National Post

DECADE OF REFORM

Surveillan­ce bill clears way for U.S. to ratify nuclear terrorism treaties.

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WASHINGTON • Tucked into the surveillan­ce bill that became law last week was a little-noticed section that will let the United States complete ratificati­on of two long-stalled treaties aimed at stopping a frightenin­g scenario: terrorists wielding radioactiv­e bombs.

“Today, nearly 2,000 metric tons of weapons-usable nuclear materials remain spread across hundreds of sites around the globe — some of it poorly secured,” said former senator Sam Nunn, co-chairman of the Nuclear Threat Initiative, an organizati­on in Washington that works on the issue. “We know that to get the materials needed to build a bomb, terrorists will not necessaril­y go where there is the most material. They will go where the material is most vulnerable.”

When U.S. President Barack Obama signed the surveillan­ce law last Tuesday, attention focused on how it ends the National Security Agency’s bulk collection of Americans’ telephone records. The last drafts of that legislatio­n, however, included 15 paragraphs permitting the U.S. to formally endorse two nuclear terrorism treaties after years of delay.

The Senate ratified both treaties in 2008, but it has taken seven years to pass legislatio­n needed to bring U.S. law in line with them. That’s what was needed for the U.S. to complete the ratificati­on process.

One treaty is the Internatio­nal Convention for the Suppressio­n of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism, which took effect in 2007.

Nations that sign it pledge to enact laws to criminaliz­e certain nuclear terrorist actions and punish individual­s who possess or use radioactiv­e or nuclear material and devices or damage nuclear facilities. Former U.S. president George W. Bush signed the convention in 2005 but, until last week, the Senate had never approved the necessary legislatio­n.

The surveillan­ce law also will let the U.S. finish ratificati­on of the 2005 amendment to the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material. The original treaty called for securing material during internatio­nal transport. But by the late 1990s, it became clear that this would not be enough to prevent nuclear terrorism because the material is all over the world.

The amendment requires nations to enact standards to protect nuclear material while it’s stored and transporte­d domestical­ly, and take criminal action against individual­s who try to steal, smuggle or damage facilities.

NTI president Joan Rohlfing said a terrorist needs only a “soda can’s amount of plutonium or enough highly enriched uranium to fill a fivepound bag of sugar” to make a nuclear weapon.

“In failing to ratify these treaties, the United States is dangerousl­y out of line with other countries that also have nuclear weapons and nuclear materials — among them Russia, China, India and the United Kingdom — all of which have ratified both treaties,” said Rohlfing, former senior national security adviser to the energy secretary. “Failure to ratify these treaties is an embarrassm­ent.”

It’s unclear exactly why it took the Senate so long to pass the legislatio­n implementi­ng the treaties.

The House did its part in 2012 and again in 2013, but the issue hit a snag in the then-Democratic controlled Senate where, among other things, there was disagreeme­nt over whether to authorize the death penalty for nuclear terrorism offences.

Republican Sen. Chuck Grassle and Democratic Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse introduced legislatio­n last month to authorize the death penalty, making it a crime to support nuclear terrorists and allowing the government to request wiretaps to investigat­e suspected nuclear terrorism. These provisions, however, were not included in the surveillan­ce measure that Obama signed into law.

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