LONDON/WASHINGTON,
Jan 30 (Reuters) - The United States and Russia could
embark on an unrestrained nuclear arms race for the
first time since the Cold War, unless they reach an
eleventh-hour deal before their last remaining arms
control treaty expires in less than a week.
The
New START treaty is set to end on February 5. Without
it, there would be no constraints on long-range
nuclear arsenals for the first time since Richard
Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev signed two
historic agreements in 1972 on the first-ever trip by
a U.S. president to Moscow.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin has proposed the two sides
should stick to existing missile and warhead limits
for one more year to buy time to work out what comes
next, but U.S. President Donald Trump has yet to
formally respond.
Trump
said this month that "if it expires, it expires", and
that the treaty should be replaced with a better one.
Some
U.S. politicians argue Trump should reject Putin's
offer, freeing Washington to grow its arsenal to
counter a rapid nuclear build-up by a third power:
China.
Trump
says he wants to pursue "denuclearisation" with both
Russia and China. But Beijing says it is unreasonable
to expect it to join disarmament talks with two
countries whose arsenals are still far larger than its
own.
WHY DO NUCLEAR TREATIES
MATTER?
Since
the darkest Cold War days when the United States and
the Soviet Union threatened each other with "mutually
assured destruction" in the event of nuclear war, both
have seen arms limitation treaties as a way to prevent
either a lethal misunderstanding or an economically
ruinous arms race.
The
treaties not only set numerical limits on missiles and
warheads, they also require the sides to share
information - a critical channel to "try to understand
where the other side is coming from and what their
concerns and drivers are", said Darya Dolzikova at the
RUSI think-tank in London.
With
no new treaty, each would be forced to act according
to worst-case assumptions about the weapons the other
is producing, testing and deploying, said Nikolai
Sokov, a former Soviet and Russian arms negotiator.
"It's
a self-sustaining kind of process. And of course, if
you've got an unregulated arms race, things will get
quite destabilising," he said.
NEW TREATY NO SIMPLE TASK
Since
the fall of the Soviet Union, Russia and the United
States have repeatedly replaced and updated the Cold
War-era treaties that limited the so-called strategic
weapons they point at each other's cities and bases.
The
most recent, New START, was signed in 2010 by U.S.
President Barack Obama and Dmitry Medvedev, a Putin
ally who was then serving as Russian president for
four years.
It
caps the number of deployed strategic warheads at
1,550 on each side, with no more than 700 systems to
deliver them from land, sea or air, by
intercontinental ballistic missile, submarine-launched
missile or heavy bomber.
Replacing
it with a new treaty would be no simple task. Russia
has developed new nuclear-capable systems - the
Burevestnik cruise missile, the hypersonic Oreshnik
and the Poseidon torpedo - that fall outside New
START's framework. And Trump has announced plans for a
space-based "Golden Dome" missile defence system that
Moscow sees as an attempt to shift the strategic
balance.
Meanwhile,
China's arsenal is growing, unchecked by agreements
between Washington and Moscow. Beijing now has an
estimated 600 warheads and the Pentagon estimates it
will have more than 1,000 by 2030.
A
bipartisan Congressional commission in 2023 said the
United States was now facing an "existential
challenge" from not one but two nuclear peers, and
needed to be prepared for simultaneous wars with
Russia and China.
Its
recommendations included preparing to bring out of
storage some or all of the strategic nuclear warheads
removed under New START and kept in a reserve
stockpile.
That
could involve restoring warheads removed from
Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles and
submarine-fired Trident D5s, and returning to nuclear
roles some 30 B-52 strategic bomber planes converted
to conventional missions.
"The
warheads are there. The missiles are there. You’re not
buying anything new," said a former senior U.S.
official involved in nuclear weapons policy who
requested anonymity.
The
former official expected only "modest" increases in
warhead reloads should Trump order those options.
But
Kingston Reif, a former Pentagon official now at the
RAND research organization, told a recent webinar that
at the high end the United States could "roughly
double" its deployed warheads from the New START
limit, while Russia would be in a position to add
around 800. Both sides would take at least the best
part of a year to make significant changes, he said.
PUTIN'S
OFFER DIVIDES VIEWS IN THE U.S.
In
policy circles in the United States, views are divided
on whether Trump should agree to Putin's offer to keep
existing limits in place for a year.
Trump
should take steps "to reduce the risk of a wasteful
nuclear arms race and to reduce the risk of a
catastrophic misinterpretation (of the other side’s
intent) that could spiral out of control during a
crisis," said Paul Dean, a former arms control
official now with the Nuclear Threat Initiative, an
advocacy group.
Arms
control advocates point out that the United States is
already facing huge expenses from a nuclear force
modernization program - including a new submarine,
bomber and ICBM – that is suffering serious delays and
massive cost overruns.
The
nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates that
it will cost U.S. taxpayers nearly $1 trillion between
2025 and 2034 to modernize, sustain and operate the
nuclear forces.
"If
the U.S. exceeds New START limits by uploading
warheads, Russia will do the same, and China will use
it as another excuse to build up their nuclear
arsenal," Democratic Senator Ed Markey, a leading arms
control proponent, told Reuters.
"Ultimately,
Trump will have started a new arms race that we do not
need, nor can we win. More weapons will not make use
safer.”
On
the other side of the debate, experts and former
officials say the U.S. shouldn't trust Putin, noting
that he halted mutual inspections under New START in
2023 because of U.S. support for Ukraine in its war
with Russia.
Franklin
Miller, a member of the bipartisan Congressional
commission, said the threats from Russia and China
require an increase in deployed U.S. strategic nuclear
warheads.
"We
now have to be able to deter Russia and China
simultaneously," said Miller. "The force that the
treaty confined the U.S. to in 2010 is not sufficient
to address Russia and China together.”
U.S.
weapons requirements should increase, although "not
radically, not monumentally," he said, in a process
that would probably take several years.
Asked
about Trump's intentions, a White House official said:
"The president will decide the path forward on nuclear
arms control, which he will clarify on his own
timeline.”
Medvedev,
the former Russian president who signed New START,
told the Kommersant newspaper that Trump was
unpredictable.
"Russia
is prepared for any development. New threats to our
security will be promptly and firmly countered," he
said.