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Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security
Bureau of Verification, Compliance, and Implementation (VCI)
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Bureau of Verification, Compliance, and Implementation (VCI)

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The Verification, Compliance, and Implementation (VCI) Bureau is headed by Assistant Secretary Paula A. DeSutter.  The Bureau's core missions are to ensure that appropriate verification requirements and capabilities are fully considered and properly integrated throughout the development, negotiation, and implementation of arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements and commitments and to ensure that other countries’ compliance is carefully watched, rigorously assessed, appropriately reported, and resolutely enforced. In this regard, the Bureau is responsible for preparing the President’s annual report to Congress on Adherence to and Compliance with Arms Control, Nonproliferation, and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments. The Bureau is further required to prepare verifiability assessments on proposals and agreements, and to report these to Congress, as required. The Bureau also prepares the President’s semi-annual Iran, North Korea, Syria Nonproliferation Report to Congress, which identifies entities that engage in the transfer of controlled items to and from Iran, North Korea, and Syria and authorizes the imposition of sanctions against these entities.

As required by statue, the Bureau also is responsible for ensuring that U.S. intelligence capabilities to collect, analyze, and disseminate precise and timely information bearing upon matters of verification and compliance – e.g., on the nature and status of foreign governments’ Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) and delivery system programs – are effectively acquired, maintained, and enhanced. VCI is designated by law as the principal policy community representative to the Intelligence Community with regard to verification and compliance matters, and uses this role – and the access to and interaction with the Intelligence Community that it entails – both to promote, preserve, and enhance key collection and analytic capabilities and to ensure that verification, compliance, and implementation intelligence requirements are met.

Robust verification, compliance, and implementation are essential to maintaining and strengthening the integrity of arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament regimes. In this regard, the Bureau leads the Department in all matters related to the implementation of certain international arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements and commitments. This includes staffing and managing treaty implementation commissions, creating negotiation and implementation policy for agreements and commitments, and developing policy for future arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament arrangements. The Bureau also leads the Department in providing sophisticated support to arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament policymaking, including information technology support and secure, near-real-time government-to-government communications linkages with foreign government treaty partners.

  
Highlights

START Aggregate Numbers of Strategic Offensive Arms
The data in this fact sheet comes from the most recent aggregate MOU data exchanged by the Parties no later than 30 days after the expiration of each six-month period following entry into force of the START Treaty.

The History of Libya’s WMD Effort and Dismantlement Program
Assistant Secretary DeSutter, S/CT Coordinator Dailey, and NP Special Negotiator Mahley spoke at briefing on the history of Libya’s WMD effort and dismantlement program and Libya’s renunciation of terrorism. Full Text | Secretary Rice's Travel to Libya

Commemoration of Open Skies Treaty 500th Flight
Logo: Open Skies 500th--In the Spirit of Openness, Transparency, and Cooperation--In Commemoration of the 500th Observation Flight, July 2008The Department announces an Open Skies Treaty commemoration ceremony held today in Vienna, Austria, to recognize the conduct of 500 observation flights carried out under the Treaty since it entered into force in January 2002. Full Text | More

2008 Annual Report on Implementation of the Moscow Treaty
Prepared by the U.S. Department of State in response to Section 2(2) of the Resolution of Advice and Consent to Ratification of the Treaty on Strategic Offensive Reductions of May 24, 2002. Full Text

U.S. Nuclear Risk Reduction Center Annual Consultations and 20th Anniversary
This year marks the 20th Anniversary of the first arms control notification exchanged between the United States and the Soviet Union, by means of the U.S. and U.S.S.R. Nuclear Risk Reduction Centers. Full Text

Is An Outer Space Arms Control Treaty Verifiable?
Assistant Secretary DeSutter delivered remarks to the George C. Marshall Institute Roundtable at the National Press Club. [State Dept. photo]Assistant Secretary DeSutter delivered remarks to the George C. Marshall Institute Roundtable at the National Press Club. View Video

Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE)
Key facts about the current treaty and agreement on adaptation.

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