Key takeaways
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- New START has expired, ending the last major US-Russia strategic arms-control agreement and its verification framework.
- The biggest near-term loss is transparency (inspections/data exchanges), which can drive worst-case planning on both sides.
- Both countries have “upload capacity” (ability to add warheads to deployed systems), increasing the risk of a faster arms buildup.
- Arms control is now entangled with Ukraine, NATO, missile defense, and intermediate-range missiles, making a replacement pact harder.
- China’s nuclear buildup complicates negotiations; Beijing rejects joining talks “at this stage.”
What Happened?
The 2011 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START), which capped deployed strategic warheads (1,550) and enabled inspections and information exchanges, has expired. Russia had suspended formal participation in 2023 (ending inspections/info exchanges) while stating it would still observe limits. With expiry, there is no longer a binding bilateral framework governing US-Russia strategic nuclear stockpiles.
Why It Matters?
Without verification, both sides may assume the other is expanding and respond in kind. This “worst-case” dynamic can accelerate an arms race even if neither side initially wants one. The absence of constraints could also push other nuclear-armed states to expand their arsenals, weakening the broader nonproliferation environment.
What’s Next?
Watch for:
- Unilateral restraint statements (temporary pledges to stick near New START limits) vs. announcements of force expansion.
- Any US move to restart or expand nuclear modernization/deployment beyond prior trajectories.
- Whether Ukraine-related diplomacy creates room for strategic stability talks, or whether negotiations stall over NATO, missile defense, and shorter-range nuclear weapons (not covered by New START).
- Signals of a new testing posture: rhetoric around resuming nuclear tests raises escalation risk even if no test occurs.















