Livermore, CA- The Administration’s budget, released today, contradicts President Obama’s pledge to reduce the nuclear weapons threat by working toward their elimination, according to a national network of groups in communities downwind and downstream from U.S. nuclear sites. Instead, the spending plan boosts funding for nuclear weapons production facilities by $625 million from last year.
The Alliance for Nuclear Accountability (ANA) said that the Obama budget includes large increases for a new plutonium production facility in Los Alamos, New Mexico and for a new highly enriched uranium production facility near Oak Ridge, Tennessee, each estimated to cost about $3 billion. The budget also fails to list a new privately financed $700 million plant, which will produce nonnuclear components for nuclear weapons in Kansas City, Missouri."
The Administration has argued that the massive increases in nuclear weapons proposed in this budget are necessary to maintain a robust nuclear deterrent,” said Jay Coghlan, Director of Nuclear Watch New Mexico, an ANA member group. “This is simply not true. The United States currently has a stockpile of 10,000 warheads that are certified as reliable. The new production facilities proposed in this budget will allow the Department of Energy to introduce untested nuclear weapons designs into the previously reliable nuclear stockpile.”
"The plan described in this budget is not about maintaining a reliable nuclear stockpile. It is a multi-billion dollar ‘radioactive pork’ construction plan that will reconstitute the nation’s ability to produce new nuclear warheads,” said Ralph Hutchison, Coordinator of the Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance. “Building new nuclear weapons production facilities makes no sense as the U.S. prepares to participate in this spring’s nuclear NonProliferation Treaty Review Conference, where it will try to persuade other nations to reduce arsenal sizes."
"This budget request, if approved, dims our hopes that we will see eventual clean up of the toxic and radioactive mess created around the country by years of nuclear weapons development, dims our hopes of nuclear disarmament and peace in the foreseeable future and dims the world’s hopes that the US would follow its international treaty obligations with respect to nuclear weapons," said Scott Yundt, staff attorney at Tri-Valley CARES in Livermore, California.
Scott Yundt, Staff Attorney, Tri-Valley Communities Against a Radioactive Environment (CAREs)


