Cold war arsenal to be cut as US, Russia seek accord

MOSCOW – Russia and the United States plan unprecedented cuts to their cold war arsenals of nuclear weapons under a new arms …

MOSCOW – Russia and the United States plan unprecedented cuts to their cold war arsenals of nuclear weapons under a new arms reduction deal, Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov was quoted as saying yesterday.

The two largest nuclear powers have been trying to find a replacement for the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (Start I), which led to the biggest reduction in nuclear weapons in history, but have so far failed to reach a deal.

“The treaty will stipulate a radical and unprecedented reduction in strategic offensive weapons,” Mr Lavrov was quoted as saying by the state-owned RIA news agency.

Cutting the vast arsenals of nuclear weapons built during the cold war is the centrepiece of US president Barack Obama’s efforts to “reset” relations with Russia, which the US is pressing for more help on Afghanistan and Iran.

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Russia and the US failed to agree on a successor to Start I by December 5th, when the treaty was due to expire, and have extended it as they search for a new agreement. Mr Obama and Russian president Dmitry Medvedev failed to clinch a deal when they met on the sidelines of the UN climate conference in Copenhagen last week.

Under a preliminary understanding agreed by the two in July, the new treaty will reduce operationally deployed nuclear warheads to between at least 1,500-1,675, a cut of about one-third from current levels.

Mr Lavrov, whose ministry is leading talks along with the US state department, said negotiations in Geneva would resolve remaining issues after the Christmas and new year holidays.

The talks in Geneva have been held in secret and both sides have agreed to a news blackout, although tension spilled into the open last week when Mr Lavrov accused US negotiators of dragging their feet.

The negotiators have been discussing technical arms control issues as they seek a deal which analysts say could pave the way for more ambitious talks aimed at cutting thousands of non-deployed nuclear warheads and shorter-range tactical nuclear warheads.

For a new Start accord, Russia has called for cheaper verification procedures – jargon for inspections and data exchanges that ensure each side is implementing cuts.

Moscow has been concerned about a new generation of non-nuclear weapons with the destructive capability of some atomic weapons. Mr Lavrov said the two types of weapon would be formally linked in a new treaty, according to Interfax. – (Reuters)