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Russia offers to extend nuclear arms limits with US

Putin says measures needed to prevent a strategic arms race with Washington

  • The New START treaty will expire on February 5, 2026.
  • Putin says the step is viable only if the US follows similarly.
  • Warns against moves undermining deterrence balance.

 

Russia on Monday offered to keep abiding by nuclear warhead limits agreed with the United States once a key treaty expires, but only for one year and if Washington did the same.

The New START treaty, signed in 2010, limits the number of nuclear warheads each side can deploy and is the last major arms proliferation agreement between the two nuclear powers.

The treaty will expire on February 5, 2026, and neither side has agreed to extend it.

Russia said it will continue adhering to the central quantitative limitations of the New START. Treaty for one year after February 5, 2026,” Russian President Vladimir Putin said in a televised meeting.

He said the measure was needed to prevent “a strategic arms race” with Washington.

“We believe that this measure will only be viable if the United States acts similarly and does not take steps that undermine or disrupt the existing balance of deterrence potentials,” Putin added.

Russia froze its participation in New START in 2023 but has continued to follow the numerical limits in the treaty voluntarily.

The agreement restricts both sides to a maximum of 1,550 deployed strategic nuclear warheads each, a reduction of nearly 30 percent from the previous limit set in 2002.

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