CARNEGIE CORPORATION TRUSTEE SENATOR SAM
NUNN AND SENATOR RICHARD G. LUGAR HONORED WITH TENTH ANNUAL HEINZ
AWARDS
New York, NY—December 4, 2003. The Heinz Family
Foundation awarded Senators Sam Nunn and Richard G. Lugar, along
with five other honorees, the Tenth Annual Heinz Awards. The two
senators were honored with the foundation’s Chairman’s
Medal, which is awarded on occasion to recognize a record of especially
notable achievement.
Recognizing the lingering post-Cold War threat posed by stockpiles
of nuclear weapons, in 1991 U.S. Senators Richard G. Lugar and Sam
Nunn forged a bipartisan congressional coalition that ultimately
authorized $500 million for the purpose of dismantling Soviet weaponry,
which, at the time, numbered tens of thousands of nuclear warheads.
Senator Lugar, a five-term senator from Indiana, who serves as the
chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, has since introduced
legislation that would expand the original program beyond the former
Soviet countries. He serves as co-chairman of the Nuclear Threat
Initiative along with Senator Nunn, who retired from the Senate
in 1996. Senator Nunn also serves as chief executive officer of
the Initiative, a nonprofit organization that works to reduce the
global threat from nuclear, biological and chemical weapons.
“I'm particularly honored that the transforming idea Senators
Nunn and Lugar stewarded through Congress was conceived at a Carnegie
Corporation-sponsored Aspen retreat on Russia,” says Vartan
Gregorian, president of Carnegie Corporation. “We have always
believed these congressional retreats offer lawmakers an opportunity
to meet with scholars on critical international issues and to have
the time to think through new policy options. This award from the
Heinz Foundation not only honors the two senators but the concept
behind these meetings.”
In making the award, the Heinz Foundation noted that the Nunn-Lugar
program has been credited with deactivating over 6,000 warheads
and destroyed 515 ballistic missiles, 441 ballistic missile silos,
115 bombers, 400 submarine-launched missiles, 408 submarine missile
launchers and 27 strategic missile submarines. Believing the United
States must have the ability to identify all weapons of mass destruction
and the capabilities to guard and systematically destroy them, the
two senators hope that the success of Nunn-Lugar will be replicated
in such global hotspots as North Korea and Iran and help reduce
tensions in Pakistan and India.
Nominations for the Heinz Awards are submitted by an invited Council
of Nominators, all experts in their fields, who serve anonymously.
The Heinz Foundation Board of Directors selects award recipients
for the Heinz Awards upon review of the jurors’ recommendations.