Nuclear Cooperation with Other Countries:
A Primer

Paul K. Kerr
Analyst in Nonproliferation
Mary Beth Nikitin
Specialist in Nonproliferation
April 22, 2011
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RS22937
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress

Nuclear Cooperation with Other Countries: A Primer

Summary
In order for the United States to engage in civilian nuclear cooperation with other states, it must
conclude a framework agreement that meets specific requirements under section 123 of the
Atomic Energy Act (AEA). The AEA also provides for exemptions to these requirements, export
control licensing procedures, and criteria for terminating cooperation. Congressional review is
required for section 123 agreements; the AEA establishes special parliamentary procedures by
which Congress may act on a proposed agreement.


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Nuclear Cooperation with Other Countries: A Primer

Contents
What Is a “Section 123” Agreement?........................................................................................... 1
Requirements Under the Atomic Energy Act ......................................................................... 2
Exempted vs. Non-exempted Agreements ............................................................................. 3
Congressional Review................................................................................................................. 3
Export Licensing......................................................................................................................... 4
Subsequent Arrangements ........................................................................................................... 5
Examples of Subsequent Arrangements ................................................................................. 7
U.S.-Japan Agreement..................................................................................................... 7
U.S.-India Agreement...................................................................................................... 7
Iran-Related Restrictions....................................................................................................... 8
Termination of Cooperation......................................................................................................... 8
Legislation in the 112th Congress................................................................................................. 8
S. 109 ................................................................................................................................... 9
H.R. 1280 ............................................................................................................................. 9
H.R. 1280, Amended..................................................................................................... 11
H.R. 1320 ........................................................................................................................... 12

Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 13

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Nuclear Cooperation with Other Countries: A Primer

What Is a “Section 123” Agreement?
Under existing law (Atomic Energy Act [AEA] of 1954; P.L. 95-242; 42 U.S.C. §2153 et seq.)1
all significant U.S. nuclear cooperation with other countries requires a peaceful nuclear
cooperation agreement.2 Significant nuclear cooperation includes the transfer of U.S.-origin
special nuclear material3 subject to licensing for commercial, medical, and industrial purposes.
Such agreements, which are “congressional-executive agreements” requiring congressional
approval, do not guarantee that cooperation will take place or that nuclear material will be
transferred, but rather set the terms of reference and authorize cooperation. The AEA includes
requirements for an agreement’s content, conditions for the President to exempt an agreement
from those requirements, presidential determinations and other supporting information to be
submitted to Congress, conditions affecting the implementation of an agreement once it takes
effect, and procedures for Congress to consider and approve the agreement.
Section 123 of the AEA requires that any agreement for nuclear cooperation meet nine
nonproliferation criteria and that the President submit any such agreement to the House
Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. The Department
of State is required to provide the President an unclassified Nuclear Proliferation Assessment
Statement (NPAS), which the President is to submit, along with the agreement, to those two
committees. The State Department is also required to provide a classified annex to the NPAS,
prepared in consultation with the Director of National Intelligence. The NPAS is meant to explain
how the agreement meets the AEA nonproliferation requirements. The President must also make a
written determination “that the performance of the proposed agreement will promote and will not
constitute an unreasonable risk to, the common defense and security.”

1 The Atomic Energy Act (AEA) was amended by the Nuclear Nonproliferation Act of 1978 (NNPA) (P.L. 95-242) to
include stringent nonproliferation requirements for significant U.S. nuclear exports. For example, the act required non-
nuclear-weapon states to have full-scope International Atomic Energy Agency safeguards as a condition for entering
into nuclear cooperation agreements with the United States. For existing and future agreements, the NNPA added a
provision for Congress to review export licenses. The act also included a provision for halting exports if a country
tested a nuclear device, violated safeguards agreements, or continued nuclear weapons-related activities.
2 Section 57 b. (2) of the AEA allows for limited forms of nuclear cooperation related to the “development or
production of any special nuclear material outside of the United States” without a nuclear cooperation agreement if that
activity has been authorized by the Secretary of Energy following a determination that it “will not be inimical to the
interest of the United States.” Agreements governing such cooperation are also known as “Section 810” agreements,
after 10 Code of Federal Regulations Part 810.
A nuclear cooperation agreement is not required for transmission of nuclear-related information, except for restricted
data. The term “restricted data,” as well as other terms used in the statute, is defined in 42 U.S.C. §2014. “Restricted
data” means “all data concerning (1) design, manufacture, or utilization of atomic weapons; (2) the production of
special nuclear material; or (3) the use of special nuclear material in the production of energy.” Restricted data,
however does not “include data declassified or removed from the Restricted Data [sic] category” pursuant to the AEA.
A nuclear cooperation agreement is necessary, though not necessarily sufficient, to permit the transfer of restricted
data.
3 “Special nuclear material” means (1) plutonium, uranium enriched in the isotopes 233 or 235, and any other material
that is determined to be special nuclear material, but does not include source material, or (2) any material artificially
enriched by any of the foregoing, but does not include source material.
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Requirements Under the Atomic Energy Act
Section 123 of the AEA specifies the necessary steps for engaging in nuclear cooperation with
another country:
Section 123a. states that the proposed agreement is to include the terms,
conditions, duration, nature, and scope of cooperation and lists nine criteria that
the agreement must meet. It also contains provisions for the President to exempt
an agreement from any of several criteria described in that section and includes
details on the kinds of information the executive branch must provide to
Congress.
Section 123b. specifies the process for submitting the text of the agreement to
Congress.
Section 123c. specifies how Congress approves cooperation agreements that are
limited in scope (e.g., do not transfer nuclear material or cover reactors larger
than 5 MWe). This report does not discuss such agreements.
Section 123d. specifies how Congress approves agreements that do cover
significant nuclear cooperation (transfer of nuclear material or reactors larger
than 5 MWe), including exempted agreements.
Section 123a., paragraphs (1) through (9), lists nine criteria that an agreement must meet unless
the President determines an exemption is necessary. These include guarantees that
• safeguards on transferred nuclear material and equipment continue in perpetuity;
• full-scope International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards are applied in
non-nuclear weapon states;
• nothing transferred is used for any nuclear explosive device or for any other
military purpose; except in the case of cooperation agreements with nuclear
weapon states, the United States has the right to demand the return of transferred
nuclear materials and equipment, as well as any special nuclear material
produced through their use, if the cooperating state detonates a nuclear explosive
device or terminates or abrogates an IAEA safeguards agreement;
• there is no retransfer of material or classified data without U.S. consent;
• physical security on nuclear material is maintained;
• there is no enrichment or reprocessing by the recipient state of transferred nuclear
material or nuclear material produced with materials or facilities transferred
pursuant to the agreement without prior approval;
• storage for transferred plutonium and highly enriched uranium is approved in
advance by the United States; and
• any material or facility produced or constructed through use of special nuclear
technology transferred under the cooperation agreement is subject to all of the
above requirements.
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Exempted vs. Non-exempted Agreements
The President may exempt an agreement for cooperation from any of the requirements in Section
123a. if he determines that the requirement would be “seriously prejudicial to the achievement of
U.S. non-proliferation objectives or otherwise jeopardize the common defense and security.” The
AEA provides different requirements, conditions, and procedures for exempt and non-exempt
agreements.4 To date, all of the section 123 agreements in force are non-exempt agreements.5
Prior to the adoption of P.L. 109-401, the Henry J. Hyde United States-India Peaceful Atomic
Energy Cooperation Act of 2006, the President would have needed to exempt the nuclear
cooperation agreement with India from some requirements of Section 123 a. P.L. 109-401,
however, exempted nuclear cooperation with India from some of the AEA’s requirements.6
Congressional Review
Under the AEA, Congress has the opportunity to review a 123 agreement for two time periods
totaling 90 days of continuous session.7 The President must submit the text of the proposed
nuclear cooperation agreement, along with required supporting documents (including the
unclassified NPAS) to the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee. The President is to consult with the committees “for a period of not less than 30 days
of continuous session.” After this period of consultation, the President is to submit the agreement
to Congress, along with the classified annex to the NPAS and a statement of his approval of the
agreement and determination that it will not damage the national security interests of the United
States. This action begins the second period, which consists of 60 days of continuous session. In
practice, the President has sent the agreement to Congress at the beginning of the full 90-day
period, which begins on the date of transmittal. Typically, the 60-day period has immediately
followed the expiration of the 30-day period. The President transmits the text of the proposed
agreement along with a letter of support with a national security determination, the unclassified
NPAS, its classified annex, and letters of support for the agreement from the Secretary of State
and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
If the President has not exempted the agreement from any requirements of section 123a., it
becomes effective at the end of the 60-day period unless, during that time, Congress adopts a joint
resolution disapproving the agreement and the resolution becomes law. If the agreement is an
exempted agreement, Congress must adopt a joint resolution of approval and it must become law

4 Nuclear cooperation agreements with nuclear weapon states recognized by the NPT are provided for in the AEA, and
are therefore non-exempt agreements. The NPT defines nuclear weapon states as those that exploded a nuclear weapon
or other nuclear explosive device prior to January 1, 1967: China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United
States.
5 The United States has concluded more than 20 bilateral nuclear cooperation agreements, as well as similar agreements
with the European Atomic Energy Community and the IAEA. See Nuclear Commerce: Governmentwide Strategy
Could
Help Increase Commercial Benefits from U.S. Nuclear Cooperation Agreements with Other Countries,
Government Accountability Office, GAO-11-36, November 2010.
6 See CRS Report RL33016, U.S. Nuclear Cooperation with India: Issues for Congress, by Paul K. Kerr. The
agreement entered into force in December 2008.
7 When calculating periods of “continuous session” under the AEA, every calendar day is counted, including Saturdays
and Sundays. Only days on which either chamber has adjourned for more than three days pursuant to the adoption a
concurrent resolution authorizing the adjournment do not count toward the total. If Congress adjourns its final session
sine die, continuity of session is broken, and the count must start anew when it reconvenes.
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by the end of the 60-day period or the agreement will not enter into force. At the beginning of this
60-day period, joint resolutions of approval or disapproval, as appropriate, are to be automatically
introduced in each house. During this period, the committees are to hold hearings on the proposed
agreement and “submit a report to their respective bodies recommending whether it should be
approved or disapproved.” If either committee has not reported the requisite joint resolution of
approval or disapproval by the end of 45 days, it is automatically discharged from further
consideration of the measure. After the joint resolution is reported or discharged, Congress is to
consider it under expedited procedures, as established by section 130.i. of the AEA.
Section 202 of P.L. 110-369, the United States-India Nuclear Cooperation Approval and
Nonproliferation Enhancement Act, which President Bush signed into law October 8, 2008,
amended section 123 of the AEA to require the President to keep the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee and the House Foreign Affairs Committee “fully and currently informed of any
initiative or negotiations relating to a new or amended agreement for peaceful nuclear
cooperation.”
Export Licensing
The AEA sets out procedures for licensing exports to states with whom the United States has
nuclear cooperation agreements. (Sections 126, 127, and 128 codified as amended at 42 U.S.C.
2155, 2156, 2157.) Each export of nuclear material, equipment, or technology requires a specific
export license or other authorization. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is required to
meet criteria in sections 127 and 128 in authorizing export licenses. These criteria are as follows:
• Application of IAEA safeguards to any material or facilities proposed to be
exported, material or facilities previously exported, and to any special nuclear
material used in or produced through the use thereof (these are not full-scope
safeguards, but safeguards required under Article III.2 of the nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty [NPT]).
• Nothing exported can be used for any nuclear explosive device or for research on
or development of any nuclear explosive device.
• Recipient states must have adequate physical security on “such material or
facilities proposed to be exported and to any special nuclear material used in or
produced through the use thereof.”
• Recipient states are not to retransfer exported nuclear materials, facilities,
sensitive nuclear technology, or “special nuclear material produced through the
use of such material” without prior U.S. approval.
• Recipient states may not reprocess or alter in form or content exported nuclear
material or special nuclear material produced though the use of exported nuclear
material without prior U.S. approval.
• The foregoing conditions must be applied to any nuclear material or equipment
that is produced or constructed under the jurisdiction of the recipient by or
through the use of any exported sensitive nuclear technology.
• Section 128 requires that recipient non-nuclear-weapon states must have full-
scope IAEA safeguards.
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The President must judge that the proposed export or exemption will “not be inimical to the
common defense and security” or that any export of that type “would not be inimical to the
common defense and security because it lacks significance for nuclear explosive purposes.” The
executive branch may also consider other factors, such as “whether the license or exemption will
materially advance the nonproliferation policy of the United States by encouraging the recipient
nation to adhere” to the NPT; whether “failure to issue the license or grant the exemption would
otherwise be seriously prejudicial” to U.S. nonproliferation objectives; and whether the recipient
nation has agreed to conditions identical to those laid out in Section 127.
Section 126b. (2) contains a provision for the President to authorize an export in the event that the
NRC deems that the export would not meet section 127 and 128 criteria. The President must
determine “that failure to approve an export would be seriously prejudicial to the achievement of
U.S. nonproliferation objectives or otherwise jeopardize the common defense and security.” In
that case, the President would submit his executive order, along with a detailed assessment and
other documentation, to Congress for 60 days of continuous session. After 60 days of continuous
session, the export would go through unless Congress were to adopt a concurrent resolution of
disapproval.8
Section 128b.(2) contains a provision for the President to waive termination of exports by
notifying the Congress that the state has adopted full-scope safeguards or that the state has made
significant progress toward adopting such safeguards, or that U.S. foreign policy interests dictate
reconsideration. Such a determination would become effective unless Congress were to adopt a
concurrent resolution of disapproval within 60 days of continuous session.
Additionally, section 129b.(1) forbids the export of “nuclear materials and equipment or sensitive
nuclear technology” to any country designated as a state sponsor of terrorism.9 Section 129b.(3)
allows the President to waive this provision.
Subsequent Arrangements
Section 131 of the Atomic Energy Act details procedures for subsequent arrangements to nuclear
cooperation agreements concluded pursuant to section 123. Such arrangements are required for
forms of nuclear cooperation requiring additional congressional approval, such as transfers of
nuclear material or technology and recipient states’ enrichment or reprocessing of nuclear
materials transferred pursuant to the agreement. Subsequent arrangements may also include
arrangements for physical security, storage or disposition of spent nuclear fuel, the application of
safeguards on nuclear materials or equipment, or “any other arrangement which the President
finds to be important from the standpoint of preventing proliferation.”


8 In light of the Supreme Court’s 1983 decision in INS v. Chadha, passing a concurrent resolution could invite a legal
challenge because it is arguably unconstitutional. Although not provided for in the AEA, Congress could choose to pass
a joint resolution of disapproval or a bill stating in substance it did not approve.
9 Section 129b. (2) states that the prohibitions described in the previous section “shall not apply to exports, reexports,
transfers, or retransfers of radiation monitoring technologies, surveillance equipment, seals, cameras, tamper-indication
devices, nuclear detectors, monitoring systems, or equipment necessary to safely store, transport, or remove hazardous
materials ... except to the extent that such technologies, equipment, seals, cameras, devices, detectors, or systems are
available for use in the design or construction of nuclear reactors or nuclear weapons.”
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Before entering into a subsequent arrangement, the Secretary of Energy must publish in the
Federal Register a determination that the arrangement “will not be inimical to the common
defense and security.” A proposed subsequent arrangement shall not take effect before 15 days
after publication of both this determination and notice of the proposed arrangement. The
Secretary of State is required to prepare an unclassified Nuclear Proliferation Assessment
Statement (NPAS) if, “in the view of” the Secretary of State, Secretary of Energy, Secretary of
Defense, or the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, a proposed subsequent arrangement “might
significantly contribute to proliferation.” The Secretary of State is to submit the NPAS to the
Secretary of Energy within 60 days of receiving a copy of the proposed subsequent arrangement.
The President may waive the 60-day requirement if the Secretary of State so requests, but must
notify both the House Foreign Affairs Committee and Senate Foreign Relations Committee of any
such waiver and the justification for it. The Secretary of Energy may not enter into the subsequent
arrangement before receiving the NPAS.
Section 131 specifies requirements for certain types of subsequent arrangements. Section 131b.
describes procedures for the executive branch to follow before entering into a subsequent
arrangement involving the reprocessing of U.S.-origin nuclear material or nuclear material
produced with U.S.-supplied nuclear technology. These procedures also cover subsequent
arrangements allowing the retransfer of such material to a “third country for reprocessing” or “the
subsequent retransfer” of more than 500 grams of any plutonium produced by reprocessing such
material. The Secretary of Energy must provide both the House Foreign Affairs Committee and
Senate Foreign Relations Committee with a report describing the reasons for entering into the
arrangement. Additionally, 15 days of continuous session must elapse before the Secretary may
enter into the arrangement, unless the President judges that “an emergency exists due to
unforeseen circumstances requiring immediate entry” into the arrangement. In such a case, the
waiting period would be 15 calendar days.
If a subsequent arrangement described in the above paragraph involves a facility that has not
processed spent nuclear reactor fuel prior to March 10, 1978 (when the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Act of 1978 was enacted), the Secretaries of State and Energy must judge that the arrangement
“will not result in a significant increase of the risk of proliferation.” In making this judgment, the
Secretaries are to give “foremost consideration ... to whether or not the reprocessing or retransfer
will take place under conditions that will ensure timely warning to the United States of any
diversion well in advance of the time at which the non-nuclear-weapon state could transform the
diverted material into a nuclear explosive device.”10 For a subsequent arrangement involving
reprocessing in a facility that has processed spent nuclear reactor fuel prior to March 10, 1978,
the Secretary of Energy will “attempt to ensure” that reprocessing “shall take place under
conditions” that would satisfy the timely-warning conditions described above. Section 131f.
specifies procedures for congressional approval of subsequent arrangements involving the storage
or disposition of foreign spent nuclear fuel in the United States.
Section 133 states that, before approving a subsequent arrangement involving certain transfers of
special nuclear material, the Secretary of Energy must consult with the Secretary of Defense “on
whether the physical protection of that material during the export or transfer will be adequate to
deter theft, sabotage, and other acts of international terrorism which would result in the diversion

10 These provisions also applies to facilities that, prior to March 18, 1978, did not have a subsequent arrangement for
reprocessing.
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of that material.”11 If the Secretary of Defense determines that “the export or transfer might be
subject to a genuine terrorist threat,” that Secretary is required to provide a written risk
assessment of the risk and a “description of the actions” that he or she “considers necessary to
upgrade physical protection measures.”
Examples of Subsequent Arrangements
U.S.-Japan Agreement
The first test of the subsequent arrangement provisions came in August 1978, when the
Department of Energy informed the House and Senate foreign relations committees of a Japanese
request for approval of the transfer of spent fuel assemblies from Japan to the United Kingdom
for reprocessing. This was the first “subsequent arrangement” approved. The United States and
Japan entered into similar arrangements until 1988, when the two governments revised their
nuclear cooperation agreement. That agreement included an “implementing agreement,” which
provided 30-year advance consent for the transfer of spent fuel from Japan to Europe for
reprocessing. While controversial, Congress did not block the nuclear cooperation agreement.
A subsequent arrangement was also necessary for the sea transport from Europe to Japan of
plutonium that had been separated from the Japanese spent fuel. The Department of Energy
approved a Japanese request for 30-year advance consent for the sea transport of plutonium. It
was submitted to Congress as a subsequent arrangement, and took effect in October 1988.
U.S.-India Agreement
The U.S. nuclear cooperation agreement with India grants New Delhi consent to reprocess
nuclear material transferred pursuant to the agreement, as well as “nuclear material and by-
product material used in or produced through the use of nuclear material, non-nuclear material, or
equipment so transferred.” However, the agreement also includes a requirement that India first
build a new national reprocessing facility to be operated under IAEA safeguards. The two
countries signed a subsequent arrangement July 30, 2010, which governs the procedures for
operating two new reprocessing facilities in India. The agreement also describes procedures for
U.S. officials to inspect and receive information about physical protection measures at the new
facilities. The arrangement would not have taken effect if Congress had adopted a joint resolution
of disapproval within 30 days of continuous session; Congress did not adopt such a resolution.12
If India were to construct any additional facilities to reprocess fuel from U.S.-supplied reactors, a
new subsequent arrangement would need to be submitted to Congress.

11 This section applies to “the export or transfer of more than 2 kilograms of plutonium or more than 5 kilograms of
uranium enriched to more than 20 percent in the isotope 233 or the isotope 235.”
12 Section 201 of the United States-India Nuclear Cooperation Approval and Nonproliferation Enhancement Act (P.L.
110-369), which approved the U.S.-India cooperation agreement, specifies procedures (different from those described
in the Atomic Energy Act) for Congress to consider subsequent arrangements to that agreement.
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Iran-Related Restrictions
The Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act (CISADA) of 2010 (P.L.
111-195), which became law July 1, 2010, contains additional restrictions on licensing nuclear
exports to countries with entities that have been sanctioned for conducting certain types of
energy-related transactions with Iran. Section 102 a.(2)(A) of the law states that “no license may
be issued for the export, and no approval may be given for the transfer or retransfer” of “any
nuclear material, facilities, components, or other goods, services, or technology that are or would
be subject to an agreement for cooperation between the United States” and such countries.
Section 102 a.(2)(B), however, allows the President to waive these restrictions. Section 102
a.(2)(C), allows the President to authorize licenses for nuclear exports “on a case-by-case basis”
to entities (which have not been sanctioned) in countries subject to the restrictions described
above.13
Termination of Cooperation
Section 129a. of the AEA requires that the United States end exports of nuclear materials and
equipment or sensitive nuclear technology to any non-nuclear-weapon state that, after March 10,
1978, the President determines to have detonated a nuclear explosive device; terminated or
abrogated IAEA safeguards; materially violated an IAEA safeguards agreement; or engaged in
activities involving source or special nuclear material and having “direct significance” for the
manufacture or acquisition of nuclear explosive devices, and “has failed to take steps which, in
the President’s judgment, represent sufficient progress toward terminating such activities.”
Section 129a. also requires that the United States halt exports to any nation the President
determines to have materially violated the terms of an agreement for cooperation with the United
States; assisted, encouraged, or induced any non-nuclear weapon state to obtain nuclear
explosives or the materials and technologies needed to manufacture them; or re-transferred or
entered into an agreement for exporting reprocessing equipment, materials or technology to a
non-nuclear weapon state, unless in connection with an international agreement to which the
United States subscribes.
The President can waive termination of exports if he determines that “cessation of such exports
would be seriously prejudicial to the achievement of United States nonproliferation objectives or
otherwise jeopardize the common defense and security.” The President must submit his
determination to Congress, which is then referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for 60 days of continuous session. The determination
becomes effective unless Congress adopts a joint resolution opposing the determination.
Legislation in the 112th Congress
Congress has intensely debated the requirements of the Atomic Energy Act for nuclear
cooperation agreements, most notably prior to the approval of the 2008 U.S.-India nuclear
cooperation agreement. During the past two years, several hearings have been held, particularly

13 For details on these sanctions, see CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions, by Kenneth Katzman.
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by the House Foreign Affairs Committee and its Nonproliferation, Terrorism, and Trade
Subcommittee, to discuss whether Congress should legislate stronger nonproliferation standards
and congressional oversight for nuclear cooperation agreements. This issue continues to be a
subject of attention in the 112th Congress.
S. 109
On January 25, 2011, Senator John Ensign introduced S. 109, which was discharged from the
Committee on Finance and forwarded to the Committee on Foreign Relations on February 3. This
bill would change current congressional review requirements by mandating positive
congressional approval of all section 123 agreements. It would also require a joint resolution of
approval for subsequent arrangements (under Section 131 a(1)), and a nuclear proliferation
assessment statement to be submitted along with proposals for subsequent arrangements.
S. 109 would also seek to strengthen congressional oversight of the negotiation of nuclear
cooperation agreements. The bill would require the President to keep the House Foreign Affairs
Committee and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee “fully and currently informed of any
initiative or negotiations” relating to a new or amended nuclear cooperation agreement prior to
any public presidential announcements. S. 109 would also require the President to consult with
relevant committees “not less than 15 calendar days” after the start of negotiations, and on a
monthly basis during negotiations. As noted, current law requires only that the President keep
Congress “fully and currently informed of any initiative or negotiations relating to” a new nuclear
cooperation agreement.
H.R. 1280
On March 31, 2011, Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Representative Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen, introduced H.R. 1280. The bill, which has bipartisan co-sponsorship, would
increase congressional oversight over the negotiation and approval of 123 agreements and
subsequent arrangements. For example, it would change the Atomic Energy Act’s congressional
review requirements by requiring that Congress adopt a joint resolution of approval within 60
days of continuous session before any nuclear cooperation agreement could go into effect (the 60
days would be part of the 90-day period of continuous session described above). The bill would
also require a joint resolution of approval for subsequent arrangements under nuclear cooperation
agreements. Additionally, H.R. 1280 contains S. 109’s notification and consultation provisions.
H.R. 1280 would also add new nonproliferation criteria to section 123a.14 Section 1 of the bill
would require governments wishing to conclude nuclear cooperation agreements with the United
States to
• guarantee that third-country nationals will not be permitted, without prior U.S.
consent, access to facilities, material or technology transferred under the
agreement;

14 This summary is not meant to be exhaustive, and the full bill text should be consulted.
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• forswear “enrichment or reprocessing activities, or acquisition or construction of
facilities for such activities,” if the country did not operate enrichment or
reprocessing facilities as of April 1, 2011;
• accede to and fully implement the Chemical Weapons Convention, the Biological
Weapons Convention, and “all other international agreements to which the
United States is a party related to export controls on nuclear, chemical,
biological, and advanced conventional weapons”;
• have an effective export control system and implement UN Security Council
Resolution 154015;
• be fully compliant with United Nations conventions and Security Council
resolutions related to nonproliferation, including the Convention of the Physical
Protection of Nuclear Material and the Nuclear Terrorism Convention;
• not be a Destination of Diversion Concern as defined by CISADA (P.L. 111-
195)16;
• closely cooperate with the United States to prevent states sponsors of terrorism
from acquiring nuclear, biological, chemical, or advanced conventional weapons;
• have an Additional Protocol to its safeguards agreement with the IAEA fully in
force;
• agree to refrain from using nuclear material or equipment acquired from non-
U.S. sources (in addition to such material or equipment obtained from the United
States) for a “nuclear explosive device” or any other military purpose; and
• guarantee that it will maintain “adequate physical security” on all special nuclear
material, in addition to such material produced using material or equipment
obtained from the United States.
The bill contains several other significant provisions. Section 2 would prohibit any U.S.
assistance, other than humanitarian aid, to a cooperating country that has withdrawn from the
NPT. Moreover, the country would be asked to return any material, equipment, or components
transferred under a nuclear cooperation agreement (on or after the bill’s enactment date), and any
special fissionable material produced using material or equipment previously transferred. Section
7 of the bill would prohibit the President from issuing an export license pursuant to a nuclear
cooperation agreement unless the cooperating country had liability protection for United States
nuclear suppliers “equivalent to the liability protection specified under the Convention on
Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage.” Section 3 of the bill would require the
executive branch to produce a report detailing the nonproliferation conditions of other nuclear
suppliers. Section 5 would require termination of nuclear exports to a cooperating country that

15 That resolution requires states to “take and enforce effective measures to establish domestic controls to prevent the
proliferation of nuclear, chemical, or biological weapons and their means of delivery, including by establishing
appropriate controls over related materials.”
16 CISADA states that the President “shall designate a country as a Destination of Diversion Concern if the President
determines that the government of the country allows substantial diversion of goods, services, or technologies”
described in the law “through the country to Iranian end-users or Iranian intermediaries.”
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had been “determined to be a ‘country of proliferation concern’ ” pursuant to the 2010 National
Defense Authorization Act.17
H.R. 1280, Amended
On April 14, the House Foreign Affairs Committee amended H.R. 1280. An agreement lacking a
legally binding requirement for the cooperating country to refrain from enrichment or
reprocessing activities (or constructing facilities for such activities) could not enter into effect,
according to the amended bill, unless Congress were to adopt a joint resolution of approval within
60 days of continuous session. An agreement including such a provision would become effective
after 60 days of continuous session unless Congress were to adopt a joint resolution of
disapproval (the 60 days referred to in this and the previous sentence would be part of the 90-day
period of continuous session described above).18
The amended version of H.R. 1280 would also prohibit any U.S. assistance, other than
humanitarian aid, to a cooperating country that has withdrawn from the NPT. However, only a
cooperating country withdrawing after enactment of the proposed law would be subject to this
prohibition. The amended bill also contains H.R. 1320’s provisions regarding U.S. assistance as
they pertain to state sponsors of proliferation and states without Additional Protocols in force (see
below).
The committee also adopted two amendments sponsored by Representative Brad Sherman. The
first would amend section 123 of the Atomic Energy Act to require that a cooperating country
have a commitment to maintain or enact, as circumstances dictate, a “legal regime providing for
adequate protection from civil liability that will allow for the participation of United States
suppliers in any effort by the country to develop civilian nuclear power.” The country would be
required to have such a regime in place no later than one year after a nuclear cooperation
agreement’s entry into force.
The second expresses the sense of Congress that the President
should ensure that participation in international nuclear programs conducted by the United
States is limited to the greatest extent practicable to governmental and nongovernmental
participants from countries that have adopted nonproliferation provisions in their nuclear
cooperation and nuclear export control policies comparable to the policies specified in
section 123 of the Atomic Energy Act (42 U.S.C. 2153), as amended by this Act.


17 That law defines a country of proliferation concern as “any country identified by the Director of Central Intelligence
as having engaged in the acquisition of dual-use and other technology useful for the development or production of
weapons of mass destruction (including nuclear weapons, chemical weapons, and biological weapons) or advanced
conventional munitions.”
18 The 60-day period would apply to new agreements. For a renewal agreement, Congress would need to adopt a joint
resolution of disapproval within 30 days of continuous session. The amended text defines a “renewal agreement” as a
nuclear cooperation agreement with a country which has previously entered into such an agreement with the United
States. A “new” nuclear cooperation agreement, according to the draft legislation, is one with a country which has not
previously entered into such an agreement with the United States.
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Nuclear Cooperation with Other Countries: A Primer

H.R. 1320
House Foreign Affairs Committee Ranking Member Howard Berman introduced H.R. 1320, co-
sponsored by Representative Brad Sherman, on April 1, 2011. The bill is divided into two
sections—strengthening nonproliferation activities (Title I) and strengthening nuclear energy
cooperation and nonproliferation (Title II).
Title I contains several provisions regarding U.S. assistance to other countries. Section 103 would
require the U.S. government, before providing assistance, to consider whether a country has an
Additional Protocol in force. Section 104 would prohibit U.S. assistance to state sponsors of
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.19 Section 101 contains H.R. 1280’s provisions
regarding countries that have withdrawn from the NPT.
H.R. 1320 would also require payment of U.S. annual dues to the IAEA’s regular budget, as well
as a report detailing nonproliferation conditions of foreign nuclear suppliers. It would also require
periodic security inspections on U.S. exports of nuclear material “to ensure that adequate physical
safeguards and accounting measures are in effect for such nuclear material.”
Title II would add conditions for new peaceful nuclear cooperation agreements. The bill contains
H.R. 1280’s provisions regarding additional protocols; third-country nationals’ access to nuclear
facilities, material, or technology; and the requirement that potential cooperating countries agree
to refrain from using nuclear material or equipment acquired from non-U.S. sources for military
purposes. Title II also contains a variation of H.R. 1280’s enrichment and reprocessing
provisions, but H.R. 1320 would not require a potential cooperating country to forswear these
activities if they would be “pursued as part of a multilateral consortium of countries” that are
NPT state-parties in good standing. The bill would require the consortium to have “the explicit
support of the United States.” Unlike H.R. 1280, H.R. 1320 does not specify that these
requirements apply only to countries possessing enrichment and reprocessing facilities as of April
1, 2011. H.R. 1320 would also require the President to determine that a potential cooperating
country had not engaged in any significant proliferation activities and was cooperating with the
United States to halt proliferation.
The bill would also amend congressional review requirements. An agreement that complied with
all of the nonproliferation criteria could be brought into effect 60 legislative days after the
President had submitted the agreement to Congress, unless Congress were to adopt a joint
resolution during those 60 days stating that Congress did not favor the agreement. If an agreement
did not comply with the nonproliferation criteria and/or the required presidential determinations
could not be made, Congress would be required to adopt a joint resolution of approval before the
agreement entered into effect. Renewal agreements meeting the nonproliferation criteria and
presidential determinations would need to sit before Congress for 30 calendar days before they
could be brought into effect. A 45-legislative-day congressional review would be required for
subsequent arrangements, after which time the arrangement would come into effect if Congress
had not enacted a joint resolution of disapproval.

19 The bill would require the Secretary of State to determine “that the government of the country has repeatedly
provided support for acts of proliferation of equipment, technology, or materials to support the design, acquisition,
manufacture, or use of weapons of mass destruction.”
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Nuclear Cooperation with Other Countries: A Primer

As with H.R. 1280, the bill says the President could not issue a license for export under the
agreement to a cooperating country without liability protection for U.S. nuclear suppliers
“equivalent to the liability protection specified under the Convention on Supplementary
Compensation for Nuclear Damage.”
H.R. 1320 would also give the President the option to make loan guarantees to countries that
forego enrichment or reprocessing and with whom the United States has a 123 agreement.

Author Contact Information

Paul K. Kerr
Mary Beth Nikitin
Analyst in Nonproliferation
Specialist in Nonproliferation
pkerr@crs.loc.gov, 7-8693
mnikitin@crs.loc.gov, 7-7745


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