The Defense Department 
          announced today the signing of a Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) 
          agreement with the Republic of Kazakstan that would permanently close 
          and seal the former Soviet Union's Degelen Mountain nuclear test tunnel 
          complex at the Semipalatinsk site. It is the largest such complex in 
          the world. 
        
 The agreement, 
          one in a series of agreements on cooperative threat reduction with 
          four successor states of the Soviet Union (Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, 
          and Kazakstan), is an important step in strengthening the recently renewed 
          1968 Nonproliferation Treaty to which Kazakstan has also acceded. It 
          also serves to reinforce long-standing U.S. efforts to promote acceptance 
          of a comprehensive nuclear test ban treaty.  
        
 The former Soviet 
          Union conducted underground nuclear tests at the Degelen Mountain Complex 
          from 1961 to 1989. The U.S.-Kazakstan cooperative project will demilitarize 
          the complex using environmentally sound methods to close and seal permanently 
          its tunnels. By foreclosing future use of the complex, this project 
          will have a positive impact on our broader efforts to enhance U.S. national 
          security as well as international security in the post-Cold War era. 
        
 As part of a Congressionally 
          funded program for nuclear infrastructure elimination, the project results 
          from discussions starting in late 1994 between Kazakstan's Ministry 
          of Science and New Technologies and the Department of Defense. The Defense 
          Nuclear Agency will execute the project for the Department of Defense, 
          in cooperation with the National Nuclear Center of Kazakstan. 
        
 The project will 
          be implemented in two phases: the first, beginning this month, will 
          assess the geological and radiological status of each tunnel and recommend 
          appropriate sealing methods and schedules. The second will be the actual 
          closures, targeted for completion by Fiscal Year 1999. The goal is to 
          seal a minimum of 60 tunnels a year. So far, six million dollars in 
          Fiscal Year 1995 CTR funding has been designated to cover the assessment 
          phase and initial tunnel closures.  
        
 The Department 
          of Defense is pleased to be engaged in this highly significant cooperative 
          undertaking with the newly independent Republic of Kazakstan, and sees 
          it as a symbol of both countries' commitment to leadership in promoting 
          global nonproliferation policies. 
        
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