Turning 25
| by Jason Warburg
Twenty-five years ago, in the waning days of the Cold War, Professor William C. Potter of the Monterey Institute of InÂternational Studies recognized the moÂment of historic change as both an opporÂtunity and a threat. The easing of tensions between superpowers offered the opporÂtunity to shrink nuclear arsenals but also heightened the risk of nuclear materials falling into the wrong hands.
Potter’s response was to propose the establishment of a new center for non-proliferation studies at the Institute. “My two graduate assistants and I were the enÂtire staff at the beginning,” he recalled.
Today the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS) is the largÂest nongovernmental organization in the world devoted to combating the spread of weapons of mass destruction, with more than 35 staff located in Monterey, Washington, D.C., and Vienna, Austria. By working with governments and international organizations around the world to disseminate analyses on critical emerging issues and train the next generÂation of nonproliferation specialists, CNS has made unique contributions to promotÂing a more secure world.
The center has adapted over time, adding expertise in chemical and biologÂical weapons and popularizing the use of innovative tools and technologies such as imagery analysis and 3d modeling for verification purposes. CNS also continues to be the hub for an ever-expanding netÂwork of nonproliferation professionals, with former staff occupying influential positions at the International Atomic EnÂergy Agency and a variety of nongovernÂmental organizations, as well as within the policy-making agencies of nations throughout the world. CNS now managÂes the Vienna Center for Disarmament and Non-Proliferation on behalf of the government of Austria.
We’ve accomplished so much over the last 25 years, and yet in some ways it feels like we’re just getting started.
“We’ve accomplished so much over the last 25 years, and yet in some ways it feels like we’re just getting started,” said PotÂter. “Every day the headlines remind us of the dangers created by the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. And every day CNS is working to educate people about those dangers.”
At the Carnegie Endowment’s 2015 InÂternational Nonproliferation Conference in Washington D.C., CNS experts dominated the agenda, serving on a variety of discusÂsion panels. In Middlebury’s D.C. office, CNS staff teamed up with Middlebury ColÂlege Professor Amy Yuen to offer a speÂcially designed intensive nonproliferation course for over a dozen students. And the center recently hosted an anniversary celeÂbration that drew friends, supporters, and alumni from all over the world.
A quarter century after its foundÂing, CNS has firmly established itself as a leading voice in the global conversation about the threat of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons and an indispensable source of research, analysis, and educaÂtion on one of the most pressing issues of our time.
For More Information
Eva Gudbergsdottir
evag@middlebury.edu
831-647-6606