U.S. Again Moves Goalposts For Nuclear Treaty Extension

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DISPATCHES FROM MOON OF ALABAMA, BY "B"
This article is part of an ongoing series of dispatches from Moon of Alabama



The Trump administration wants to abandon all nuclear arms treaties with Russia. It has already left the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty that restricted some classes of shorter range nuclear weapons. It left the Open Sky treaty which allowed for verification flights. It is now letting the New-START treaty with Russia run out.

New-START limits the number of deployed strategic weapons and nuclear warheads that can be used for intercontinental attacks. These include long range bombers, silo based nuclear missiles and the number of submarine launched nuclear missiles. The treaty does not limit the number of short range nuclear weapons or the number of nuclear warheads which are not deployed but held in reserve.

The current treaty will end on February 5 2021 unless Russia and the U.S. agree to extend it for up to 5 years as the treaty foresees. The Trump administration has said that it wants a new agreement before the upcoming election. There are now only two weeks left to negotiate an extension.

While the Trump administration wants to abandon New-Start it does not want to take the blame for doing so. It first tried to include China, which has far fewer weapons than the U.S, and Russia, into the treaty. China did not want to be part of the treaty even as the U.S. practiced childish diplomacy theatre to 'shame' China into negotiations.

The talks were going nowhere as the U.S. rejected the five year extension Russia wanted and demanded that other Russian arms, not covered by the current treaty, should also be included. On October 16 Russia's President Putin held a meeting with his national security cabinet. They discussed the treaty negotiations:

President of Russia Vladimir Putin:

Before we get to the main item on today’s agenda, I would like to ask Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov whether there has been any progress in the dialogue with the United States to extend one of the central documents in terms of international security and arms control. I am referring to the New START, the Treaty on Measures for the Further Reduction and Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms.

Where are we in the talks with the Americans?

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov: Mr President,

In keeping with your instructions, we remain quite proactive in our contacts with our American colleagues on strategic stability matters in all their aspects, including by emphasising our initiative to take a decision without delay to extend the New START, set to expire in February 2021, for a new five-year term without any preconditions. This initiative remains on the table.
...

Vladimir Putin: It would be extremely sad, if this Treaty ceased to exist and was not replaced by another fundamental document of this kind. During all the previous years, the New START worked and worked properly, performing its fundamental role as a constraint curtailing the arms race and a tool of arms control. It is clear that we have new weapons systems that the American side lacks, at least for the time being. But we are not refusing to discuss this aspect of the matter as well.

In this regard, I have a proposal, namely, to extend the Treaty now in effect unconditionally for at least a year in order to have a chance to hold substantive talks on all the parameters of problems that are regulated by treaties of this kind, lest we leave our countries and all nations of the world with a vested interest in maintaining strategic stability without such a fundamental document as the Strategic Offensive Arms Limitation Treaty.

Please, formulate our position to the US partners and try to obtain at least some comprehensible reply from them as soon as possible.

Sergei Lavrov: We will do it as soon as we can, Mr President.

Vladimir Putin: Thank you.

The U.S. rejected the offer:

Russia on Friday proposed extending a soon-to-expire nuclear arms treaty for one year without any changes, a move seen in Washington as a tactic to delay action on the treaty until after the American presidential election.
...
The offer drew a cool reception in Washington. Within hours, the Trump administration issued a statement from Robert C. O’Brien, the national security adviser, rejecting the offer from the Russian president.

“President Putin’s response today to extend New Start without freezing nuclear warheads is a non-starter,” Mr. O’Brien said. “The United States is serious about arms control that will keep the entire world safe. We hope that Russia will reevaluate its position before a costly arms race ensues.”

Mr. O’Brien repeated the administration’s proposal to extend New Start for one year, "in exchange for Russia and the United States capping all nuclear warheads during that period.”

The proposal to cap all nuclear warheads would expand New Start beyond strategic weapons, its current focus, to also cover tactical nuclear warheads.

The big issue with the U.S. proposal is that there is no agreement or even the infrastructure that would allow to verify the number of all nuclear warheads. How would those be counted and how would dismantling or renovation of such warheads be handled. Would there be Russian inspectors in U.S. nuclear warhead depots and manufacturing facilities and U.S. inspectors in Russian ones? Negotiating the required processes to allow for that would likely take years. The Pentagon and the Senate would certainly oppose any inspection scheme.

But Putin is serious with wanting to keep the treaty. Today he took another step towards the U.S. position:

Moscow is ready to offer Washington a mutual one-year freeze on both sides’ nuclear arsenals, if New START (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) is prolonged for the same period of time, the Russian Foreign Ministry stated.

"Russia offers to prolong New START for one year, and it is ready to take on the political obligation along with the USA to freeze the amount of its nuclear warheads for that period. This position can be implemented strictly on the understanding that the freezing of the warheads will not be accompanied by any additional demands from the side of the US," the ministry noted.

That offer is for an unverifiable gentlemen's agreement to freeze the number of nuclear warheads. Any verification scheme would be too complicated to negotiate within the few weeks left to the treaty.

(((James Acton))) @james_acton32 - 14:52 UTC · Oct 20, 2020

Important question. Totally different. New START doesn’t limit nondeployed warheads.

Graham W. Jenkins @grahamwjenkins

Replying to @james_acton32

How would monitoring and verification differ from the current New START regime?

Daryl G Kimball @DarylGKimball

Replying to @james_acton32

Nor does New START limit deployed or nondeployed nonstrategic warheads. Thus agreement on a verifiable "freeze" on total stockpiles would require agreement on counting rules, stockpile size and composition, and monitoring/verification methods. These are not small details.

The U.S. responded quickly to the new Russian offer by issuing additional demands:

We appreciate the Russian Federation’s willingness to make progress on the issue of nuclear arms control.

The United States is prepared to meet immediately to finalize a verifiable agreement. We expect Russia to empower its diplomats to do the same.

It is impossible to negotiate a 'verifiable agreement' about a freeze of the number of all nuclear warheads - strategic and tactical,  deployed and nondeployed - within 14 days:

(((James Acton))) @james_acton32 - 14:47 UTC · Oct 20, 2020

A deal is possible but it’s unclear whether it’s close. A disagreement over whether verification is needed is pretty significant. If the US wants a deal before the election then either (i) US will have to back down and accept no verification; or (1/n)

Or (ii) the US will have to accept a Russian promise to negotiate verification arrangements since it’s not possible to do so in 2 weeks. Both are possibilities; both are far from assured. (2/2)

It would take years to verify each sides numbers of warheads in the first place.

The U.S. position to get a "verifiable agreement" within two weeks is nonsensical. It is simply a ploy to blame Russia when the time for extending the treaty runs out.

The negotiation process again proves that the U.S. is no longer 'agreement capable'.

Posted by b on October 20, 2020 at 17:00 UTC | Permalink

Comments Sampler

It is absolutely clear that any Russian initiative to rescue the treaty is going to be seen in Warshington as evidence of Russian weakness. In fact I do not see what advantage lies in Russia extending the treaty with someone that Russia itself says is "not agreement capable". As for being blamed, literally what is there that happens on the earth or above it that is not blamed on Russia already by the Amerikastani Empire?

It's time for Russia to say, "If you don't want an honest discussion and extension, then to hell with you. And to hell with the treaty too. We survived the 1980s, we'll survive this too.

"Will you?"

Posted by: Biswapriya Purkayast | Oct 20 2020 17:10 utc | 1

I'm not seeing the value in restarting the nuclear arm's race.
Am I missing something?
Or are the top level US policy maker's totally moronic or evil?

Posted by: Jpc | Oct 20 2020 17:12 utc | 2

As Andrei said more than once, along the lines, US is "nuclear trigger happy".

So, in near future I see even more nukes (of old types) in lot of US and NATO bases all around the world, and no any other significant technological advacement.

Don't forget US is only country ever to use nuclear weapons against enemy. It is also only country ever to use nukes against purely civilian targets (whole cities). And don't forget not once it was called for a war criminal for it.

Posted by: Abe | Oct 20 2020 17:21 utc | 3

Also, it won't be another arms race for next decade ad least, even longer. Russia learned it's lesson.

For every 10 or 100 new nukes US (re)builds, Russia will use its tech. advantage and deploy extra Avangard or Poseidon or something new to balance the scale. One side will use muscles/quantity and other side will use brains/quality.

Posted by: Abe | Oct 20 2020 17:25 utc | 4
Yes.

Posted by: winston2 | Oct 20 2020 17:26 utc | 5

Posted by: karlof1 | Oct 20 2020 17:32 utc | 6

Has anyone told these morons.
Everyone, everything, everywhere will die!
A long time ago folks figured that out.
Hey set off one in Nevada or the Pacific again just to see have the explosions got better!

Posted by: Jpc | Oct 20 2020 17:34 utc | 7

I guess I want to ask all those Trump supporters that say that Trump hasn't started any wars what the hell they are smoking?

We are in a civilization war and this is how empire fights when it can't go MAD and is stymied with conventional warfare.  Get your hip boots out because the US shit show during the next few weeks is going to get deep. Look at how much the MSM is gatekeeping about the Biden story and the ongoing financial rape and pillage that got front page in 2008 does not even get reported these days.

Posted by: psychohistorian | Oct 20 2020 17:46 utc | 8

Posted by: karlof1 | Oct 20 2020 17:32 utc | 6

"Biden has said he'll agree to the extension and resume negotiations, a position that has me seriously re-evaluating who my vote will be for."

I voted for Biden solely on this reason. There are no mulligans in a global nuclear war.

Posted by: One Too Many | Oct 20 2020 18:03 utc | 9

@psychohistorian #8
The original START expired during Obama's administration. It was replaced with a "new" START - that's the one expiring soon - but it was 2 years later.
Where was the hue and cry then?

Posted by: c1ue | Oct 20 2020 18:04 utc | 10

People who claim Trump is not a war-monger should have no problem whatsoever with this. Either they're pretending to have one, just to bash America, or they have been lying about Trump's moral superiority because they favor Trump's domestic policies. And if you genuinely believe Putin actually has working superweapons (without testing, no less!) then it is even less of a problem. There certainly is nothing whatsoever to criticize the US for, except for making the mistake of not holding back a superior rival with a treaty. But for some reason, the complaint of the OP is *not* that the US has moved the goalposts so incompetently it's scored an own goal!

Posted by: steven t johnson | Oct 20 2020 18:09 utc | 11

Proof in Italics and Capital Letters that the US is non-agreement capable.

They dictate and demand and try to coerce, issue threats and spew sanctions.

But they can't abide negotiation. So, they tear up treaties and relationships like children in a temper tantrum.

And each time they defy Russia, China, Iran or North Korean, they terrify themselves more with the realization that they are powerless.

Posted by: Red Ryder | Oct 20 2020 18:11 utc | 12

The US seems to be laboring under a misapprehension that Russia and China are going to allow themselves to be drawn into a 50's to 80's style arms race. As a couple of other people have pointed out here, that's simply not a correct reading. It's the old "what if they held a war and no one came" question ... a one-sided "arms race" will be a very lonely feeling.

Posted by: Caliman | Oct 20 2020 18:36 utc | 13


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About the author(s)

"b" is Moon of Alabama's founding (and chief) editor.  This site's purpose is to discuss politics, economics, philosophy and blogger Billmon's Whiskey Bar writings. Moon Of Alabama was opened as an independent, open forum for members of the Whiskey Bar community.  Bernhard )"b") started and still runs the site. Once in a while you will also find posts and art from regular commentators. You can reach the current administrator of this site by emailing Bernhard at MoonofA@aol.com

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