New START and implications for National Security Programs
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateOpening Statement Before the Senate Armed Services Committee Hearing on the New STARTWashington, DCJune 17, 2010
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you very much, Chairman Levin, Senator McCain, members of the committee. It’s a great pleasure for me to return to testify before a committee that I was very honored to serve on. And we are here, today, Secretary Gates, Secretary Chu, and Admiral Mullen, and myself, because we share a strong belief that the new START treaty will make our country more secure and we urge the Senate to ratify it expeditiously.Now, I know that some argue we don’t need a new START treaty. But let’s be clear about the choice before us. It is between this treaty and no obligation for Russia to keep its strategic nuclear forces below an agreed level, and between this treaty and no on-the-ground verification of Russia’s strategic forces. As Secretary Gates, and then as you, Chairman Levin have pointed out, every previous president of both parties who faced this choice has concluded that the United States is better off with a treaty than without one. And the United States Senate has always agreed.
More than two years ago, President Bush began this process that led to this treaty that we are discussing today. And the new START treaty has already received broad bipartisan endorsement. As James Schlesinger, the Secretary of Defense for Presidents Nixon and Ford, and the Secretary of Energy for President Carter, declared recently in his Congressional testimony, “It is obligatory for the United States to ratify.”
Now, why do so many people who have studied this issue over so many years coming from opposite ends of the political spectrum agree so strongly? Well, today, I’d like to discuss briefly what the new START treaty is and also what it is not. This is a treaty that, if ratified, will provide stability, transparency, and predictability for the two countries with more than 90 percent of the world’s nuclear weapons. It is a treaty that will reduce the permissible number of Russian and U.S. deployed strategic warheads to 1,550, a level not seen since the 1950s.
In addition, each country will be limited to 700 deployed strategic delivery vehicles and 800 deployed and non-deployed strategic missile launchers and heavy bombers. These limits will help the United States and Russia bring our deployed strategic arsenals, which were sized for the Cold War, to levels that are more appropriate for today’s threats.
This is a treaty that will help us track remaining weapons with an extensive verification regime. Now, this regime draws upon our experience over the last 15 years in implementing the original START treaty. The verification provisions reflect today’s realities, including the much smaller number of facilities in Russia compared with the former Soviet Union. And for the first time, we will be monitoring the actual numbers of warheads on deployed strategic missiles.
So by bringing the new START treaty into force, we will strengthen our national security more broadly, including by creating greater leverage to tackle a core national security challenge – nuclear proliferation.
This will also demonstrate our leadership and strengthen our hand as we work with others to hold irresponsible governments accountable, whether in further isolating Iran and enforcing the rules against violators or in persuading other countries to implement better controls on their own nuclear materials.
And it makes clear that we are committed to real reductions and to upholding our end of the bargain under the Nonproliferation Treaty, which has already brought about important benefits in my discussions with foreign leaders about strengthening the nonproliferation regime and a range of other topics.
But I want to be also very clear that there are numerous things this treaty will not do. As Secretary Gates and Admiral Mullen will discuss more fully, the new START treaty does not compromise the nuclear force levels we need to protect ourselves and our allies. It does not infringe upon the flexibility we need to maintain our forces, including bombers, submarines, and missiles in the way that best serves our own national security interests. This treaty does not constrain our missile defense efforts. And I want to underscore this because I know there have been a lot of concerns about it and I anticipate a lot of questions. But this is something this committee recently reiterated in the FY11 national defense authorization bill. Section 231 reads and I quote, “It is the sense of Congress that there are no constraints contained in the new START treaty on the development or deployment by the United States of effective missile defenses, including all phases of the phased adaptive approach to missile defense in Europe and further enhancements to the ground-based mid-course defense, as well as future missile defenses.”
Now, I worked with some of you on this committee when I had the honor of serving in the Senate on behalf of a very strong missile defense system, so I want to make this point very clearly. Now, Russia has, as the Chairman said, issued a unilateral statement expressing its view. But that is not an agreed-upon view. That is not in the treaty. It’s the equivalent of a press release. And we are not in any way bound by it. In fact, we’ve issued our own statement, which is now part of the record, making clear that the United States intends and, in fact, is continuing to improve and deploy effective missile defense systems. The treaty’s preamble does include language acknowledging the relationship between strategic offensive and defensive forces, but that’s simply a statement of fact. It, too, does not in any way constrain our missile defense programs.
Now, the treaty also includes language – and I think this is Senator McCain’s reference to Article 5 – prohibiting the conversion or use of offensive missile launchers for missile defense interceptors, and vice versa. But in fact, we had no intention of doing that anyway. And as General O’Reilly, our missile defense director, has made clear in testimony, we reached the conclusion it is actually cheaper to build smaller, tailor-made missile defense silos than to convert offensive launchers. I mean, we could have had a long list – we’re not going to launch from any moving vehicle like a car or a truck or a cow. I mean, we could have said a lot of things that we’re not going to do. But the fact is we weren’t going to do them and we weren’t going to do this either. And the treaty does not restrict us in any way from building new missile defense launchers, 14 of which are currently being constructed in Alaska. So I think the very facts on the ground undermine and refute any argument to the contrary.
Now, the Obama Administration has requested $9.9 billion for missile defense in FY11. That is almost $700 million more than Congress provided in FY10.
And finally, the new START treaty does not restrict our ability to modernize our nuclear weapons complex to maintain a safe, secure, and effective deterrent. As Secretary Chu will discuss, this Administration has called for a 10 percent increase in FY11 for overall weapons and infrastructure activities in a time of very serious budget constraints. And we’ve called for a 25 percent increase in direct stockpile work. During the next 10 years, this Administration proposes investing $80 billion in our nuclear weapons complex.
So let me just conclude by taking a step back and putting the new START treaty into a larger context. This treaty is one part of a broader effort to reduce the threat posed by the deadliest weapons the world has ever known, especially the potential intersection of violent extremism and nuclear proliferation. We have several coordinated efforts that have been briefed to this committee, including the Nuclear Posture Review, the recently concluded Nuclear Security Summit, and the Nonproliferation Treaty Review Conference, as well as extensive bilateral engagements.
So while a ratified new START treaty stands on its own terms, and when you look at the very real benefits it provides to our national security, it is part of a broader strategy. So Mr. Chairman, Senator McCain, members of the committee, we stand ready to work with you as you undertake your constitutional responsibilities with respect to this treaty, and we are ready to answer any and all questions. And we hope that at the end of your deliberations, you will come to the same conclusion that we and many others have reached, including many others who have sat in these chairs and voted in the Senate chamber, that this treaty makes our country more secure and merits the Senate’s consent to ratification.
Thank you.
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Video & Text: Secretary Clinton’s Remarks on the New Start Treaty at the Senate Armed Services Committee
June 17, 2010 by still4hill
I just watched Hillary on Cspan, as always explaining every detail masterfully.I loved at the end how Sen Brown from Mass went to her and spoke w/her for a while; she’s a rock star and everybody wants to go and meet her!LOL!
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I have been looking for this on Cspan all day, all I see is the BP fiasco. Oh well, I did see this anyway. Scott Brown and Hillary also met somebody who was posting on Facebook – lucky little lady! Whole gang of fangirls congratulating her as if she had just met Justin Bieber. LOL!
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She looked so tired, but she was on target as always and some of the photos released are nice.
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She did look so tired. But, as you said, she spoke effectively and forcefully. Loooonnng day too. Meeting with Petraeus began at 5:30 p.m. But since she’s tired from doing so much important work, she always looks beautiful to me.
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It’s almost the weekend. I’m sure she’s looking forward to a rest.
Once again I have jewelry envy.
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The NECKLACE!!!!!!!!!!!! I KNOW!!!!!!
A few things on her plate tomorrow – I’ll post a little later. But, yes, she needs to be squired home to Chappaqua and escorted to a hot tub and then bed.
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She should rest as opposed to “rest”.
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LOL!!! Yes, that too.
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I love some of the stuff she says (rest, sure) like during her campaign when she said she felt “blessed” to have a “passionate” spouse in response to questions about one of those times when Bill got angry about stuff that was said. There were a dozen or so men behind her – Harlem businessmen, I think – and it was fun to watch them struggle to keep straight faces. Most failed.
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LOLOL!!!!! I know! And she says this stuff with a straight face! ISTG – I do not remember ANY SOS being this entertaining. ANY official!
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And it’s always about her and sex! Like Bill’s “Goodbye, Madame Secretary,” which sounded like something naughty. They say absence makes the heart grow fonder, fine, but they’re ridiculous.
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*the Clintons are ridiculous.
Just clarifying.
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… and cute!
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That was so cute! EVERYBODY figured they call each other by their titles in bed. She’s a tease. So is Big Dawg!
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I can’t believe this stuff just happens with her (I think it sometimes does with her husband) so the question is what was the political message with that statement – “Vote for me because I’ll do the best job… and spend a good amount of time ‘debriefing’ my First Gentleman.” 😕
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ROTFLMAO!!!!!!! Key words: ” … debriefing my First Gentleman” … How does ANYBODY not roar with laughter? Srsly! *in tears w/ laughter*
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I think the only vote she’d get from saying she blessed to have a passionate spouse is from the passionate spouse himself and I think she already had that one. Maybe, when she comes up with these loaded statements, it’s a way of letting Bill know that last night was “above par.”
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Cute communication! *likes*
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How did I miss this comment. OH! Clinton-Code for sure!
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The debriefing comment wasn’t a direct quote, but rather a paraphrasing of all of her statements that take dual meanings – especially during her campaign. It’s like she was making sure everyone knew that they were still happily married and warning the Secret Service that they still had some places in the White House that they hadn’t crossed off their list yet.
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I wondered how I missed anything that blatant!
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I can just imagine the political cartoons that would’ve come about if those had been her words. 😀
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LOLOL!
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No, you know Bill Clinton can’t stand near a microphone without speaking into it. He’d have to say his bit. (Imagine that voice.)
“I would do anything I could to make my wife the best president she can be and, if debriefing me would help, then that’s more than fine with me. Also, depending on the role I would take on, I might have to debrief her now and then.”
Actually, if I for some reason had to ask a question of the former president in a jounalistic capacity, I would ask him (regarding Haiti and his humanitarian work, of course 😉 ) “Do you debrief the Secretary of State? The two of you are so busy. When do you find the time to debrief her?” just to see how he’d handle it and if the clip would made the Daily Show.
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ROTFLMAO!!!!!!!!!!!!! You would be saying all this with a completely straight face, of course.
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Absolutely. How else would it seem to be a legitimate question?
If he said yes, the follow-up is “On a regular basis?” and if the answer is no then it becomes “Well then who does debrief her?” The potential for comedy is nearly limitless.
Someone should “debrief” her every now and again.
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… and many are ready and willing, it appears!
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I think that if she were asked “Does the former president debrief you from time to time?” we’d find out if Tom Junod was right about her blushing. 😀
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I am sure she does.
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…or the press conference explaining herself. “I meant debrief not ‘debrief’!”
Meanwhile he’d just stand next to her grinning.
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I can see it. Then they could have a little hair-touching crack-up like she did with Qureshi.
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I doubt her reaction would be as funny as his. I think he’d catch the double entendre before she did.
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I dunno – she’s pretty quick on the draw!
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But he turns bright red and laughs while she never does so much as bat an eye. No color changes, no laughs.
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She’s cool, but I do believe she blushes when caught unprepared. She’s probably ALWAYS prepared for that stuff re: Big Dawg.
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nice this video
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