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US–UK Mutual Defence Agreement

The US–UK Mutual Defense Agreement, or the 1958 UK–US Mutual Defence Agreement, is a bilateral treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom on nuclear weapons co-operation. The treaty's full name is Agreement between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland for Cooperation on the uses of Atomic Energy for Mutual Defense Purposes. It allows the US and the UK to exchange nuclear materials, technology and information. The US has nuclear co-operation agreements with other countries, including France and other NATO countries, but this agreement is by far the most comprehensive. Because of the agreement's strategic value to Britain, Harold Macmillan (the Prime Minister who presided over the United Kingdom's entry into the agreement) called it "the Great Prize".[1]

US–UK Mutual Defense Agreement
Agreement between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland for Cooperation on the uses of Atomic Energy for Mutual Defense Purposes
Logo for celebrations commemorating the 50th anniversary of the treaty in 2008
Signed3 July 1958 (1958-07-03)
LocationWashington, DC
Effective4 August 1958 (1958-08-04)
Expiration31 December 2024 (2024-12-31)
Signatories

The treaty was signed on 3 July 1958 after the Soviet Union had shocked the American public with the launch of Sputnik on 4 October 1957, and the British hydrogen bomb programme had successfully tested a thermonuclear device in the Operation Grapple test on 8 November. The special relationship proved mutually beneficial, both militarily and economically. Britain soon became dependent on the United States for its nuclear weapons since it agreed to limit their nuclear program with the agreement of shared technology. The treaty allowed American nuclear weapons to be supplied to Britain through Project E for use by the Royal Air Force and British Army of the Rhine until the early 1990s when the UK became fully independent in designing and manufacturing its own warheads.

The treaty provided for the sale to the UK of one complete nuclear submarine propulsion plant, as well as ten years' supply of enriched uranium to fuel it. Other nuclear material was also acquired from the US under the treaty. Some 5.4 tonnes of UK-produced plutonium was sent to the US in return for 6.7 kilograms (15 lb) of tritium and 7.5 tonnes of highly enriched uranium (HEU) between 1960 and 1979, but much of the HEU was used not for weapons but as fuel for the growing fleet of British nuclear submarines. The treaty paved the way for the Polaris Sales Agreement, and the Royal Navy ultimately acquired entire weapons systems, with the UK Polaris programme and Trident nuclear programme using American missiles with British nuclear warheads.

The treaty has been amended and renewed nine times. The most recent renewal extended it to 31 December 2024.

Background edit

Quebec Agreement edit

 
Quebec Conference in 1943. Seated are (left to right): Anthony Eden, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Countess of Athlone and Winston Churchill. Standing are (left to right): Earl of Athlone (Governor General of Canada), Mackenzie King (Prime Minister of Canada), Sir Alexander Cadogan, and Brendan Bracken.

During the early part of the Second World War, Britain had a nuclear weapons project, codenamed Tube Alloys.[2] At the Quadrant Conference in August 1943, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Winston Churchill, and the President of the United States, Franklin Roosevelt, signed the Quebec Agreement, which merged Tube Alloys with the American Manhattan Project to create a combined British, American and Canadian project.[3] The Quebec Agreement established the Combined Policy Committee and the Combined Development Trust to co-ordinate their efforts.[4] Many of Britain's top scientists participated in the Manhattan Project.[5]

The September 1944 Hyde Park Aide-Mémoire extended both commercial and military co-operation into the post-war period,[6] but Roosevelt died on 12 April 1945, and it was not binding on subsequent administrations.[7] In fact, it was physically lost. When Field Marshal Sir Henry Maitland Wilson raised the matter in a Combined Policy Committee meeting in June 1945, the American copy could not be found.[8] The Quebec Agreement specified that nuclear weapons would not be used against another country without mutual consent. On 4 July, Wilson gave the British agreement for the use of nuclear weapons against Japan.[9] On 8 August, the Prime Minister, Clement Attlee, sent a message to President Harry Truman that referred to themselves as "heads of the Governments which have control of this great force".[10][11]

Truman administration edit

The British government had trusted that the US would continue to share nuclear technology, which it considered to be a joint discovery.[10] On 9 November 1945, Attlee and the Prime Minister of Canada, Mackenzie King, went to Washington, DC, to confer with Truman about future co-operation in nuclear weapons and nuclear power.[12][13] A Memorandum of Intention was signed on 16 November 1945 that made Canada a full partner and replaced the Quebec Agreement's requirement for "mutual consent" before using nuclear weapons to one for "prior consultation". There was to be "full and effective co-operation in the field of atomic energy", but British hopes were soon disappointed[14] since it was only "in the field of basic scientific research".[15][16]

Technical co-operation was ended by the United States Atomic Energy Act of 1946 (McMahon Act), which forbade passing "restricted data" to American allies under pain of death.[17] That partly resulted from the arrest for espionage of the British physicist Alan Nunn May in February 1946 while the legislation was being debated.[18] Fearing a resurgence of American isolationism and Britain losing its great power status, the British government restarted its own development effort,[19] now codenamed High Explosive Research.[20]

By the end of 1947, 1,900 long tons (1,900 t) of uranium ore from the Belgian Congo was stockpiled for the Combined Development Trust at Springfields, near Preston in Lancashire, as part of a wartime sharing agreement, along with 1,350 long tons (1,370 t) for British use. To gain access to the stockpile for their own nuclear weapons project, the Americans opened negotiations that resulted in the Modus Vivendi,[21] an agreement that was signed on 7 January 1948 and officially terminated all previous agreements, including the Quebec Agreement. It removed the British right of consultation on the use of nuclear weapons;[22] allowed for limited sharing of technical information between the United States, Britain and Canada[23][24] and continued the Combined Policy Committee and the Combined Development Trust[22] although the latter was renamed the Combined Development Agency.[25][26]

In 1949, the Americans offered to make atomic bombs in the US available for Britain to use if the British agreed to curtail their atomic bomb programme.[27] That would have given Britain nuclear weapons much sooner than its own target date of late 1952.[28] Only the bomb components required by war plans would be stored in the UK, the rest would be kept in the US and Canada.[29] The offer was rejected by the British on the grounds that it was not "compatible with our status as a first-class power to depend on others for weapons of this supreme importance".[30]

As a counter-offer, the British proposed limiting the British programme in return for American bombs.[31] The opposition of key American officials, including Lewis Strauss from the United States Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), and Senators Bourke B. Hickenlooper and Arthur Vandenberg of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy (JCAE), coupled with security concerns aroused by the 2 February 1950 arrest of the British physicist Klaus Fuchs as an atomic spy, caused the proposal to be dropped.[32] The June 1951 defection of Donald Maclean, who had served as a British member of the Combined Policy Committee from January 1947 to August 1948, reinforced the Americans' distrust of British security arrangements.[33]

Eisenhower administration edit

The first British atomic bomb was successfully tested in Western Australia in Operation Hurricane on 3 October 1952,[34] but although it was more advanced than the American bombs of 1946, Britain was still several years behind in nuclear weapons technology.[35] On 1 November, the United States conducted Ivy Mike, the first nuclear test of a true thermonuclear device (also known as a hydrogen bomb).[36] The JCAE saw little benefit for the US from sharing technology with Britain.[37][38] The Soviet Union responded to Ivy Mike with the test of Joe 4, a boosted fission weapon, on 12 August 1953.[37] That prompted President Dwight Eisenhower, who was inaugurated in January 1953, to inform the US Congress that the McMahon Act, which he considered a "terrible piece of legislation" and "one of the most deplorable incidents in American history of which he personally felt ashamed", was obsolete.[39]

 
US President Dwight D. Eisenhower (second from right) and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan (left foreground) meet for talks in Bermuda in March 1957 to repair the rift created by the 1956 Suez Crisis.

At the three-power Bermuda Conference in December 1953, Eisenhower and Churchill,[40] who had become prime minister again on 25 October 1951,[41] discussed the possibility of the United States giving Britain access to American nuclear weapons in wartime,[40] which came to be called Project E.[39] There were technical and legal issues that had to be overcome before American bombs could be carried in British aircraft. The Americans would have to disclose their weights and dimensions, and their delivery would require data concerning their ballistics. Further down the track would also be issues of custody, security and targeting. The release of such information was restricted by the McMahon Act.[42]

It was amended on 30 August 1954 by the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, which allowed for greater exchange of information with foreign nations[43] and paved the way for the Agreement for Co-operation Regarding Atomic Information for Mutual Defence Purposes, which was signed on 15 June 1955.[44] On 13 June 1956, another agreement was concluded for the transfer of nuclear submarine propulsion technology to Britain, which saved the British government millions of pounds in research and development costs. It precipitated a row with the JCAE over whether that was permitted under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 and whether Britain met the security standards set by the 1955 agreement. With the 1956 presidential election approaching, Eisenhower was forced to rescind the offer.[45]

The October 1956 Suez Crisis brought relations between Britain and the United States to a low ebb.[46] Eisenhower met with the new British prime minister, Harold Macmillan, in Bermuda in March 1957 and raised the possibility of basing US intermediate range ballistic missile (IRBM) systems in the UK.[47] This came to be called Project Emily.[48] There were also discussions on exchanging nuclear submarine propulsion technology for information on the British Calder Hall nuclear power plant, allowing the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) to purchase uranium ore from Canada and co-ordinating the war plans of RAF Bomber Command with those of the Strategic Air Command.[49]

Although the IRBM negotiations pre-dated the Suez Crisis, the British government touted the IRBM deal as a demonstration that the rift had been healed.[50] The British hydrogen bomb programme attempted to detonate a thermonuclear device in the Operation Grapple test series at Christmas Island in the Pacific.[51] The test series was facilitated by the US, which also claimed the island.[52] Although the first tests were unsuccessful,[53] the Grapple X test on 8 November achieved the desired result.[51][54]

Negotiations edit

Sputnik crisis edit

 
Eisenhower (left) lays the cornerstone for the new Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) building in Germantown, Maryland, on 8 November 1957. Joint Committee on Atomic Energy (JCAE) Chairman Carl T. Durham (centre) and AEC Chairman Lewis Strauss (right) look on.

The successful development of British thermonuclear weapons came at an opportune moment to renew negotiations with the Americans. The Soviet Union's launch of Sputnik 1, the world's first artificial satellite, on 4 October 1957, came as a tremendous shock to the American public, which had trusted that American technological superiority ensured their invulnerability. Suddenly, there was now incontrovertible proof that in at least some areas, the Soviet Union was actually ahead. In the widespread calls for action in response to the Sputnik crisis, officials in the United States and Britain seized an opportunity to mend their relationship.[55] At the suggestion of Harold Caccia, the British Ambassador to the United States, Macmillan wrote to Eisenhower on 10 October to urge for both countries pool their resources,[56] as Macmillan put it, to meet the Soviet challenge on every front, "military, economic and political".[57]

Macmillan flew to Washington, DC, for talks on 25 October.[58] He had concerns that the disastrous 10 October Windscale fire might prove a stumbling block in negotiations,[59] as it might reflect badly on British expertise and provide ammunition for opponents of closer co-operation with the British. He ordered extra copies of the report into the fire to be destroyed and for the printers to destroy their type.[60] He immediately sensed how shaken the Americans had been by Sputnik,[55] which placed the Eisenhower administration under great public pressure to act on the deployment of IRBMs by a shocked and distraught nation.[61]

Eisenhower and Macmillan agreed to form a study group headed by Sir Richard Powell, the Permanent Secretary to the Ministry of Defence, and Donald A. Quarles, the United States Deputy Secretary of Defense, to consider how the deployment of IRBMs to Britain might be expedited.[58] Another study group, under Strauss and Sir Edwin Plowden, the head of the UKAEA, would investigate nuclear co-operation and the exchange of nuclear information.[59] The personal relationship developed between Plowden and Strauss would be crucial in converting the latter over to the idea of providing information to Britain.[62]

By December, most of the issues with the IRBM negotiations had been ironed out,[63] and a formal agreement was drawn up on 17 December, but it was not until the end of the month that it was definitely determined that Britain would receive Thor, not Jupiter, missiles.[64]

However, the nuclear submarine propulsion effort was running into trouble. Under the July 1956 agreement and a February 1957 directive from Eisenhower, Royal Navy officers had been assigned to study the US Navy's nuclear submarine programme. By October 1957, its head, Rear Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, felt that their questions were slowing the deployment of the Polaris submarine-launched IRBM at a critical time. He feared that any delay might cause Congress to favour land-based missiles. By December, the British liaison officers were complaining of slow response to their questions. Rickover proposed that Westinghouse be permitted to sell the Royal Navy a nuclear submarine reactor, which would allow it to immediately proceed with building its own nuclear-powered submarine. The British government endorsed this idea, as it would save it a great deal of money.[65][66]

Amendment of McMahon Act edit

For their part, the British wanted the McMahon Act's restrictions on nuclear co-operation to be relaxed. They wanted to know the weight, dimensions, fusing and firing sequences, safety features, and in-flight procedures. That information would allow American bombs to be carried in British V-bombers and American warheads to be fitted to British Blue Streak missiles.[65] That could save millions of pounds and avoid domestic political complications if Britain had to persist with nuclear testing during an international moratorium.[62] While the British knew what they wanted, there was no consensus among the Americans as to what they wanted to provide.[65] US Secretary of State John Foster Dulles was concerned that a special relationship with Britain might complicate US relationships with its other allies.[67] Strauss, in particular, felt that a proposal to give hydrogen bomb secrets to the British would likely not get past the JCAE, and counselled drafting amendments that were sufficiently vague as to give the president the authority that he needed without arousing its ire.[65] Eisenhower declared that the US and the UK were "interdependent" and pledged to ask Congress to amend the McMahon Act.[68]

Crucially, he managed to secure the support of Carl T. Durham, the chairman of the JCAE. Eisenhower met with congressional leaders on 3 December 1957 and pressed for more discretion to co-operate with all America's NATO allies, not just Britain.[69] Indeed, the administration negotiated agreements with Australia, Canada and NATO.[70] Eisenhower did not yet have wholehearted support for the proposal, but outright opposition from US Senator Clinton Anderson failed to attract much support.[69] On 27 January 1958, Strauss sent Durham the administration's proposed legislative changes,[70] and the JCAE Subcommittee on Agreements for Cooperation, chaired by Senator John Pastore, held hearings from 29 to 31 January. Quarles and Major General Herbert Loper, the Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Atomic Energy Affairs, were forced to deal with pointed questions about nuclear proliferation.[71] British information security, or the lack thereof no longer seemed so important now that the Soviet Union was apparently ahead and the UK had independently developed the hydrogen bomb,[72] but the JCAE objected to the terms of the proposed deal to trade British uranium-235 for US plutonium under which the US would pay USD$30 per gram for plutonium that cost $12 per gram to produce in the UK.[73]

The amendments were passed by the US House of Representatives on 19 June but not without changes that now limited exchanges of nuclear weapons data to nations that had made substantial progress in the field. The same restriction applied to the actual transfer of non-nuclear components of nuclear weapons. American nuclear weapons were to remain under US custody and could not be turned over to allies except in wartime. The sale of nuclear reactors for submarines and nuclear fuel for them and other military reactors was permitted. Only the UK qualified as a nation that had made substantial progress.[74] The bill passed Congress on 30 June 1958 and was signed into law by Eisenhower on 2 July 1958.[75]

The 1958 US–UK Mutual Defence Agreement was signed by Dulles and Samuel Hood, the British Minister in Washington, DC, on 3 July[76] and was approved by Congress on 30 July.[77]

Implementation edit

Details edit

 
UK Defence Minister Des Browne (right) addresses a reception hosted by US Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates (left) commemorating the 50th anniversary of the US-UK Mutual Defence Agreement in Washington, DC, on 9 July 2008.

The agreement enables the US and the UK to exchange classified information with the objective of improving each party's "atomic weapon design, development, and fabrication capability".[76] While the US has nuclear co-operation agreements with other countries, including France and some NATO countries, none of them is similar in scope to the US–UK Mutual Defence Agreement.[78] Macmillan called it "the Great Prize".[1]

Article 2 of the treaty covered joint development of defence plans; the mutual training of personnel in the use and defence against nuclear weapons; the sharing of intelligence and evaluation of enemy capabilities; the development of nuclear delivery systems and the research, development and design of military reactors.[79] The treaty called for the exchange of "classified information concerning atomic weapons when, after consultation with the other Party, the communicating Party determines that the communication of such information is necessary to improve the recipient's atomic weapon design, development and fabrication capability".[76] The US would communicate information about atomic weapons that were similar to UK atomic weapons. For the immediate future, that would exclude information about thermonuclear weapons.[80] Confidential intelligence matters are also covered by the agreement. The UK government has not published those sections "because of the necessity for great confidentiality and because of the use that such information would be to other would-be nuclear states. In other words, it might well assist proliferation".[81]

Article 3 provided for the sale to the UK of one complete nuclear submarine propulsion plant, as well as the uranium needed to fuel it for ten years.[79] Because of concerns expressed by the JCAE, the AEC would determine the price that Britain would pay for highly enriched uranium (HEU).[80] The treaty did not originally allow for non-nuclear components of nuclear weapons to be given to Britain. It was amended on 7 May 1959 to give Britain access to non-nuclear components[77] and to permit the transfer of special nuclear material such as plutonium, HEU and tritium.[82] The treaty paved the way for the subsequent Polaris Sales Agreement,[83] which was signed on 6 April 1963.[84] The two agreements have been "the cornerstone of the UK-US nuclear relationship for nearly 60 years".[79]

Nuclear weapons development edit

The AEC invited the British government to send representatives to a series of meetings in Washington, DC, on 27 and 28 August 1958 to work out the details. The US delegation included Willard Libby, AEC deputy chairman; Loper; Brigadier General Alfred Starbird, AEC Director of Military Applications; Norris Bradbury, director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory; Edward Teller, director of the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory; and James W. McRae, president of the Sandia Corporation. The British representatives were Sir Frederick Brundrett, the Chief Scientific Adviser to the Ministry of Defence, and Victor Macklen from the Ministry of Defence; and William Penney, William Cook and E. F. Newly from the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment at Aldermaston. The Americans disclosed the details of nine of their nuclear weapon designs: the Mark 7, Mark 15/39, Mark 19, Mark 25, Mark 27, Mark 28, Mark 31, Mark 33 and Mark 34. In return, the British provided the details of seven of theirs, including Green Grass; Pennant, the boosted device which had been detonated in the Grapple Z test on 22 August; Flagpole, the two-stage device scheduled for 2 September; Burgee, scheduled for 23 September; and the three-stage Halliard 3. The Americans were impressed with the British designs, particularly with Halliard 1, the heavier version of Halliard 3. Cook, therefore, changed the Grapple Z programme to fire Halliard 1 instead of Halliard 3.[85] Macmillan noted in his diary with satisfaction:

in some respects we are as far, and even further, advanced in the art than our American friends. They thought interchange of information would be all give. They are keen that we should complete our series, especially the last megaton, the character of which is novel and of deep interest to them.[86]

An early benefit of the agreement was to allow the UK to "Anglicise" the W28 nuclear warhead as the Red Snow warhead for the Blue Steel missile.[87] The British designers were impressed by the W28, which was not only lighter than the British Green Grass warhead used in Yellow Sun but also remarkably more economical in its use of expensive fissile material. The Yellow Sun Mark 2 using Red Snow cost £500,000 compared with £1,200,000 for the Mark 1 with Green Grass.[88] A 1974 CIA proliferation assessment noted: "In many cases [Britain's sensitive technology in nuclear and missile fields] is based on technology received from the US and could not legitimately be passed on without US permission".[89] The UK National Audit Office noted that most of the UK Trident programme warhead development and production expenditure had been incurred in the US, which supplied special materials and "certain warhead-related components and services".[90][91] There is evidence that the warhead design of the British Trident system is similar to or even based upon the US W76 warhead fitted in US Navy Trident missiles, with design and blast model data supplied to the UK.[92][93]

Britain soon became dependent on the United States for its nuclear weapons, as it lacked the resources to produce a range of designs.[94] The treaty allowed the UK to receive US nuclear weapons for the Royal Air Force (RAF) and British Army of the Rhine (BAOR) under Project E.[95] Similar custody arrangements were made for the Thor missiles supplied under Project Emily.[96] The UK was able to carry out underground nuclear tests at the US Nevada Test Site, where the first British test took place on 1 March 1962.[97] British nuclear testing in the United States continued until it was abruptly halted by President George H. W. Bush in October 1992.[98][99] Major subcritical nuclear tests continued to occur, most notably the Etna test in February 2002 and the Krakatau test in February 2006.[100]

Special nuclear materials barter edit

 
The Royal Navy's Swiftsure-class submarine HMS Splendid

Under the agreement 5.37 tonnes of UK-produced plutonium was sent to the US in exchange for 6.7 kg of tritium and 7.5 tonnes of HEU between 1960 and 1979. A further 470 kg of plutonium was swapped between the US and the UK for reasons that remain classified.[101] Some of the UK-produced plutonium was used in 1962 by the US for the only known nuclear weapon test of reactor-grade plutonium.[102] The plutonium sent to the US included some produced in UK civil Magnox reactors, and the US gave assurances that the civil plutonium was not used in the US nuclear weapons programme. It was used in civil programmes which included californium production and reactor research.[101]

Some of the fissile materials for the UK Trident warhead were purchased from the US,[91] but much of the HEU supplied by the US was used not for weapons but as fuel for the growing fleet of UK nuclear submarines. Under the treaty, the US supplied the UK with not only nuclear submarine propulsion technology but also a complete S5W pressurised water reactor of the kind used to power the US Skipjack-class submarines. That was used in the Royal Navy's first nuclear-powered submarine, HMS Dreadnought, which was launched in 1960 and commissioned in 1963. The S5W was fuelled by uranium enriched to between 93 and 97 per cent uranium-235.[103] In return for a "considerable amount" of information regarding submarine design and quietening techniques being passed on to the United States,[104] reactor technology was transferred from Westinghouse to Rolls-Royce,[105] which used it as the basis for its PWR1 reactor used in the UK's Valiant, Resolution, Churchill, Swiftsure and Trafalgar submarines.[106]

The UK produced HEU at its facility in Capenhurst, but production for military purposes ceased there in March 1963.[107] Thereafter, uranium oxide was imported from Australia, Canada, Namibia, South Africa, the United States and Zaire and processed into uranium hexafluoride at Springfields. It was then shipped to the US, where it was enriched at the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant near Piketon, Ohio. HEU was then flown back to the UK in RAF aircraft.[103] In 1994, with the Portsmouth plant about to close, the treaty was amended with the US requirement to "provide" uranium enrichment services changed to one to "arrange" them.[76] By March 2002, the UK had a stockpile of 21.86 tonnes of HEU, about 80 years' supply for the Royal Navy's nuclear-powered submarines.[108]

Joint Working Groups edit

Most of the activity under the treaty is information exchange through Joint Working Groups (JOWOG). At least 15 of them were established in 1959.[109] Subjects investigated included

one-point safety, computer codes, metallurgy and fabrication technology for beryllium, uranium and plutonium, corrosion of uranium in the presence of water and water vapour, underground effects tests, outer-space testing, clandestine testing, the technology of lithium compounds, high explosives, deuterium monitors, extinguishing plutonium fires, high-speed cameras, mechanical safing, liquid and solid explosive shock initiation, environmental sensing switches, neutron sources, tritium reservoirs, telemetry, hydrodynamic and shock relations for problems with spherical and cylindrical symmetry, nuclear cross sections, radiochemistry, atomic demolition munitions, warhead hardening, asymmetric detonations, terrorist nuclear threat response, nuclear weapons accidents and waste management.[109]

Between 2007 and 2009, staff of the Atomic Weapons Establishment paid 2,000 visits to US nuclear facilities.[110] As of 2014 there are also two enhanced collaborations jointly developing capabilities:

  • Enhanced Nuclear Safety to develop architectures and technologies related to warhead safety; and
  • Warhead Electrical System to develop architectures and technologies for warhead electrical systems.[111]

Mutual benefit edit

The Anglo-American special relationship proved mutually beneficial although it has never been one of equals after the World Wars since the US has been far larger than the United Kingdom both militarily and economically.[94] Lorna Arnold noted:

The balance of advantage in the exchanges was necessarily in Britain's favour but they were not entirely one-sided. In some areas, notably electronics and high explosives, the British were equal or perhaps even superior, and in many areas they had valuable ideas to contribute, as the American scientists, and notably Teller, appreciated.[112]

A 1985 report by the US State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research reported that the US was "profoundly involved and benefited greatly" from the treaty.[113]

Renewal edit

 
NNSA Administrator Lisa Gordon-Hagerty and Stephen Lovegrove cut the ribbon on the US-UK Mutual Defence Agreement 60th Anniversary commemorative exhibit in June 2018

The treaty was amended on 7 May 1959, 27 September 1968, 16 October 1969, 22 June 1974, 5 December 1979, 5 June 1984, 23 May 1994 and 14 June 2004. Most amendments merely extended the treaty for another five or ten years; others added definitions and made minor changes.[76][114][115] As of 2020, the most recent renewal was on 22 July 2014, extending the treaty to 31 December 2024, with minor changes for the Trident nuclear programme.[116][117]

A 2004 legal opinion obtained by the British American Security Information Council (BASIC) argued that renewal of the treaty violated Article VI of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which required signatories to take steps towards nuclear disarmament, but that was not accepted by the British government. In July 2014, Baroness Warsi, the Senior Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs from 2012 to 2014,[118] stated the government's position:

We are committed to the goal of a world without nuclear weapons and firmly believe that the best way to achieve this is through gradual disarmament negotiated through a step-by-step approach within the framework of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The UK has a strong record on nuclear disarmament and continues to be at the forefront of international efforts to control proliferation, and to make progress towards multilateral nuclear disarmament. The UK-USA Mutual Defence Agreement is, and will continue to be, in full compliance with our obligations under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.[119]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Macmillan 1971, p. 323.
  2. ^ Gowing 1964, pp. 108–111.
  3. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 277.
  4. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 285–286.
  5. ^ Gowing 1964, pp. 236–242.
  6. ^ Gowing 1964, pp. 340–342.
  7. ^ Paul 2000, pp. 72–73.
  8. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 457–458.
  9. ^ Gowing 1964, p. 372.
  10. ^ a b Goldberg 1964, p. 410.
  11. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 372–373.
  12. ^ Gott 1963, p. 240.
  13. ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 73–77.
  14. ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, p. 92.
  15. ^ Paul 2000, pp. 80–83.
  16. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 468.
  17. ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 106–108.
  18. ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 105–108.
  19. ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 181–184.
  20. ^ Cathcart 1995, pp. 23–24, 48, 57.
  21. ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 358–360.
  22. ^ a b Botti 1987, pp. 34–35.
  23. ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 245–254.
  24. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 281–283.
  25. ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 352–353.
  26. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, p. 285.
  27. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 307–308.
  28. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, p. 310.
  29. ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 281–283.
  30. ^ Baylis 1995, p. 75.
  31. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 309–310.
  32. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 312–314.
  33. ^ Botti 1987, pp. 74–75.
  34. ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974b, pp. 493–495.
  35. ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974b, pp. 474–475.
  36. ^ Arnold & Pyne 2001, pp. 16–20.
  37. ^ a b Arnold & Pyne 2001, pp. 27–30.
  38. ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974b, pp. 498–500.
  39. ^ a b Baylis 2008, pp. 429–430.
  40. ^ a b Paul 2000, pp. 200–201.
  41. ^ Farmelo 2013, pp. 372–375.
  42. ^ Young 2016, pp. 200–201.
  43. ^ Botti 1987, pp. 140–141.
  44. ^ Botti 1987, pp. 147–149.
  45. ^ Botti 1987, pp. 161–164.
  46. ^ Botti 1987, pp. 171–174.
  47. ^ Botti 1987, pp. 174–177.
  48. ^ Young 2016, pp. 98–99.
  49. ^ Botti 1987, pp. 180–181.
  50. ^ Young 2007, p. 8.
  51. ^ a b Baylis 1994, pp. 166–170.
  52. ^ Botti 1987, pp. 159–160.
  53. ^ Arnold & Pyne 2001, p. 147.
  54. ^ Arnold & Pyne 2001, pp. 160–162.
  55. ^ a b Botti 1987, pp. 199–201.
  56. ^ Arnold & Pyne 2001, p. 199.
  57. ^ "Foreign Relations of the United States, 1955–1957, Western Europe and Canada, Volume XXVII – Document 306". Office of the Historian, United States Department of State. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
  58. ^ a b Divine 1993, p. 34.
  59. ^ a b Baylis 2008, p. 438.
  60. ^ Lohr, Steve (2 January 1988). "Britain Suppressed Details of '57 Atomic Disaster: Macmillan feared the loss of U.S. cooperation". The New York Times. p. 3. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
  61. ^ Divine 1993, pp. 73–74.
  62. ^ a b Baylis 2008, p. 440.
  63. ^ Baylis 2008, p. 442.
  64. ^ Wynn 1997, p. 287.
  65. ^ a b c d Botti 1987, p. 203.
  66. ^ Baylis 2008, pp. 441–442.
  67. ^ Baylis 2008, p. 439.
  68. ^ Moore 2010, p. 33.
  69. ^ a b Botti 1987, pp. 207–208.
  70. ^ a b Botti 1987, p. 214.
  71. ^ Botti 1987, pp. 215–219.
  72. ^ Botti 1987, pp. 224–225.
  73. ^ Botti 1987, p. 224.
  74. ^ Botti 1987, pp. 232–233.
  75. ^ Botti 1987, pp. 234–236.
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References edit

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External links edit

mutual, defence, agreement, mutual, defense, agreement, 1958, mutual, defence, agreement, bilateral, treaty, between, united, states, united, kingdom, nuclear, weapons, operation, treaty, full, name, agreement, between, government, united, states, america, gov. The US UK Mutual Defense Agreement or the 1958 UK US Mutual Defence Agreement is a bilateral treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom on nuclear weapons co operation The treaty s full name is Agreement between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland for Cooperation on the uses of Atomic Energy for Mutual Defense Purposes It allows the US and the UK to exchange nuclear materials technology and information The US has nuclear co operation agreements with other countries including France and other NATO countries but this agreement is by far the most comprehensive Because of the agreement s strategic value to Britain Harold Macmillan the Prime Minister who presided over the United Kingdom s entry into the agreement called it the Great Prize 1 US UK Mutual Defense AgreementAgreement between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland for Cooperation on the uses of Atomic Energy for Mutual Defense PurposesLogo for celebrations commemorating the 50th anniversary of the treaty in 2008Signed3 July 1958 1958 07 03 LocationWashington DCEffective4 August 1958 1958 08 04 Expiration31 December 2024 2024 12 31 SignatoriesJohn Foster Dulles US Samuel Hood 6th Viscount Hood UK The treaty was signed on 3 July 1958 after the Soviet Union had shocked the American public with the launch of Sputnik on 4 October 1957 and the British hydrogen bomb programme had successfully tested a thermonuclear device in the Operation Grapple test on 8 November The special relationship proved mutually beneficial both militarily and economically Britain soon became dependent on the United States for its nuclear weapons since it agreed to limit their nuclear program with the agreement of shared technology The treaty allowed American nuclear weapons to be supplied to Britain through Project E for use by the Royal Air Force and British Army of the Rhine until the early 1990s when the UK became fully independent in designing and manufacturing its own warheads The treaty provided for the sale to the UK of one complete nuclear submarine propulsion plant as well as ten years supply of enriched uranium to fuel it Other nuclear material was also acquired from the US under the treaty Some 5 4 tonnes of UK produced plutonium was sent to the US in return for 6 7 kilograms 15 lb of tritium and 7 5 tonnes of highly enriched uranium HEU between 1960 and 1979 but much of the HEU was used not for weapons but as fuel for the growing fleet of British nuclear submarines The treaty paved the way for the Polaris Sales Agreement and the Royal Navy ultimately acquired entire weapons systems with the UK Polaris programme and Trident nuclear programme using American missiles with British nuclear warheads The treaty has been amended and renewed nine times The most recent renewal extended it to 31 December 2024 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Quebec Agreement 1 2 Truman administration 1 3 Eisenhower administration 2 Negotiations 2 1 Sputnik crisis 2 2 Amendment of McMahon Act 3 Implementation 3 1 Details 3 2 Nuclear weapons development 3 3 Special nuclear materials barter 3 4 Joint Working Groups 3 5 Mutual benefit 4 Renewal 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground editQuebec Agreement edit nbsp Quebec Conference in 1943 Seated are left to right Anthony Eden President Franklin D Roosevelt the Countess of Athlone and Winston Churchill Standing are left to right Earl of Athlone Governor General of Canada Mackenzie King Prime Minister of Canada Sir Alexander Cadogan and Brendan Bracken During the early part of the Second World War Britain had a nuclear weapons project codenamed Tube Alloys 2 At the Quadrant Conference in August 1943 the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Winston Churchill and the President of the United States Franklin Roosevelt signed the Quebec Agreement which merged Tube Alloys with the American Manhattan Project to create a combined British American and Canadian project 3 The Quebec Agreement established the Combined Policy Committee and the Combined Development Trust to co ordinate their efforts 4 Many of Britain s top scientists participated in the Manhattan Project 5 The September 1944 Hyde Park Aide Memoire extended both commercial and military co operation into the post war period 6 but Roosevelt died on 12 April 1945 and it was not binding on subsequent administrations 7 In fact it was physically lost When Field Marshal Sir Henry Maitland Wilson raised the matter in a Combined Policy Committee meeting in June 1945 the American copy could not be found 8 The Quebec Agreement specified that nuclear weapons would not be used against another country without mutual consent On 4 July Wilson gave the British agreement for the use of nuclear weapons against Japan 9 On 8 August the Prime Minister Clement Attlee sent a message to President Harry Truman that referred to themselves as heads of the Governments which have control of this great force 10 11 Truman administration edit The British government had trusted that the US would continue to share nuclear technology which it considered to be a joint discovery 10 On 9 November 1945 Attlee and the Prime Minister of Canada Mackenzie King went to Washington DC to confer with Truman about future co operation in nuclear weapons and nuclear power 12 13 A Memorandum of Intention was signed on 16 November 1945 that made Canada a full partner and replaced the Quebec Agreement s requirement for mutual consent before using nuclear weapons to one for prior consultation There was to be full and effective co operation in the field of atomic energy but British hopes were soon disappointed 14 since it was only in the field of basic scientific research 15 16 Technical co operation was ended by the United States Atomic Energy Act of 1946 McMahon Act which forbade passing restricted data to American allies under pain of death 17 That partly resulted from the arrest for espionage of the British physicist Alan Nunn May in February 1946 while the legislation was being debated 18 Fearing a resurgence of American isolationism and Britain losing its great power status the British government restarted its own development effort 19 now codenamed High Explosive Research 20 By the end of 1947 1 900 long tons 1 900 t of uranium ore from the Belgian Congo was stockpiled for the Combined Development Trust at Springfields near Preston in Lancashire as part of a wartime sharing agreement along with 1 350 long tons 1 370 t for British use To gain access to the stockpile for their own nuclear weapons project the Americans opened negotiations that resulted in the Modus Vivendi 21 an agreement that was signed on 7 January 1948 and officially terminated all previous agreements including the Quebec Agreement It removed the British right of consultation on the use of nuclear weapons 22 allowed for limited sharing of technical information between the United States Britain and Canada 23 24 and continued the Combined Policy Committee and the Combined Development Trust 22 although the latter was renamed the Combined Development Agency 25 26 In 1949 the Americans offered to make atomic bombs in the US available for Britain to use if the British agreed to curtail their atomic bomb programme 27 That would have given Britain nuclear weapons much sooner than its own target date of late 1952 28 Only the bomb components required by war plans would be stored in the UK the rest would be kept in the US and Canada 29 The offer was rejected by the British on the grounds that it was not compatible with our status as a first class power to depend on others for weapons of this supreme importance 30 As a counter offer the British proposed limiting the British programme in return for American bombs 31 The opposition of key American officials including Lewis Strauss from the United States Atomic Energy Commission AEC and Senators Bourke B Hickenlooper and Arthur Vandenberg of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy JCAE coupled with security concerns aroused by the 2 February 1950 arrest of the British physicist Klaus Fuchs as an atomic spy caused the proposal to be dropped 32 The June 1951 defection of Donald Maclean who had served as a British member of the Combined Policy Committee from January 1947 to August 1948 reinforced the Americans distrust of British security arrangements 33 Eisenhower administration edit The first British atomic bomb was successfully tested in Western Australia in Operation Hurricane on 3 October 1952 34 but although it was more advanced than the American bombs of 1946 Britain was still several years behind in nuclear weapons technology 35 On 1 November the United States conducted Ivy Mike the first nuclear test of a true thermonuclear device also known as a hydrogen bomb 36 The JCAE saw little benefit for the US from sharing technology with Britain 37 38 The Soviet Union responded to Ivy Mike with the test of Joe 4 a boosted fission weapon on 12 August 1953 37 That prompted President Dwight Eisenhower who was inaugurated in January 1953 to inform the US Congress that the McMahon Act which he considered a terrible piece of legislation and one of the most deplorable incidents in American history of which he personally felt ashamed was obsolete 39 nbsp US President Dwight D Eisenhower second from right and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan left foreground meet for talks in Bermuda in March 1957 to repair the rift created by the 1956 Suez Crisis At the three power Bermuda Conference in December 1953 Eisenhower and Churchill 40 who had become prime minister again on 25 October 1951 41 discussed the possibility of the United States giving Britain access to American nuclear weapons in wartime 40 which came to be called Project E 39 There were technical and legal issues that had to be overcome before American bombs could be carried in British aircraft The Americans would have to disclose their weights and dimensions and their delivery would require data concerning their ballistics Further down the track would also be issues of custody security and targeting The release of such information was restricted by the McMahon Act 42 It was amended on 30 August 1954 by the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 which allowed for greater exchange of information with foreign nations 43 and paved the way for the Agreement for Co operation Regarding Atomic Information for Mutual Defence Purposes which was signed on 15 June 1955 44 On 13 June 1956 another agreement was concluded for the transfer of nuclear submarine propulsion technology to Britain which saved the British government millions of pounds in research and development costs It precipitated a row with the JCAE over whether that was permitted under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 and whether Britain met the security standards set by the 1955 agreement With the 1956 presidential election approaching Eisenhower was forced to rescind the offer 45 The October 1956 Suez Crisis brought relations between Britain and the United States to a low ebb 46 Eisenhower met with the new British prime minister Harold Macmillan in Bermuda in March 1957 and raised the possibility of basing US intermediate range ballistic missile IRBM systems in the UK 47 This came to be called Project Emily 48 There were also discussions on exchanging nuclear submarine propulsion technology for information on the British Calder Hall nuclear power plant allowing the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority UKAEA to purchase uranium ore from Canada and co ordinating the war plans of RAF Bomber Command with those of the Strategic Air Command 49 Although the IRBM negotiations pre dated the Suez Crisis the British government touted the IRBM deal as a demonstration that the rift had been healed 50 The British hydrogen bomb programme attempted to detonate a thermonuclear device in the Operation Grapple test series at Christmas Island in the Pacific 51 The test series was facilitated by the US which also claimed the island 52 Although the first tests were unsuccessful 53 the Grapple X test on 8 November achieved the desired result 51 54 Negotiations editSputnik crisis edit nbsp Eisenhower left lays the cornerstone for the new Atomic Energy Commission AEC building in Germantown Maryland on 8 November 1957 Joint Committee on Atomic Energy JCAE Chairman Carl T Durham centre and AEC Chairman Lewis Strauss right look on The successful development of British thermonuclear weapons came at an opportune moment to renew negotiations with the Americans The Soviet Union s launch of Sputnik 1 the world s first artificial satellite on 4 October 1957 came as a tremendous shock to the American public which had trusted that American technological superiority ensured their invulnerability Suddenly there was now incontrovertible proof that in at least some areas the Soviet Union was actually ahead In the widespread calls for action in response to the Sputnik crisis officials in the United States and Britain seized an opportunity to mend their relationship 55 At the suggestion of Harold Caccia the British Ambassador to the United States Macmillan wrote to Eisenhower on 10 October to urge for both countries pool their resources 56 as Macmillan put it to meet the Soviet challenge on every front military economic and political 57 Macmillan flew to Washington DC for talks on 25 October 58 He had concerns that the disastrous 10 October Windscale fire might prove a stumbling block in negotiations 59 as it might reflect badly on British expertise and provide ammunition for opponents of closer co operation with the British He ordered extra copies of the report into the fire to be destroyed and for the printers to destroy their type 60 He immediately sensed how shaken the Americans had been by Sputnik 55 which placed the Eisenhower administration under great public pressure to act on the deployment of IRBMs by a shocked and distraught nation 61 Eisenhower and Macmillan agreed to form a study group headed by Sir Richard Powell the Permanent Secretary to the Ministry of Defence and Donald A Quarles the United States Deputy Secretary of Defense to consider how the deployment of IRBMs to Britain might be expedited 58 Another study group under Strauss and Sir Edwin Plowden the head of the UKAEA would investigate nuclear co operation and the exchange of nuclear information 59 The personal relationship developed between Plowden and Strauss would be crucial in converting the latter over to the idea of providing information to Britain 62 By December most of the issues with the IRBM negotiations had been ironed out 63 and a formal agreement was drawn up on 17 December but it was not until the end of the month that it was definitely determined that Britain would receive Thor not Jupiter missiles 64 However the nuclear submarine propulsion effort was running into trouble Under the July 1956 agreement and a February 1957 directive from Eisenhower Royal Navy officers had been assigned to study the US Navy s nuclear submarine programme By October 1957 its head Rear Admiral Hyman G Rickover felt that their questions were slowing the deployment of the Polaris submarine launched IRBM at a critical time He feared that any delay might cause Congress to favour land based missiles By December the British liaison officers were complaining of slow response to their questions Rickover proposed that Westinghouse be permitted to sell the Royal Navy a nuclear submarine reactor which would allow it to immediately proceed with building its own nuclear powered submarine The British government endorsed this idea as it would save it a great deal of money 65 66 Amendment of McMahon Act edit For their part the British wanted the McMahon Act s restrictions on nuclear co operation to be relaxed They wanted to know the weight dimensions fusing and firing sequences safety features and in flight procedures That information would allow American bombs to be carried in British V bombers and American warheads to be fitted to British Blue Streak missiles 65 That could save millions of pounds and avoid domestic political complications if Britain had to persist with nuclear testing during an international moratorium 62 While the British knew what they wanted there was no consensus among the Americans as to what they wanted to provide 65 US Secretary of State John Foster Dulles was concerned that a special relationship with Britain might complicate US relationships with its other allies 67 Strauss in particular felt that a proposal to give hydrogen bomb secrets to the British would likely not get past the JCAE and counselled drafting amendments that were sufficiently vague as to give the president the authority that he needed without arousing its ire 65 Eisenhower declared that the US and the UK were interdependent and pledged to ask Congress to amend the McMahon Act 68 Crucially he managed to secure the support of Carl T Durham the chairman of the JCAE Eisenhower met with congressional leaders on 3 December 1957 and pressed for more discretion to co operate with all America s NATO allies not just Britain 69 Indeed the administration negotiated agreements with Australia Canada and NATO 70 Eisenhower did not yet have wholehearted support for the proposal but outright opposition from US Senator Clinton Anderson failed to attract much support 69 On 27 January 1958 Strauss sent Durham the administration s proposed legislative changes 70 and the JCAE Subcommittee on Agreements for Cooperation chaired by Senator John Pastore held hearings from 29 to 31 January Quarles and Major General Herbert Loper the Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Atomic Energy Affairs were forced to deal with pointed questions about nuclear proliferation 71 British information security or the lack thereof no longer seemed so important now that the Soviet Union was apparently ahead and the UK had independently developed the hydrogen bomb 72 but the JCAE objected to the terms of the proposed deal to trade British uranium 235 for US plutonium under which the US would pay USD 30 per gram for plutonium that cost 12 per gram to produce in the UK 73 The amendments were passed by the US House of Representatives on 19 June but not without changes that now limited exchanges of nuclear weapons data to nations that had made substantial progress in the field The same restriction applied to the actual transfer of non nuclear components of nuclear weapons American nuclear weapons were to remain under US custody and could not be turned over to allies except in wartime The sale of nuclear reactors for submarines and nuclear fuel for them and other military reactors was permitted Only the UK qualified as a nation that had made substantial progress 74 The bill passed Congress on 30 June 1958 and was signed into law by Eisenhower on 2 July 1958 75 The 1958 US UK Mutual Defence Agreement was signed by Dulles and Samuel Hood the British Minister in Washington DC on 3 July 76 and was approved by Congress on 30 July 77 Implementation editDetails edit nbsp UK Defence Minister Des Browne right addresses a reception hosted by US Defense Secretary Robert M Gates left commemorating the 50th anniversary of the US UK Mutual Defence Agreement in Washington DC on 9 July 2008 The agreement enables the US and the UK to exchange classified information with the objective of improving each party s atomic weapon design development and fabrication capability 76 While the US has nuclear co operation agreements with other countries including France and some NATO countries none of them is similar in scope to the US UK Mutual Defence Agreement 78 Macmillan called it the Great Prize 1 Article 2 of the treaty covered joint development of defence plans the mutual training of personnel in the use and defence against nuclear weapons the sharing of intelligence and evaluation of enemy capabilities the development of nuclear delivery systems and the research development and design of military reactors 79 The treaty called for the exchange of classified information concerning atomic weapons when after consultation with the other Party the communicating Party determines that the communication of such information is necessary to improve the recipient s atomic weapon design development and fabrication capability 76 The US would communicate information about atomic weapons that were similar to UK atomic weapons For the immediate future that would exclude information about thermonuclear weapons 80 Confidential intelligence matters are also covered by the agreement The UK government has not published those sections because of the necessity for great confidentiality and because of the use that such information would be to other would be nuclear states In other words it might well assist proliferation 81 Article 3 provided for the sale to the UK of one complete nuclear submarine propulsion plant as well as the uranium needed to fuel it for ten years 79 Because of concerns expressed by the JCAE the AEC would determine the price that Britain would pay for highly enriched uranium HEU 80 The treaty did not originally allow for non nuclear components of nuclear weapons to be given to Britain It was amended on 7 May 1959 to give Britain access to non nuclear components 77 and to permit the transfer of special nuclear material such as plutonium HEU and tritium 82 The treaty paved the way for the subsequent Polaris Sales Agreement 83 which was signed on 6 April 1963 84 The two agreements have been the cornerstone of the UK US nuclear relationship for nearly 60 years 79 Nuclear weapons development editThe AEC invited the British government to send representatives to a series of meetings in Washington DC on 27 and 28 August 1958 to work out the details The US delegation included Willard Libby AEC deputy chairman Loper Brigadier General Alfred Starbird AEC Director of Military Applications Norris Bradbury director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory Edward Teller director of the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory and James W McRae president of the Sandia Corporation The British representatives were Sir Frederick Brundrett the Chief Scientific Adviser to the Ministry of Defence and Victor Macklen from the Ministry of Defence and William Penney William Cook and E F Newly from the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment at Aldermaston The Americans disclosed the details of nine of their nuclear weapon designs the Mark 7 Mark 15 39 Mark 19 Mark 25 Mark 27 Mark 28 Mark 31 Mark 33 and Mark 34 In return the British provided the details of seven of theirs including Green Grass Pennant the boosted device which had been detonated in the Grapple Z test on 22 August Flagpole the two stage device scheduled for 2 September Burgee scheduled for 23 September and the three stage Halliard 3 The Americans were impressed with the British designs particularly with Halliard 1 the heavier version of Halliard 3 Cook therefore changed the Grapple Z programme to fire Halliard 1 instead of Halliard 3 85 Macmillan noted in his diary with satisfaction in some respects we are as far and even further advanced in the art than our American friends They thought interchange of information would be all give They are keen that we should complete our series especially the last megaton the character of which is novel and of deep interest to them 86 An early benefit of the agreement was to allow the UK to Anglicise the W28 nuclear warhead as the Red Snow warhead for the Blue Steel missile 87 The British designers were impressed by the W28 which was not only lighter than the British Green Grass warhead used in Yellow Sun but also remarkably more economical in its use of expensive fissile material The Yellow Sun Mark 2 using Red Snow cost 500 000 compared with 1 200 000 for the Mark 1 with Green Grass 88 A 1974 CIA proliferation assessment noted In many cases Britain s sensitive technology in nuclear and missile fields is based on technology received from the US and could not legitimately be passed on without US permission 89 The UK National Audit Office noted that most of the UK Trident programme warhead development and production expenditure had been incurred in the US which supplied special materials and certain warhead related components and services 90 91 There is evidence that the warhead design of the British Trident system is similar to or even based upon the US W76 warhead fitted in US Navy Trident missiles with design and blast model data supplied to the UK 92 93 Britain soon became dependent on the United States for its nuclear weapons as it lacked the resources to produce a range of designs 94 The treaty allowed the UK to receive US nuclear weapons for the Royal Air Force RAF and British Army of the Rhine BAOR under Project E 95 Similar custody arrangements were made for the Thor missiles supplied under Project Emily 96 The UK was able to carry out underground nuclear tests at the US Nevada Test Site where the first British test took place on 1 March 1962 97 British nuclear testing in the United States continued until it was abruptly halted by President George H W Bush in October 1992 98 99 Major subcritical nuclear tests continued to occur most notably the Etna test in February 2002 and the Krakatau test in February 2006 100 Special nuclear materials barter edit nbsp The Royal Navy s Swiftsure class submarine HMS Splendid Under the agreement 5 37 tonnes of UK produced plutonium was sent to the US in exchange for 6 7 kg of tritium and 7 5 tonnes of HEU between 1960 and 1979 A further 470 kg of plutonium was swapped between the US and the UK for reasons that remain classified 101 Some of the UK produced plutonium was used in 1962 by the US for the only known nuclear weapon test of reactor grade plutonium 102 The plutonium sent to the US included some produced in UK civil Magnox reactors and the US gave assurances that the civil plutonium was not used in the US nuclear weapons programme It was used in civil programmes which included californium production and reactor research 101 Some of the fissile materials for the UK Trident warhead were purchased from the US 91 but much of the HEU supplied by the US was used not for weapons but as fuel for the growing fleet of UK nuclear submarines Under the treaty the US supplied the UK with not only nuclear submarine propulsion technology but also a complete S5W pressurised water reactor of the kind used to power the US Skipjack class submarines That was used in the Royal Navy s first nuclear powered submarine HMS Dreadnought which was launched in 1960 and commissioned in 1963 The S5W was fuelled by uranium enriched to between 93 and 97 per cent uranium 235 103 In return for a considerable amount of information regarding submarine design and quietening techniques being passed on to the United States 104 reactor technology was transferred from Westinghouse to Rolls Royce 105 which used it as the basis for its PWR1 reactor used in the UK s Valiant Resolution Churchill Swiftsure and Trafalgar submarines 106 The UK produced HEU at its facility in Capenhurst but production for military purposes ceased there in March 1963 107 Thereafter uranium oxide was imported from Australia Canada Namibia South Africa the United States and Zaire and processed into uranium hexafluoride at Springfields It was then shipped to the US where it was enriched at the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant near Piketon Ohio HEU was then flown back to the UK in RAF aircraft 103 In 1994 with the Portsmouth plant about to close the treaty was amended with the US requirement to provide uranium enrichment services changed to one to arrange them 76 By March 2002 the UK had a stockpile of 21 86 tonnes of HEU about 80 years supply for the Royal Navy s nuclear powered submarines 108 Joint Working Groups editMost of the activity under the treaty is information exchange through Joint Working Groups JOWOG At least 15 of them were established in 1959 109 Subjects investigated includedone point safety computer codes metallurgy and fabrication technology for beryllium uranium and plutonium corrosion of uranium in the presence of water and water vapour underground effects tests outer space testing clandestine testing the technology of lithium compounds high explosives deuterium monitors extinguishing plutonium fires high speed cameras mechanical safing liquid and solid explosive shock initiation environmental sensing switches neutron sources tritium reservoirs telemetry hydrodynamic and shock relations for problems with spherical and cylindrical symmetry nuclear cross sections radiochemistry atomic demolition munitions warhead hardening asymmetric detonations terrorist nuclear threat response nuclear weapons accidents and waste management 109 Between 2007 and 2009 staff of the Atomic Weapons Establishment paid 2 000 visits to US nuclear facilities 110 As of 2014 update there are also two enhanced collaborations jointly developing capabilities Enhanced Nuclear Safety to develop architectures and technologies related to warhead safety and Warhead Electrical System to develop architectures and technologies for warhead electrical systems 111 Mutual benefit editThe Anglo American special relationship proved mutually beneficial although it has never been one of equals after the World Wars since the US has been far larger than the United Kingdom both militarily and economically 94 Lorna Arnold noted The balance of advantage in the exchanges was necessarily in Britain s favour but they were not entirely one sided In some areas notably electronics and high explosives the British were equal or perhaps even superior and in many areas they had valuable ideas to contribute as the American scientists and notably Teller appreciated 112 A 1985 report by the US State Department s Bureau of Intelligence and Research reported that the US was profoundly involved and benefited greatly from the treaty 113 Renewal edit nbsp NNSA Administrator Lisa Gordon Hagerty and Stephen Lovegrove cut the ribbon on the US UK Mutual Defence Agreement 60th Anniversary commemorative exhibit in June 2018 The treaty was amended on 7 May 1959 27 September 1968 16 October 1969 22 June 1974 5 December 1979 5 June 1984 23 May 1994 and 14 June 2004 Most amendments merely extended the treaty for another five or ten years others added definitions and made minor changes 76 114 115 As of 2020 update the most recent renewal was on 22 July 2014 extending the treaty to 31 December 2024 with minor changes for the Trident nuclear programme 116 117 A 2004 legal opinion obtained by the British American Security Information Council BASIC argued that renewal of the treaty violated Article VI of the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty which required signatories to take steps towards nuclear disarmament but that was not accepted by the British government In July 2014 Baroness Warsi the Senior Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs from 2012 to 2014 118 stated the government s position We are committed to the goal of a world without nuclear weapons and firmly believe that the best way to achieve this is through gradual disarmament negotiated through a step by step approach within the framework of the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty The UK has a strong record on nuclear disarmament and continues to be at the forefront of international efforts to control proliferation and to make progress towards multilateral nuclear disarmament The UK USA Mutual Defence Agreement is and will continue to be in full compliance with our obligations under the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty 119 See also editAllied technological cooperation during World War II AUKUS Trilateral security partnership between Australia the United Kingdom and the United States announced in 2021 List of military alliances Military alliance Tizard Mission UKUSA Agreement Multilateral treaty covering signals intelligence secretly signed in 1946Notes edit a b Macmillan 1971 p 323 Gowing 1964 pp 108 111 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 277 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 285 286 Gowing 1964 pp 236 242 Gowing 1964 pp 340 342 Paul 2000 pp 72 73 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 457 458 Gowing 1964 p 372 a b Goldberg 1964 p 410 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 372 373 Gott 1963 p 240 Gowing amp Arnold 1974a pp 73 77 Gowing amp Arnold 1974a p 92 Paul 2000 pp 80 83 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 468 Gowing amp Arnold 1974a pp 106 108 Gowing amp Arnold 1974a pp 105 108 Gowing amp Arnold 1974a pp 181 184 Cathcart 1995 pp 23 24 48 57 Gowing amp Arnold 1974a pp 358 360 a b Botti 1987 pp 34 35 Gowing amp Arnold 1974a pp 245 254 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 281 283 Gowing amp Arnold 1974a pp 352 353 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 p 285 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 307 308 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 p 310 Gowing amp Arnold 1974a pp 281 283 Baylis 1995 p 75 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 309 310 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 312 314 Botti 1987 pp 74 75 Gowing amp Arnold 1974b pp 493 495 Gowing amp Arnold 1974b pp 474 475 Arnold amp Pyne 2001 pp 16 20 a b Arnold amp Pyne 2001 pp 27 30 Gowing amp Arnold 1974b pp 498 500 a b Baylis 2008 pp 429 430 a b Paul 2000 pp 200 201 Farmelo 2013 pp 372 375 Young 2016 pp 200 201 Botti 1987 pp 140 141 Botti 1987 pp 147 149 Botti 1987 pp 161 164 Botti 1987 pp 171 174 Botti 1987 pp 174 177 Young 2016 pp 98 99 Botti 1987 pp 180 181 Young 2007 p 8 a b Baylis 1994 pp 166 170 Botti 1987 pp 159 160 Arnold amp Pyne 2001 p 147 Arnold amp Pyne 2001 pp 160 162 a b Botti 1987 pp 199 201 Arnold amp Pyne 2001 p 199 Foreign Relations of the United States 1955 1957 Western Europe and Canada Volume XXVII Document 306 Office of the Historian United States Department of State Retrieved 12 September 2017 a b Divine 1993 p 34 a b Baylis 2008 p 438 Lohr Steve 2 January 1988 Britain Suppressed Details of 57 Atomic Disaster Macmillan feared the loss of U S cooperation The New York Times p 3 Retrieved 18 August 2019 Divine 1993 pp 73 74 a b Baylis 2008 p 440 Baylis 2008 p 442 Wynn 1997 p 287 a b c d Botti 1987 p 203 Baylis 2008 pp 441 442 Baylis 2008 p 439 Moore 2010 p 33 a b Botti 1987 pp 207 208 a b Botti 1987 p 214 Botti 1987 pp 215 219 Botti 1987 pp 224 225 Botti 1987 p 224 Botti 1987 pp 232 233 Botti 1987 pp 234 236 a b c d e Agreement between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland for Cooperation on the uses of Atomic Energy for Mutual Defence Purposes PDF Nuclear Threat Initiative Archived from the original PDF on 12 April 2015 Retrieved 1 August 2022 a b Botti 1987 p 238 Ellwood Tobias 24 November 2014 Military Alliances Written question 214429 Hansard UK Parliament Retrieved 25 November 2014 a b c Mills 2014 p 3 a b Botti 1987 pp 236 237 Lord Bach 22 June 2004 UK US Mutual Defence Agreement Hansard UK Parliament Archived from the original on 12 March 2007 Retrieved 15 March 2007 Moore 2010 pp 84 85 Baylis 2008 pp 455 456 Jones 2017 p 444 Arnold amp Pyne 2001 pp 202 205 Macmillan 1971 p 565 Moore 2010 pp 88 89 Moore 2010 pp 104 105 Prospects for Further Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons PDF Report Special National Intelligence Estimate CIA 23 August 1974 p 40 SNIE 4 1 74 Archived PDF from the original on 13 February 2008 Retrieved 20 January 2008 Plesch Dan March 2006 The Future of Britain s WMD PDF Report Foreign Policy Centre p 15 Archived from the original PDF on 21 June 2006 Retrieved 15 March 2007 a b Downey 1987 pp 3 10 18 Britain s Next Nuclear Era Federation of American Scientists 7 December 2006 Archived from the original on 6 February 2007 Retrieved 15 March 2007 Stockpile Stewardship Plan Second Annual Update FY 1999 PDF United States Department of Energy April 1998 Archived from the original PDF on 25 March 2009 Retrieved 15 March 2007 a b Botti 1987 pp 238 241 Moore 2010 pp 114 115 Moore 2010 pp 98 99 UK Mounts First Underground Nuclear Test UGT Atomic Weapons Establishment Archived from the original on 18 January 2008 Retrieved 15 March 2007 Baylis 2008 p 462 Wade 2008 p 209 Wade 2008 p 210 a b Plutonium and Aldermaston an historical account PDF UK Ministry of Defence 4 September 2001 Archived from the original PDF on 13 December 2006 Retrieved 15 March 2007 Additional Information Concerning Underground Nuclear Weapon Test of Reactor Grade Plutonium US Department of Energy June 1994 Retrieved 15 March 2007 a b Ritchie 2015 p 3 p 529 Conway s All The World s Fighting Ships US Naval Institute Press Annapolis 1996 ISBN 1 55750 132 7 Moore 2010 p 35 Ritchie 2015 p 4 Moore 2010 pp 197 199 Ritchie 2015 p 7 a b Moore 2010 p 90 Mills 2014 p 5 Dunne Philip 21 October 2014 Written question 209762 Angus Robertson 26 09 2014 UK Parliament Retrieved 27 October 2014 Arnold amp Pyne 2001 p 215 Baylis 2008 p 461 Treaties in Force PDF United States Department of State Retrieved 8 September 2017 Disarmament Documentation Amendment to the 1958 US UK Mutual Defence Agreement on nuclear weapons cooperation June 2004 Acronym Institute Retrieved 12 September 2016 UK US Amendment to the Agreement for Cooperation on the Uses of Atomic Energy for Mutual Defense Purposes Foreign and Commonwealth Office 16 October 2014 Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 22 March 2015 Norton Taylor Richard 30 July 2014 UK US sign secret new deal on nuclear weapons The Guardian Retrieved 8 September 2017 Townsend Mark Lady Warsi on Palestine Islam quitting and how to stay true to your beliefs The Guardian Retrieved 12 May 2016 Mills 2014 p 10 References editArnold Lorna Pyne Katherine 2001 Britain and the H bomb Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire New York Palgrave ISBN 978 0 230 59977 2 OCLC 753874620 Baylis John Summer 1994 The Development of Britain s Thermonuclear Capability 1954 61 Myth or Reality Contemporary Record 8 1 159 164 ISSN 1361 9462 Baylis John 1995 Ambiguity and Deterrence British Nuclear Strategy 1945 1964 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 828012 2 Baylis John June 2008 The 1958 Anglo American Mutual Defence Agreement The Search for Nuclear Interdependence The Journal of Strategic Studies 31 3 425 466 doi 10 1080 01402390802024726 ISSN 0140 2390 S2CID 153628935 Botti Timothy J 1987 The Long Wait the Forging of the Anglo American Nuclear Alliance 1945 58 Contributions in Military Studies New York Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 25902 9 OCLC 464084495 Cathcart Brian 1995 Test of Greatness Britain s Struggle for the Atom Bomb London John Murray ISBN 0 7195 5225 7 OCLC 31241690 Divine Robert A 1993 The Sputnik Challenge Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 505008 0 OCLC 875485384 Downey Gordon 29 June 1987 Ministry of Defence and Property Services Agency Control and Management of the Trident Programme PDF London Her Majesty s Stationery Office ISBN 978 0 10 202788 4 OCLC 655304084 Retrieved 12 December 2019 Farmelo Graham 2013 Churchill s Bomb How the United States Overtook Britain in the First Nuclear Arms Race New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 02195 6 OCLC 858935268 Goldberg Alfred July 1964 The Atomic Origins of the British Nuclear Deterrent International Affairs 40 3 409 429 doi 10 2307 2610825 JSTOR 2610825 Gott Richard April 1963 The Evolution of the Independent British Deterrent International Affairs 39 2 238 252 doi 10 2307 2611300 ISSN 0020 5850 JSTOR 2611300 Gowing Margaret 1964 Britain and Atomic Energy 1939 1945 London Macmillan OCLC 3195209 Gowing Margaret Arnold Lorna 1974a Independence and Deterrence Britain and Atomic Energy 1945 1952 Volume 1 Policy Making London Macmillan ISBN 0 333 15781 8 OCLC 611555258 Gowing Margaret Arnold Lorna 1974b Independence and Deterrence Britain and Atomic Energy 1945 1952 Volume 2 Policy and Execution London Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 333 16695 7 OCLC 946341039 Hewlett Richard G Anderson Oscar E 1962 The New World 1939 1946 PDF University Park Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0 520 07186 7 OCLC 637004643 Retrieved 26 March 2013 Hewlett Richard G Duncan Francis 1969 Atomic Shield 1947 1952 PDF A History of the United States Atomic Energy Commission University Park Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0 520 07187 5 OCLC 3717478 Retrieved 7 March 2015 Jones Matthew 2017 Volume I From the V Bomber Era to the Arrival of Polaris 1945 1964 The Official History of the UK Strategic Nuclear Deterrent Abingdon Oxfordshire Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 67493 6 OCLC 957683181 Macmillan Harold 1971 Riding the Storm 1956 1959 London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 10310 4 OCLC 198741 Mills Claire 17 September 2014 UK US Mutual Defence Agreement PDF Report House of Commons Library Archived from the original PDF on 12 September 2017 Retrieved 12 September 2017 Moore Richard 2010 Nuclear Illusion Nuclear Reality Britain the United States and Nuclear Weapons 1958 64 Nuclear Weapons and International Security since 1945 Basingstoke Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 21775 1 OCLC 705646392 Paul Septimus H 2000 Nuclear Rivals Anglo American Atomic Relations 1941 1952 Columbus Ohio Ohio State University Press ISBN 978 0 8142 0852 6 OCLC 43615254 Ritchie Nick February 2015 The UK Naval Nuclear Propulsion Programme and Highly Enriched Uranium PDF Report Washington DC Federation of American Scientists Retrieved 12 September 2017 Wade Troy E II 2008 Nuclear Testing A US Perspective In Mackby Jenifer Cornish Paul eds US UK Nuclear Cooperation After 50 Years Washington DC Center for Strategic and International Studies Press pp 200 211 ISBN 978 0 89206 530 1 OCLC 845346116 Wynn Humphrey 1997 RAF Strategic Nuclear Deterrent Forces Their Origins Roles and Deployment 1946 1969 A documentary history London The Stationery Office ISBN 0 11 772833 0 Young Ken Spring 2007 A Most Special Relationship The Origins of Anglo American Nuclear Strike Planning Journal of Cold War Studies 9 2 5 31 doi 10 1162 jcws 2007 9 2 5 S2CID 57563082 Young Ken 2016 The American Bomb in Britain US Air Forces Strategic Presence 1946 64 Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 8675 5 OCLC 942707047 External links editFull text of the Agreement Negotiations for extension to treaty 2004 US UK Agreement Atomic Weapons Establishment Mutual Defence Agreement and the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty Legal Opinion Portals nbsp Politics nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Nuclear technology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title US UK Mutual Defence Agreement amp oldid 1220817941, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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