CNS at 30

November 1, 2019

On October 28, alumni, funders, staff, diplomats, other government officials, and friends gathered in Washington, DC, to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS), a unique institution that has grown to become the premier nongovernmental organization in the United States dedicated to education and training to combat the world’s deadliest weapons.

The International Advisory Council Convenes

(L-R): Bill Potter, Sandy Spector, Gov. Jerry Brown

(L-R): Bill Potter, Sandy Spector, Gov. Jerry Brown

The anniversary events commenced with an annual meeting of the Center’s International Advisory Council (IAC) at its Washington office, chaired by Founding Director Dr. William C. Potter. Over the course of its 30-year history, CNS has spawned a global, multigenerational network of nonproliferation experts and specialists working in every conceivable capacity in the field. From technical experts at international organizations and national laboratories to career specialists in foreign and defense ministries—as well as leaders in the nongovernmental, academic, and philanthropic fields—CNS has helped build a cadre of nonproliferation and disarmament professionals well-equipped to address the most pressing challenges presented by the existence and spread of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons. Dr. Potter noted that the need for such a specialized corps is arguably greater than ever before.

(L-R): Sen. Sam Nunn, Bill Potter, Sandy Spector

(L-R): Sen. Sam Nunn, Bill Potter, Sandy Spector

Dr. Potter also remarked on the evolutionary character of CNS: while the past year marked the loss of six nonproliferation giants and friends of the Center—Ambassador Roland Timerbaev, Dr. David Hamburg, Dr. Janne Nolan, Under Secretary of State Ellen Tauscher, International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Yukiya Amano, and Senator Richard Lugar—it also marked the rise of a diverse new generation of CNS leaders. They include Jessica Varnum as the new Deputy Director, Sarah Bidgood as the new Eurasia Nonproliferation Program Director, Dr. Richard Pilch as the new Biological and Chemical Weapons Nonproliferation Director, and, as of January 2020, Dr. Ian Stewart as the new Executive Director of the Washington office. Ian will succeed Leonard “Sandy” Spector. (A tribute to Sandy’s decades-long career followed at the anniversary’s evening gala event; see below.) The Center also appointed its first-ever Communications Director, Rhianna Tyson Kreger.

Dr. Potter also extended special thanks to several of the Center’s supporters in attendance at the meeting, including representatives from Carnegie Corporation of New York, Dr. Tom Pattison, Mr. Cary Neiman, Doreen and Jim McElvany, and Jayron Martin, stepdaughter of the Center’s namesake.

(L-R): Dr. Vladimir Orlov, Dr. Laurie Patton, Dr. Robert Gard

(L-R): Dr. Vladimir Orlov, Dr. Laurie Patton, Dr. Robert Gard

“CNS represents the best of responsive thinking and responsive action,” said Middlebury College President Laurie Patton in her keynote remarks at the opening of the meeting. She affirmed that the Center adroitly reflects Middlebury’s three core aims: a connected community to further Middlebury’s goals; embracing key issues of the day; and embodying a sense of place in the world. Moreover, she remarked, CNS serves as a source of inspiration for the wider Middlebury community, pointing in particular to its project-based learning, its penchant for “asking questions well,” and the unparalleled opportunities CNS provides to students, often breaking down the barriers between undergraduate and graduate studies.

Other senior-level Middlebury representatives also were in attendance, including Vice President for Academic Affairs Jeff Dayton-Johnston, Vice President for Advancement Colleen Fitzpatrick, and Vice President for Communications and Marketing David Gibson.

 


 

“Responsive Thinking and Responsive Action” on Display

Margaret Croy (right) and Mary Beth Nikitin (left) speaking on the lunchtime panel

Margaret Croy (right) and Mary Beth Nikitin (left) speaking on the lunchtime panel

Several of our most prominent leaders and engaged colleagues delivered presentations to the IAC demonstrating three central areas of our work: open-source tools, US-Russia nonproliferation cooperation, and geopolitical analysis of the 2020 Nonproliferation Treaty Review Conference.

East Asia Program Director Dr. Jeffrey Lewis and Deputy Director Jessica Varnum offered IAC members a sneak peek at the results of their ongoing research into missile proliferation in the Middle East. The presentation illustrated how CNS experts are leveraging corporate partnerships to utilize innovative technologies, data analysis—and a bit of trigonometry—to present policy makers and the public with the objective facts needed to ask the right questions and understand pertinent policy implications.

In the international NPT arena, the crucial role CNS plays in facilitating constructive dialogue between key parties was on full display at the IAC. Dr. Potter, Ms. Bidgood, Dr. Vladimir Orlov of the PIR Center in Russia, and senior government officials from Egypt and the United States offered participants a first-hand glimpse into the difficulties facing the next major NPT meeting—the 2020 NPT Review Conference.

CNS at 30 poster

The need for much greater cooperation is perhaps most acute in the realm of US-Russia nuclear relations—the focus of the morning’s “Roundtable on the Future of US-Russian Nuclear Arms Control.” Traditionally a linchpin of global nonproliferation efforts, US-Russia relations are alarmingly weak at present, and beset by an atmosphere of mistrust, a dearth of dialogue, and crumbling arms-control frameworks. Every speaker—former Governor Jerry Brown, former Senator Sam Nunn (Chairman of the Nuclear Threat Initiative), Russian Ambassador Anatoly Antonov, Russian journalist Dr. Elena Chernenko, and former Ambassador John Beyrle—lamented this breakdown of relations, explored its roots and effects, and warned of worsening security for all if steps to repair it are not undertaken.

Nonproliferation difficulties extend beyond the NPT, too, as illustrated by the lunchtime panel on “Looming Proliferation Challenges,” chaired by Research Associate Margaret Croy, with presentations by a stalwart array of CNS alumni: Mary Beth Nikitin of the Congressional Research Service, Paul Warnke (a Congressional Nuclear Security Fellow), Pablo Callis (Permanent Mission of Chile to the United Nations), Anton Khlopkov (CENESS Moscow), and Representative Jimmy Panetta (Democrat of California).

 


 

The Gala Reception

At a spectacular evening gala event at the stately Occidental Grill, nestled between the White House and Congress, friends and alumni reconvened to celebrate the CNS anniversary.

CNS at 30 photo

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2fMgCU3Ag0
A photo montage presented during the 30th anniversary celebration of the
James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies,
held at the Occidental Grille and Restaurant, Washington, DC, October 28, 2019.

Former CNN correspondent Frank Sesno functioned as Master of Ceremonies for the evening, with nearly a dozen leaders and prominent friends delivering tributes to CNS, Dr. Potter, and Mr. Spector. Against a backdrop of CNS photos throughout the decades, attendees heard vignettes from Ambassador Robert Gallucci (former President of MacArthur Foundation), Joe Cirincione (Ploughshares Fund), Thomas Countryman (Arms Control Association), Ambassador Susan Burk (former Special Representative of the President for Nuclear Nonproliferation), Patricia Nicholas (Carnegie Corporation of New York), Elisa Moskowitz (Department of Defense), Jon Wolfsthal (former CNS Deputy Director and former Special Assistant to President Obama), and Senator Sam Nunn (NTI), and Kazakh Ambassador to the United States Erzhan Kazykhanov. Dr. Vladimir Orlov (PIR Center) and Tom Blandon (Nuclear Security Archive) also gave impromptu toasts.

Senator Nunn and Mr. Frank Sesno toast Dr. Potter

Senator Nunn and Mr. Frank Sesno toast Dr. Potter

***

In 1989, the dangers posed by the existence and potential spread of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons required a thoughtful, long-term approach to addressing them. With prescience and patience, Dr. Potter and colleagues set out to establish a center, unique in its time, laser-focused on educating and training the next generation of specialists committed at home and abroad to combat these dangers. Though the geopolitical world has monumentally shifted several times since then, and though the beneficiaries of CNS training have exponentially grown—in number, influence, and geographic scope—the mission of CNS remains as focused and imperative now as it was then.

Mr. Jon Wolfstahl paid a tribute to Sandy Spector

Mr. Jon Wolfstahl paid a tribute to Sandy Spector

The anniversary celebration, then, was not simply an opportunity to pay homage to the institution that provided today’s nonproliferation leaders with the training and education they need to work on these challenges at the national and global level. It also served to inspire and energize this gathering of alumni, staff, and friends to accelerate this work in the decades to come.

Gala Photo Gallery Slideshow

2019-10-28 CNS 30th Anniversary Gala

View the gallery if you cannot view the slideshow.

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