1 FAM 440
BUREAU OF ARMS CONTROL, VERIFICATION AND COMPLIANCE (AVC)
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
(Office of Origin: AVC)
1 FAM 441 ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR ARMS
CONTROL, VERIFICATION AND COMPLIANCE (AVC)
1 FAM 441.1 Responsibilities
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
The Assistant Secretary for Arms Control, Verification and
Compliance (AVC):
(1) Reports directly to the Under Secretary of State
for Arms Control and International Security (T);
(2) Has as his or her principal responsibility the
overall supervision (including oversight of policy and resources) within the
Department of all matters relating to verification and compliance with
international arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements or
commitments;
(3) Leads U.S. efforts to develop arms control
policies for the implementation of existing agreements and the negotiation of
future agreements;
(4) Leads efforts to promote the vision of a safe,
secure world through the development, negotiation and implementation of
bilateral and multilateral arms control and
disarmament, transparency and confidence-building measures;
(5) Advances national and international security
through the negotiation and implementation of effectively verifiable and
diligently enforced arms control and disarmament agreements involving weapons
of mass destruction and their means of delivery as well as some categories of conventional weapons;
(6) Leads efforts for developing U.S. policy relative
to existing and prospective Euro-Atlantic arms control, disarmament, and security arrangements
concerning conventional and nuclear weapons and forces;
(7) Advances missile defense and space policy in
support of U.S. national security policies and objectives;
(8) Leads efforts to develop new verification and
transparency technologies in support of arms control agreements and
arrangements;
(9) Leads efforts to
enhance strategic stability;
(10) Coordinates
policy recommendations within the U.S. Government regarding verification of
compliance with international arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament
agreements and commitments, and assists the Secretary of State and the Under
Secretary for Arms Control and International Security in developing
verification and compliance policies and negotiating and implementing
verifiable agreements or commitments;
(11) Supervises
three deputy assistant secretaries, who, in turn, manage the day-to-day
operations of their portion of AVC, exercising principal oversight over the management
and staffing of the subordinate organizations and the development of policies
and programs to assure responsiveness to Administration and Departmental
priorities:
(a) Designates one of the three deputy assistant
secretaries as his or her principal deputy assistant secretary (PDAS); and
(b) The PDAS supports the Assistant Secretarys
management of the bureau and serves as Acting Assistant Secretary in the
absence of the Assistant Secretary, performing all functions of that position
that have been properly delegated;
(12) Serves as the
principal policy representative to the Intelligence Community on verification
and compliance matters (22 U.S.C. 2652c(c)(3)). In this regard, the Assistant
Secretary articulates requirements for intelligence assets and sensor programs
critical to verifying compliance with arms control, nonproliferation, and
disarmament agreements and commitments, and supports efforts to ensure that
such programs and technologies are developed, deployed, maintained, and
adequately funded;
(13) Participates
in all Departmental and interagency groups or organizations within the
executive branch that assess, analyze, or review U.S. planned or ongoing
policies, programs, or actions that have a direct bearing on verification and
compliance. These include intelligence committees concerned with developing or
exploiting measurement or signals intelligence or other national technical
means of verification (22 U.S.C. 2652c(c)(2));
(14) Leads the
Departments development of verification proposals and assessments for
prospective arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements and
commitments; and negotiates verification measures and leads related
consultations. On behalf of the Secretary, the Assistant Secretary prepares
verifiability assessments for submission to Congress on the degree to which the
components of arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements can be
verified, as required under 22 U.S.C. 2577 or by direction;
(15) Leads the
Departments assessment of the compliance of other countries with their arms
control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements and commitments; leads
compliance diplomacy efforts; and engages in diplomatic consultations to
address compliance policy and concerns. The Assistant Secretary is responsible
for verifying of weapons of mass destruction (WMD)-related bilateral and
multilateral agreements and commitments;
(16) Prepares the
Presidents Annual Report to Congress on Adherence to and Compliance with Arms
Control, Nonproliferation, and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments (22
U.S.C. 2593a), other congressional reports on compliance, and other reports
prepared by the Department relating to arms control, nonproliferation, or
disarmament verification or compliance matters;
(17) Prepares the
Presidents Annual Report on compliance with the Conventional Armed Forces in
Europe (CFE) Flank Document consistent with Condition 5(C) of the Senate CFE
Resolution of Advice and Consent to Ratification;
(18) Prepares the
Presidents Annual Report on compliance with the Chemical Weapons Convention
(CWC) consistent with Condition 10(C) of the Senate CWC Senate Resolution of
Advice and Consent to Ratification;
(19) Prepares the
Presidents Annual Report on the New START Treaty (NST) consistent with Condition
10, and the Presidents Annual Report on Nonstrategic (Tactical) Nuclear
Weapons consistent with Condition 12(B) of the Senate Resolution of Advice and
Consent to Ratification of the New START Treaty, dated December 22, 2010;
(20) Evaluates and
executes, from the perspective of verification and compliance, the
implementation of existing and future arms control, nonproliferation, and
disarmament agreements and commitments and related transparency measures;
(21) Leads the
Department in all matters related to the implementation of existing and
prospective international arms control and disarmament agreements and
commitments related to strategic and intermediate-range missiles and
conventional weapons issues. Agreements include: the New Strategic Arms Reduction
Treaty (New START); Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty; the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test Ban Treaty (CTBT); the
Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty (FMCT); Convention on the Prohibition of
the Development, Production, Stockpiling, and Use of Chemical Weapons and on
their Destruction (CWC); Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE);
Vienna Document 2011 Confidence-and
Security-Building Measures (CSBMs); Treaty on Open Skies; and arms control
elements of the Dayton Peace Accords;
(22) Leads efforts
to promote the global ban on chemical weapons embodied in the CWC and manages
the U.S. National Authority that oversees U.S. implementation of the CWC;
(23) Serves as the
Departments lead and principal policy representative to the U.S.-European
Unions (EU) regular dialogues on
verification, compliance and related issuesmeeting at (27+1)in a
continued effort to strengthen our strategic partnership with the EU and work
together on issues of common interest in the areas
of Euro-Atlantic security, arms control
implementation, verification, compliance, space
and compliance enforcement;
(24) Leads efforts to
promote U.S. arms control and disarmament objectives in UN and UN-related
venues, to include the UN First Committee (Nonproliferation and Disarmament),
the Conference on Disarmament, and the UN Disarmament Commission;
(25) Ensures that
verification, compliance, and compliance enforcement implications are factored
into the development of U.S. policies to strengthen existing and develop new
arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements and arrangements
(related to nuclear, chemical, biological, and conventional weapons and
missiles and other delivery systems);
(26) Develops and
reviews the verification and compliance performance of countries being
considered for membership in multilateral nonproliferation agreements and
arrangements, including the Australia Group and the Missile Technology Control
Regime; and oversees bureau participation in Department efforts related to
these treaty organizations and other multilateral and regional organizations;
(27) Manages the
Key Verification Assets Fund (Section 1111 of Public Law 106-113). The V
Fund, established by Congress, authorizes the Secretary to transfer funds to
other agencies for retaining, researching, developing, or acquiring
technologies or programs relating to the verification of arms control,
nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements and commitments. As the
coordinating entity for the U.S. Government, the bureau ensures that the V Fund
supports projects facilitating achievement of Administration priorities and
leverages the use of Department funds to assist other agencies in the
development of technologies and programs critical for detecting WMD activities
and for verifying compliance;
(28) Manages the
External Research Board (REB) on behalf of the Under Secretary for Arms Control
and International Security;
(29) Serves as the
Director of the Nuclear Risk Reduction Center (NRRC), which operates dedicated
government-to-government communications systems on a 24-hour basis, and is
charged with transmitting and disseminating, for the U.S. Government,
government-to-government notifications required under various arms control and
security agreements. The Assistant Secretary leads negotiations related to
existing and prospective arms control and other security agreements involving
this center;
(30) Maintains on
behalf of the Department of State, which is the designated U.S. Government
archivist, a comprehensive diplomatic record of arms control, nonproliferation,
and disarmament negotiations, as well as a comprehensive database on
verification and compliance information (22 U.S.C. 2578 and 22 U.S.C. 2577a);
(31) Manages the
Departments Foster Fellows program, which brings visiting scholars from the
faculties of recognized institutes of higher learning to work in the Department
in the fields of arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament (22 U.S.C.
2568); and
(32) Analyzes
military expenditures and arms transfers and prepares a comprehensive unclassified annual report on
World Military Expenditures and Arms Transfers, pursuant to 22 U.S.C. 2593b.
1 FAM 441.2 Organization
(CT:ORG-235; 02-14-2011)
An organization chart of the Bureau of Arms Control,
Verification and Compliance (AVC) is found at 1 FAM Exhibit
441.2.
1 FAM 441.3 Definitions
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
Bilateral Consultative Commission
(BCC): The Bilateral Consultative Commission was created to promote the
objectives and implementation of the provisions of the New START Treaty.
Biological Weapons Convention (BWC):
The Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, and
Stockpiling of Bacteriological (Biological) and Toxin Weapons and on their
Destruction entered into force March 26, 1975. The BWC was the first
multilateral disarmament treaty banning an entire category of weapons. It
effectively prohibits the development, production, acquisition, transfer,
retention, stockpiling, and use of biological and toxin weapons. The treaty
currently has 155 state parties and 16 signatory parties.
Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC):
The Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling,
and Use of Chemical Weapons and on their Destruction entered into force April
29, 1997. The CWC obligates states parties to never under any circumstances
develop, produce, or otherwise acquire, stockpile, or retain chemical weapons,
or transfer, directly or indirectly, chemical weapons to anyone. The Treaty
currently has 188 member states.
Chemical weapons (CW):
(1) Toxic chemicals and their precursors, except where
intended for purposes not prohibited under the Chemical Weapons Convention, as
long as the types and quantities are consistent with such purposes;
(2) Munitions and devices, specifically designed to
cause death or other harm through the toxic properties of those toxic chemicals
specified in subparagraph (1) of this definition, which would be released as a
result of employing such munitions or devices; and
(3) Any equipment specifically designed to be used
directly in connection with the employment of the munitions and devices
specified in subparagraph (2) of this definition.
Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty
(CTBT): The CTBT bans nuclear test explosions in any environment and, in
so doing, aims at eliminating nuclear weapons by constraining the development
and qualitative improvement of new types of nuclear weapons. It was drafted at
the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva and opened for signature in New York on
September 24, 1996. The CTBT will enter into force 180 days after it has been
ratified by the 44 states listed in Annex 2 of the Treaty. The Treaty provides
for a comprehensive global verification regime, which consists of an
International Monitoring System, consultation and clarification procedures,
provisions for requesting on-site inspections, and confidence-building
measures.
Confidence-and-security-building
measures (CSBMs): Measures requiring effective and concrete actions
concerning the military activities and force structures
of the states concerned and aimed at reducing tension and strengthening
confidence and security among those states. For
example, the Vienna Document 2011 contains CSBMs developed by the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).
Conventional Armed Forces in Europe
Treaty (CFE): A 30-nation international treaty that establishes
limitations on conventional armaments and equipment and provides for
transparency about the conventional armed forces of the states parties. The Treaty
entered into force in July 1992 and its limitations took effect in November
1995.
Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty (FMCT):
This proposed international treaty would ban the further production of fissile
material for use in nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices. Major
related issues include dealing with existing national stocks of fissile
material, the identification of effective measures for the verification of
treaty compliance, requirements for treaty entry into force, and treaty duration.
Forum for Security Cooperation (FSC):
The body of the Vienna-based Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE) that negotiates and reviews implementation of agreements related
to arms control, disarmament, and confidence-and-security-building measures, as
well as other military and security issues.
Foster Fellowship Program: The
program that brings noted academics to the State Department for 1-year
assignments. Section 202 of the Arms Control and Disarmament Act, as amended
(22 U.S.C. 2568), provides that "[a] program for visiting scholars in the
fields of arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament shall be established
in order to obtain the services of scholars from the faculties of recognized
institutes of higher learning." The law states that the purpose of the
program is to give specialists in the physical sciences and other disciplines
an opportunity for active participation in the arms control, nonproliferation,
and disarmament activities of the Department of State and to enable the
Department to gain the perspective and expertise such persons can offer. Foster
Fellows serve for 1 year in the Bureau of Arms Control, Verification and
Compliance; the Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation; and the
Bureau of Political-Military Affairs. Scholars are named in honor of William
C. Foster, the first director of the United States Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency, who served from 1961 to 1969. Over 60 scholars have served since the
program began in 1984.
High-Level Task Force
(HLTF): The NATO body responsible for
addressing issues related to Euro-Atlantic conventional arms control.
Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces
(INF) Treaty: The Treaty between the United States of America and the
Union of Soviet Socialists Republics on the Elimination of Their
Intermediate-Range and Shorter-Range Missiles entered into force on June 1,
1988. The Treaty is of unlimited duration.
Joint Consultative Group (JCG):
The implementing body for the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe. The
JCG meets in Vienna, Austria.
Limited Test-Ban Treaty (LTBT):
The Treaty Banning Nuclear Weapon Tests in the Atmosphere, in Outer Space and
Under Water entered into force October 10, 1963. The treaty prohibits nuclear
weapons tests or any other nuclear explosion in the atmosphere, in outer space
and under water. While not banning tests underground, the treaty does prohibit
nuclear explosions in this environment if they cause radioactive debris to be
present outside the territorial limits of the state under whose jurisdiction or
control the explosions were conducted. The treaty is of unlimited duration.
Moscow Treaty: The treaty was superseded by the New START Treaty upon
its entry into force on February 5, 2011.
The national technical means (NTM): All data available to a
nation from all sources and exploitation techniques, whether classified or
unclassified, to use in assessing the actions and behavior of other nations. The
term is frequently applied to compliance determinations, but can be used to
assess threats emanating from hostile nations. NTM can include data from
sensors/devices on the surface, under the surface, in the air, or in space, as
well as data reported by individuals and groups.
Publicly available data: Data from
international inspectorates (such as the International Atomic Energy Agency and
the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons), defector reports,
news media, and various sources on the Internet.
New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty
(New START): The Treaty between the United States of America and the
Russian Federation on Measures for the Further Reduction and Limitation of
Strategic Offensive Arms. The treaty was signed on April 8, 2010 in Prague,
the Senate provided advice and consent to ratification on December 22, 2010, and the treaty entered into force on February 5, 2011.
The New START Treaty superseded the Moscow
Treaty and succeeds the original START Treaty, which expired on December
5, 2009.
Nonproliferation and Arms Control
Technology Working Group: The Nonproliferation and Arms Control
Technology Working Group (NPAC TWG) was created by Presidential Decision
Directive (PDD-27) in 1994 as the mechanism to coordinate the research and
development response to challenges in arms control, nonproliferation, and
disarmament. The President has designated the Department of State, the
Department of Energy, and the Department of Defense as the co-chairing agencies
for the NPAC TWG. The Office of Verification,
Planning, and Outreach in the
Bureau of Arms Control, Verification and Compliance represents the Department
of State in this capacity as co-chair and as the Executive Secretary for the
NPAC TWG.
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT):
The Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, also known as the NPT,
entered into force on March 5, 1970. The Treaty is designed to: prevent the
spread of nuclear weapons; provide assurance, through international safeguards,
that the peaceful nuclear activities of states which have not already developed
nuclear weapons will not be diverted to making such weapons; promote, to the
maximum extent consistent with the other purposes of the treaty, the peaceful
uses of nuclear energy, to include the potential benefits of any peaceful
application of nuclear explosion technology being made available to nonnuclear
parties under appropriate international observation; and express the
determination of the parties that the treaty should lead to further progress in
comprehensive arms control and nuclear disarmament measures. On May 11, 1995,
more than 170 countries attending the NPT Review and Extension Conference
decided to extend the treaty indefinitely and without conditions.
Open Skies Consultative Commission
(OSCC): The implementing body for the Treaty on Open Skies. The OSCC
meets in Vienna, Austria.
Open Skies Treaty: A 34-nation
international treaty that establishes a regime of unarmed aerial observation
flights over the entire territories of the states parties in order to gather
information about military forces and activities as a means of promoting
openness and transparency. The treaty entered into force on January 1, 2002.
Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE): The Vienna-based regional security
organization composed of 57 participating states
from Europe, Central Asia, and North America that
deals with and promotes dialogue on military security, early warning,
conflict prevention, crisis management, and post-conflict rehabilitation as well as democratization and human rights issues.
Organization for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons (OPCW): This implementing body of the Chemical Weapons
Convention (CWC) has the mandate to achieve the object and purpose of the
Convention to ensure the implementation of its provisions, including those for
international verification of compliance with it, and to provide a forum for
consultation and cooperation among states parties.
Peaceful Nuclear Explosions Treaty
(PNET): The Treaty between the United States of America and the Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics on Underground Nuclear Explosions for Peaceful
Purposes, also known as the PNET, was signed in on May 28, 1976. The PNET
governs all nuclear explosions carried out at locations outside the weapons
test sites specified under the Threshold Test Ban Treaty (TTBT). The parties
agree not to carry out any individual nuclear explosions having a yield
exceeding 150 kilotons; not to carry out any group explosion having an
aggregate yield exceeding 1,500 kilotons; and not to carry out any group
explosion having an aggregate yield exceeding 150 kilotons unless the
individual explosions in the group could be identified and measured by agreed
verification procedures. The treaty entered into force December 11, 1990. The
treaty remains in force for a period of 5 years from entry into force and is
automatically extended for successive 5-year periods. However, neither party
may withdraw from the PNET while the TTBT remains in force; conversely, either
party may withdraw from the PNET upon termination of the TTBT.
Special Verification Commission (SVC):
The forum established by the Treaty between The United States of America and
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics on the Elimination of Their
Intermediate-Range and Shorter-Range Missiles (also
known as the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty) to address
implementation and compliance issues for that Treaty.
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty
(START): The Treaty between the United States of America and the Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics on the Reduction and Limitation of Strategic
Offensive Arms. The treaty was signed on July 31, 1991, entered into force
December 5, 1994, and expired on December 5,
2009.
Threshold Test-Ban Treaty (TTBT):
The Treaty between the United States of America and the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics on the Limitation of Underground Nuclear Weapon Tests, also
known as the TTBT, was signed on July 3, 1974. It establishes a nuclear
threshold, by prohibiting tests having a yield exceeding 150 kilotons. The
protocol to the TTBT limits nuclear weapon testing to specific designated tests
sites to assist verification. The United States and the Soviet Union began
negotiations in November 1987 to reach agreement on additional verification
provisions that would make it possible for the United States to ratify the
treaty. The TTBT verification protocol provides for the use of the
hydrodynamic yield measurement method with respect to all tests having a
planned yield measurement method with respect to all tests having a planned
yield exceeding 50 kilotons, as well as seismic monitoring and, with respect to
all tests having a planned yield exceeding 35 kilotons, on-site inspections. The
treaty entered into force December 11, 1990. The treaty remains in force for a
period of 5 years from entry into force and is automatically extended for
successive 5-year periods unless either party notifies the other of its
termination or the parties achieve a solution to the problem of the cessation
of all underground nuclear weapon tests.
1 FAM 441.4 Authorities
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
Authorities include:
(1) The Foreign Affairs Reform and Restructuring Act
of 1998, Public Law 105-277, amended the Arms Control and Disarmament Act
(Public Law 87-297), and abolished the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency. Its functions and personnel were incorporated into the Department of
State;
(2) Section 1112 of the Arms Control and
Nonproliferation Act of 1999 (Public Law 106-113; 22 U.S.C. 2652c), which
established the position and principal functions of the Assistant Secretary of
State for Verification and Compliance. In the Departments reorganization of
the T bureaus in 2005, the bureaus name was changed to Verification,
Compliance, and Implementation (VCI) and additional implementation
responsibilities were added to the bureaus portfolio. In the Departments
reorganization of the T bureaus in 2010, the bureaus name was changed to Arms
Control, Verification and Compliance (AVC);
(3) The Arms Control, Verification and Compliance
Bureau is responsible within the Department for fulfilling various
congressional reporting requirements (22 U.S.C. 2652c(c)(4)). These include:
(a) All reports required pursuant to 22 U.S.C. 2577,
which encompass verifiability assessments in connection with arms control,
nonproliferation, or disarmament agreements or proposals; and reports required
in the case of any significant degradation in the capacity of the United States
to verify compliance of the components of such agreements;
(b) The Presidents Annual Report to Congress entitled
Adherence to and Compliance with Arms Control, Nonproliferation, and
Disarmament Agreements and Commitmentsreferenced as so much of the report
required under paragraphs (4) through (6) of Section 403(a) of the Arms Control
and Disarmament Act (22 U.S.C. 2593a(a)(4) through (6)) as relates to
verification and compliance matters (also referred to as the Compliance Report
(CR));
(c) Specialized reports on compliance by U.S. treaty
partners as required by Senate Resolutions of Advice and Consent to
Ratification for the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Flank Document
(Condition 5(C)), the Chemical Weapons Convention (Condition 10); and
(d) Other reports being prepared by the Department of
State as of November 29, 1999, relating to arms control, nonproliferation, or
disarmament verification or compliance matters (22 U.S.C. 2652c(c)(4)(C));
(4) Section 1111 of Public Law 106-113 establishes the
Key Verification Assets Fund (V Fund) and authorizes the Secretary of State
to transfer funds available to the Department of State under this section to
the Department of Defense, the Department of Energy, or any agency, entity, or
component of the Intelligence Community, as needed, for retaining, researching,
developing, or acquiring technologies or programs relating to the verification
of arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements or commitments. The
Arms Control, Verification and Compliance Bureau has the responsibility in the
Department for overseeing the V Fund and advising the Secretary;
(5) 22 U.S.C. 2578 requires the Secretary of State to
establish and maintain a comprehensive negotiation record archive for each arms
control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreement under negotiation or in
force after January 1, 1990. At the direction of T, the Assistant Secretary of
State for Arms Control, Verification and Compliance has the responsibility
within the Department for fulfilling this requirement;
(6) 22 U.S.C. 2577a requires the Department to
maintain a comprehensive information database on verification concepts,
research, technologies, and systems. At the direction of T, the Arms Control,
Verification and Compliance Bureau has the responsibility in the Department for
fulfilling this requirement;
(7) Pursuant to National Security Decision Directive
(NSDD) 301 (1988) and the 1987 Soviet-American Nuclear Risk Reduction Center
(NRRC) Agreement (as revised in 2000), the Department established the NRRC on a
24-hour, 7-day-a-week basis, for the U.S. Government to facilitate
government-to-government communications in connection with measures to reduce
the risk of nuclear war between the United States and the Soviet Union (extends
to the Parties of the expired START
Treatythe Russian Federation, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, and Ukraine). The role of the NRRC has subsequently been expanded
to encompass notifications and exchanges involving a wide range of bilateral
and multilateral arms control agreements. The Assistant Secretary for Arms
Control, Verification and Compliance serves as Director of the NRRC;
(8) 22 U.S.C. 2571 requires the Department to
coordinate research, development, and other studies conducted in the fields of
arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament by or for other government
agencies. At the direction of T, the Arms Control, Verification and Compliance
Bureau has the responsibility in the Department for fulfilling this
requirement;
(9) 22 U.S.C. 2593b requires the Secretary of State to
publish an annual unclassified report on world military expenditures and arms
transfers. At the direction of T, the Arms Control, Verification and
Compliance Bureau has the responsibility in the Department for preparing this
report;
(10) Executive Order 13128 and NSPD 70 with respect to
the implementation of the CWC;
(11) Delegation of Authority 293-2, dated October 23,
2011, Section 2(a)(13), which delegated from the Secretary of State to the
Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security (T) all of the
functions that were vested in the United States Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency (ACDA) before it was merged, by statute, with the Department of State,
including any functions conferred on the Director or any officer or employee of
ACDA. As noted in this subchapter, many of those authorities are now exercised
by the Arms Control, Verification and Compliance Bureau, at the direction of T;
and
(12) Other authorities, as appropriate.
1 FAM 442 TREATY COMMISSIONERS AND
REPRESENTATIVES REPORTING DIRECTLY TO THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY
1 FAM 442.1 U.S. Representative for
the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (AVC/OPCW)
(CT:ORG-235; 02-14-2011)
The U.S. Representative for the Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (AVC/OPCW):
(1) Serves as the U.S. Representative to the
Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW);
(2) Maintains close confidential relationships with
the Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security and the
Assistant Secretary for International Security and Nonproliferation;
(3) As the Representative to the Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, has the lead responsibility for all matters
within the Department of State on issues directly involving U.S. participation
in the organization;
(4) In coordination with AVC, develops and implements
executive branch policy with respect to the prohibition of chemical weapons and
is responsible for developing strategies to implement this policy; and
(5) In coordination with the bureaus of Legislative
Affairs and Public Affairs, serves as a principal spokesperson for the
Administration and the Department of State before Congress and the public on
all matters directly involving U.S. participation in the Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons.
1 FAM 442.2 U.S. Representative for
the Conference on Disarmament (AVC/CD)
(CT:ORG-235; 02-14-2011)
The U.S. Representative for the Conference on Disarmament
(AVC/CD):
(1) Serves as the U.S. Permanent Representative to the
Conference on Disarmament (CD);
(2) Maintains close relationships with the Under
Secretary for Arms Control and International Security and the Assistant
Secretary for Arms Control, Verification and Compliance (AVC);
(3) As the Permanent Representative to the Conference
on Disarmament, has the lead responsibility within the Department of State on
all matters directly involving U.S. participation in that organization;
(4) In coordination with AVC, develops executive
branch policies with respect to all issues within the purview of the Conference
on Disarmament, including strategies for implementing those policies;
(5) In coordination with AVC, the Bureau of
International Organization Affairs, and the U.S. Mission to the United Nations,
leads the United States Delegation to the annual meeting of the First (Disarmament
and International Security) Committee of the United Nations General Assembly;
and
(6) In coordination with the bureaus of Legislative
Affairs and of Public Affairs, serves as a principal spokesperson for the
Administration and the Department of State before Congress and the public on
all matters directly involving U.S. participation in the Conference on
Disarmament.
1 FAM 442.3 U.S. Commissioners, INF Treaty and the New START Treaty
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
The U.S. Commissioners,
INF Treaty and the New START Treaty:
(1) Contribute to
overall policy direction and coordination for all activities related to the
Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treatys Special Verification
Commission; and the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treatys (New START) Bilateral
Consultative Commission. The commissioners
advise the Assistant Secretary for Arms Control, Verification and
Compliance and the Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security
on all matters related to the implementation of the
INF, and New START Treaties. The commissioners
also provide general advice on
potential follow-on agreements and commitments; further reductions of nuclear
weapons; and verification and transparency related to those reductions;
(2) Head the
interagency U.S. delegations to the INF and New START Treaties implementation
commissions. Upon request of the National Security Council, the commissioners
chair the interagency Policy Committee and, as permitted by the respective
treaties, negotiate agreements and formal statements in the Commissions on
issues arising from implementation of the INF and New START Treaties. The
commissioners, working with the relevant interagency committee, provide
leadership and advice to the interagency discussions and implementation efforts
related to the INF and New START treaties;
(3) Liaise with
offices in the State Department, Office of the Secretary of Defense, Joint
Chiefs of Staff, Intelligence Community, Department of Energy, and National
Security Council involved in INF and New START Treaty implementation; and
(4) Set goals and
objectives for U.S. delegations, and monitors and directs the use of delegation
staff and other resources to achieve bureau priorities for INF and New START
Treaty implementation and compliance assessment.
1 FAM 442.4 Chief U.S. Arms Control
Delegate, U.S. Mission to the OSCE
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
The Chief U.S. Arms Control Delegate, U.S. Mission to the
OSCE:
(1) Performs duties under the direction of the U.S.
Representative to the Organization for Security and Cooperation (OSCE) and the
Assistant Secretary for Arms Control, Verification and Compliance;
(2) Contributes to overall policy development and
coordination for all activities related to the Conventional Armed Forces in
Europe (CFE) Treatys Joint Consultative Group (JCG); the Open Skies Treatys
Open Skies Consultative Commission (OSCC); and the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europes (OSCE) Forum for Security Cooperation (FSC); and
for purposes of Articles IV and V of Annex 1B of the Dayton Accords. This
delegate advises the Assistant Secretary for Arms Control, Verification and Compliance
on all matters related to the management of these treaties and agreements in
these bodies, and also provides advice on treaty implementation involving
verification and compliance issues;
(3) Heads the interagency U.S. delegation to sessions
of the JCG, OSCC, FSC, the Dayton Accords Article V Commission, and overseas
delegation activities related to Article IV of Annex 1B of the Dayton Accords. As
instructed by the National Security Council-chaired interagency policy committee on Arms Control,
the delegate negotiates agreements and makes formal statements in these bodies
on issues arising from implementation of the treaties and agreements. The
delegate has responsibility for liaison with the State Department and
representatives from other agencies serving on the U.S. delegation from the
Office of the Secretary of Defense, Joint Chiefs of Staff, and other agencies
as appropriate;
(4) Based on guidance, prepares and presents policy,
position papers, and statements to the three arms control implementation forums
in Vienna. The delegate is responsible for reporting on all official meetings
and other delegation meetings as they relate to implementation issues. In this
capacity, the delegate participates in interagency discussion and
implementation efforts related to the CFE and Open Skies Treaties; the Vienna
Document 2011 on Confidence and
Security-Building Measures (CSBMs); and many other FSC-agreed CSBMs; and
(5) Sets goals and objectives for the U.S. arms
control delegation to the OSCE and monitors and directs the use of staff and
other resources in Vienna to achieve bureau priorities for U.S. treaty
implementation objectives.
1 FAM 442.5 Comprehensive Nuclear
Test-Ban Treaty Preparatory Commission (AVC/CTBT)
(CT:ORG-235; 02-14-2011)
The Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty Preparatory
Commission (AVC/CTBT):
(1) Contributes to interagency development of the
overall policy direction and coordination for all activities related to the
Comprehensive Nuclear-Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) Preparatory Commission and advises
the Assistant Secretary on all matters related to the CTBT;
(2) Heads the interagency U.S. delegation to the CTBT
Preparatory Commission and its subordinate bodies in sessions with other
signatories to the treaty and negotiates agreements and formal statements in
the Commission on issues arising from implementing this treaty. The AVC/CTBT
participates in interagency discussions and implementation efforts related to
the CTBT;
(3) Has responsibility for liaison with State
Department, OSD, JCS, DOE, and NSC offices involved in the Commission; and
(4) Sets goals and objectives, and monitors and
directs the use of mission unit staff and other resources to achieve bureau
priorities for CTBT implementation and compliance.
1 FAM 443 DEPUTY ASSISTANT SECRETARIES
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
a. Three deputy assistant secretaries report to the
Assistant Secretary for Arms Control, Verification and Compliance.
b. The deputy assistant secretaries advise the
Assistant Secretary on arms control, verification, and compliance policy
formulation, negotiation, implementation, and reporting.
c. The deputy assistant secretaries also help set
bureau goals and objectives, and direct and oversee the use of staff and other
resources to pursue and achieve bureau, Department, and U.S. Government
priorities.
d. The deputy assistant secretaries assist the
Assistant Secretary in the management of the bureau in the development and
implementation of U.S. Government arms control, verification, and compliance
policy, including with arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament
agreements and commitments.
e. The deputy assistant secretaries monitor other
countries compliance with their arms control, nonproliferation, and
disarmament agreements and commitments and support the bureaus preparation of
the Presidents annual Report on Adherence to and Compliance with Arms
Control, Nonproliferation, and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments (also
referred to as the Compliance Report).
f. As designated by the Assistant Secretary, the
deputy assistant secretaries lead international discussions and diplomacy
efforts related to arms control, verification, compliance, and compliance
enforcement, and implementation of arms control and disarmament agreements and
commitments as appropriate.
g. At the direction of the Assistant Secretary, the
deputy assistant secretaries ensure that verification and compliance policies
are factored into U.S. efforts to strengthen existing and developing new, arms
control, nonproliferation, and disarmament regimes and arrangements.
h. The deputy assistant secretaries coordinate and/or
consult on arms control, verification, and compliance policy with other U.S.
Government departments and agencies, and meet with Congress, foreign
governments, and international entities to explain and build support for U.S.
arms control, verification, and compliance policies.
i. As required, the deputy assistant secretaries
testify before Congressional Committees and brief congressional staff.
j. The Principal Deputy
Assistant Secretary supervises the work of the following offices:
(1) Office of Multilateral and Nuclear Affairs
(AVC/MNA); and
(2) Office of Strategic Stability
and Deterrence Affairs (AVC/SSD).
k. The Deputy Assistant Secretary for Verification, Planning, and European Security (AVC/FO) supervises the work of the following
offices:
(1) Office of Verification, Planning, and Outreach
(AVC/VPO);
(2) Office of Euro-Atlantic Security Affairs
(AVC/ESA); and
(3) Nuclear Risk Reduction Center (AVC/NRRC).
l. The Deputy Assistant Secretary for Emerging Security Challenges and Defense Policy
(AVC/FO) supervises the work of the
following offices:
(1) Office of Chemical and Biological Weapons Affairs
(AVC/CBW); and
(2) Office of Emerging
Security Challenges (AVC/ESC).
1 FAM 444 OFFICES REPORTING TO THE
DEPUTY ASSISTANT SECRETARIES
1 FAM 444.1 Office of Chemical and
Biological Weapons Affairs (AVC/CBW)
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
The Office of Chemical and Biological Weapons Affairs
(AVC/CBW):
(1) Leads efforts to promote the global ban on
chemical weapons embodied in the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC); manages the
U.S. National Authority for the CWC; and assesses compliance with the CWC and
the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC). The office also implements efforts to
impede and roll back the threat of chemical and biological weapons and to
dissuade and impede states and entities from pursuing, using, and/or
proliferating these weapons and related equipment and technology;
(2) Specifically, the office has lead responsibility
within the U.S. Government for bilateral and multilateral efforts to implement
the CWC and promotes measures on the future of the Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). It provides direct guidance and
support to the U.S. Delegation to the Organization for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons and manages the U.S. National Authority, which oversees U.S.
implementation of the CWC. The office chairs the U.S. Government-wide CWC
Backstopping Group;
(3) The office also has lead responsibility within the
Department for developing policy and addressing verification and compliance
aspects of existing and prospective agreements and commitments involving
biological or chemical weapons;
(4) The office has the lead on U.S. compliance
assessments of other countries chemical and biological activities, as well as
on developing approaches and leading negotiations to resolve U.S. concerns and
chairs the U.S. Government-wide Verification, Compliance and Analysis Working
Group (VCAWG);
(5) The office prepares those sections of the
congressionally-mandated annual report on Adherence to and Compliance with Arms
Control, Nonproliferation, and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments relating
to chemical and biological weapons;
(6) In addition, with respect to the CWC, the office
prepares the Annual Condition 10(C) Report on compliance with the CWC mandated
by the Senate Resolution of Ratification;
(7) The office is also responsible for preparing
verifiability assessments of arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament
agreements as required under 22 U.S.C. 2577 or by direction;
(8) Represents the Department on these issues in
contacts with the NSC, the Departments of Defense, Commerce, Homeland Security,
Justice, the Intelligence Community, and other applicable entities, on issues
involving chemical and biological weapons; and
(9) Coordinates closely with the Office of
Verification, Planning, and Outreach (AVC/VPO)
to ensure that current and projected collection and analytical requirements
related to verification, compliance, and implementation in the above areas are
clearly formulated, well understood, and given appropriate emphasis and
attention.
1 FAM 444.2 Office of Verification, Planning, and Outreach
(AVC/VPO)
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
The Office of Verification,
Planning, and Outreach (AVC/VPO):
(1) Reports to the
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Verification, Planning, and European Security;
(2) Supports AVC bureau
principals by providing concrete strategic planning support for all
Congressional, public affairs, and public diplomacy activities:
(a) Coordinates strategies
and plans to inform key U.S. groups and opinion leaders on bureau objectives,
including overseeing outreach to nongovernmental organizations (NGOs);
(b) Serves as policy
advisor to the Bureaus Assistant Secretary (AVC) and Principal Deputy
Assistant Secretary (AVC/PDAS) on all legislative, congressional, press, and
public affairs relating to all issues within the AVC Bureaus purview;
(c) Coordinates with
others within the Department of State and with appropriate representatives of
other U.S. Government agencies, including the Departments of Defense (DoD) and
Energy (DOE), National Security Council (NSC), and the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) with respect to the presentation of policy issues before Congress,
the media and the public;
(d) Serves as the bureaus
GAO liaison to the Bureau of the Comptroller and Global Financial Services
(CGFS), ensuring adequate and appropriate representation of AVC equities;
facilitating GAO requests for meetings and information; and providing feedback
and follow-up to GAO as reports are drafted and released;
(e) Integrates arms
control, disarmament and compliance issues into U.S. foreign policy, and, in
coordination with the Bureau of Public Affairs (PA), develops and delivers key
messages on these issues to the media, NGOs, the private sector and the
Congress;
(f) Coordinates AVC
bureau-wide analyses of cross-cutting issues and works with other offices in
the bureau to better align positions in various forums to advance U.S.
interests. AVC/VPO coordinates and works with the Departments Bureau of
Public Affairs;
(g) Coordinates bureau
efforts on strategic dialogues and regional processes involving multiple AVC
issues;
(h) Collaborates with regional
and functional bureaus in preparation of policy papers and briefing material
for meetings and trips by AVC principals and visits of senior foreign
officials;
(i) Oversees the full
range of Congressional activities for the bureau, including activities relating
to legislation and preparation of Congressional testimony, hearings and
briefings by bureau principals, staff, and other U.S. Government officials on
the full range of AVC topics and manages preparation of Congressional
correspondence;
(j) Supervises the
submission of reports mandated by Congress;
(k) Develops and maintains
relationships with key Congressional interlocutors and relevant media outlets;
(l) Reviews and analyzes
legislation involving Department and AVC equities and keeps the Assistant
Secretary and appropriate bureau staff informed of Congressional activities;
(m) Provides advice and
counsel H on AVC issues and works closely with H contacts to coordinate options
and strategies and to formulate Department positions on AVC issues;
(n) Recommends legislative
options and strategies to advance AVC goals;
(o) Oversees and
coordinates the preparation of statements and briefing materials for testimony
by the Assistant Secretary and other senior Department of State principals on
substantive arms control, disarmament and compliance issues, as well as
responses to Congressional inquiries in written, spoken, or briefing form;
(p) Develops, plans,
coordinates, and executes a broad range of outreach efforts, both foreign
(public diplomacy) and domestic (public affairs), in support of Department and
U.S. Government international security and nonproliferation priorities to
inform and influence key foreign groups and opinion leaders, NGOs, academia,
youth audiences, and the general public;
(q) Formulates and
implements public affairs and public diplomacy for the bureau, including
speeches, press guidance, opinion-editorials, and web content;
(r) Plans and oversees
the execution of public affairs initiatives and media and press activities,
advising the Assistant Secretary and bureau principals on media contacts and
appearances;
(s) Responds to direct
media inquiries, coordinating with PA and serves as the single point of contact
for AVC interaction with foreign and domestic press to include coordination and
the timely preparation and dissemination of daily press guidance for AVC,
working closely with PA and press officers throughout the Department;
(t) Maintains and
facilitates broad clearance of a wide range of current AVC talking points for
use by AVC principals and other Department officials; and
(u) Monitors online media
activity and maintains the bureaus online, electronic information sites;
(3) Provides
policy guidance to senior members of the Department of State and advises the
Assistant Secretary and the Under Secretary for Arms Control and International
Security (T) on technology issues and
requirements:
(a) Participates in interagency groups that promote
and guide the research and development of promising verification and
transparency technologies and assets (pursuant to 22 U.S.C. 2571);
(b) Represents the
Department at the interagency Counterproliferation Program Review Committee to
address improvements in the U.S. Governments efforts to combat WMD and the
means of their delivery;
(c) Supports the Assistant
Secretarys official role as the
Department's principal policy representative to the Intelligence Community and
its constituent parts by participating in interagency and Intelligence
Community boards, committees, and working groups concerned with developing,
retaining, and strengthening national technical means (NTM) necessary for
verifying compliance with arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament
agreements and commitments, and with respect to other verification and
compliance matters;
(d) Develops the
annual AVC Research and Development Requirements
document and ensures widest external distribution for articulating bureau
technology requirements for sensor programs and assets critical for verifying
compliance with arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements and
commitments and supports efforts to ensure that these programs are developed,
deployed, maintained, and adequately funded;
(e) Assesses the
capability of technologies, systems, devices, and techniques to promote verification
with arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements and
commitments, as required under 22 U.S.C. 2577 or as otherwise directed;
(f) Coordinates
technologies supporting NTMs with the Department of Defense, the Department of
Energy, and the Intelligence Community (IC) to support efforts to ensure that
critical sensor systems are properly researched, developed, funded, operated,
and deployed to detect and identify weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and the
means of their delivery;
(g) Serves as the
bureau manager of the "Key Verification Assets Fund (V Fund); advises the
Assistant Secretary and the deputy assistant secretaries on the disposition of
the V Fund; and advocates annual funding requests;
(h) Assists in the
development of verification measures and regimes in order to support
negotiations for existing and prospective agreements and commitments (and
related consultations);
(i) Coordinates
closely with the relevant offices in the bureau to ensure that current and
projected collection and analytical requirements related to arms control,
verification, and compliance in their respective areas are clearly formulated,
well understood, and given appropriate emphasis and attention; and
(j) As required,
briefs Congressional Committees and staff; and
(4) Supports and houses
the executive directorate responsibilities for the Secretary of States
International Security Advisory Board (ISAB) under the direction of the Under
Secretary for Arms Control and International Security (T).
1 FAM 444.3 Office of Multilateral
and Nuclear Affairs (AVC/MNA)
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
The Office of Multilateral and Nuclear Affairs (AVC/MNA):
(1) Leads efforts to promote the vision of a safe,
secure world without nuclear weapons through the identification, negotiation,
assessment, and implementation of global and multinational arms control,
transparency, and confidence building measures, and other measures;
(2) In support of its mission, the office:
(a) Promotes U.S. and international ratification of and
entry into force of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty and effective
implementation of the treatys verification regime;
(b) Leads the development of U.S. policy on a Fissile
Material Cutoff Treaty (and on fissile material production moratoria) and leads
the negotiation of such an agreement in this area;
(c) Manages U.S. engagement in relevant international
and multilateral discussions and negotiations;
(d) Manages development of U.S. policy and international
engagement on such other international multilateral arms control/disarmament
agreements not within the specific purview of other AVC offices, such as the
Seabed Arms Control Treaty, and the Environmental Modification Convention;
(e) Assesses international compliance with relevant
associated nuclear agreements and commitments; and
(f) Promotes measures to establish consequences for
violation of international agreements;
(3) More generally, the office coordinates U.S. policy
on arms control, verification and compliance issues before the Conference on
Disarmament (CD) in Geneva; the First (Disarmament and International Security)
Committee of the United Nations General Assembly (UNFC) in New York; the
Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty
Organization (CTBTO PrepCom) in Vienna; and the United Nations Disarmament
Commission (UNDC) in New York;
(4) The Office has lead responsibility within the U.S.
Government for bilateral and multilateral efforts to implement nuclear
disarmament-associated efforts and measures, including the CTBT and future
multilateral treaties, agreements, and commitments. It provides direct policy
guidance and support to the U.S. delegations to multilateral organizations
established to negotiate such agreements and commitments, including the CD,
UNFC, CTBTO PrepCom, and UNDC. Additionally, the office leads bilateral and
multilateral consultations on matters within the purview of these bodies,
including with the European Unions Committee on Disarmament in the UN (CODUN)
and other regional organizations;
(5) The office also has lead responsibility within the
Department for assessing the verifiability of prospective global and
multilateral nuclear-related arms control and disarmament agreements and
commitments and addressing the adequacy of monitoring and verification
resources for existing global and multilateral nuclear-related arms control and
disarmament agreements and commitments;
(6) The office has the lead on U.S. assessments of
other countries activities in terms of their compliance with specific global
and multilateral nuclear-related arms control and disarmament agreements and
commitments, as well as on developing the diplomatic approaches and leading the
negotiations to resolve U.S. compliance concerns;
(7) The office prepares those sections of the congressionally-mandated
annual Compliance Report relating to multilateral and bilateral nuclear-related
arms control and disarmament agreements and commitments, specifically the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, the Threshold Test Ban
Treaty, the Peaceful Nuclear Explosions Treaty, and unilaterally-declared
nuclear testing moratoria;
(8) MNA also advances relevant Administration policies
before the Congress, the American public, and foreign audiences in coordination
with the bureaus of Legislative Affairs, Public Affairs, and relevant
regional/functional bureaus; and
(9) Coordinates closely with the Office of
Verification, Planning, and Outreach (AVC/VPO)
to ensure that current and projected collection and analytical requirements
related to arms control, verification, and compliance in the above areas are
clearly formulated, well understood, and given appropriate emphasis and
attention.
1 FAM 444.4 Office of Strategic Stability and Deterrence Affairs (AVC/SSD)
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
The Office of Strategic Stability
and Deterrence (AVC/SSD):
(1) Represents the Assistant Secretary and serves as
lead within the Department for strategic arms control treaties; leads in the
policy formulation for, and oversight of, negotiation, ratification,
verification, compliance, and implementation aspects of current and prospective
arms control agreements involving strategic, intermediate-range, and
nonstrategic nuclear weapons systems;
(2) Represents the Assistant Secretary and serves as
lead within the Department for diplomatic engagement on strategic military
issues through the formulation, negotiation, and oversight of policy
initiatives that improve strategic stability and create the international
security environment necessary to reduce the worldwide salience of nuclear
arsenals. The office engages with
potential treaty partners to gauge interest in, and feasibility of, pursuing
new arms control proposals;
(3) Represents the Assistant Secretary as the lead
within the Department and chairs interagency committees for reviewing and
assessing compliance by foreign countries with arms control, nonproliferation,
and disarmament agreements and commitments involving nuclear warheads and
strategic, intermediate-range and nonstrategic nuclear forces; incorporates
compliance analyses and assessments into the Presidents Annual Report to
Congress on Adherence to and Compliance with Arms Control, Nonproliferation,
and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments, pursuant to 22 U.S.C. 2593a and
other reports, as appropriate, and, prepares verifiability assessments of arms
control and nonproliferation agreements and commitments, as required under 22
U.S.C. 2577, or by direction;
(4) The office has the following specific functions
with respect to diplomatic engagement:
(a) Represents the Assistant Secretary as the lead in
the Department for initiatives on arms control, transparency,
and confidence-building related to the
development and deployment of delivery vehicles for weapons of mass
destruction;
(b) Represents the Assistant Secretary as the lead in
the Department for issues related to the United States Nuclear Force Posture
and related issues such as declaratory policy and
deterrence, including the Extended Deterrence Dialogue with Japan and the
Deterrence Strategy Committee with the Republic of Korea;
(c) Together, with the Office of Euro-Atlantic Security Affairs, shares
responsibility for initiatives related to nonstrategic nuclear forces
associated with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO);
(d) Serves as the contact point for the Department with
the United States Strategic Command (STRATCOM);
(e) Represents the Assistant Secretary as the lead in
the Department for initiatives related to the Presidential Nuclear Initiatives
and similar, new transparency efforts; and
(f) Builds relationships with nongovernmental
organizations to foster exchanges on strategic issues; and
(5) Coordinates closely with the Office of
Verification, Planning, and Outreach (AVC/VPO)
to ensure that current and projected collection and analytical requirements
related to arms control, verification, and compliance in the above areas are
clearly formulated, well understood, and given appropriate emphasis and
attention.
1 FAM 444.5 Nuclear Risk Reduction
Center (AVC/NRRC)
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
The Nuclear Risk Reduction Center (AVC/NRRC):
(1) Operates the United
States direct, dedicated, government-to-government communications
systems on a 24-hour basis pursuant to National Security Decision Directive
(NSDD) 301 (1988) and the 1987 Soviet-American Nuclear Risk Reduction Center
(NRRC) Agreement (as revised in 2000), to support implementation of arms
control and other security agreements;
(2) Acts as the
focal point within the U.S. Government for message receipt and handling of
notifications and other communications required
by, in connection with, and in support of, existing nuclear, chemical, conventional, and cyber arms
control treaties and security-building agreements between the United States and over 55 foreign
governments and international organizations on a 24-hour basis;
(3) Translates incoming notifications and other
messages; disseminates the notifications and
messages received to appropriate U.S.
Government departments and agencies; and
executes operational alerts, as necessary, for time-sensitive notifications
requiring immediate attention;
(4) Executes final review, handling, and transmission
of outgoing U.S. Government notifications and other messages to counterpart foreign governments or international
organizations, pursuant to the same arms
control and security-building agreements;
disseminates these notifications and messages to
other U.S. Government agencies and departments; and executes operational
alerts, as necessary, for time-sensitive notifications requiring immediate
attention;
(5) Participates in interagency
policy groups responsible for existing and prospective arms control and other
security agreements requiring communications support in order to ensure
effective technology infrastructure; translation
support; and message formatting, receipt, handling, and dissemination;
(6) Advises Department policy and operational offices
on communications issues affecting new arms control and international security
agreements, assessing possible NRRC roles in implementing communication
protocols for new agreements while adhering to national security and
presidential directives;
(7) Participates, as necessary, in negotiations
related to existing and prospective arms control and other security-building agreements requiring communication
support;
(8) Provides technical assistance to, and conducts
technical exchanges with, foreign governments and international organizations
on the operation of national communication systems for arms control and other
security-building agreements; and
(9) Provides guidance in developing U.S. Government
communications procedures and technology to ensure that NRRC operational
readiness can support national security goals and objectives.
1 FAM 444.6 Office of Euro-Atlantic
Security Affairs (AVC/ESA)
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
The Office of Euro-Atlantic Security Affairs (AVC/ESA):
(1) Provides policy guidance to senior members of the
Department of State and advises the Assistant Secretary for Arms Control,
Verification and Compliance and the Under Secretary for Arms Control and
International Security on the matters described herein;
(2) Represents the Assistant Secretary as the lead
within the Department for developing U.S. policy relative to existing and
prospective European and Euro-Atlantic arms control agreements and security
arrangements concerning conventional and nuclear weapons and forces, including
the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE); the Vienna Document 2011 Confidence-and Security-Building Measures
(CSBMs); the Treaty on Open Skies; and arms control elements of the Dayton
Peace Accords; develops tactics for achieving that policy; chairs related
interagency committees; and drafts negotiating instructions on European and
Euro-Atlantic arms control issues; is responsible for leading U.S. ratification
of such treaties to which the U.S. is a party; coordinates U.S. participation
in the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europes (OSCE) Forum for
Security Cooperation (FSC); supports the U.S. Chief Arms Control Delegate in
the U.S. Mission to the OSCE and provides delegation members on a rotating
basis from Washington; supports the U.S. Mission to NATO; supports the AVC
Bureau Assistant Secretary as U.S. Chair of the NATO Arms Control Committee;
provides the U.S. Representative to the NATO High-Level
Task Force (HLTF) and the NATO
Verification Coordinating Committee; provides the U.S. Representative to NATO
committees on nuclear weapons forces and arms control; supports the US Mission
to the EU; and represents the United States, as appropriate, on these issues at
international meetings and conferences;
(3) Represents the Assistant Secretary as the lead
within the Department for addressing the verification, compliance, compliance
diplomacy, and compliance enforcement aspects of existing and prospective
Euro-Atlantic arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements and
commitments; leads international negotiations and consultations related to the
verification, compliance, and compliance enforcement aspects of these
agreements and commitments; reviews the verification and compliance performance
of countries being considered for membership in multilateral nonproliferation
regimes and arrangements; prepares verifiability assessments of these
agreements as required under 22 U.S.C. 2577, or by direction; and prepares
compliance analyses and assessments for the Presidents Annual Report on
Adherence to and Compliance with Arms Control, Nonproliferation, and Disarmament
Agreements and Commitments, pursuant to 22 U.S.C. 2593a, as well as
specialized compliance reports required under Senate Resolutions of
Ratification, and other reports, as appropriate;
(4) Supports efforts to promote
Confidence-and-Security-Building Measures (CSBMs) in regions of the world
beyond Europe, in connection with OSCE efforts at wider sharing of OSCE norms,
principles, and commitments with Mediterranean and Asian states;
(5) Analyzes military expenditures and arms transfers
by foreign countries and prepares, pursuant to 22 U.S.C. 2593b, the annual
report, "World Military Expenditures and Arms Transfers";
(6) As required, briefs Congressional Committees and
staff; and
(7) Coordinates closely with the Office of
Verification, Planning, and Outreach (AVC/VPO)
to ensure that current and projected collection and analytical requirements
related to arms control, verification, and compliance in the above areas are
clearly formulated, well understood, and given appropriate emphasis and
attention.
1 FAM 444.7 Office of Emerging Security Challenges (AVC/ESC)
(CT:ORG-375; 10-06-2015)
The Office of Emerging
Security Challenges (AVC/ESC):
(1) Provides analysis, options, and recommendations to
senior members of the Department of State and
advises the Assistant Secretary and the
Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security on all
policy, programmatic, technical, and threat issues related to missile defense systems and cooperation, outer space security issues and transparency and
confidence building measures, cyber strategic
stability, and Arctic and Antarctic security issues;
(2) Leads the State
Departments efforts to enhance ballistic missile defense cooperation among
Allies and Partners including in bilateral and multilateral fora, including at
NATO, the NATO-Russia Council and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and also
leads efforts to promote predictability related to missile defense deployments
with Russia and China;
(3) Provides the Department of State representative or
the technical advisor to numerous U.S. interagency delegations involved in
consultations and negotiations on missile defense
cooperation with allies, friends, and Russia;
(4) Leads the Department
of States efforts to promote outer space security efforts, including
transparency and confidence building
measures (TCBMs) on all issues related to strategic space arms control and
military-related space policy issues, including
bilateral Space Security Dialogues and multilateral issues such as the European Unions International Code of Conduct on
Outer Space. AVC/ESC supports the formulation and implementation of military- and
intelligence-related space policies, including the space-situational awareness
information sharing and maritime domain awareness activities of the Department
of Defense. AVC/ESC supports the efforts of the
Bureau of Oceans, and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs at the
UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space, including the Working Group
on the Long-term Sustainability of Outer Space Activities. AVC/ESC supports
the efforts of the Bureau of Intelligence and Research to formulate Department
of State positions on intelligence-related space policy issues;
(5) Plays a leading role
in the efforts of the Department of State to promote transparency, enhance
cooperation, and build confidence in cyber security issues. AVC/ESC supports
the Office of the Department of State Coordinator for Cyber Issues in
negotiating and implementing bilateral and regional confidence-building and clarifying
international norms of behavior for state conduct in cyber space;
(6) Leads the
Departments efforts to ensure peace and stability in the Polar regions,
including seeking to maintaining and preserving the Arctic as a region free of
conflict and the arms control provisions contained in the Antarctic Treaty;
(7) Leads the
Departments public diplomacy effort with regard to related missile defense, space policy, cyber security, and Arctic/Antarctic issues and prepares
materials (e.g., fact sheets) for use by
Department of State officials, and provides public speakers for domestic and
overseas forums; and
(8) Briefs
Congressional Committees and staffs on related missile
defense, space policy, cyber security and
Arctic/Antarctic security issues.