ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:95102304.TXT DATE:10/23/95 TITLE:23-10-95 CLINTON, YELTSIN ENDORSE EFFORTS ON NUCLEAR SECURITY TEXT: (Texts: Joint statement, fact sheet) (820) Hyde Park, New York -- President Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin October 23 underscored their "strong support for the efforts underway" in the United States and Russia to ensure the security of nuclear weapons. In a joint statement issued following their meeting at Hyde Park, the presidents "noted with satisfaction that bilateral and multilateral cooperation in these areas has grown rapidly over the past year and includes joint activities on law enforcement, customs, intelligence liaison and on-the-ground cooperation to improve nuclear materials security at ten sites, protecting tons of nuclear material." The presidents also endorsed "speedy implementation" of plans outlined by the Gore-Chernomyrdin Commission for bilateral cooperation in connection with the dismantlement of nuclear weapons and the storage of fissile material from dismantled weapons. Following are the texts of the joint statement and a White House fact sheet on nuclear materials security: (begin text joint statement) Presidents Clinton and Yeltsin noted the importance they attach to ensuring the security of nuclear weapons and nuclear materials, maintaining effective control over them, and combating illegal trafficking in nuclear materials. They underscored their strong support for the efforts underway in the Russian Federation and the United States to achieve these objectives, including the rapidly growing range of cooperative activities being pursued jointly by U.S. and Russian experts. The presidents noted with satisfaction that bilateral and multilateral cooperation in these areas has grown rapidly over the past year and includes joint activities on law enforcement, customs, intelligence liaison and on-the-ground cooperation to improve nuclear materials security at ten sites, protecting tons of nuclear material. The presidents also welcomed cooperative efforts to improve the security of nuclear weapons in transport or storage in connection with their dismantlement. The two presidents welcomed the joint report on steps that have been accomplished and additional steps that should be taken to ensure the security of nuclear materials, prepared by the Gore-Chernomyrdin Commission in implementation of the May 10 summit declaration on nonproliferation. This report outlines current and planned U.S.-Russian programs of bilateral cooperation that will result in broad improvements in nuclear materials security, including several important sites with weapons-usable nuclear material, increased security for nuclear weapons in connection with their dismantlement, and construction of a safe and secure long-term storage facility for fissile material from dismantled weapons. The presidents endorsed speedy implementation of these plans and directed that they be expanded and accelerated to the greatest extent possible. (end text joint statement) (begin text fact sheet) Following their meeting in Hyde Park, Presidents Clinton and Yeltsin issued a joint statement noting the importance they attach to ensuring the security of nuclear weapons and materials and welcoming the joint report they received from the Gore-Chernomyrdin Commission discussing how the United States and Russia can work together to strengthen security for nuclear material. This report follows up on the presidents' May 10 summit statement on nonproliferation. Joint cooperative efforts to bolster security and accounting for nuclear material made significant advances in Russia in 1995, including: -- expanding cooperation from a handful of facilities to more than a dozen, enhancing the safety and security of tons of nuclear material; -- creating a new material protection, control and accounting training center at Obninsk; -- improving national-level oversight of nuclear material security, including regulations, licensing and inspections; -- creating nuclear material protection, control and accounting systems at four facilities -- Elektrostal (a nuclear fuel plant), Arzamas-16 (a nuclear weapons laboratory), Kurchatov and Obninsk (nuclear research centers) -- to serve as models for such systems at other facilities; and -- accelerating direct cooperation between U.S. and Russian nuclear labs to improve nuclear materials security. For 1996, the United States and Russia have agreed to expand their cooperation as follows: -- expansion of intergovernmental cooperation to five of the largest civilian sites handling weapons-usable material in Russia, located in Dmitrovgrad, Obninsk, Podolsk, Mayak and Elektrostal; -- expansion of direct lab-to-lab cooperation to additional key facilities including labs at Chelyabinsk-70, Krasnoyarsk-26 and Sverdlovsk-44; -- further development of the Obninsk training facility; and -- additional training, technical assistance and equipment to improve Russia's national material control and accounting system. These projects will draw on the $30 million in Nunn-Lugar funds and $17 million in lab-to-lab funds currently available. The administration has requested an additional $70 million in nuclear material security funds from Congress for these projects in FY 1996. The United States, using $140 million in Nunn-Lugar funds, has been cooperating with Russia on the design and construction of a safe, secure and ecologically-sound storage facility for fissile material from dismantled nuclear weapons. Another $32 million in Nunn-Lugar funds is being spent to enhance security in the transportation and storage of the increasing numbers of nuclear weapons destined for dismantlement. (end text fact sheet) NNNN