ALBANIA'S CHEMICAL WEAPONS CON |
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Authors: | Matthew V. Tompkins |
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Affiliation: | Senior Research Associates of the Program for Nonproliferation Studies , Monterey Institute of International Studies |
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Abstract: | In 2003, the Albanian government declared that in late 2002 it had discovered a heretofore unknown cache of 16 tons of chemical weapons. Tirana requested and received assistance from the West in securing and destroying the materials, a task completed in 2007. Albania has been lauded for its responsible handling of the discovery and for being the first nation to complete the destruction of its chemical weapons under the terms of the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC). This article argues that the Albanian government has always knowingly possessed the weapons, keeping them a secret until a post-September 11, 2001 international focus on weapons of mass destruction made it politically worthwhile for Tirana to declare and destroy them. The likelihood that the governments of the West turned a willful blind eye to this chain of events is troubling for the credibility of the CWC and confidence in nonproliferation measures in general. Finally, the author recommends measures to avoid and address similar situations in the future. |
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Keywords: | Albania Chemical Weapons Convention Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons chemical weapons China |
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