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World
Public Library Collection
DTIRP
Publication Collection:
Comprehensive
Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty
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U.S.
Department of Defense (DoD) arms control community outreach
program
Under
a growing number of arms control treaties and agreements,
the United States has agreed to grant foreign inspection
teams unprecedented levels of access to U.S. sites
and facilities associated with treaty-related inspection
and overflight activities. As a community outreach
program, the DTIRP combines and focuses multi-agency
intelligence, counterintelligence, security expertise,
and treaty inspection experience to form top notch
teams of knowledgeable experts ready to provide
security awareness and assistance to facilities
facing arms control inspections.
All
240 eBooks
and eDocuments are included in the World Public Library
Collections. You can find the title you are looking
for by using our comprehensive full text search
engine. Below is a list of the most popular titles
in the DTIRP Publications Collection.
Comprehensive
Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty
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Comprehensive
Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty Indicators
Although the United States has not conducted
any nuclear weapon test explosions since 1992,
natural or man-made events could occur that
might lead other States Parties to the CTBT
to request consultation and clarification
from the United States. This pamphlet identifies
several potential indicators of nuclear explosive
testing that could increase a facility's susceptibility
to on-site inspection.
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Comprehensive
Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty—The Impact
Although a remote possibility, facility security
managers could be asked to grant sufficient
access to a site or facility to fulfill U.S.
treaty obligations under the CTBT. This pamphlet
describes the CTBT's verification measures
and on-site inspection provisions. The pamphlet
also identifies ways in which CTBT inspections
could affect U.S. facilities should the CTBT
enter into force.
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Quick
Reference Guide to CFE Inspections
This
pamphlet is designed to aid commanders and
other treaty implementers involved in hosting
inspections under the Treaty on Conventional
Armed Forces in Europe. The guide provides
an overview of the Treaty and identifies
CFE verification methods, inspection types,
treaty-permitted inspection activities,
existing types of treaty-limited equipment,
and existing types of equipment not limited
by
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Strengthened
Safeguards System Operations Security Checklist
This reference guide provides a checklist
for declarable sites under the United States-International
Atomic Energy Agency (U.S.-IAEA) Strengthened
Safeguards Agreement. The guide is divided
into seven phases: asset/sensitive information,
susceptibility, threat, vulnerability, risk,
probability, and recommended countermeasures.
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The
U.S.-IAEA Additional Protocol—An Overview
of Nuclear Safeguards
This bulletin reviews the provisions of the
U.S.-IAEA Additional Protocol that will allow
IAEA inspectors greater access to U.S. information
and locations, except those with national
security significance, when it enters into
force.
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Strategic
Arms Reduction Treaty—Special Right of Access
Visits (SAVs) and Other Questions Facing
the U.S. Defense Industry
This
pamphlet answers many questions posed by
U.S. defense industry representatives regarding
the potential impact a START visit with
special right of access could have on their
facilities. The pamphlet focuses on the
degree of access foreign inspection teams
would be permitted and the types of site
assistance available. Importantly, the pamphlet
also suggests appropriate security countermeasures
for protecting sensitive information.
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Radiation
Detection Equipment: An Arms Control Verification
Tool
This
pamphlet briefly summarizes the procedures
for using radiation detection equipment
(RDE) and reviews the steps taken to ensure
the safety and security of personnel and
facilities. The pamphlet examines how RDE
was introduced under the Intermediate-Range
Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty. It also assesses
RDE use under the Strategic Arms Reduction
Treaty (START) and looks ahead to possibilities
for RDE use under future nuclear weapons
agreements.
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The
Moscow Treaty—An Evolutionary, Flexible Approach
to Arms Control
This article briefly describes the provisions
of the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty
(SORT), also known as the Moscow Treaty, which
are of interest to DoD and defense contractor
facilities. The article also describes U.S.
plans to implement the treaty and the diplomatic
forums established to discuss treaty implementation
and related issues.
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Arms
Control Agreements Synopses
This pamphlet provides comprehensive synopses
of the various arms control treaties and agreements
to which the United States is party or may
become party. Each synopsis identifies the
treaty's legal status and number of States
Parties or signatory states. Each synopsis
then reviews the purpose and objectives of
the treaty, the treaty's verification provisions,
current activities, implementation status,
and potential security concerns for impacted
facilities.
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Guide
to Arms Control Policy and Implementation
Organizations
This guide provides contact information, including
telephone, fax, and DSN numbers, for the primary
U.S. Government offices involved in arms control
compliance and implementation. The guide is
designed to help facility managers, treaty
compliance officers, and other treaty implementers
quickly locate the appropriate office(s) when
seeking answers to time-sensitive questions.
Offices are organized alphabetically and each
entry includes a brief description of the
office's functions and capabilities.
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Questions
or Comments eMail Support Department, 
©
2008 World eBook Fair, WorldeBookFair.org, All Rights Reserved
World Wide.
World
eBook Fair is produced by the
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Public Library Association, a
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with any governmental agency or department.
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