The CTR Program Provided Equipment to Dismantle Russian Ballistic Missile Submarines
www.dtra.mil/newsservices/photo_library/CTR/CTR-2.cfm
Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) programs refer to a series of collaborative
efforts between the United States and the states of the former Soviet Union
(especially Russia) to reduce the threat posed by the Soviet legacy of WMD.
These programs are also known as "Nunn-Lugar Programs" after Senators
Sam Nunn and Richard Lugar, who sponsored the first legislation to authorize
them. The term is used here to cover all U.S. government programs in this area,
including those administered by the Departments of
Defense,
Energy,
and State. Only the
Department of Defense uses the term "Cooperative Threat Reduction,"
however, in the names of its programs.
Recently the United States
government has explored
expanding nonproliferation assistance,
including cooperative threat reduction programs, to
states outside the former Soviet Union. The Nunn-Lugar
Expansion Act permitted the Department of Defense to
spend $50 million on cooperative threat reduction
measures outside the former Soviet Union. The United
States funded
the elimination
of chemical weapons in Albania and the
destruction of CW production facilities in Yugoslavia.
Other countries that
may benefit from such expanded CTR programs include
India, Pakistan, and North Korea.
While the United States has increased the number of
countries that may benefit from CTR funding, it has also
joined with other nations in
the Global Partnership to increase international
funding for CTR efforts. |