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1st collector for New START Treaty Ratification – Hillary Clinton
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1st collector for New START Treaty Ratification – Hillary Clinton
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Energy Secretary Steven Chu and business leaders discuss how, with an understanding of Science and Math, individuals are shaping the world we live in.
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1st collector for A STEM Education, Tools to Change the World
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Today, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted 14 to 4 to approve a treaty that will make all of us safer.
A bipartisan majority in the committee, including all of the Democrats and Republicans Dick Lugar, Bob Corker, and Johnny Isakson, voted to approve the New START Treaty with Russia and send the treaty to the full Senate for a vote.
The strong showing in the committee increases the likelihood that the 67 senators necessary to approve the treaty will vote for START on the floor—if they are given the chance to vote. With the elections approaching, the Senate could run out of time to take up this important agreement.
You can help. Urge your senators to call publicly for a vote on the treaty and to ask Senate leaders to schedule a vote. Urge your senators to vote “yes” on the new START Treaty
Why is the New START Treaty important for national security?
Please contact your senators today and ask them to call publicly for a vote on the New START Treaty.
Background
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The American public is asking a fundamental question: Will the New START Treaty increase U.S. national security and reduce nuclear threats?
We began working together to reduce the threat of nuclear weapons in the 1980s, when the Cold War created a threatening environment that could lead to an all-out nuclear war between the United States and the Soviet Union. It was a very real possibility.
Today, the nuclear threat has changed. The possibility of nuclear war has declined, but the chances of nuclear weapons being used by a terrorist group, or a rogue nation in a regional war, are increasing. These threats are fueled by the spread of nuclear weapons, materials and technology around the world.
With this new context, the goal of nuclear threat reduction grows ever more vital to U.S. security. After we reviewed the treaty and the testimony presented by experts, we now believe the American public can, with confidence, support this agreement.
It is likely to improve the security of the United States, and our allies, and lead to even greater international cooperation on nuclear risk reduction. The long, careful process to produce this treaty should increase cooperation on missile defense capabilities, which can provide an important measure of protection against an actual attack, or an accidental firing.
The New START treaty is relatively straightforward: The treaty sets lower ceilings on deployed strategic nuclear warheads and long-range ballistic missiles and bombers, with important provisions to verify the new terms. In our view, this represents a crucial step forward in reducing the nuclear threat.
We find three important reasons for support:
First, with the expiration of the 1991 START Treaty last December, there is no longer any agreement for monitoring strategic nuclear forces on both sides. The treaty’s provisions for data exchange and on-site inspection is likely to provide valuable information on Russian nuclear capabilities that we would not have otherwise. It is also likely to increase transparency and confidence on both sides — improving predictability, stability and security.
Second, New START reaffirms the long-standing principle of achieving greater nuclear reductions in the two nations that still control more than 90 percent of global nuclear inventories. This principle underpins our nonproliferation diplomacy worldwide, and helps open the door to even greater cooperation with other nations on the most pressing nuclear threat issues, including nuclear terrorism and the nuclear programs of Iran and North Korea. Going forward, Washington and Moscow must increase our work together to further reduce nuclear threats.
Third, Washington and Moscow should expand use of the existing Nuclear Risk Reduction Centers – which we, and other members of Congress, established with President Ronald Reagan to further reduce nuclear threats.
For example, to improve both nations’ early warning capabilities, the centers could exchange data on global missile launches. Other nations could be integrated into this system. It could provide the basis for a joint initiative involving Russia, the United States and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization on a missile defense architecture for Europe that would help address other key issues, like tactical nuclear weapons vulnerable to theft by terrorists. Indeed, when the centers were proposed, they were envisioned to help prevent catastrophic nuclear terrorism. These initiatives can go forward with a New START Treaty.
Together, we have spent more than 50 years in the Senate working on national security issues, and our confidence in our nation’s treaty ratification process now leads us to urge the America public to support the New START Treaty.
Critics have expressed understandable concerns that the treaty might undermine the U.S. missile defense program, citing the preamble language on the relationship between strategic offensive and defensive arms; or the treaty’s prohibition on using existing strategic launchers for placement of missile defense interceptors, or Russian assertions of a right to withdraw.
There have also been legitimate issues raised about the importance of a strong U.S. commitment to maintaining the safety, security and reliability of our own weapons, given the treaty’s reductions and the continuing need for a strong nuclear deterrent in light of today’s threats.
The defense secretary, the leaders of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the general in charge of our missile defense program have all testified that New START is not a threat to U.S. missile defenses. Their statements are an important step in addressing the missile defense issue, as is the administration’s proposed 10-year nuclear stockpile plan.
These are important issues that must now be considered under our constitutional process and monitored in the years to come by the executive and legislative branches so that the treaty will merit broad and sustained bipartisan support.
The American public can be confident that this treaty enhances our national security.
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Queen – I Want It All Original Movie Soundtrack,Taken from Queen – ‘Greatest Video Hits 2’
In collaborazione con http://www.queenfreddie.
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Last April the U.S. and Russia signed the new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, which puts us one step closer to eliminating nuclear weapons. Together, the U.S. and Russia possess almost 95% of the world’s strategic nuclear weapons, and the Treaty will cut these nuclear arsenals by one-third. But, for the Treaty to enter into force it must be ratified by both countries, which means that two-thirds (67 votes) of the Senate must vote in favor of the Treaty.
Tell your two Senators we need New START NOW!
Together, the U.S. and Russia possess almost 95% of the world’s strategic nuclear weapons, and this Treaty will cut those nuclear arsenals by one-third. But, for the Treaty to enter into force it must be ratified by both countries, which means that we two-thirds (67 votes) of the Senate must vote in favor of the Treaty. And we need to make sure both of your Senators support New START when it comes to the floor of the Senate.
Your voice is even more critical now as opponents of reducing our nuclear arsenal are gearing up to mount fierce opposition to New START. Opponents like Senator DeMint who stated during the hearing today “New START makes America less safe.” That’s why it is so important NOW, as the Treaty moves to the Senate floor, that you make your voice heard and ask both of your Senators to put America’s national security over politics. Click here to ask your Senators to vote in favor of the Treaty today.
Thanks for all you do,
Anu
Anu Joshi
Manager of Membership and Outreach
Citizens for Global Solutions
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London UK
24 January 1973
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1st collector for Waterloo Sunset ~ The Kinks ~ Live 1973
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London UK
24 January 1973
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1st collector for Lola ~ The Kinks ~ Live 1973
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Rolling Stones – Loving Cup 1972 live
I’m the man on the mountain, come on up.
I’m the plowman in the valley with a face full of mud.
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May 21, 1972
Rialto Theatre
Montreux, Switzerland
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1st collector for Tumbling Dice #1 — The Rolling Stones — Live …
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CHOREADO
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1st collector for BEFORE THEY MAKE ME RUN – THE ROLLING STONES
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Music Video for “Love Is Strong” the first single, taken off the Stones’ 1994 album Voodoo Lounge.
Download from iTunes here – http://clkuk.
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