Undersecretary of State Rose Gottemoeller's comments at a meeting marking the 20th anniversary of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty underlined some of the obstacles keeping the treaty from being activated.
It will come into force only if the United States and other holdouts among the 44 countries that are designated "nuclear capable" - China, Egypt, India, Iran, Israel, North Korea and Pakistan - ratify.
But anti-treaty Republicans stand in the way of the two-thirds majority needed in the Senate for ratification.
"In the shadow of another North Korean nuclear test, illicit rocket launch, and the catastrophic Iran nuclear deal, the Obama administration advocating for a flawed international nuclear-weapons treaty is mindboggling," Republican senators Tom Cotton and James Lankford declared last month.
"The United States acknowledges that we have not completed our work on ratification and that our delay gives cover to other ...Countries," she said. At the same time, she said her country continues to work internationally and domestically for the treaty "because we know that a global ban on nuclear explosive testing is good for our country."
Advocates say the treaty builds trust at a time of high international tensions, and it is needed to reduce or eliminate radioactive contamination of the atmosphere. But those opposed claim the treaty does not achieve its aim. U.S. Critics say it would allow the country's enemies to cheat while diminishing America's security in an increasingly hostile world.
The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization already polices the world for any sign of nuclear tests with a global network of monitoring stations that pick up seismic signals and gases released by such events. But it cannot go on site to inspect for tests.
That can happen only if the treaty enters into force.
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