Echoing the principles of the now-defunct New START treaty, Russia has pledged to voluntarily uphold the pact’s nuclear limits for one more year. President Vladimir Putin announced the decision as a crucial step to maintain global stability and prevent an unchecked arms race from emerging.
The New START treaty, signed by Obama and Medvedev, was the last bilateral agreement of its kind, limiting each nation’s deployed nuclear warheads to 1,550. Though Putin suspended the treaty in 2023 and it has since expired, its core limitations will now guide Russian policy as a matter of voluntary choice.
This voluntary adherence comes with a significant caveat. Putin directly linked the policy’s success to the behavior of the United States. He stated that the measure would only be “viable” if Washington also showed restraint and did not take actions that could “disrupt the existing balance of deterrence.”
The Russian government sees this as a potential starting point for renewed diplomacy. Putin suggested that mutual adherence to these familiar limits could create an atmosphere more “conducive to substantive strategic dialogue,” offering a path back from the current state of high tension.
This one-year commitment acts as a bridge to an uncertain future. It provides a temporary continuation of a well-understood arms control regime, but the long-term stability it offers is fragile and dependent on the reciprocal actions of the United States.
Echoes of START: Russia to Uphold Nuclear Pact’s Limits Voluntarily for a Year
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