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The Administration strongly opposes S. 495 as a deficient and unworkable 
alternative to the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC), which has been ratified 
by over 70 nations.  This bill represents a unilateral approach to a global 
problem that requires an international solution.  S. 495 would place the United 
States outside the CWC, would adversely affect U.S. national security and 
economic interests, and would undermine U.S. leadership in fighting 
transnational problems like proliferation and terrorism.  By not ratifying the 
CWC, the United States will begin to incur trade restrictions starting April 
29th.  The U.S. chemical industry estimates that this could result in hundreds 
of millions of dollars in lost sales a year. 
 
S. 495 contains neither the breadth nor depth of restrictions provided in the 
Convention for chemical weapons and for verification and it raises serious 
constitutional concerns.  Under S. 495 only the United States would be 
required to eliminate its stockpile of chemical weapons.  Moreover, S. 495 
imposes only U.S. sanctions against countries that use chemical weapons 
and only U.S. penalties for terrorist activities committed in the United 
States or by U.S. citizens.  In contrast, the Convention establishes a 
multilateral, global regime that will effectively fight the scourge of chemical 
weapons and terrorism. 
 
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