ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:95092809.TXT DATE:09/28/95 TITLE:28-09-95 CLINTON DIRECTIVE AIMS TO FURTHER REDUCE NUCLEAR THREAT TEXT: (Text: White House statement) (450) Washington -- The United States will work with Russia and the other states of the former Soviet Union to "deepen our cooperation to reduce the risk of illicit transfers of nuclear weapons...to states or terrorists," the White House said September 28. Press Secretary Mike McCurry, in a written statement, said President Clinton has issued a directive calling for "concrete steps to deepen and accelerate our cooperation with the FSU to protect, control and account for nuclear materials; to continue our joint efforts to assure the security of nuclear weapons themselves; and to increase the integration of our diplomatic, law enforcement and intelligence efforts." Following is the text of the White House statement: (begin text) Today, the United States is taking another step to reduce the nuclear threat. The president has directed his administration to launch an accelerated plan to improve the security of nuclear materials. Working with Russia and the other states of the former Soviet Union, we will deepen out cooperation to reduce the risk of illicit transfers of nuclear weapons, fissile materials, and other dangerous nuclear and radioactive substances to states or terrorists. Even as the threat of nuclear war recedes, we must confront the urgent challenge of ensuring that nuclear weapons and materials do not fall into the wrong hands. For that reason, President Clinton has made the security of nuclear materials a matter of the highest priority. Already we have achieved an unprecedented level of direct cooperation among our governments. U.S. nuclear material security experts are now working closely with their counterparts at more than two dozen sites across the former Soviet Union to identify and remedy potential weaknesses in systems designed to protect nuclear materials. These efforts complement other initiatives to increase nuclear material security -- such as the shipment of highly-enriched uranium out of Kazakhstan for safekeeping under Operation Sapphire; the transfer of nuclear weapons from Ukraine to Russia for dismantlement; and the agreement with Russia under which 500 metric tons of highly-enriched uranium from nuclear warheads are already being converted to much safer low-enriched uranium fuel for electricity production in civilian nuclear reactors. The directive we are issuing today calls for concrete steps to deepen and accelerate our cooperation with the FSU to protect, control and account for nuclear materials; to continue our joint efforts to assure the security of nuclear weapons themselves; and to increase the integration of our diplomatic, law enforcement and intelligence efforts. Working together, we are reducing the nuclear danger we all face and making the lives of the American people, and people around the world, safer. (end text) NNNN