the need for strengthened compliance with the treaty’s nonproliferation obligations. Focusing on cases such as North Korea and Iran, the United States will emphasize the threat that nuclear “rogues” pose to international security. They will attempt to demonstrate that the only true challenge to the NPT is that posed by these bad regimes. To a certain degree, their argument is valid. The challenges posed by North Korea and Iran have illuminated the need for two significant reforms to the NPT. There is support for both of these measures, and they can and should be taken at the Review Conference in May.



Article X Reform. North Korea successfully hid its nuclear weapons program and then became the first member to ever withdraw from the treaty in early 2003. To this point, the international response to these actions, highlighted by the six-party talks, has been woefully inadequate. The fact that North Korea could withdraw from the treaty without major consequences must be addressed.



To respond to this challenge, there must be a strong push to enhance Article X of the treaty, which allows for withdrawal in the case that “extraordinary events” threaten a country’s “supreme interests.” The international community must make clear that no state will be permitted to get off scot-free if it withdraws from the treaty and declares itself a nuclear power. To accomplish this, the Review Conference can and should build on French and German proposals by calling for the UN Security Council to pass a resolution clarifying the NPT withdrawal process. This resolution would demand that any party attempting to withdraw explain precisely what “extraordinary events” led to its withdrawal. It would also hold that state responsible for any violations committed while it was a party to the NPT, and it would prohibit the withdrawing party from using any materials, equipment, facilities, or technology acquired under the NPT. If the withdrawing state proves unwilling to comply with these demands, the international community in general, and the nuclear-supplier states in particular, would have a very strong legal basis for military action to force compliance, if necessary. Such international solidarity would, in turn, improve the likelihood of succeeding in disarmament negotiations before any military action became necessary.



The Additional Protocol Standard. In the fall of 2002, the international community learned that, while they were fixated on Russia’s overt nuclear commerce with Iran, the mullahs had been covertly procuring nuclear technology from the network of Pakistani scientist A.Q. Khan. Over time, however, the IAEA has successfully uncovered large portions of Iran’s formerly illicit program. Though we cannot yet be sure that all of Iran’s activities have been brought to light, it is clear from the words of IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei that the Additional Protocol has been an essential tool in this process so far. “If a country wants to proliferate, it will most likely go underground, meaning undeclared…The undeclared, of course is usually an easier route and that’s where the [Additional] protocol is a key.” Beyond Iran, the Additional Protocol has been important in Libya, as well as in revealing small-scale clandestine activities in South Korea and Egypt.



As a policy measure, therefore, the United States should follow up on earlier public statements and push for the universal acceptance of the Additional Protocol. If the Additional Protocol became the standard for international inspections, the IAEA would have a much easier time both identifying violators and deterring other states from pursuing illicit nuclear weapons programs.



The Dangers of Being Unbalanced. If the 2004 preparatory session for this year’s conference is any indicator, however, this US emphasis on nonproliferation may be accompanied by downplaying the disarmament pillar. As then-Undersecretary of State John Bolton stated in the spring of 2004, “We cannot divert attention away from violations we face by focusing on Article VI issues that do not exist.” Though there will be widespread support for both empowering the IAEA with the Additional Protocol and clarifying the NPT withdrawal process, this lack of balance on the part of the United States may lead some to attempt to frustrate what they see as Washington’s discriminatory aims.



Peaceful Access to Nuclear Technology. Though lack of balance may hinder some nonproliferation objectives, it could really haunt the conference when the delegates take up proposals to limit access to uranium enrichment and plutonium reprocessing facilities, which could be used to produce bombs. Of real concern is that countries might work to cynically misuse the NPT to obtain the very technologies and facilities needed to produce nuclear weapons and then withdraw from the treaty ready to go nuclear. These concerns are as old as the NPT itself, and every two decades, it seems the international community tries and fails to make progress on this risk. Yet now, with the looming spread of uranium enrichment and plutonium reprocessing technologies to more and more countries, the ability of countries to acquire and malevolently manipulate nuclear facilities raises more questions than ever before.



Iran is the main test case. Having hidden major portions of its nuclear program for 18 years, Iran is now within a few months or years of obtaining a fully operational uranium enrichment capability. Having acquired it clandestinely, and given the instability of its region, there is more than a little concern that Iran is not committed to its non-nuclear status. Yet there is nothing in the NPT per se that gives countries the right to deny Iran access to enrichment, even if it has cheated previously on the treaty.



Thus, a number of proposals have been put forward that would build additional stability into the Treaty regime. On February 11, 2004, President Bush called on all countries that did not possess enrichment or reprocessing facilities to refrain from developing them in exchange for guaranteed access to fuel services for reactors. IAEA Director General ElBaradei has called for a five-year moratorium on construction and operation of all such plants, regardless of which countries own and operate them. This would give the international community time to look at international management options for proliferation-sensitive facilities. While most states understand that these issues are too complex to be resolved at the NPT Review Conference, many are interested in discussing the options, and hope that some momentum for international dialogue and future action can be created at the Conference.



Disarmament. With the nuclear powers focused exclusively on nonproliferation and limiting others’ access to a closed nuclear fuel cycle, many of the non-nuclear weapon states will try to balance the debate by emphasizing disarmament. Though often treated as a “second-class commitment” by the nuclear powers, disarmament is central to the NPT. It is one of only two concessions made by the nuclear powers to entice the non-nuclear states to remain faithful to their nonproliferation commitments. Now, with much desire among some to change the rules regarding nonproliferation and access to peaceful nuclear technology, there will be even greater desire for major disarmament commitments from the nuclear-weapon states.



The Thirteen Steps. The 2000 Review Conference has rightly been remembered for the difficult compromise made by the New Agenda Coalition, a group of non-nuclear countries friendly with the United States, and the nuclear-weapon states. Under their leadership the entire conference agreed to thirteen concrete and pragmatic steps towards disarmament. These steps included early entry into force of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), a moratorium on all nuclear explosions, conclusion within five years of a verifiable treaty to ban the production of fissile material for nuclear weapons, and an “unequivocal commitment” by the nuclear-weapon states to full nuclear disarmament.



Since the 2000 Review Conference, however, the nuclear-weapon states, most noticeably the United States and France, have attempted to downplay the importance of the 13 Steps, warning that they are unlikely to be re-affirmed at the 2005 Review Conference. This approach is both unnecessary and counterproductive. Lack of flexibility on the 13 Steps has the potential to bring the conference to a standstill.



Though the Bush administration contends that the 13 Steps are a relic of the past, which no longer apply in the post-9/11 world, only one of these steps has actually been rendered obsolete. The true problem with the twelve still-relevant steps is that they are in conflict with some Bush administration policy priorities, such as the desire to shorten the time required for nuclear testing, opposition to a verifiable treaty to end the production of fissile material for nuclear weapons, opposition to the CTBT, and the hope of developing new “bunker busting” nuclear weapons.



For its nonproliferation objectives to be met, however, it would be prudent for the Bush administration to swallow its pride and comply with its solemn agreements by either re-affirming the twelve still-relevant steps or re-negotiating an equivalent set of steps towards nuclear disarmament. The agreement to the 13 Steps in 2000 was a major political achievement and the failure to re-affirm or re-negotiate in 2005 would have major political consequences.



Beyond the 13 Steps, the rest of the disarmament debate will likely center around the three black sheep of the nonproliferation regime: Israel, India, and Pakistan. Calls for each of these states to disarm and join the NPT as non-nuclear members will almost certainly be futile and go unheeded.



Towards a Strengthened NPT


Though it would be naïve to expect the Review Conference to produce a consensus document that solves all of the treaty’s problems, it is not outside the realm of possibility that the conference will adjourn with a fortified NPT and an international community energized to make the world safe from nuclear weapons.



In order to achieve this objective, however, the delegates will have to embrace the idea of Universal Compliance and accept a balance of obligations. This means that both nuclear- and non-nuclear weapon states must acknowledge that they have important obligations to fulfill under the treaty. Only this approach can address both the crisis of compliance and the crisis of confidence. It would also correct the impression that the nuclear-weapon states get more out of the nonproliferation regime than do their non-nuclear counterparts. Over 98% of the world’s nations have embraced the Non-Proliferation Treaty because they believe that it enhances their security. To sustain and strengthen the NPT, the “advantaged” nuclear-weapon states must ensure that the other 183 member-states see the treaty as fundamentally beneficial and fair.



Though it does not seem overly likely, with the Universal Compliance approach, the NPT Review Conference could bolster a regime that is very much in need of bolstering. The NPT must not lose its hard-won mantle of “most successful treaty every devised.” With a sustained and strengthened NPT, brighter days could still lie ahead.



Joshua Williams and Jon B. Wolfsthal work on nonproliferation issues at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, DC. Wolfsthal is the co-author of Deadly Arsenals: Tracking Weapons of Mass Destruction and Universal Compliance: A Strategy for Nuclear Security.



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[1]Since the NPT came into force the following states have given up nuclear weapons or nuclear weapons programs, or ceased consideration of pursuing a nuclear weapons program: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Egypt, Italy, Japan, Libya, Norway, Romania, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, West Germany, and Yugoslavia.

[2]Mohamed ElBaradei, “Preserving the Non-Proliferation Treaty,” Disarmament Forum, No. 4, 2004, p. 5.

[3]Ibid., 5.

[4]Rebecca Johnson, “Is the NPT Up to the Challenge of Proliferation?” Disarmament Forum, No. 4, 2004, p. 13.

[5]Interview with Sergio Duarte, “Walking the Nonproliferation Tightrope,” Arms Control Today, December 2004. Available at http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2004_12/Duarte_ACTversion.asp Site visited 4/27/05.

[6]Interview with Mohamed ElBaradei, “Tackling the Nuclear Dilemma,” Arms Control Today, March 2005. Available at http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2005_03/ElBaradei.asp Site visited 4/27/05.

[7]Statement by US Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security John R. Bolton, “The NPT: A Crisis of Non-Compliance,” before the 3rd Session of the Preparatory Committee for the 2005 NPT Review Conference. Available at http://www.un.int/usa/04_063.htm. Site visited 4/27/05.

[8]Johnson, 17.
Snuffysmith
Need for Nuclear Consensus
Proliferation Brief, Volume 8, Number 4

The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) has united the world against the spread of nuclear weapons for 35 years and has permitted only one defector - North Korea.

Today, this important security system is mired in such discord that it is in danger of crumbling. As envoys from around the world meet this month in New York to review the NPT, North Korea is ratcheting up the pressure with a militarily meaningless but politically pointed missile test. Iran enters the meeting with threats to end its suspension of uranium enrichment, a process that can make fuel for nuclear reactors but also for bombs.

There are still 25,000 nuclear weapons in the world, some poorly guarded. The United States must respond. Its leadership is essential to bolster the nuclear security systems. A diplomatic food fight at a meeting about the NPT in New York would only doom efforts to meet these 21st century challenges, the most frightening of which is a potentially nuclear al-Qaida.

There is just one problem. Rather than leading, Washington is throwing as much food as anyone.

U.S. officials bang the drum loudly over North Korea's nuclear brinkmanship and Iran's 18 years of covert nuclear efforts, believing that the only challenge to the nonproliferation system is one of others' compliance.

Many of the 183 non-nuclear weapon states disagree. They believe that the main problem lies with the five nuclear powers (the United States, Russia, China, France and Britain) not living up to their side of the NPT bargain - to work toward eliminating their nuclear arsenals as long as the non-nuclear weapon states do not develop their own nukes. This complaint has grown especially loud as the Bush administration forges ahead with efforts to develop new nuclear weapons and plans to maintain an arsenal of about 5,000 warheads indefinitely.

Such conflict has been resolved before and can be resolved again. The last NPT Review Conference in 2000 was salvaged because of a hard-fought political compromise. Dropping righteous but unrealistic calls for immediate nuclear disarmament, nuclear "have-nots" such as Brazil, Egypt, South Africa and Sweden found middle ground with the five nuclear powers. Together, they agreed to 13 pragmatic steps for reducing and eliminating nuclear weapons.

They include an end to all nuclear test explosions, a diminished role for nuclear weapons in security policy, ending production of nuclear weapons material and reaffirmation of the goal of nuclear disarmament. The pact proved that each side was willing to make concessions and acknowledge the importance of the other's priorities. These steps still make sense. Only one - the pledge to abide by the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty - is now obsolete because the United States abrogated the pact in 2002.

Today, the United States (with the tacit support of the other nuclear powers) is threatening to reopen and even widen the dangerous breach that was broached in 2000 by walking away from this agreement, effectively ignoring its side of the NPT bargain. Worse, as the United States vocally rejects its past commitments, it has not produced an alternative.

This strategy will not work. As British Prime Minister Tony Blair said in January, "If the United States wants the rest of the world to be part of the agenda it has set, it must be part of their agenda, too."

Washington can do this by defying expectations and complying with its solemn agreements. It can and should reaffirm the 12 still-relevant steps or negotiate a new consensus agreement. This could garner other nations' support for making withdrawal from the treaty more difficult and for stopping countries from getting nuclear technology for peaceful purposes, then leaving the treaty and using them to build weapons. Others could support President Bush's proposal for making tough, new inspections procedures mandatory for all nations using nuclear technology. All could agree to do more to secure nuclear materials from terrorists.

Consensus on these and other common-sense measures is within reach. It is worth a serious, high-level effort. If we give a little, we can get a lot more. Nothing less than the U.S. nonproliferation agenda and the security of the American people is at stake.

Joseph Cirincione is the Director for Non-Proliferation and Joshua Williams is a Junior Fellow for Non-Proliferation at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. This piece first appeared in the Baltimore Sun.

For the latest proliferation news and resources, visit the Carnegie Proliferation News website, www.ProliferationNews.org.
Snuffysmith
Liberty, and other prickly themes
Despite shows of unity, a creeping sense of diverging visions emerged
during Bush and Putin's symbolic meeting. By Howard LaFranchi
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0510/p01s01-usfp.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Kabul's must-see TV heats up culture war in Afghanistan
Tolo TV is a lightning rod for Afghan critics who see the station as a
threat to the country's Islamic values. By Ben Arnoldy
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0510/p01s03-wosc.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
A tougher UN starts taming Congo
Weapons are flowing into disarmament centers, thanks to a United
Nations force led by troops from Pakistan. By Duncan Woodside
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0510/p06s01-woaf.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Colombian villagers want own peace deal
Local officials will try to get leftist rebels to remove land mines. Is
this a model? By Rachel Van Dongen
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0510/p06s02-woam.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Russia's Half-Truth
It still only tells the glory side of its WWII story. But its future
depends on an honest review. The Monitor's View
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0510/p08s03-comv.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
12 rebels killed in operation in eastern Afghanistan :

About twelve rebels were killed in eastern Afghanistan when US Marines tracked down a group of insurgents there, coalition said on Monday.
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2005-05/...ent_2934914.htm

http://snipurl.com/erlh
Snuffysmith
2 US marines killed in Afghanistan :

Two U.S. Marines were killed May 8 northwest of Jalalabad, in Laghman Province, in an engagement with approximately 25 suspected Taliban.
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2005-05/...ent_2933723.htm

http://snipurl.com/erlj
Snuffysmith
Taliban official turned U.S. spy faces prosecution:

Zadran, 53, had avoided prison in a federal smuggling case by turning FBI informant. For three years, he offered intelligence on the Taliban's hierarchy and terrorist operations in Afghanistan even as he served as the regime's U.S. representative.
http://www.bradenton.com/mld/bradenton/new...al/11592391.htm

http://snipurl.com/erlk
Snuffysmith
Mr. Bush and the Riga axioms :

HISTORIANS OF the Cold War will not have missed the significance of President George W. Bush choosing Riga as the venue for his speech on Saturday repudiating the 1945 Yalta Agreement.
http://www.thehindu.com/2005/05/09/stories...50906171100.htm

http://snipurl.com/erll
Snuffysmith
US 'torpedoed Kursk nuclear sub':

A FORMER British military official has backed a sensational claim that the Russian nuclear submarine, the Kursk, was torpedoed by US forces in August 2000.
http://snipurl.com/erlm
Snuffysmith
Oil companies that don't pay taxes must leave Venezuela:

President Hugo Chavez said Sunday that foreign oil companies operating in Venezuela must pay taxes he insists they owe, or else leave the country.
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=...5638&sec=Latest

http://snipurl.com/erlq
Snuffysmith
Venezuela to probe oil firms for tax evasion:

Venezuelan lawmakers will investigate international oil companies which have been accused of evading taxes and other charges, said the president of the National Assembly.
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/business/3172707

http://snipurl.com/erlr
theglobalchinese
Nepal rebels attack military post, 30 killed Reuters AlertNet
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