Sam Nunn (born September 8, 1938, Macon, Georgia, U.S.) is a U.S. senator from Georgia (1972–97) and Democratic Party politician noted for his chairmanship of the Senate Committee on Armed Services and his authorship of several important pieces of legislation.
Nunn, whose father was a lawyer and farmer, was the grandnephew of longtime U.S. Rep. Carl Vinson of Georgia. He was raised in the small town of Perry, in central Georgia. He attended the Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech) from 1956 to 1959 and then transferred to Emory University, from which he graduated in 1961. He went on to earn a law degree there the following year. While an undergraduate, Nunn served two years in the U.S. Coast Guard, and he served in the Coast Guard Reserve from 1960 to 1968. After admission to the bar in 1962, he worked for the Armed Services Committee of the House of Representatives but soon had to return to his hometown of Perry to help on the family farm.
Nunn won election to the Georgia House of Representatives in 1968. Four years later he entered the U.S. Senate in a special election to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Sen. Richard Russell. His most noteworthy legislative achievements include drafting the 1986 Department of Defense Reorganization Act and, with Sen. Richard Lugar, the 1991 Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction Program. The former resulted in the most-significant defense reorganization since the National Security Act of 1947, and the latter provided incentives for Russia and the former Soviet republics to destroy excess nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons. For their pioneering legislation, Senators Nunn and Lugar were nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in both 2000 and 2001. In addition to the Senate Committee on Armed Services, Nunn served on the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations and on the Intelligence and Small Business committees.
Nunn was a notable dissenter in the 1991 Senate vote on military action against Ṣaddām Ḥussein’s forces in Kuwait. His vote against the action proved to be a factor in the demise of his otherwise promising run for the White House on the 1992 Democratic ticket. After the United States emerged victorious from Operation Desert Storm, Nunn withdrew from the presidential race because of the unpopularity of his antiwar stance. He chose not to run for reelection in 1996.
Following his retirement from politics, Nunn practiced law in Atlanta and served on corporate boards. In addition, in 2001 he cofounded the Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI), a Washington, D.C., nonprofit organization established to reduce the threat posed to global security by weapons of mass destruction. Nunn was also a distinguished professor at the school of international affairs at Georgia Tech that bore his name.