{"id":5893,"date":"2018-11-30T14:29:47","date_gmt":"2018-11-30T19:29:47","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/2017-2021.state.gov\/?post_type=state_bureau&p=5893"},"modified":"2020-11-30T23:43:50","modified_gmt":"2020-12-01T04:43:50","slug":"under-secretary-for-arms-control-and-international-security-affairs","status":"publish","type":"state_bureau","link":"https:\/\/2017-2021.state.gov\/bureaus-offices\/under-secretary-for-arms-control-and-international-security-affairs\/","title":{"rendered":"Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security"},"featured_media":17186,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"template":"","state_bureaus":[832],"state_countries_and_areas":[],"state_policy_issues":[],"state_states":[],"state_subjects":[],"state_author_groups":[],"state_rss_feeds":[],"acf":{"tf_display_feat_image_on_related_content":true,"page_subnavigation":"857","link_button":{"title":"Subscribe","url":"https:\/\/service.govdelivery.com\/service\/subscribe.html?code=USSTATEBPA_28","target":"_blank"},"text_mission_title":"Our Mission","ta_mission_copy":"The Office of the Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security leads the interagency policy process on nonproliferation and manages global U.S. security policy, principally in the areas of nonproliferation, arms control, regional security and defense relations, and arms transfers and security assistance.","po_biography_selector":{"ID":15518,"post_author":"90","post_date":"2018-12-11 20:35:44","post_date_gmt":"2018-12-12 01:35:44","post_content":"[inline-image id=\"15520\" align=\"left\"]\r\n\r\nDr. Christopher Ford was sworn in as Assistant Secretary for International Security and Nonproliferation on January 9, 2018. In his current capacity, Dr. Ford was additionally delegated the authorities and functions of the Office of the Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security on October 21, 2019. Before coming to ISN, Dr. Ford served as Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Weapons of Mass Destruction and Counterproliferation at the National Security Council.\r\n\r\nDr. Ford began his public service in 1996 as Assistant Counsel to the Intelligence Oversight Board and then served on several Congressional staffs, including the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. In 2003, he served as Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary in the State Department\u2019s Bureau of Verification and Compliance (now the Bureau of Arms Control, Verification, and Compliance). In 2006, he was named U.S. Special Representative for Nuclear Non-Proliferation, where he was responsible for U.S. diplomacy with respect to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.\r\n\r\nFrom 2008 to 2013, Dr. Ford was a Senior Fellow at Hudson Institute, a foreign affairs and national security think tank. In 2013, Dr. Ford returned to Congress where he served on the Senate Committee on Appropriations, the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, and the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.\r\n\r\nDr. Ford also served as an intelligence officer in the U.S. Navy Reserve from 1994 until 2011, receiving an Honorable Discharge at the rank of Lieutenant Commander.\r\n\r\nHe is the author of three books and scores of articles and monographs.\r\n\r\nDr. Ford earned an A.B., summa cum laude, at Harvard University, a D.Phil. at Oxford University in the United Kingdom (as a Rhodes Scholar), and a J.D. at Yale Law School.\r\n\r\nA native of Cincinnati, Ohio, Dr. Ford lives with his family in Bethesda, Maryland.","post_title":"Dr. Christopher Ashley Ford","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"dr-christopher-ashley-ford","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2020-11-30 23:25:11","post_modified_gmt":"2020-12-01 04:25:11","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/2017-2021.state.gov\/?post_type=state_biography&p=15518","menu_order":21,"post_type":"state_biography","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},"text_social_label":"Follow Us:","fc_social_channels":[{"acf_fc_layout":"twitter","url_twitter":"https:\/\/twitter.com\/UnderSecT"}],"tf_include_relationships":false,"tf_include_recent_content":false,"text_the_latest_headline":"The Latest","group_the_latest_featured_article":{"po_featured_article_selector":{"ID":145904,"post_author":"91","post_date":"2020-04-20 08:25:10","post_date_gmt":"2020-04-20 12:25:10","post_content":"The Arms Control and International Security Papers are produced by the Office of the Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security to make U.S. State Department policy analysis available in an electronically accessible format compatible with \u201csocial distancing\u201d during the COVID-19 crisis.<\/strong>\r\n\r\nPaper #25: 1\/8\/21\r\n<\/strong>Four Years of Innovation and Continuity in U.S. Policy: Arms Control and International Security Since January 2017<\/a> - (Plain Text Version<\/a>)\r\n\r\nIn this ACIS Paper, Assistant Secretary Ford looks across the policy arenas covered by the State Department\u2019s \u201cT\u201d family of bureaus to provide a survey and summary of policy development and innovation in key issue areas since the current U.S. administration took office in January 2017.\r\n\r\nPaper #24: 12\/29\/20\r\n<\/strong>Issues To Watch in Arms Control, Nonproliferation and Disarmament<\/a> - (Plain Text Version<\/a>)\r\n<\/strong>\r\n\r\nAssistant Secretary Ford surveys a number of current questions in the arms control, nonproliferation, and disarmament arenas, identifying key \u201cissues to watch\u201d in the years ahead.\r\n\r\nPaper #23: 12\/7\/2020\r\n<\/strong>Technology-Transfer De-risking: A New and Growing Need\u00a0\u00a0[4 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nIn this ACIS Paper, Assistant Secretary Ford explores the emerging issue of \"de-risking\" as applied to engagements with the technology sector of the People's Republic of China, stressing the need for commercial actors to ensure that technology-related engagements with China are not abused, and describing the emerging arena of \"technology transfer de-risking\" (T2D), which is of increasing importance for commercial entities and financial institutions that wish to avoid reputational risk, to prevent potential future U.S. sanctions or penalties, and to keep their involvement with the PRC from inadvertently supporting human rights abuses and fueling destabilizing military developments.\r\n\r\nPaper #22: 11\/13\/2020\r\n<\/strong>Law, Morality, and the Bomb [10 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nIn this paper presented to a panel hosted by the Global Security Institute and the American Bar Association, Assistant Secretary Ford explores some key legal and moral issues attendant to the possession and potential use of nuclear weapons, arguing for a more factually and morally nuanced approach than one normally hears from many disarmament advocates.\r\n\r\nPaper #21: 11\/5\/2020\r\nStrategic Stability and the Global Race for Technology Leadership [9 MB]<\/a>\r\n<\/strong>\r\n\r\nThis edition of the ACIS Papers series looks at the challenges involved in preserving strategic stability in a modern environment of technology-fueled great power competition, arguing the importance of meeting these challenges through a mix of traditional nuclear arms control, the enforcement of norms of responsible behavior in new conflict domains such as cyberspace and outer space, and the development and implementation of effective, coordinated approaches to technology competition among the \u201clikeminded\u201d states of the non-authoritarian world.\r\n\r\nPaper #20: 10\/20\/2020\r\nInternational Security in Cyberspace: New Models for Reducing Risk [6 MB]<\/a>\r\n<\/strong>\r\n\r\nIn this ACIS Paper, Assistant Secretary Ford recounts the evolution of U.S. cyberspace security diplomacy over the last several years, describing the difficulty of making traditional \"arms control\" concepts work in this novel domain, but emphasizing the valuable contributions nonetheless already being made through the articulation of voluntary, nonbinding norms of responsible state behavior and a shift to a more explicitly deterrence-focused cyberspace security policy.\r\n

Paper #19: 10\/15\/2020<\/strong>\r\nCompetitive Strategy in Divided Times [4 MB]<\/a><\/p>\r\n

Dr. Ford participated in a workshop hosted by the University of Pennsylvania Perry World House and Brookings Institution entitled \u201cRoadmap for Reentry in 2021 and Beyond: Advancing Institutional Commitments in a New Geostrategic Environment.\u201d He presented this latest ACIS paper to workshop panelists and attendees.<\/p>\r\nPaper #18: 9\/9\/2020<\/strong>\r\nDeterrence and the U.S. Nuclear Weapons Infrastructure [9 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nThis latest addition to the Arms Control and International Security paper series \u2014 prepared by Under Secretary of Energy and National Nuclear Security Administration Administrator Lisa Gordon-Hagerty and with an introduction by Assistant Secretary Ford \u2014 offers a perspective upon the United States\u2019 nuclear deterrent needs and what NNSA is doing to meet them.\r\n\r\nPaper #17: 8\/26\/2020<\/strong>\r\nU.S. National Security Export Controls and Hong Kong: A Case Study in the Unhappy Death of a Happy Teleology [5 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nThis addition to the ACIS Papers series looks at recent changes in United States national security export controls as they apply to Hong Kong, and as U.S. officials have readjusted these controls in response to changes in that territory and the degree of control over it exercised by the People\u2019s Republic of China.\r\n\r\nPaper #16:\u00a08\/19\/2020<\/strong>\r\nExport Controls and National Security Strategy in the 21st Century [11 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\n\u200bThis ACIS paper reprints the full text that Assistant Secretary Ford prepared for his presentation to the Center for a New American Security on August 19, 2020, as a part of CNAS\u2019 new Project on Export Controls and National Security.\u200b\r\n\r\nPaper #15: 8\/4\/2020<\/strong>\r\nEvolving Approaches to the \u201cMiddle East WMD-Free Zone\u201d [10 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nIn this ACIS Paper, Assistant Secretary Ford looks back at the history of efforts to implement the Middle East WMD-Free Zone called for in the Resolution on the Middle East adopted by the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty\u2019s Review and Extension Conference in 1995, outlining how traditional ways of trying to achieve this goal have become irrelevant or counterproductive, and calling for a new approach based around trying to ameliorate challenges in the security environment and develop good-faith engagement between all regional states.\r\n\r\nPaper #14: 7\/30\/2020\r\n<\/strong>To Tango Alone: Problems of Theory and Practice in the Sociology of Arms Control, Nonproliferation, Disarmament, and Great Power Competition [16 MB]<\/a><\/strong>\r\n\r\nIn this paper, Assistant Secretary Ford offers some thoughts on conceptual currents in international relations thinking over the last generation that helped both produce and lead to the failure of major elements of the post-Cold War agenda in arms control, disarmament policy, and great power relations. This paper, however, also explores how we may find a better path forward, informed by a sounder understanding of some of these same currents.\r\n\r\nPaper #13: 7\/24\/2020\r\n<\/strong>The New U.S. Policy on UAS Exports: Responsibly Implementing the MTCR's \"Presumption of Denial\" [7 MB]<\/a>\r\n

In this ACIS Paper, Assistant Secretary Ford recounts the United States\u2019 effort to reform the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) controls with respect to a subcategory of Unmanned Aerial Systems, and explains the new U.S. national approach to implementing the MTCR\u2019s \u201cstrong presumption of denial\u201d for proliferation-responsible transfers of \u201cCategory I\u201d items under the MTCR Guidelines.<\/p>\r\nPaper #12: 7\/24\/2020\r\n<\/strong>Arms Control in Outer Space: History and Prospects [14 MB]<\/a>\r\n

In this ACIS Paper, Assistant Secretary Ford discuss his long-standing efforts to find effective forms of arms control in outer space and the reasons such efforts have failed in the modern era, before exploring what prospects there yet may be for international efforts to reduce risk, increase transparency and predictability, and head off the dangers of an outer space arms race \u2014 even as both the Russian federation and the People\u2019s Republic of China (PRC) are rushing to weaponize the space domain.<\/p>\r\nPaper #11: 7\/23\/2020\r\n<\/strong>Strengthening Deterrence and Reducing Nuclear Risks, Part II: The Sea-Launched Cruise Missile-Nuclear (SLCM-N) [2 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nThis edition of the Arms Control and International Security Papers \u2014 produced by the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, and with an introduction by Assistant Secretary Ford \u2014 explains the U.S. policy and strategy behind the Sea-Launched Cruise Missile-Nuclear (SLCM-N).\r\n\r\nPaper #10:\u00a0 6\/18\/2020\r\nRussian Arms Control Compliance: A Report Card, 1984-2020 [13 MB]<\/a>\r\n<\/strong>\r\n\r\nFollowing the public release of the unclassified \"Executive Summary\" of the State Department's 2020 report on Adherence to and Compliance with Arms Control, Nonproliferation, and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments, Assistant Secretary Ford looks back at 35 years of U.S. compliance assessments to outline the history of U.S. concerns over Russian\/Soviet behavior in this arena. In particular, he describes how the history of Moscow's noncompliance closely tracks the global security environment's evolution, from Cold War tensions to post-Cold War relaxation, and more recently back to competitive tension.\r\n\r\nPaper #9:\u00a0 6\/5\/2020\r\n<\/strong>Technology Transfers to the PRC Military and U.S. Countermeasures: Responding to Security Threats with New Presidential Proclamation [10 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nIn this addition to the ACIS Papers, Assistant Secretary Ford outlines the changes the United States recently announced to rules pertaining to the entry of certain students and researchers from the People\u2019s Republic of China in response to the national security challenges presented by Beijing\u2019s Military-Civil Fusion strategy.\r\n

Paper #8:\u00a0 5\/22\/2020\r\n<\/strong>U.S. National Security Export Controls and Huawei: The Strategic Context in Three Framings [10 MB]<\/a><\/p>\r\n

In this latest addition to the\u00a0ACIS Papers, Assistant Secretary Ford discusses recent U.S. moves to restrict transfers of cutting-edge U.S. technology to the Chinese technology company Huawei, explaining these steps and placing them in the strategic context of a great power competition with the People\u2019s Republic of China brought on by Beijing\u2019s geopolitical revisionism, exploitation of such firms to steal and divert foreign technology to support the Chinese military, abuses of human rights in China itself, and employment of companies such as Huawei as tools of strategic influence.<\/p>\r\nPaper #7:\u00a0 5\/20\/2020<\/strong>\r\nArms Control and Disarmament: Adjusting to a New Era [11 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nThis latest ACIS Paper publishes Assistant Secretary Ford\u2019s remarks on May 20, 2020, as the keynote speaker at an event commemorating the 25th anniversary of the Sandia National Laboratory\u2019s Cooperative Monitoring Center.\u00a0 He offers thoughts on some of the most critical challenges the public policy community is facing regarding how diplomacy in arms control and disarmament can contribute to global security.\u00a0 How we adapt our approaches to a changing security environment is perhaps the most important and potentially consequential decision diplomats have faced since the height of the Cold War.\r\n\r\nPaper #6:\u00a0 5\/11\/2020<\/strong>\r\nCompetitive Strategy vis-\u00e0-vis China and Russia: A View from the \u201cT Suite\u201d [10 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nIn this latest part of the series, Assistant Secretary Ford outlines the approach being taken in the \u201cT\u201d family of bureaus at the Department of State in support of U.S. competitive strategy vis-\u00e0-vis the People\u2019s Republic of China and the Russian Federation, as inspired by the U.S. National Security Strategy.\r\n\r\nPaper #5:\u00a0 5\/5\/2020<\/strong>\r\nIranian Nuclear Safeguards Concerns and the Integrity of the IAEA Safeguards System [8 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nIn this issue of the ACIS papers, Assistant Secretary Ford discusses new evidence that has emerged suggesting the possible presence of undeclared nuclear material or activity in Iran, and what this information means, not just for Iran diplomacy but for the integrity of the global nuclear safeguards regime.\r\n\r\nPaper #4:\u00a0 4\/23\/2020<\/strong>\r\nStrengthening Deterrence and Reducing Nuclear Risks: The Supplemental Low-Yield U.S. Submarine-Launched Warhead [9 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nThis latest monograph in the Arms Control and International Security Paper Series \u2013 produced by the State Department\u2019s Bureau of Arms Control, Verification and Compliance, and with an introduction by Assistant Secretary Ford \u2013 explains U.S. thinking behind the supplemental low-yield W76-2 Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile.\r\n\r\nPaper #3: 4\/21\/2020<\/strong>\r\nSecurity Assistance and U.S. Competitive Strategy: Improving Our Game [6 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nIn this third issue of the T paper series, Assistant Secretary Ford outlines the ways in which the State Department applies U.S. arms transfers to enhance the capabilities of allies and partners in support of U.S. competitive strategy vis-\u00e0-vis state-level competitors.\r\n\r\nPaper #2: 4\/20\/2020<\/strong>\r\nAI, Human-Machine Interaction, and Autonomous Weapons: Thinking Carefully About Taking \u201cKiller Robots\" Seriously [12 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nThis second in the T series of papers offers thoughts on the public policy challenges presented by the prospect of Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems (LAWS).\u00a0 In this paper, Assistant Secretary Ford offers his perspective upon these issues, urging readers not to be seduced by sensationalized simplifications, and calling for careful, sustained attention to the complexities they raised \u2013 such as through the work already being done by the LAWS Group of Governmental Experts.\r\n\r\nPaper #1: 4\/6\/2020<\/strong>\r\nU.S. Priorities for \"Next-Generation Arms Control\" [5 MB]<\/a>\r\n\r\nThe first of a series of papers offers thoughts on U.S. priorities for \u201cnext-generation arms control\u201d involving both Moscow and Beijing, which we hope will be able to forestall the global nuclear arms race that may otherwise be sparked by the ongoing nuclear build-ups by both Russia and the People's Republic of China.\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n","post_title":"Arms Control and International Security Papers","post_excerpt":"The Arms Control and International Security Papers are produced by the Office of the Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security to make U.S. State Department policy analysis available in an electronically accessible format compatible with \u201csocial distancing\u201d during the COVID-19 crisis.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"arms-control-and-international-security-papers","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2021-01-08 12:45:43","post_modified_gmt":"2021-01-08 17:45:43","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/2017-2021.state.gov\/?page_id=145904","menu_order":34,"post_type":"page","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},"text_call_to_action_label":"Read More"},"display_countries_areas":false,"text_offices_title":"Bureaus","addlink_text":"","addlink_link":"","addlink_icon":false,"sel_media_type":"","clone_mixed_media":{"sel_media_type":"","img_mm_image":false,"group_slideshow":{"sel_slideshow_source":false,"text_flickr_album_id":"","gallery_media_library_images":false},"group_video":{"sel_video_source":false,"sel_aspect_ratio":false,"group_brightcove":{"text_brightcove_code":"","ta_brightcove_caption":""},"group_youtube":{"oembed_youtube_url":null,"ta_youtube_caption":""},"group_embed":{"ta_embed_code":"","text_embed_title":"","ta_embed_caption":""}}},"tf_include_latest":true,"document_date":"November 30, 2018","parent_post_url_id":"0"},"yoast_head":"\nUnder Secretary for Arms Control and International Security - United States Department of State<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/2017-2021.state.gov\/bureaus-offices\/under-secretary-for-arms-control-and-international-security-affairs\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security - United States Department of State\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/2017-2021.state.gov\/bureaus-offices\/under-secretary-for-arms-control-and-international-security-affairs\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"United States Department of State\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2020-12-01T04:43:50+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" 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