Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 102 Part 2.djvu/1032

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PUBLIC LAW 100-000—MMMM. DD, 1988

102 STAT. 2036

PUBLIC LAW 100-456—SEPT. 29, 1988

(3) The damage limitation capability, the survivability, and the retaliatory potential of such force posture, and the implications for strategic stability, assessed with regard to the likely force postures of the Soviet Union under such an agreement and the first-strike potential of such force postures. (4) The likely effect of a breakout by the Soviet Union from such an arms control agreement on the survivability and of the force posture of the United States under such an agreement recommended by the President under paragraph (1). President of U.S. (c) FORM OF REPORT.—The President shall submit the report under Classified subsection (b) in both classified and uncleissified form.

information. Public information. Classified information. Public information.

SEC. 909. ON-SITE INSPECTION AGENCY

(a) REPORT REQUIREMENTS.—(1) Not later than six months after the date of the enactment of this Act, the officers named in paragraph (2) shall each submit to the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on Foreign Affairs, and the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on Foreign Relations, and the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate an unclassified report, with classified annexes as necessary, on the responsibility of each such officer for the monitoring and verification of arms control agreements. Each such report— (A) shall address specifically any responsibility the officer submitting the report has with respect to on-site inspections (whether inspections of facilities of the United States or inspections of facilities of another party to the agreement); and (B) shall set forth the organizational elements of each department or agency over which the officer submitting the report has jurisdiction which have functions related to the monitoring or verification of arms control agreements. (2) Officers referred to in paragraph (1) are the following: (A) The Secretary of Defense. (B) The Secretary of State. (C) The Director of Central Intelligence. (D) The Director of the United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. (b) MATTERS TO B E INCLUDED.—Each report under subsection (a) shall— (1) describe in detail the monitoring and verification activities carried out with respect to the INF Treaty, (2) evaluate the effectiveness with which these functions have been implemented, and (3) include recommendations for any future organizational or policy changes that may be necessary in view of the experience of implementing the INF Treaty. (c) INF TREATY DEFINED.—For purposes of subsection (b), the term "INF Treaty" means the Treaty Between the United States of America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics on the Elimination of Their Intermediate-Range and Shorter-Range Missiles (signed at Washington on December 9, 1987). (d) BUDGET REQUESTS.—Any request submitted to Congress by the Executive Branch for authorization of appropriations for the On-Site Inspection Agency for any fiscal year shall, as a separate activity, provide details of all funding and of all military and civilian personnel requested for that Agency for that fiscal year, including the number of such personnel of the Department of Defense and other