accuracy | The House of Representatives meets this week to consider the Pentagon’s budget proposal.
GREG MELLO, gmello at lasg.org, @TrishABQ Mello is executive director of the Los Alamos Study Group. The group’s recent backgrounders include “President Requests Unprecedented Spending on Nuclear Weapons Maintenance, Design, Production” and “U.S. Claims of Nuclear Weapons Retirement, Dismantlement ‘May be Misleading’ — GAO.” [PDF]
Mello said today: “As in previous years, the House Armed Services
Committee version of the annual Defense Authorization Act tries to force
the administration to design and build new nuclear weapons, components,
and high-dollar factories sooner rather than later, and without further
ado.
“The Committee wants to start design of a new cruise missile warhead
three years sooner than the administration believes is desirable.
“To take another example, the bill mandates ramping up production of
plutonium warhead cores (‘pits’) to 30 pits per year by 2023 independent
of any actual need. The new idea is production for production’s sake.
Without this there would be no need for production, or new factories,
since pits will last several decades more. The U.S. also has at least
15,000 surplus pits, thousands of which are reusable.
“Fortunately the bill also requires a detailed study of ways to
produce more pits (and dispose of surplus plutonium) that don’t require
new factories. The National Nuclear Security Administration operates
several plutonium facilities at great cost and extra capacity of various
kinds. Even the supremely-hawkish House Armed Services Committee wants
to know if it is really prudent to build new plutonium facilities.
“Overall, the policy shifts in this bill go towards maintaining jobs
in the warhead complex, and especially at the big three nuclear labs,
still sized for a Cold War. This bill aims to keep the labs fat and
happy.
“Warheads last a long time. To the warhead caucus, that’s a big
problem. The Committee therefore proposes billions of dollars in
make-work. It’s up to responsible Republicans and Democrats — both — to
rein in this waste, which does nothing for anybody’s conception of
national security.
“Meanwhile, the Administration could and should immediately cut the
deployed nuclear arsenal back to the somewhat lower levels already
approved by the military and Pentagon.”
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