Citizens to Stop Nuclear Terrorism

CITIZENS TO STOP NUCLEAR TERRORISM

We are actively campaigning to educate elected officials and the public about the nature of the threat of nuclear terrorism and steps that must be taken to ensure that terrorists bent on staging a devastating nuclear 9/11 against the United States never can carry out their plans.
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ABOUT US

Citizens to Stop Nuclear Terrorism actively is campaigning to educate elected officials and the public about the nature of the threat of nuclear terrorism and steps that must be taken to ensure that terrorists bent on staging a devastating nuclear 9/11 against the United States never can carry out their plans.

CSNT is a 501(c)(3) organization, meaning that your donations are tax deductible. IRS No. 86-1170037. Its official address is: Citizens to Stop Nuclear Terrorism, 612 South Laurel Street, Richmond, Va. 23220.

 

Staff:

Edmund Rennolds, Founder and Executive Director

E-mail: CSNT1@att.net

Phone: 214-478-8314

Katherine C. Meade, Management Consultant
Phone: 703-626-5381

Harlan Lang, Director of Development
Phone: 301-751-4898

Richard C. Gross, Media Adviser
Phone: 505-466-4779


Board of Directors:

Edmund Rennolds, a former journalist and businessman, lives in Washington, D.C. He was co-founder of American Forum and founder and executive director of America’s Future Media Project, non-profit organizations that distribute editorial material about public issues to the media nationwide.

Butch Ball is a businessman in Richmond, Va.

Scott Burger is a corporate computer specialist and an activist with the Green Party and the Sierra Club in Virginia. He is CSNT's treasurer and his address in Richmond, Va., is the same as that of the organization's official address.

Jim Doherty is a businessman in Richmond, Va.

John Macgregor served at the World Bank for 25 years, planning and coordinating programs of lending and technical support in the Middle East, Africa and South Asia and appraising and supervising projects there and in Latin America and East Asia. He emphasized increased bank support for private investment opportunities and good governance. He leads private nonprofit groups dedicated to sustainable energy use and new energy technology.

Leslie Rose is a medical doctor in Richmond. He has a bachelor’s degree in physics and contemplated a career at a national nuclear laboratory after service in the Navy.

Advisory Board:

Randolph M. Bell, a founding board member of CSNT, served 30 years at the State Department. He was ambassador-at-large in the Bureau of European Affairs and acting deputy secretary of state for NATO Affairs. Before that, he was director of Russian and Eurasian Analysis, Bureau of Intelligence and Research -- the principal intelligence adviser on Russia and the former Soviet states to Deputy Secretary Strobe Talbott.

Robert W. Daniel Jr. is a former Republican congressman from Virginia. He served in the CIA and managed an 85-person intelligence unit focusing on weapons of mass destruction as director of intelligence for the U.S. Department of Energy from 1989 to 1993.

Robert L. Gallucci, president of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and a former assistant secretary of state for political-military affairs, served as the chief U.S. negotiator with North Korea during the Clinton administration on the potential manufacture of nuclear weapons materials. He has written several publications on political-military issues, including Going Critical: The First North Korean Nuclear Crisis, with Joel S. Wit and Daniel Poneman. He was dean of Georgetown University’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service.

James E. Goodby received five ambassadorial appointments from Presidents Bill Clinton, Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter. His assignments included chief negotiator for nuclear threat reduction agreements (the Nunn-Lugar program), 1993-94. His book, The Gravest Danger: Nuclear Weapons, coauthored with Sidney Drell, deals with nuclear proliferation and was published by the Hoover Institution in 2003. His most recent book is At the Borderline of Armageddon—How American Presidents Managed the Atom Bomb (Rowman&Littlefield, 2006). He also is the author of many articles on nuclear weapons issues and on Northeast Asia, especially security issues in the Korean Peninsula.

 

  

NEWS/VIEWS

Another six old former Soviet strategic nuclear warheads deactivated under Nunn-Lugar

South Korea seeks to boost its role in the anti-WMD campaign

U.S. to help Malta detect and seize any trafficked nuclear materials at a major port

Vietnam prohibits illicit sales, transfers, purchases or possession of nuclear materials

Former Sen. Sam Nunn warns of nuclear terrorism threat on The Colbert Report

Senior U.S. official says federal government must focus more on WMD response

U.S. lab reveals nuclear response capabilities to help countries thwart terrorism

IAEA is assessing claim that Myanmar is establishing a nuclear weapons program

U.S., European Union adopt counterterrorism declaration

U.S., Russia discuss procedures to guard nuclear sites

Justice Department says WMD readiness must be improved around Washington, D.C.

Russia says terrorists seeking nuclear materials

Op-Ed: Don't gamble with America's future

Report: Total of operational nuclear weapons in eight nations dips from previous year

Report: Justice Department unprepared to safeguard public after a WMD terrorist strike

Former 9/11 commission chief says intelligence gaps leave U.S. vulnerable to terrorism

Getting the right budget for "loose nukes:" Part I

Nuclear terror drill held in Los Angeles

Britain investigating company suspected of supplying Iran with "dirty bomb" material

The nuclear security summit: Highlights of commitments from different countries

Video: World leaders pledge to act against nuclear terrorism

Testimony: "Nuclear terrorism is one of the most challenging threats to global security"

The nuclear security summit: Achievements and agenda for action

Report: Concerns about terrorism expressed at nuclear security summit

Expert warns that nuclear waste in Australia could be a terrorist target

FBI chief says Al-Qaida still pursuing WMD, posing a "serious threat" to U.S.

Analysis: Funding the fight against nuclear terrorism

Op-Ed: Facing the nuclear terrorism threat

Leaders of key Congress panel doubt if four-year goal to secure nuke weapons can be met

Preliminary analysis of FY11 funding request for international WMD security programs

Russia says Mexico will join global nuclear counterterrorism group

Homeland Security Department scales back development of new radiation detectors

Obama administration may accelerate disassembly of older nuclear weapons

Obama administration considers new nuclear weapons strategy

More money, leadership needed to fulfill pledge to secure nuclear materials in four years

Three former Soviet strategic nuclear warheads dismantled under Nunn-Lugar initiative

Main U.S. counterterrorism center hit by flawed staffing, internal cultural clashes

U.S., Slovakia train to prevent illicit trafficking of weapons-grade nuclear materials

Opinion: Three steps to reducing nuclear terrorism

Biden disputes Cheney's assertions that nuclear terrorism is a likely threat to the U.S.

Pentagon might shift command responsibility for combating WMD spread

Controlling the nuclear threat must be a top priority

Clinton fears terrorists with weapons of mass destruction

Book says British intelligence believes terrorists seeking weapons of mass destruction

U.S. experts urge Obama administration to accelerate securing fissile materials

Iran signals willingness to send low-enriched uranium to France, Russia for refinement

U.S. deploys radiation to detectors to ports in Israel, Malaysia, Portugal and Taiwan

Nuclear material moved from Livermore Lab to five more secure government sites

U.S., Russia hold nuclear security talks, tour nuclear facility

Nine more nuclear-capable missiles eliminated under Nunn-Lugar program

Reactors in Wisconsin and Idaho stop using highly enriched uranium

U.N. Security Council adopts resolution securing all nuclear materials within four years

U.N. Security Council Resolution 1887

Russia completes 75 percent of its conversion of highly enriched uranium

Op-ed: Allow interdiction of ships suspected of carrying nuclear materials

How U.S. removed 24 nuclear bombs worth of highly enriched uranium from Kazakhstan

GAO warns of lax security at some foreign research reactors

GAO report: FEMA has not issued recovery plans in case of radiological, nuclear attack

Iceland, Morocco sign on in support of the Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism

U.S. intelligence community sets WMD priorities for the next four years

Russian-made highly enriched uranium removed from Hungarian reactor

U.S., Poland sign nuclear security agreement

Paper: The Armageddon Test

Report: An update on funding for control nuclear weapons and materials

Report: World at risk

Obama administration plans to appoint White House nuclear terror czar

Officials warn that Homeland Security in disarray

Report calls nuclear terrorism a serious risk

 

 


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