Year
2023
File Attachment
finalpaper_206_0505035250.pdf262.33 KB
Abstract
The Trilateral Initiative was launched by Russian Minister of Atomic Energy Viktor
Mikhailov, Director General Hans Blix, and U.S. Secretary of Energy Hazel O'Leary at their 17
September 1996 meeting in Vienna, Austria. The aim of the initiative was to fulfill the
commitments made by Presidents Clinton and Yeltsin concerning IAEA verification of weaponorigin fissile materials and to complement their commitments regarding the transparency and
irreversibility of nuclear arms reductions. Experts from the U.S., Russia and IAEA worked to
explore technical, legal, and financial options for verification of classified weapons origin fissile
materials. This paper will reflect on the history of the Trilateral Initiative, progress towards
technical verification since then, and prospects for technology development to support future
arms control efforts.
As a technical rather than a policy expert, I will steer away from future arms control treaty
prognostications and focus on looking ahead in the monitoring and verification technology
realm. The U.S. government is funding several programs to help prepare technology experts
support future arms control initiatives. The U.S. 2022 Nuclear Posture Review states that
successfully enforcing future arms control agreements will require new technical capabilities for
verification and monitoring. It references investing in needed technologies as well as developing
the next generation of technical experts required to negotiate and implement future agreements.
Some examples of these programs include NNSA’s Arms Control Advancement Initiative,
Human Capital Development, enhanced basic R&D work on arms control monitoring and
verification tools and technology, and the State Department’s effort with the Nuclear Threat
Initiative on partnering internationally for the development, testing and demonstration of
monitoring and verification technology tools.