http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/politics/us-and-russia-agree-key-nuclear-deal-1733007.html

US and Russia agree key nuclear deal

Associated Press


Monday, 6 July 2009


 

Jim Young / Reuters

US President Barack Obama meets Russian President Dmitry Medvedev at the 
Kremlin in Moscow

  a..  More pictures 


Russia and the US agreed today to cut their nuclear warhead arsenals to as few 
as 1,500 each, aiming toward the lowest levels of any US-Russia arms control 
deal. 



The initial agreement signed by presidents Barack Obama and Dmitry Medvedev at 
a Moscow summit, is meant to guide negotiators as the nations work toward a 
replacement pact for the START strategic arms control reduction treaty, which 
expires in December. 


The joint understanding, signed after about three hours of talks at the 
Kremlin, also commits the new treaty to lower each nation's longer-range 
missiles for delivering nuclear bombs to between 500 and 1,100. 


Under current treaties, each country is allowed a maximum of 2,200 warheads and 
1,600 launch vehicles. 


A White House statement said the new treaty "will include effective 
verification measures." 


"The new agreement will enhance the security of both the US and Russia, as well 
as provide predictability and stability in strategic offensive forces," the 
statement said. 


The leaders also announced several other deals meant to show progress toward 
repairing badly damaged US-Russian relations including Moscow allowing the 
United States to transport arms across its land and airspace into Afghanistan 
for the war there. 


They outlined other ways to work together to help stabilise Afghanistan, 
including increasing assistance to the Afghan army and police and training 
counter-narcotics personnel. A joint statement said the United States and 
Russia welcomed increased international support for upcoming Afghan elections 
and they were prepared to help Afghanistan and Pakistan work together against 
the "common threats of terrorism, extremism and drug trafficking." 


Other side agreements include reviving a joint commission to try to account for 
missing service members of both countries dating back to the Second World War 
and new cooperation on public health issues. 


The commission was first created by the first President Bush and President 
Boris Yeltsin in the early 1990s, but the Russians later downgraded their 
participation. The US hope Russia will open some of its more sensitive archives 
to US researchers seeking details about missing American servicemen. 


Mr Obama needs Russia's help chiefly in pressuring Iran and North Korea to give 
up their nuclear weapons ambitions, but also in tackling terrorism, global 
warming and the economy. But with relations frayed with Moscow's war with 
Georgia last year and US missile defence plans in eastern Europe, Mr Obama's 
desire to reset relations is a huge test of his diplomatic skills. 


"The United States and Russia have more in common than they have differences," 
Mr Obama said as he and Medvedev first sat down. 


His host launched the high-stakes summit with similar good will. 


"We'll have a full-fledged discussion of our relations between our two 
countries, closing some of the pages of the past and opening some of the pages 
of the future," Mr Medvedev said. 


However the two sides remain at stalemate over the US pursuit of a 
missile-defence system in Europe, pushed hard by Mr Bush and under review by Mr 
Obama. 


The US insists it is designed to protect US allies in Europe from a potential 
nuclear attack by Iran. But the Russians see it as a first step toward a system 
that could weaken their offensive nuclear strike potential. 


The summit starts a week-long trip for Mr Obama that also features G8 meetings 
and a visit with the pope in Italy, and a speech in Ghana. 


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