Morning Briefing - May 30, 2019
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May 30, 2019

DIA Believes Russia Is ‘Probably’ Not Adhering To Nuclear Test Ban

By ExchangeMonitor

The Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) assesses Russia “probably is not adhering” fully to a multilateral prohibition on nuclear testing, the agency’s director said Wednesday.

Speaking at a Hudson Institute event, Lt. Gen. Robert Ashley Jr. argued Russia’s development of new nuclear warhead designs and overall stockpile management is enhanced by even low-yield nuclear testing.

“The United States believes that Russia probably is not adhering to the nuclear testing moratorium in a manner consistent with the zero-yield standard,” Ashley said. “Our understanding of nuclear weapon development leads us the believe Russia’s testing activities would help it improve its nuclear weapon capabilities. The United States, by contrast, has forgone such benefits by upholding a zero-yield standard.”

Pressed by the Wall St. Journal, which reported DIA’s assessment prior to Ashley’s address, the general would not say whether Mosocow has actually conducted a low-yield nuclear test at its subcritical testing facility at Novaya Zemlya. Ashley would say only that “I believe they have the capability to do that.”

Russia signed and ratified the 1996 Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), which aims to ban all nuclear explosive testing. The 184-nation treaty has not entered force, as eight nations including the United States have not ratified it. The U.S., however, voluntarily refrains from yield testing and performs only sub-critical tests — explosive plutonium experiments that lack even the low yield of so-called hydronuclear tests.

Arms control advocates on Wednesday roundly criticized Ashley’s assessment on Twitter, accusing the general of resurrecting old worries of Russian non-compliance to bolster the Donald Trump administration’s drive to replace current, bilateral nuclear-weapon treaties such as New START with multilateral deals that would limit Chinese nuclear weapon programs as well as Russian and American programs.

Lewis pointed to a 2012 study from the U.S. National Academies in which a panel including the former director of the Livermore National Laboratory and a former Stratcomm commander opined that “it is unlikely that hydronuclear tests would enable Russia to develop new strategic capabilities outside of its nuclear-explosion test experience.”

High up in the Senate GOP leadership, Sen. John Cornyn’s (R-Texas) press shop retweeted the Journal’s story without comment.

 

Exchange Monitor staff in Washington contributed to this story, which first appeared in WC Morning Briefing affiliate publication, Defense Daily.

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