Groups of scientists, nonproliferation specialists, former generals and former ambassadors have authored open letters in support of the nuclear deal between Iran and the world’s six major powers. One group of former generals has also written an open letter.
On August 8, 29 top U.S. scientists wrote to President Barack Obama in support of the Iran nuclear deal. The “innovative agreement” has “much more stringent constraints than any previously negotiated non-proliferation framework,” according to the co-signers, who include six Nobel laureates, nuclear experts and former White House advisers. The following is the complete text.
Richard L. Garwin, IBM Fellow Emeritus
Michael E. Fisher, Professor Emeritus, Cornell University and University of Maryland
Sheldon L. Glashow, Boston University
Lisbeth Gronlund, Union of Concerned Scientists
David Gross, Professor of Theoretical Physics, Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, UCSB
Sigfried S. Hecker Center for International Security and Cooperation, Stanford University
Martin E. Hellman, Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University
Ernest Henley, University of Washington
Gregory Loew, Emeritus Deputy Director and Professor, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
C. Kumar N. Patel, Professor Emeritus of Experimental Condensed Matter, UCLA
Burton Richter, Stanford University
Myriam Sarachik, City College of New York, CUNY
Roy F. Schwitters, The University of Texas at Austin
Frank Wilczek, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
David Wright, Union of Concerned Scientists
Amb. (ret.) Adrian Basora, Ambassador to Czechoslovakia
J. Brian Atwood, Administrator of USAID and Under Secretary of State for Management
Amb. (ret.) William M. Bellamy, Ambassador to Kenya
Amb. (ret.) John R. Beyrle, Ambassador to Russia and Bulgaria
Amb. (ret.) James Keough Bishop, Ambassador to Niger, Liberia and Somalia
Amb. (ret.) Barbara K. Bodine, Ambassador to Yemen
Amb. (ret.) Avis Bohlen, Assistant Secretary for Arms Control
Amb. (ret.) Eric J. Boswell, Assistant Secretary of State for Diplomatic Security
Amb. (ret.) Stephen Bosworth, Ambassador to the Republic of Korea
Amb. (ret.) Richard Boucher, Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia
Amb. (ret.) Kenneth C. Brill, Ambassador to the IAEA, UN and founder of the U.S. National Counterproliferation Center
Amb (ret.) Kenneth L. Brown, Ambassador to Republic of Congo, Cote d’Ivoire, and Ghana
Amb. (ret.) A. Peter Burleigh, Ambassador and Deputy Permanent Representative to the United Nations
Amb. (ret.) Nicholas Burns, Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, Ambassador to Greece and NATO
Amb. (ret.) James F. Collins, Ambassador to the Russian Federation and Ambassador at Large for the New Independent States
Amb. (ret.) Edwin G. Corr, Ambassador to Peru, Bolivia and El Salvador
Amb. (ret.) William Courtney, Commissioner, Bilateral Consultative Commission to implement the Threshold Test Ban Treaty
Amb. (ret.) Ryan Crocker, Ambassador to Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Syria, Kuwait, and Lebanon
Amb. (ret.) James B. Cunningham, Ambassador to Israel, Afghanistan and the United Nations
Amb. (ret.) Walter L. Cutler, Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Tunisia
Amb. (ret.) Ruth A. Davis, Ambassador to the Republic of Benin and Director General of the Foreign Service
Amb. (ret.) John Gunther Dean, Ambassador to India
Amb. (ret.) Shaun Donnelly, Ambassador to Sri Lanka
Amb. (ret.) Harriet L. Elam-Thomas, Ambassador to Senegal
Amb. (ret.) Theodore L. Eliot Jr., Ambassador to Afghanistan
Amb. (ret.) Nancy Ely-Raphel, Ambassador to Slovenia
Amb. (ret.) Chas W. Freeman, Jr., Assistant Secretary of Defense and Ambassador to Saudi Arabia
Amb. (ret.) Robert Gallucci, Ambassador at Large
Amb. (ret.) Robert S. Gelbard, President’s Special Representative for the Balkans
David C. Gompert, former Acting Director of National Intelligence
Amb. (ret.) James E. Goodby, Special Representative of the President for Nuclear Security and Dismantlement, and Ambassador to Finland
Amb. (ret.) Marc Grossman, Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs and Ambassador to Turkey
Amb. (ret.) Brandon Grove, Director Foreign Service Institute
Amb. (ret.)William Harrop, Ambassador to Israel, Guinea, Kenya, and Seychelles
Amb. (ret.) Ulric Haynes, Jr. Ambassador to Algeria
Amb. (ret.) Donald Hays, Ambassador to the United Nations
Amb. (ret.) Heather M. Hodges, Ambassador to Ecuador and Moldova
Amb. (ret.) Karl Hofmann, Ambassador to Togo
Amb. (ret.) Thomas C. Hubbard, Ambassador to the Republic of Korea
Amb. (ret.) Vicki Huddleston, Ambassador to Mali and Madagascar
Thomas L. Hughes, former Assistant Secetary of State for Intelligence and Research
Amb. (ret.) Dennis Jett, Ambassador to Mozambique and Peru
Amb. (ret.) Beth Jones, Assistant Secretary of State for Europe and Eurasia
Amb. (ret.) James R. Jones, Ambassador to Mexico and formerly Member of Congress and White House Chief of Staff
Amb. (ret.) Theodore Kattouf, Ambassador to Syria and United Arab Emirates
Amb. (ret.) Richard D. Kauzlarich, Ambassador to Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Amb. (ret.) Kenton W. Keith, Ambassador to Qatar
Amb. (ret.) Roger Kirk, Ambassador to Romania and Somalia
Amb. (ret.) John C. Kornblum, Ambassador to Germany and U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs
Amb. (ret.) Eleni Kounalakis, Ambassador to Hungary
Amb. (ret.) Daniel Kurtzer, Ambassador to Israel and Egypt
Amb. (ret.) Bruce Laingen, Chargé d’Affaires in Tehran (1979)
Frank E. Loy, Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs
Amb. (ret.) William Luers, Ambassador to Czechoslovakia and Venezuela
Amb. (ret.) Princeton N. Lyman, Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs
Amb. (ret.) John F. Maisto, Ambassador to Organization of American States, Venezuela, Nicaragua
Amb. (ret.) Jack Matlock, Ambassador to the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, and Special Assistant to the President for National Security
Amb. (ret.) Donald F. McHenry, United States Permanent Representative to the United Nations
Amb. (ret.) Thomas E. McNamara, Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs, Ambassador to Colombia, and at Large for Counterterrorism
Amb. (ret.) William B. Milam, Ambassador to Pakistan and Bangladesh
Amb. (ret.) Tom Miller, Ambassador to Greece and Bosnia-Herzegovina
Amb. (ret.) George E. Moose, Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Ambassador to Benin, Senegal
Amb. (ret.) Cameron Munter, Ambassador to Pakistan and Serbia
Amb. (ret.) Richard Murphy, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs and Ambassador to Saudi Arabia
Amb. (ret.) Ronald E. Neumann, Ambassador to Afghanistan, Algeria, and Bahrain
Amb. (ret.) Thomas M. T. Niles, Assistant Secretary of State for Europe and Canada and Ambassador to Greece
Phyllis E. Oakley, Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Intelligence and Research
Amb. (ret.) W. Robert Pearson, Ambassador to Turkey
Amb. (ret.) Robert H. Pelletreau, Assistant Secretary of State for Near East Affair
Amb. (ret.) Pete Peterson, Ambassador to Vietnam
Amb. (ret.) Thomas Pickering, Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, Ambassador to Israel, Russia, India, United Nations, El Salvador, Nigeria and Jordan
Amb. (ret.) Joan M. Plaisted, Ambassador to the Republic of the Marshall Islands and Kitibati
Amb. (ret.) Nicholas Platt, Ambassador to Pakistan, Philippines, and Zambia
Amb. (ret.) Anthony Quainton, Assistant Secretary of State for Diplomatic security or Director General of the Foreign Service
Amb. (ret.) Robin L. Raphel, Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia
Amb. (ret.) Charles A. Ray, Ambassador to Zimbabwe and Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for POW/Missing Personnel Affairs
Amb (ret.) Arlene Render, Ambassador to The Gambia, Zambia and Cote d’Ivoire
Amb. (ret.) Julissa Reynoso, Ambassador to Uruguay
Amb. (ret.) Francis J. Ricciardone, Ambassador to Egypt, Turkey, the Philippines, and Palau
Amb. (ret.) Rozanne L. Ridgway, Assistant Secretary for Europe and Canada and Counselor of the Department
Amb. (ret.) Peter F. Romero, Assistant Secretary of State
Amb. (ret.) Theodore Sedgwick, Ambassador to Slovakia
Amb. (ret.) J. Stapleton Roy, Ambassador to China and Indonesia
Amb. (ret.) William A. Rugh, Ambassador to Yemen and the United Arab Emirates
Amb. (ret.) Janet A Sanderson, Ambassador to Algeria and Haiti
Amb. (ret.) Teresita C. Schaffer, Ambassador to Sri Lanka
Amb. (ret.) Howard B. Schaffer, Ambassador to Bangladesh
Amb. (ret.) Raymond G. H. Seitz, Ambassador to the United Kingdom
Amb. (ret.) John Shattuck, Ambassador to the Czech Republic
Amb. (ret.) Ronald I. Spiers, Ambassador to Pakistan, Turkey and Assistant Secretary for Politico-Military Affairs
Amb. (ret.) William Lacy Swing, Ambassador to South Africa, Nigeria, Haiti, Congo-DRC, Liberia, and Republic of Congo
Amb. (ret.) Patrick Nickolas Theros, Ambassador to the State of Qatar
Arturo A. Valenzuela, Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs and Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs
Amb. (ret.) William J. Vanden Heuvel, Deputy Permanent United States Representative to the United Nations
Amb. (ret.) Nicholas A. Veliotes, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs
Amb. (ret.) Richard N. Viets, Ambassador to Jordan
Amb. (ret.) Edward S. Walker, Jr., Ambassador to Israel, Egypt and United Arab Emirates
Amb. (ret.) Alexander F. Watson, Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs, and Ambassador to Peru
Amb. (ret.) Melissa Wells, Ambassador to Estonia, DRC-Congo, Mozambique, Guinea Bissau
Amb. (ret.) Philip C. Wilcox Junior, Ambassador at Large for Counter Terrorism
Molly K. Williamson, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, Defense, and Commerce
Amb. (ret.) Frank Wisner, Ambassador to India, Egypt, the Philippines and Zambia, and Under Secretary of State for International Security Affairs
Amb. (ret.) John Wolf, Assistant Secretary for Nonproliferation
Amb. (ret.) Kenneth Yalowitz, Ambassador to Belarus and Georgia
GEN James “Hoss” Cartwright, U.S. Marine Corps GEN Joseph P. Hoar, U.S. Marine Corps GEN Merrill “Tony” McPeak, U.S. Air Force GEN Lloyd W. "Fig" Newton, U.S. Air Force LGEN Robert G. Gard, Jr., U.S. Army LGEN Arlen D. Jameson, U.S. Air Force LGEN Frank Kearney, U.S. Army LGEN Claudia J. Kennedy, U.S. Army LGEN Donald L. Kerrick, U.S. Army LGEN Charles P. Otstott, U.S. Army LGEN Norman R. Seip, U.S. Air Force LGEN James M. Thompson, U.S. Army VADM Kevin P. Green, U.S. Navy VADM Lee F. Gunn, U.S. Navy MGEN George Buskirk, US Army MGEN Paul D. Eaton, U.S. Army MGEN Marcelite J. Harris, U.S. Air Force MGEN Frederick H. Lawson, U.S. Army | MGEN William L. Nash, U.S. Army MGEN Tony Taguba, U.S. Army RADM John Hutson, U.S. Navy RADM Malcolm MacKinnon III, U.S. Navy RADM Edward "Sonny" Masso, U.S. Navy RADM Joseph Sestak, U.S. Navy RADM Garland “Gar” P. Wright, U.S. Navy BGEN John Adams, U.S. Air Force BGEN Stephen A. Cheney, U.S. Marine Corps BGEN Patricia "Pat" Foote, U.S. Army BGEN Lawrence E. Gillespie, U.S. Army BGEN John Johns, U.S. Army BGEN David McGinnis, U.S. Army BGEN Stephen Xenakis, U.S. Army RDML James Arden "Jamie" Barnett, Jr., U.S. Navy RDML Jay A. DeLoach, U.S. Navy RDML Harold L. Robinson, U.S. Navy RDML Alan Steinman, U.S. Coast Guard |
1. Admiral David Architzel, US Navy, Retired 2. Admiral Stanley R. Arthur, US Navy, Retired 3. General William Begert, US Air Force, Retired 4. General J.B. Davis, US Air Force, Retired 5. Admiral William A. Doughert, US Navy, Retired 6. Admiral Leon A. “Bud” Edney, US Navy, Retired 7. General Alfred G. Hansen US Air Force, Retired 8. Admiral Thomas Hayward, US Navy, Retired 9. Admiral James Hogg, US Navy, Retired 10. Admiral Jerome Johnson, US Navy, Retired 11. Admiral Timothy J. Keating, US Navy, Retired 12. Admiral Robert J. Kelly, US Navy, Retired 13. Admiral Thomas Joseph Lopez, US Navy, Retired 14. Admiral James A. “Ace” Lyons, US Navy, Retired 15. Admiral Richard Macke, US Navy, Retired 16. Admiral Henry Mauz, US Navy, Retired 17. General Lance Smith, US Air Force, Retired 18. Admiral Leighton Smith, US Navy, Retired 19. Admiral William D. Smith, US Navy, Retired 20. General Louis C. Wagner, Jr., US Army, Retired 21. Admiral Steve White, US Navy, Retired 22. General Ronald W. Yates, US Air Force, Retired 23. Lieutenant General Teddy G. Allen, US Army, Retired 24. Lieutenant General Edward G. Anderson, III, US Army, Retired 25. Lieutenant General Marcus A. Anderson, US Air Force, Retired 26. Lieutenant General Spence M. Armstrong, US Air Force, Retired 27. Lieutenant General Harold W. Blot, US Marine Corps, Retired 28. Vice Admiral Michael Bowman, US Navy, Retired 29. Lieutenant General William G. “Jerry” Boykin, US Army, Retired 30. Vice Admiral Edward S. Briggs, US Navy, Retired 31. Lieutenant General Richard E. “Tex” Brown III, US Air Force, Retired 32. Lieutenant General William J. Campbell, US Air Force, Retired 33. Vice Admiral Edward Clexton, US Navy, Retired 34. Vice Admiral Daniel L. Cooper, US Navy, Retired 35. Vice Admiral William A. Dougherty, US Navy, Retired 36. Lieutenant General Brett Dula, US Air Force, Retired 37. Lieutenant General Gordon E. Fornell, US Air Force, Retired 38. Lieutenant General Thomas B. Goslin, US Air Force, Retired 39. Lieutenant General Earl Hailston, US Marine Corps, Retired 40. Vice Admiral Bernard M. Kauderer, US Navy, Retired 41. Lieutenant General Timothy A. Kinnan, US Air Force, Retired 42. Vice Admiral J. B . LaPlante, US Navy, Retired 43. Vice Admiral Tony Less, US Navy, Retired 44. Lieutenant General Bennett L. Lewis, US Army, Retired 45. Vice Admiral Michael Malone, US Navy, Retired 46. Vice Admiral John Mazach, US Navy, Retired 47. Lieutenant General Thomas McInerney, US Air Force, Retired 48. Lieutenant General Fred McCorkle, US Marine Corps, Retired 49. Vice Admiral Robert Monroe, US Navy, Retired 50. Vice Admiral Jimmy Pappas, US Navy, Retired 51. Vice Admiral J. Theodore Parker, US Navy, Retired 52. Lieutenant General Garry L. Parks, US Marine Corps, Retired 53. Lieutenant General Everett Pratt, US Air Force, Retired 54. Vice Admiral John Poindexter, US Navy, Retired 55. Lieutenant General Clifford "Ted" Rees, Jr., US Air Force, Retired 56. Vice Admiral William Rowden, US Navy, Retired 57. Vice Admiral Robert F. Schoultz, US Navy, Retired 58. Lieutenant General E.G. “Buck” Shuler, Jr., US Air Force, Retired 59. Lieutenant General Hubert 'Hugh" G. Smith, US Army, Retired 60. Vice Admiral Edward M. Straw, US Navy, Retired 61. Lieutenant General David J. Teal, US Air Force, Retired 62. Vice Admiral D.C. "Deese" Thompson, US Coast Guard, Retired 63. Lieutenant General William E. Thurman, US Air Force, Retired 64. Lieutenant General Billy Tomas, US Army, Retired 65. Vice Admiral John Totushek, US Navy, Retired 66. Vice Admiral Jerry Tuttle, US Navy, Retired 67. Vice Admiral Jerry Unruh, US Navy, Retired 68. Vice Admiral Timothy W. Wright, US Navy, Retired 69. Rear Admiral William V. Alford, Jr., US Navy, Retired 70. Major General Thurman E. Anderson, US Army, Retired 71. Major General Joseph T. Anderson, US Marine Corps, Retired 72. Rear Admiral Philip Anselmo, US Navy, Retired 73. Major General Joe Arbuckle, US Army, Retired 74. Rear Admiral James W. Austin, US Navy, Retired 75. Rear Admiral John R. Batzler, US Navy, Retired 76. Rear Admiral John Bayless, US Navy, Retired 77. Major General John Bianchi, US Army, Retired 78. Rear Admiral Donald Vaux Boecker, US Navy, Retired 79. Rear Admiral Jerry C. Breast, US Navy, Retired 80. Rear Admiral Bruce B. Bremner, US Navy, Retired 81. Major General Edward M. Browne, US Army, Retired 82. Rear Admiral Thomas F. Brown III, US Navy, Retired 83. Rear Admiral Lyle Bull, US Navy, Retired 84. Major General Bobby G. Butcher, US Marine Corps, Retired 85. Rear Admiral Jay A. Campbell, US Navy, Retired 86. Major General Henry D. Canterbury, US Air Force, Retired 87. Major General Carroll D. Childers, US Army, Retired 88. Rear Admiral Ronald L. Christenson, US Navy, Retired 89. Major General John R.D. Cleland, US Army, Retired 90. Major General Richard L. Comer, US Air Force, Retired 91. Rear Admiral Jack Dantone, US Navy, Retired 92. Major General William B. Davitte, US Air Force, Retired 93. Major General James D. Delk, US Army, Retired | 94. Major General Felix Dupre, US Air Force, Retired 95. Rear Admiral Philip A. Dur, US Navy, Retired 96. Major General Neil L. Eddins, US Air Force, Retired 97. Rear Admiral Paul Engel, US Navy, Retired 98. Major General Vince Falter, US Army, Retired 99. Rear Admiral James H. Flatley, US Navy, Retired 100. Major General Bobby O. Floyd, US Air Force, Retired 101. Major General Paul Fratarangelo, US Marine Corps, Retired 102. Rear Admiral Veronica "Ronne" Froman, US Navy, Retired 103. Rear Admiral R. Byron Fuller, US Navy, Retired 104. Rear Admiral Frank Gallo, US Navy, Retired 105. Rear Admiral Albert A. Gallotta, Jr., US Navy, Retired 106. Rear Admiral James Mac Gleim, US Navy, Retired 107. Rear Admiral Robert H. Gormley, US Navy, Retired 108. Rear Admiral William Gureck, US Navy, Retired 109. Major General Gary L. Harrell, US Army, Retired 110. Rear Admiral Donald Hickman, US Navy, Retired 111. Major General Geoffrey Higginbotham, US Marine Corps, Retired 112. Major General Kent H. Hillhouse, US Army, Retired 113. Rear Admiral Tim Hinkle, US Navy, Retired 114. Major General Victor Joseph Hugo, US Army, Retired 115. Major General James P. Hunt, US Air Force, Retired 116. Rear Admiral Grady L. Jackson, US Navy, Retired 117. Major General William K. James, US Air Force, Retired 118. Rear Admiral John M. “Carlos” Johnson, US Navy, Retired 119. Rear Admiral Pierce J. Johnson, US Navy, Retired 120. Rear Admiral Steven B. Kantrowitz, US Navy, Retired 121. Major General Maurice W. Kendall, US Army, Retired 122. Rear Admiral Charles R. Kubic, US Navy, Retired 123. Rear Admiral Frederick L. Lewis, US Navy, Retired 124. Major General John D. Logeman, Jr., US Air Force, Retired 125. Major General Homer S. Long, Jr., US Army, Retired 126. Major General Robert M. Marquette, US Air Force, Retired 127. Rear Admiral Robert B. McClinton, US Navy, Retired 128. Rear Admiral W. J. McDaniel, MD, US Navy, Retired 129. Major General Keith W. Meurlin, US Air Force, Retired 130. Rear Admiral Terrence McKnight, US Navy, Retired 131. Major General John F. Miller, Jr., US Air Force, Retired 132. Major General Burton R. Moore, US Air Force, Retired 133. Rear Admiral David R. Morris, US Navy, Retired 134. Rear Admiral Ed Nelson, Jr., US Coast Guard, Retired 135. Major General George W. "Nordie" Norwood, US Air Force, Retired 136. Major General Everett G. Odgers, US Air Force, Retired 137. Rear Admiral Phillip R. Olson, US Navy, Retired 138. Rear Admiral Robert S. Owens, US Navy, Retired 139. Rear Admiral Robert O. Passmore, US Navy, Retired 140. Major General Richard E. Perraut, Jr., US Air Force, Retired 141. Rear Admiral W.W. Pickavance, Jr., US Navy, Retired 142. Rear Admiral L.F. Picotte, US Navy, Retired 143. Rear Admiral Thomas J. Porter, US Navy, Retired 144. Major General H. Douglas Robertson, US Army, Retired 145. Rear Admiral W.J. Ryan, US Navy, Retired 146. Rear Admiral Norman Saunders, US Coast Guard, Retired 147. Major General John P. Schoeppner, Jr., US Air Force, Retired 148. Major General Edison E. Scholes, US Army, Retired 149. Rear Admiral Hugh P. Scott, US Navy, Retired 150. Major General Richard Secord, US Air Force, Retired 151. Rear Admiral James M. Seely, US Navy, Retired 152. Major General Sidney Shachnow, US Army, Retired 153. Rear Admiral William H. Shawcross, US Navy, Retired 154. Rear Admiral Bob Shumaker, US Navy, Retired 155. Major General Willie Studer, US Air Force, Retired 156. Major General Larry Taylor, US Marine Corps, Retired 157. Rear Admiral Jeremy Taylor, US Navy, Retired 158. Major General Richard L. Testa, US Air Force, Retired 159. Rear Admiral Robert P. Tiernan, US Navy, Retired 160. Major General Paul E. Vallely, US Army, Retired 161. Major General Kenneth W. Weir, US Marine Corps, Retired 162. Major General John Welde, US Air Force, Retired 163. Rear Admiral James B. Whittaker, US Navy, Retired 164. Major General Geoffrey P. Wiedeman, Jr., MD, US Air Force, Retired 165. Rear Admiral H. Denny Wisely, US Navy, Retired 166. Brigadier General John R. Allen, Jr., US Air Force, Retired 167. Brigadier General John C. Arick, US Marine Corps, Retired 168. Brigadier General Loring R. Astorino, US Air Force, Retired 169. Rear Admiral Robert E. Besal, US Navy, Retired 170. Brigadier General William Bloomer, US Marine Corps, Retired 171. Brigadier General George P. Cole, Jr., US Air Force, Retired 172. Brigadier General Richard A. Coleman, US Air Force, Retired 173. Brigadier General James L. Crouch, US Air Force, Retired 174. Rear Admiral Marianne B. Drew, US Navy, Retired 175. Brigadier General Philip M. Drew, US Air Force, Retired 176. Brigadier General Larry K. Grundhauser, US Air Force, Retired 177. Brigadier General Thomas W. Honeywill, US Air Force, Retired 178. Brigadier General Gary M. Jones, US Army, Retired 179. Brigadier General Stephen Lanning, US Air Force, Retired 180. Brigadier General Thomas J. Lennon, US Air Force, Retired 181. Rear Admiral Bobby C. Lee, US Navy, Retired 182. Brigadier General Robert F. Peksens, US Air Force, Retired 183. Brigadier General Joe Shaefer, US Air Force, Retired 184. Brigadier General Graham E. Shirley, US Air Force, Retired 185. Brigadier General Stanley O. Smith, US Air Force, Retired 186. Brigadier General Hugh B. Tant III, US Army, Retired 187. Brigadier General Michael Joseph Tashjian, US Air Force, Retired 188. Brigadier General William Tiernan, US Marine Corps, Retired 189. Brigadier General Roger W. Scearce, US Army, Retired 190. Brigadier General Robert V. Woods, US Air Force, Retired |
On August 17, more than 70 of the world’s leading nuclear nonproliferation specialists issued the following joint statement in support of the deal.
The Comprehensive P5+1 Nuclear Agreement With Iran:
A Net-Plus for Nonproliferation
Statement from Nuclear Nonproliferation Specialists
August 17, 2015
The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) is a strong, long-term, and verifiable agreement that will be a net-plus for international nuclear nonproliferation efforts.
It advances the security interests of the P5+1 nations (China, France, Germany, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States), the European Union, their allies and partners in the Middle East, and the international community.
When implemented, the JCPOA will establish long-term, verifiable restrictions on Iran's enrichment facilities and research and development, including advanced centrifuge research and deployment. Taken in combination with stringent limitations on Iran’s low-enriched uranium stockpile, these restrictions ensure that Iran’s capability to produce enough bomb-grade uranium sufficient for one weapon would be extended to approximately 12 months for a decade or more.
Moreover, the JCPOA will effectively eliminate Iran’s ability to produce and separate plutonium for a nuclear weapon for at least 15 years, including by permanently modifying the Arak reactor, Iran’s major potential source for weapons grade plutonium, committing Iran not to reprocess spent fuel, and shipping spent fuel out of the country.
The JCPOA is effectively verifiable. The agreement will put in place a multi-layered monitoring regime across Iran’s entire nuclear supply chain, including centrifuge manufacturing sites (for 20 years), uranium mining and milling (for 25 years), and continuous monitoring of a larger number of nuclear and nuclear-related sites.
The JCPOA requires Iran to implement and ratify the additional protocol to Iran’s comprehensive safeguards agreement, which significantly enhances the International Atomic Energy Agency’s (IAEA) inspection regime. Among other measures, this will give international inspectors timely access to any Iranian facility of proliferation concern, including military sites, which the JCPOA will ensure cannot be stalled more than 24 days without serious consequences.
In addition, the JCPOA puts in place safeguards that require early notification of design changes or new nuclear projects by Iran (the modified code 3.1 provision). The additional protocol and code 3.1 monitoring and verification measures will remain in place indefinitely.
The JCPOA also requires that Iran cooperate with the IAEA to conclude its long-running investigation of Iran's past activities with possible military dimensions (PMDs) and permanently prohibits certain dual-use activities, which could contribute to the design and development of a nuclear explosive device.
Taken together, these rigorous limits and transparency measures will make it very likely that any future effort by Iran to pursue nuclear weapons, even a clandestine program, would be detected promptly, providing the opportunity to intervene decisively to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon.
The agreement requires that Iran undertake major steps—including to reduce its uranium enrichment capacity, modify the Arak reactor, allow for more intrusive international monitoring, and cooperate with the IAEA’s PMD investigation—before UN Security Council, U.S., and EU economic and financial sanctions are suspended or terminated, and it provides for swift consequences in the event of noncompliance.
If all sides comply with and faithfully implement their multi-year obligations, the agreement will reduce the risk of a destabilizing nuclear competition in a troubled region – giving time and space to address other regional problems without fear of an Iran armed with nuclear weapons—and head off a catastrophic military conflict over Iran's nuclear program.
Though all of us could find ways to improve the text, we believe the JCPOA meets key nonproliferation and security objectives and see no realistic prospect for a better nuclear agreement.
We urge the leaders of the P5+1 states, the European Union, and Iran to take the steps necessary to ensure timely implementation and rigorous compliance with the JCPOA.
Endorsed by:
Amb. Nobuyasu Abe, Commissioner of the Japan Atomic Energy Commission* and former United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Disarmament Affairs, former Director-General for Arms Control and Science Affairs of the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs
James Acton, Co-Director, Nuclear Policy Program, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace*
John Ahearne, former Chairman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Steve Andreasen, former Director for Defense Policy and Arms Control on the National Security Council staff (1993-2001) consultant to the Nuclear Threat Initiative*
Dr. Bruce Blair, Research Scholar, Program on Science and Global Security, Princeton University
Dr. Barry Blechman, Co-Founder, Stimson Center*
Hans Blix, former Director General of the IAEA
Avis Bohlen, former Assistant Secretary of State for Arms Control, U.S. Department of State
Amb. (ret.) Kenneth C. Brill, Ambassador to the IAEA (2001-2004) and Founding Director of the U.S. National Counterproliferation Center (2005-2009)
Matthew Bunn, Professor of Practice, Harvard Kennedy School, and former adviser to the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
Susan F. Burk, former Special Representative of the President for Nuclear Nonproliferation, and former Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Nonproliferation, U.S. Department of State
Sandra Ionno Butcher, Executive Director, Pugwash Conferences on Science & World Affairs (International)*
John Carlson, Counselor, Nuclear Threat Initiative, former Director General, Australian Safeguards and Nonproliferation Office
Joseph Cirincione, President, Ploughshares Fund
Tom Z. Collina, Director of Policy, Ploughshares Fund, and former Executive Director and Co-Founder of the Institute for Science and International Security and the Director of the Global Security Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists
Avner Cohen, Professor of Nonproliferation Studies at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey*
Philip E. Coyle, former Associate Director for National Security and International Affairs, White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
Toby Dalton, Co-Director, Nuclear Policy Program, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace*
Kelsey Davenport, Director for Nonproliferation Policy, Arms Control Association
Amb. Jayantha Dhanapala, former United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Disarmament Affairs
Amb. Sergio Duarte, former United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Disarmament Affairs
Robert J. Einhorn, former U.S. Department of State Special Advisor for Nonproliferation and Arms Control and former negotiator on the Iran nuclear talks
Dina Esfandiary, MacArthur Fellow, Centre for Science and Security Studies, Department of War Studies, Kings College London
Trevor Findlay, Senior Research Fellow, Project on Managing the Atom, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard University
Richard L. Garwin, former Chair of the Arms Control and Nonproliferation Advisory Board of the U.S Department of State
Ellie Geranmayeh, Policy Fellow, European Council on Foreign Relations*
Ilan Goldenberg, former Iran Team Chief, Office of the Secretary of Defense, U.S. Department of Defense
Dr. Lisbeth Gronlund, Co-Director and Senior Scientist, Global Security Program, Union of Concerned Scientists
Morton H. Halperin, former Director of Policy Planning, U.S. Department of State
Laicie Heeley, Fellow, Stimson Center*
Paul Ingram, Executive Director, British American Security Information Council
Raymond Jeanloz, Chair, National Academy of Sciences Committee on International Security and Arms Control*
Togzhan Kassenova, Associate, Nuclear Policy Program, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace*
R. Scott Kemp, assistant professor of nuclear science and engineering at MIT, former science advisor to the U.S. Department of State’s Special Advisor for Nonproliferation and Arms Control
Daryl G. Kimball, Executive Director, Arms Control Association
Michael Krepon, Co-Founder, Stimson Center*
Ellen Laipson, President and CEO, Stimson Center*
Dr. Edward Levine, former Senior Professional Staff Member, Senate Foreign Relations Committee (1997-2011) and Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (1976-1997)
Dr. Jeffrey Lewis, Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey* and Director of East Asia Non-Proliferation Program at the Center for Nonproliferation Studies*
Jan Lodal, former Principal Deputy Under Secretary of Defense, U.S. Department of Defense
Jessica T. Mathews, Distinguished Fellow, former President, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace*
Fred McGoldrick, former Director of the Office of Nonproliferation and Export Policy, U.S. Department of State
Oliver Meier, Deputy Head, International Security Division, German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP)*
Dr. Zia Mian, Director of the Project on Peace and Security in South Asia at the Program on Science and Global Security, Princeton University
Adam Mount, Stanton Nuclear Security Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations*
Richard Nephew, former Principal Deputy Coordinator for Sanctions Policy at the Department of State, and Director for Iran on the National Security Staff
George Perkovich, Vice President for Studies, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace*
Amb. Thomas R. Pickering, former Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, and former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Russian Federation, India, Israel, and Jordan
Steve Pifer, Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution, and retired career Foreign Service officer
Paul R. Pillar, former U.S. National Intelligence Officer for the Near East and South Asia
Valerie Plame, former covert CIA operations officer
William Potter, Sam Nunn and Richard Lugar Professor of Nonproliferation Studies at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey*
Tariq Rauf, former Head of Verification and Security Policy Coordination, Office reporting to the Director General, International Atomic Energy Agency, and Director of the Disarmament, Arms Control and Non-Proliferation Programme at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI)*
Laura Rockwood, Executive Director, Vienna Center for Disarmament and Non-Proliferation,* and former section head for nonproliferation and policymaking in the Office of Legal Affairs of the IAEA (1985-2013)
Joan Rohlfing, President and Chief Operating Officer, Nuclear Threat Initiative*
Dr. Randy Rydell, former Senior Political Affairs Officer in the Office of the High Representative for Disarmament, United Nations
Scott D. Sagan, The Caroline S.G. Munro Professor of Political Science, Stanford University
Thomas Shea, former IAEA Safeguards Official, and former Head of the IAEA Trilateral Initiative Office, and former Sector Head of Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Programs, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Shen Dingli, Professor and Director, Program on Arms Control and Regional Security, and Associate Dean, Institute of International Studies, Fudan University, Shanghai, China
Jacqueline Shire, former member of United Nations Panel of Experts (Iran) established under Security Council Resolution 1929 (2010)
Leonard S. Spector, Deputy Director, Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies,* and former Assistant Deputy Administrator for Arms Control and Nonproliferation at the U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration
Sharon Squassoni, Senior Fellow and Director, Proliferation Prevention Program, Center for Strategic and International Studies*
Ariane M. Tabatabai, Visiting Assistant Professor in the Security Studies Program at the Georgetown University Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service*
Honorable Ellen O. Tauscher, former Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security, U.S. Department of State, seven-term Member of House of Representatives, and Chairman of the Strategic Forces Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee (2006-2009)
Greg Thielmann, former Director of the Strategic, Proliferation and Military Affairs Office in the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research
Dr. Ali Vaez, Senior Iran Analyst, International Crisis Group
Frank von Hippel, former Assistant Director for National Security, White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
Dr. James Walsh, Research Associate at the Security Studies Program, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Honorable Andy Weber, former Assistant Secretary of Defense for Nuclear, Chemical and Biological Defense Programs, U.S. Department of Defense
Larry Weiler, former Special Assistant to the Director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency and a negotiator of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty
Amb. Joseph Wilson (ret.), former Special Assistant to President Bill Clinton and Senior Director at the National Security Council
Joel S. Wit, Visiting Scholar at U.S.-Korea Institute at SAIS, Senior Research Fellow at Columbia University Weatherhead Institute for East Asian Studies, and former Coordinator for the U.S.-North Korea Agreed Framework (1995-1999)
Dr. David Wright, Co-Director and Senior Scientist, Global Security Program, Union of Concerned Scientists
Amb. Norman A. Wulf, U.S. Department of State (ret.), and Special Representative of the President for Nuclear Nonproliferation (1999-2002)
*Institution listed for identification purposes only.
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