The two presidents met in Helsinki, Finland, on Monday Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
There is widespread uproar today over yesterdayâs press conference between US President Donald Trump and Russian president Vladimir Putin. Trumpâs apparent repudiation of his own intelligence agenciesâ findings of Russian cyber-interference in the American election was called bizarre, shameful and disgraceful even by politicians in Trumpâs own party. A former CIA director called the comments .
But the press conference may have contained one ray of light. In a little-noticed remark, Putin said he gave Trump âa note with a number of specific suggestionsâ about disarmament. âThis includes the extension of the Strategic Offensive Arms Limitation Treaty.â
By this, he meant the 2010 New Start agreement limiting the two countries to 1550 warheads each. It expires in 2021 but has the option of being extended another five years. According to nuclear expert Joe Cirincione, âa simple exchange of diplomatic notes between the partiesâ could do it.
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Russia appears to have taken the first step. Itâs unclear how Trump responded to Putin but at the press conference he said âin terms of stopping [nuclear proliferation], we have to do it â ultimately, thatâs probably the most important thing that we can be working on.â
from Russia and the EU in April, extending the New Start agreement is important. It is the only remaining arms agreement between the two powers that involves direct inspections of each otherâs weapons. Russia and the US hold 92 per cent of the worldâs nukes.
Trumpâs move
Directly inspecting each otherâs weapons not only verifies compliance with the treaty but is also vital for reducing military uncertainties between the two sides, making false alarms and accidental nuclear exchange less likely.
Putin seemed to acknowledge this on Monday, calling on both sides âto interact on the disarmament agenda, military and technical cooperation.â
Unfortunately, says Cirincione, Putin also appeared to link the extension of New Start with the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty, which limits each sideâs medium-range missiles. This treaty is also in limbo, with both sides accusing the other of violations.
Putin also mentioned US systems designed to shoot down incoming missiles, which Russia claims undermine nuclear deterrence, and the âagenda of non-placement of weapons in spaceâ. Trump has created a Space Force to address military issues in orbit.
âIâm afraid that the outlook is cloudy with a chance of nuclear rain, if New Start extension is indeed linked to a resolution of all these other issues,â says Cirincione. He notes with concern that Trumpâs national security advisor, John Bolton – who is ideologically opposed to arms treaties – stood outside the door as the two presidents met this week in Helsinki, Finland.
At the end of the press conference Putin handed Trump a souvenir football from the recent World Cup in Russia and said âthe ball is in your courtâ. It is: the worldâs nuclear future could depend on whether Trump returns Putinâs note, and talks begin.
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