[The
nuclear initiative has been a signature issue for Mr. Obama: It is among the
goals he campaigned on in 2008 and part of the reason he was awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize barely a year into his presidency. Benjamin J. Rhodes, a deputy
national security adviser, told reporters on Tuesday that the administration’s
overall efforts had made it “harder than ever before for terrorists and bad
actors to acquire nuclear material.”]
By David E. Sanger and William J. Broad
But
despite the progress, several countries are balking at safeguards promoted by
the United
States
or are building new stockpiles.
President
Vladimir V. Putin of Russia , where some of the largest stockpiles of
civilian nuclear material remain, has decided to boycott the summit meeting, which
begins Thursday night. Mr. Putin has made it clear he will not engage in
nuclear cleanup efforts dominated by the United States .
In
addition, Pakistan’s embrace of a new generation of small, tacticalnuclear
weapons, which the Obama administration considers highly vulnerable to theft or
misuse, has changed the way the administration talks about Pakistani nuclear
security. While Mr. Obama declared early in his presidency that the United States believed Pakistan ’s nuclear assets were secure, administration
officials will no longer repeat that line. Instead, when the subject comes up, they
note the modest progress Pakistan has made in training its guards and
investing in sensors to detect break-ins. They refuse to discuss secret talks
to persuade the Pakistanis not to deploy their new weapons.
And
Belgium , where a nuclear facility was sabotaged in 2014
and where nuclear plant workers with inside access went off to fight for the
Islamic State militant group, has emerged as a central worry. The country is so
divided and disorganized that many fear it is vulnerable to an attack far more
sophisticated than the bombings in the Brussels airport and subway system last
week.
For
the first time, the Nuclear Security Summit will include a special session on
responding to urban terrorist attacks — and a simulation of how to handle the
threat of imminent nuclear terrorism.
“The
key question for this summit,” said Matthew Bunn, a nuclear expert at Harvard
and a former White House science adviser, “is whether they’ll agree on
approaches to keep the improvements coming.”
The
nuclear initiative has been a signature issue for Mr. Obama: It is among the
goals he campaigned on in 2008 and part of the reason he was awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize barely a year into his presidency. Benjamin J. Rhodes, a deputy
national security adviser, told reporters on Tuesday that the administration’s
overall efforts had made it “harder than ever before for terrorists and bad
actors to acquire nuclear material.”
But
the administration’s budget for aiding global nuclear cleanups has been cut by
half; some officials argue that less funding is needed with fewer nations
willing to give up nuclear materials. A report Mr. Bunn helped write noted, “The
administration is now projecting lower spending year after year for years to
come, postponing or canceling a wide range of nuclear security activities that
had been included in previous plans.”
In
a recent report, the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a private advocacy group in Washington that tracks nuclear weapons and materials, warned
that many radioactive sources were “poorly secured and vulnerable to theft.”
The report called the probability of a terrorist’s detonating a dirty bomb
“much higher than that of an improvised nuclear device.”
Ingredients
for so-called dirty bombs, which use conventional explosives to spew
radioactive material, are still scattered around the globe at thousands of
hospitals and other sites that use the highly radioactive substances for
industrial imaging and medical treatments. Less than half of the countries that
attended the last nuclear summit in 2014 pledged to secure such materials, and
they in turn represent less than 15 percent of the 168 nations belonging to the
International Atomic Energy Agency.
And
while the administration succeeded in getting more than a dozen countries to
give up their civilian stockpiles of highly enriched uranium, a main fuel of
atomic bombs, the Nuclear Threat Initiative said in another report that some 25
nations still had such materials — enough for thousands of nuclear weapons.
The
report called highly enriched uranium “one of the most dangerous materials on
the planet,” warning that an amount small enough to fit in a five-pound sugar
bag could be used to build a nuclear device “with the potential to kill
hundreds of thousands of people.”
Still,
that does not mean Mr. Obama’s efforts have failed altogether. He is expected
to announce a major achievement soon: the removal of roughly 40 bombs’ worth of
highly enriched uranium and separated plutonium from Japan . Some of the uranium was fabricated in
pieces the size of squares of chocolate that could be easily slipped into a
pocket, a terrorist’s dream.
And
Ukraine was the site of a success that, in
retrospect, looks even bigger than it did four years ago.
On
a bitterly cold day in Kiev , the Ukrainian capital, in March 2012, two years before Ukraine descended into crisis, a team of Americans
and Ukrainians packed the last shipment of highly enriched uranium into railway
cars, ridding the country of more than 500 pounds of nuclear fuel. It would
have been enough to build eight or more nuclear bombs, depending on the skill
and destructive ambitions of the bomb maker.
“We
had vodka,” recalled Andrew J. Bieniawski, then a United States Energy
Department official central to the elimination. “It was amazing.”
Yet
there are signs that what began as a global effort to prevent terrorists from
obtaining the world’s deadliest weapons is fracturing.
In
fact, there is a case to be made that even as vulnerable stockpiles have shrunk,
the risk of nuclear terrorism has not.
There
is evidence that groups like the Islamic State are more interested than ever in
nuclear plants, materials and personnel — especially in Belgium , where the attacks last week killed more
than 30 people.
The
Belgian police discovered last yearthat Islamic State operatives had taken
hours of surveillance video at the home of a senior official at a large nuclear
site in Mol , Belgium . The plant in Mol, a northern resort area, holds
large stocks of highly enriched uranium.
Laura
Holgate, Mr. Obama’s top adviser on nuclear terrorism, noted on Tuesday that
the United
States
had worked with Belgium to “reduce the amount of nuclear material”
at one key site. Asked about the Islamic State’s interest in obtaining nuclear
fuel from Belgium , she said, “We don’t have any information
that a broader plot exists.”
Ms.
Holgate told reporters that this week’s meeting would address the question: “How
do you sustain the momentum to the summit after the summit ends?”
The
results of previous summit meetings have ranged from treaty ratifications to
the establishment of more than a dozen training centers around the globe where
guards, scientists, managers and regulators sharpen their skills at preventing
atomic terrorism.
Near
Beijing , one of the largest training centers opened
this month. “It’s in our national interest” to help foreigners secure their
atomic materials, said Nick Winowich, an engineer at Sandia National
Laboratories, one of the American nuclear labs that helped in the center’s
development.
The
biggest wins have been the removal of all highly enriched uranium from 12
countries, including Austria , Chile , Hungary , Libya , Mexico , Turkey and Vietnam . The material was mostly reactor fuel. But
officials said terrorists could have turned it into least 130 nuclear weapons.
Critics
of the summit process point to vague communiqués that seem to have done little
to drive hard decisions. A sense of summit fatigue now seems to prevail, the
critics add, noting that Russia ’s withdrawal evades some of the biggest
security problems.
The
Obama administration has also presided over a steady drop in American spending
on international nuclear security. Budgets fell from over $800 million in 2012
to just over $500 million in 2016. For 2017, the White House has proposed less
than $400 million — half the spending of the high point .
The
administration has defended the cuts, saying they reflect the completion of
some programs and upgrades and the suspension of cooperative work with Russia after its invasion of the Crimean Peninsula .
“The
summit process has achieved some very important objectives,” said Kenneth N. Luongo,
president of the Partnership for Global Security, a private group that
advocates new nuclear safeguards. “But it needed to aim higher. The world is
not becoming any easier to deal with. There’s still a responsibility to think
big.”