Also tagged in: Alliances, Armed forces, Arms control, Arms control agreements, Arms control verification, Arms sales, Authorization, Biological warfare, Bombs, Border patrols, Budgets, Caribbean area, Chemical warfare, Chile, Civil liberties, Coast guard, Commemorations, Communicable diseases, Communication in medicine, Conferences, Congress, Congress and foreign policy, Congressional oversight, Congressional reporting requirements, Congressional tributes, Conventional weapons, Coups d'etat, Criminal justice, Data banks, Debt relief, Defense policy, Democracy, Developing countries, Diplomacy, East Asia, Education, Egypt, Embassies, Emergency management, Emergency medicine, Employee training, Energy, Epidemics, Epidemiology, Estonia, Europe, Export controls, Fissionable materials, Foreign aid, Foreign policy, Foreign students, Former Soviet states, Greece, Haiti, Health information systems, Health policy, Health surveys, Higher education, Human rights, Information technology, International affairs, International agencies, International control of nuclear power, International cooperation, International finance, Israel, Job training, Laboratories, Land mines, Latin America, Latvia, Law, Legislation, Licenses, Lithuania, Medical care, Medical education, Medical laboratories, Medical statistics, Medical supplies, Medicine, Middle East and North Africa, Military assistance, Military education, Military regimes, Military training, Minesweeping, Nuclear energy research, Nuclear exports, Nuclear fuels, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear security measures, Nuclear weapons, Ordnance, Pakistan, Peacekeeping forces, Peru, Police, Police training, Politics and government, President and foreign policy, Presidents, Preventive medicine, Public corruption, Public health personnel, Reactor fuel reprocessing, Research and development, Rule of law, Sanctions (International law), Scholarships, Science policy, Scientific instruments and apparatus, Shipbuilding, Shipyards, Smuggling, South Asia, South Korea, Space activities, Space stations, Syndromes, Technical assistance, Technology, Technology transfer, Terrorism, Trade, Uranium enrichment, Warships, Weapons systems, World health
Latest Action: 09/24/2008 - Committee on Foreign Relations. Original measure reported to Senate by Senator Dodd. With written report No. 110-496. Bill Text An original bill to authorize appropriations under the Arms Export Control Act and the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 for security assistance for fiscal years 2009 and 2010, and for other purposes.
Also tagged in: Afghanistan, Agricultural assistance, Agriculture, Air force, Ammunition, Armed forces, Armed forces abroad, Armed forces reserves, Arms control, Army, Brain, Budgets, Business, Central Asia, Civil liberties, Congress, Congress and military policy, Congressional oversight, Congressional reporting requirements, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Defense budgets, Defense economics, Defense industries, Defense policy, Defense procurement, Department of Agriculture, Department of Defense, Department of Justice, Department of State, Disaster relief, Drug abuse, Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Drug law enforcement, East Asia, Economic assistance, Embassies, Emergency management, Energy, Executive departments, Explosives, Federal budgets, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Federal law enforcement officers, Food, Food relief, Foreign aid, Foreign policy, Government employees, Government trust funds, Head injuries, Health policy, Housing, Human rights, Immigration, Inspectors general, Intelligence activities, International affairs, International agencies, International relief, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Job training, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Marines, Medical care, Medical research, Medicine, Mental health services, Middle East and North Africa, Military aircraft, Military and naval supplies, Military assistance, Military bases, Military construction operations, Military housing, Military medicine, Military occupation, Military operations, Military personnel, Military research, Military sealift, Military training, Mines (Ordnance), Minesweeping, National Guard, Navy, North Korea, Nuclear nonproliferation, Off-budget expenditures, Ordnance, Pakistan, Peacekeeping forces, Petroleum, Politics and government, Prisons, Protection of officials, Public contracts, Public prosecutors, Refugees, Reprogramming of appropriated funds, Rescission of appropriated funds, Research and development, Salaries, Science policy, Security measures, Shipbuilding, South Asia, Supplemental appropriations, Tajikistan, Tanks (Combat vehicles), Terrorism, Torture, Treaties, Turkmenistan, U.S. Agency for International Development, War casualties, War relief, Warships, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 05/13/2008 - Referred to the Committee on Appropriations, and in addition to the Committee on the Budget, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee conc Bill TextMaking emergency supplemental appropriations for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2008, and for other purposes. 5/13/2008--Introduced. Clean Global War on Terror Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2008 - Makes emergency supplemental FY2008 appropriations for specified activities related to the war on terror, international affairs, and national defense matters to the Departments of Agriculture (including food relief to certain foreign countries), of Justice, of Defense (military, including funds for Afghan and Iraqi security forces), of Defense (military construction), and of State (including international peacekeeping activities). Rescinds certain funds made available in: (1) the U.S. Troop Readiness, Veterans' Care, Katrina Recovery, and Iraq Accountability Appropriations Act, 2007 for the Defense Health Program; and (2) the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008 for the Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Fund. Makes additional supplemental appropriations [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Armed forces, Arms control, Arms control agreements, Arms control verification, Child health, Child nutrition, Children, Criminal justice, Defense policy, Economic assistance, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Families, Food, Foreign aid, Foreign policy, Health policy, Hunger, International affairs, Medical care, Medicine, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear security measures, Nuclear terrorism, Nuclear weapons, Russia, Secondary education, Terrorism, Weapons of mass destruction, Weapons systems, World health
Latest Action: 03/13/2008 - Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. Bill TextRecognizing the paramount need to address the threat of international terrorism and protect the global security of the United States by reducing the number and accessibility of nuclear weapons and preventing their proliferation, and directing a portion of the resulting savings towards child survival, hunger, and universal education, and calling on the President to take action to achieve these goals. 3/13/2008--Introduced. Global Security Priorities Resolution - Expresses the sense of the House of Representatives that: (1) the President should continue negotiations with other countries and unilateral initiatives to achieve nuclear arms reductions, and agree to the verifiable reduction of deployed U.S. and Russian nuclear weapons; (2) the Cooperative Threat Reduction (Nunn-Lugar) Program should be extended to requesting third countries; and (3) funds saved through nuclear arms reductions should be used for cooperative threat reduction and to alleviate problems affecting children [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Appropriations, Armed forces, Arms control, Budgets, Congress, Congress and foreign policy, Congress and military policy, Congressional reporting requirements, Defense budgets, Defense economics, Defense policy, Deterrence, Foreign policy, International affairs, Military posture, Military strategy, Missile warheads, Nuclear warfare, Nuclear weapons, President and foreign policy, Presidents, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 08/01/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S10606-10608) Bill TextA bill to require a comprehensive nuclear posture review, and for other purposes. 8/1/2007--Introduced. Nuclear Policy and Posture Review Act of 2007 - Directs the President to conduct a nuclear policy review to consider a range of options on the role of nuclear weapons in U.S. security policy. Requires the Secretary of Defense to conduct a comprehensive review of the U.S. nuclear posture to clarify U.S. nuclear deterrence policy and strategy. Expresses the sense of Congress that the President's review should be used as the basis for establishing future U.S. strategic arms control objectives and negotiating positions. Prohibits the appropriation or availability of funds for the Reliable Replacement Warhead Program for FY2008-FY2010 until reports on the above reviews have been submitted to Congress.
Also tagged in: Arms control, Arms control agreements, Classified defense information, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Energy, Foreign policy, Forensic chemistry, Government information, Government publicity, Hazardous substances, Intelligence activities, International affairs, International cooperation, Negotiations, Nuclear fuels, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear terrorism, Nuclear weapons, Official secrets, Radiation, Treaties, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 09/27/2008 - Message on Senate action sent to the House. Bill TextTo strengthen efforts in the Department of Homeland Security to develop nuclear forensics capabilities to permit attribution of the source of nuclear material, and for other purposes. 6/18/2008--Passed House amended. (There is 1 other summary) Nuclear Forensics and Attribution Act - (Sec. 3) Expresses the sense of Congress that the President should: (1) pursue bilateral and multilateral international agreements to establish, under the auspices of existing bilateral or multilateral agreements, an international framework for determining the source of any confiscated nuclear or radiological material or weapon, as well as the source of any detonated weapon and the nuclear or radiological material used in such a weapon; (2) develop protocols for the data exchange and dissemination of sensitive information relating to nuclear or radiological materials and samples of controlled nuclear or radiological materials to the extent required by such agreements; and [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Accounting, Afghanistan, Air force, Alabama, Alaska, Alliances, Alternative energy sources, Animals, Antimissile missiles, Appellate courts, Appropriations, Arizona, Arkansas, Armed forces, Armed forces abroad, Armed forces reserves, Armed Forces Retirement Home, Arms control, Arms control agreements, Army, Artillery, Auditing, Authorization, Aviation insurance, Ballistic missile defenses, Biennial budgets, Biological warfare, Bombings, Bombs, Budgets, Building construction, Business, Business ethics, California, Cancer, Chemical warfare, Chromium, Civil liberties, Civil service retirement, Civil-military relations, Clothing, Cold War, College costs, College teachers, Colleges, Colorado, Commemorations, Communicable diseases, Communications, Competition, Competitive bidding, Congress, Congress and military policy, Congressional hearings, Congressional investigations, Congressional oversight, Congressional reporting requirements, Congressional witnesses, Connecticut, Corrosion, Cost accounting, Cost effectiveness, Counterterrorism, Cultural property, Defense budgets, Defense contracts, Defense economics, Defense industries, Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, Defense policy, Defense procurement, Delaware, Democracy, Dentists, Department of Defense, Department of Energy, Detention of persons, Deterrence, Developing countries, Drug abuse, Drug law enforcement, Drugs, East Asia, Education, Electric power production, Elementary and secondary education, Emergency management, Energy, Energy conservation, Enlisted personnel, Environmental assessment, Environmental protection, Europe, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Explosives, Export controls, Extremist movements in politics, Families, Federal advisory bodies, Federal employees, Fighter aircraft, Finance, Firearms, Fissionable materials, Florida, Foreign aid, Foreign exchange, Foreign policy, Former Soviet states, Fringe benefits, Georgia, Germany, Gifts, Government contractors, Government employees, Government employees' life insurance, Government information, Government publicity, Government service contracts, Government travel, Government trust funds, Governmental investigations, Habitat conservation, Hawaii, Hazardous substances, Hazardous waste sites, Hazardous wastes, Health policy, Health surveys, High technology, Higher education, History, Household moving, Housing, Human rights, Humanities, Idaho, Illinois, Indian lands, Indiana, Indians, Informers, Inspectors general, Insurgency, International affairs, International military forces, Iran, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Italy, Japan, Judges, Kansas, Kentucky, Laboratories, Land transfers, Land use, Language and languages, Law, Leases, Legal services, Legislation, Liability for environmental damages, Licenses, Logistics, Louisiana, Maine, Maintenance and repair, Managed care, Manganese, Marines, Marketing, Maryland, Massachusetts, Materials, Medical care, Medical education, Medical research, Medicine, Metals, Michigan, Middle East and North Africa, Military agreements, Military aircraft, Military airlift, Military and naval supplies, Military assistance, Military base closures, Military bases, Military civic action, Military command and control, Military construction operations, Military dependents, Military education, Military housing, Military law, Military leave, Military medals, decorations, etc., Military medicine, Military occupation, Military operations, Military pay, Military pensions, Military personnel, Military posture, Military promotions, Military readiness, Military research, Military sealift, Military strategy, Military training, Military vehicles, Military weapons, Minorities, Missile warheads, Missing in action, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Music, Nanotechnology, National Guard, National security, NATO countries, NATO military forces, Natural resources, Navy, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York State, Nongovernmental organizations, North Carolina, North Dakota, North Korea, Nuclear energy research, Nuclear fuels, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear reactors, Nuclear security measures, Nuclear warfare, Nuclear weapons, Nuclear weapons plants, Nuclear weapons tests, Oaths, Officer personnel, Oklahoma, Ordnance, Pakistan, Palau Islands, Peace, Pennsylvania, Pension funds, Pensions, Performance measurement, Personnel management, Petroleum, Petroleum industry, Plutonium, Police, Politics and government, Potable water, Prescription pricing, Prison labor, Private police, Private schools, Public contracts, Radar, Radioactive waste disposal, Radioactive wastes, Reconnaissance satellites, Rent, Reprogramming of appropriated funds, Research and development, Research and development facilities, Research centers, Retired military personnel, Rhode Island, Russia, Scholarships, School buildings, Science policy, Secondary education, Security clearances, Service academies, Shipbuilding, Shipyards, Soldiers' homes, Solid wastes, South Asia, South Carolina, Space activities, Space warfare, Special forces (Military science), Strategic forces, Strategic materials, Strategic planning, Student loan funds, Submarines, Supplemental appropriations, Survivors' benefits, Tanker aircraft, Tanks (Combat vehicles), Tax-deferred compensation plans, Technical assistance, Technology, Tennessee, Terrorism, Terrorists, Texas, Thailand, Transportation, Travel costs, Treaty-making power, Utah, Veterans, Virginia, Wages, Warships, Washington State, Water resources, Weapons systems, Western Hemisphere, Whistle blowing
Latest Action: 06/29/2007 - Select Committee on Intelligence. Reported by Senator Rockefeller with amendments. With written report No. 110-125. Additional views filed. Bill TextAn original bill to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2008 for military activities of the Department of Defense, for military construction, and for defense activities of the Department of Energy, to prescribe military personnel strengths for such fiscal year, and for other purposes. 6/5/2007--Reported to Senate without amendment. (There is 1 other summary) (This measure has not been amended since it was introduced. The summary has been expanded because action occurred on the measure.) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 - Division A: Department of Defense Authorizations - Title I: Procurement - Subtitle A: Authorization of Appropriations - (Sec. 101) Authorizes appropriations for FY2008 for the Army, Navy and Marine Corps, and Air Force for aircraft, missiles, weapons and tracked combat vehicles, ammunition, shipbuilding and conversion, and other procurement. (Sec. 104) Authorizes appropriations [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Armed forces, Arms control agreements, Auditing, Authorization, Budgets, Cold War, Congress, Congress and military policy, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Defense budgets, Defense contracts, Defense economics, Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, Defense policy, Department of Energy, Energy, Environmental assessment, Environmental protection, Executive departments, Finance, Fissionable materials, Foreign policy, Government contractors, Government trust funds, Hazardous substances, Hazardous waste sites, Hazardous wastes, History, Idaho, International affairs, Laboratories, Missile warheads, Nevada, New Mexico, Nuclear energy research, Nuclear fuels, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear reactors, Nuclear security measures, Nuclear weapons, Nuclear weapons plants, Nuclear weapons tests, Pennsylvania, Plutonium, Potable water, Public contracts, Radioactive waste disposal, Radioactive wastes, Research and development facilities, Russia, Science policy, Solid wastes, Strategic forces, Tennessee, Texas, Treaty-making power, Warships, Water resources, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 06/05/2007 - Committee on Armed Services. Original measure reported to Senate by Senator Levin. Without written report. Bill TextAn original bill to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2008 for defense activities of the Department of Energy, and for other purposes. 6/5/2007--Reported to Senate without amendment. (There is 1 other summary) (This measure has not been amended since it was introduced. The summary has been expanded because action occurred on the measure.) Department of Energy National Security Act for Fiscal Year 2008 - Title XXXI [sic]: Department of Energy National Security Programs - Subtitle A: National Security Programs Authorizations - (Sec. 3101) Authorizes appropriations for the Department of Energy (DOE) for FY2008 for: (1) activities of the National Nuclear Security Administration in carrying out programs necessary for national security, with specified allocations for weapons activities, defense nuclear nonproliferation activities, naval reactors, the Office of the Administrator for Nuclear Security, and the International [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Advice and consent of the Senate, Afghanistan, Air defenses, Air piracy, Airline passenger traffic, Alliances, Appropriations, Arab-Israeli conflict, Armed forces, Arms control, Arms control agreements, Arms control verification, Arms sales, Aviation safety, Bank examination, Biological warfare, Bombings, Border patrols, Boundaries, Budgets, Business, Central Intelligence Agency, Charities, Chemical warfare, Civil liberties, Communications, Computer crimes, Computer security measures, Confidential funding (Federal budgets), Congress, Congress and foreign policy, Congress and military policy, Congressional committee chairmen, Congressional committee membership, Congressional committees (House), Congressional committees (Senate), Congressional investigations, Congressional oversight, Congressional reorganization, Congressional reporting requirements, Cost effectiveness, Counterfeiting, Counterterrorism, Criminal justice, Cultural relations, Data banks, Defense policy, Department of Defense, Department of Homeland Security, Department of Justice, Department of State, Detention of persons, Diplomacy, Director of National Intelligence, Economic assistance, Economic development, Economic policy, Education, Educational exchanges, Elementary and secondary education, Emergency communication systems, Emergency management, Emergency medicine, Employee training, Energy, Energy research, English language, Environmental monitoring, Environmental protection, Environmental technology, Equipment and supplies, Exchange of persons programs, Executive departments, Executive Office of the President, Executive reorganization, Explosives, Export controls, Extremist movements in politics, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to Indians, Federal aid to law enforcement, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Federal law enforcement officers, Federal preemption, Federal-Indian relations, Federal-local relations, Federal-state relations, Finance, Fingerprints, Fire departments, Fire fighters, Fire prevention, Fissionable materials, Foreign aid, Foreign policy, Foreign service, Former Soviet states, Gifts, Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Grants-in-aid, Hazardous substances, Higher education, House Homeland Security, House Intelligence, Human rights, Humanities, Identification devices, Identification of criminals, Immigration, Information technology, Infrastructure, Infrastructure (Economics), Intelligence activities, Intelligence officers, Intelligence services, International affairs, International broadcasting, International cooperation, International finance, Islamic countries, Islamic fundamentalism, Job training, Law, Leadership, Liability (Law), Libraries, Medical care, Medical research, Medicine, Middle East and North Africa, Military readiness, Military strategy, Military technology, Minorities, Missile warheads, Money laundering, National security, Natural resources, Nuclear fuels, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear security measures, Nuclear terrorism, Nuclear weapons, Pakistan, Paramedical personnel, Passports, Peace negotiations, Performance measurement, Planning, Plutonium, Police, Police communication systems, Police training, Politics and government, President and foreign policy, Presidential appointments, Presidents, Prisoners of war, Prisoners' rights, Products liability, Public-private partnerships, Radio frequency allocation, Religion, Religious education, Rescue work, Research and development, Restoration ecology, Right of privacy, Risk, Rural affairs, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Scholarships, Science policy, Scientists, Security clearances, Security measures, Senate Appropriations, Senate Armed Services, Senate Intelligence, Senate rules and procedure, September 11, 2001, Social security, Social security numbers, Social services, South Asia, Standards, State and local government, State laws, State-local relations, Subpoena, Tactical nuclear weapons, Technology, Technology transfer, Telecommunication, Terrorism, Terrorists, Trade, Transportation, Transportation safety, Travel, United Nations, Urban affairs, Urban areas, Volunteer workers, Weapons of mass destruction, Weapons systems, Whistle blowing, Women, Women's education
Latest Action: 01/17/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. Bill TextA bill to ensure the implementation of the recommendations of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States. 1/17/2007--Introduced. Ensuring Implementation of the 9/11 Commission Report Act - Homeland Emergency Response Operations Act or the HERO Act - Amends the Communications Act of 1934 to require the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to complete assignment of the electromagnetic spectrum for public safety services to permit operation by December 31, 2007. Requires reports respecting: (1) a unified incident command system; (2) a national critical infrastructure risk and vulnerabilities assessment; and (3) private sector preparedness. Faster and Smarter Funding for First Responders Act of 2005 - Amends the Homeland Security Act of 2002 to establish a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) grant program to assist state and local governments in achieving essential capabilities for terrorism preparedness. Directs the Secretary of Homeland [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Advice and consent of the Senate, Aggression, Armed forces, Arms control, Arms control agreements, Ballistic missile defenses, Ballistic missiles, Building construction, Conferences, Congress, Congress and foreign policy, Congress and military policy, Congressional oversight, Congressional-executive relations, Defense policy, Energy, Federal installations, Foreign policy, Hazardous substances, International affairs, International cooperation, Laboratories, Military research, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear weapons, Nuclear weapons plants, Nuclear weapons tests, Plutonium, President and foreign policy, Presidents, Research and development, Research centers, Russia, Science policy, Space activities, Space warfare, Tactical nuclear weapons, Tritium, United Nations, War, Weapons of mass destruction, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 02/05/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade. Bill TextRecognizing the dangers posed by nuclear weapons and calling on the President to engage in nonproliferation strategies designed to eliminate these weapons of mass destruction from United States and worldwide arsenals. 1/16/2007--Introduced. Requests the President to inform Congress and the Secretary General of the United Nations regarding U.S. efforts and measures taken with respect to implementation and observance of Article VI of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) and certain U.N. resolutions calling for U.S. and world nuclear disarmament. Calls on the President to implement and observe all NPT obligations and commitments and to revise national policies on nuclear weapons accordingly. Urges the President, in the interests of protecting and advancing human, national, and global security, to: (1) declare that the United States will not use nuclear weapons first, and that pending their elimination, such weapons serve only to deter a [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Advice and consent of the Senate, Armed forces, Arms control, Arms control agreements, Authorization, Biological warfare, Budgets, Central Asia, Chemical warfare, Congress, Congress and foreign policy, Congress and military policy, Congressional oversight, Congressional reporting requirements, Counterterrorism, Criminal justice, Defense policy, Department of Energy, Energy, Europe, Executive departments, Executive Office of the President, Executive reorganization, Federal employees, Fissionable materials, Foreign aid, Foreign policy, Former Soviet states, Fringe benefits, Government employees, Government information, Government liability (International law), Hazardous substances, International affairs, International cooperation, International law, Labor, Military assistance, Military maneuvers, Military training, National security, Nuclear facilities, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear security measures, Nuclear terrorism, Nuclear weapons, Performance measurement, Planning-programming-budgeting, Plutonium, President and foreign policy, Presidential appointments, Presidents, Reprogramming of appropriated funds, Russia, Strategic planning, Terrorism, Transfer of employees, Transportation, Transportation of hazardous substances, United Nations, Uranium, Weapons of mass destruction, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 01/09/2007 - Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. Bill TextTo provide for counterproliferation measures. 1/9/2007--Introduced. 9-11 Commission Combating Proliferation Implementation Act - Establishes within the Executive Office of the President the Office for Combating the Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMDs). Requires the Director of the Office to: (1) develop and advise the President on WMD anti-proliferation policies; and (2) implement a Strategy for Combating the Proliferation of WMDs. Expresses the sense of Congress that: (1) the President should request the President of the Russian Federation to appoint a corresponding official to the Director; (2) the President should expand and strengthen the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI); and (3) the United States should engage the United Nations to develop a U.N. Security Council resolution authorizing the PSI under international law. Authorizes funding for: (1) acceleration of removal or security of fissile materials, radiological materials, and [...] show full description
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