Arms Control Experts Applaud Announcement of New
Nuclear Reductions Treaty with Russia

Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation
March 26, 2010

http://www.armscontrolcenter.org/audience/media/experts_applaud_us_russia_03262010/

Washington, D.C.

Today, the Obama Administration announced that
negotiations for the text of the most significant
nuclear reductions treaty between the United States and
Russia in decades are complete. President Barack Obama
and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev will sign the
agreement on April 8 in Prague, Czech Republic.

"We welcome the announcement of the completion of a new
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty to reduce the numbers
of nuclear weapons in United States and Russia," said
the Center's Executive Director John Isaacs. "This is a
huge step forward in advancing the bipartisan nuclear
security agenda that the President outlined in Prague
in April 2009 to reduce the dangers posed by nuclear
weapons."

That agenda included three primary objectives: to
reduce and eventually eliminate existing nuclear
weapons stockpiles, prevent the proliferation of
nuclear weapons to new states, and prevent nuclear
weapons-usable materials from falling into the hands of
terrorists. Reductions in the United States and Russia
are they key to moving forward on the first goal.

"This agreement demonstrates the Administration's
commitment to moving away from Cold War era stockpiles
and reducing the number of nuclear weapons in the two
countries that currently possess more than 95% of those
remaining in the world," added Leonor Tomero, the
Center's director of nuclear non-proliferation. "It is
a key element of the President's efforts to effectively
address the most pressing threat to the United States:
the danger that nuclear weapons might spread to other
countries or to terrorists or that a nuclear weapon
might be detonated by accident."

This foreign policy victory builds on the domestic
victory of the Administration this week on health care.
"A stronger President on health care is a stronger
President to move forward this nuclear security
agenda," Isaacs said. "We look for a Senate vote on the
treaty this year. The sooner the treaty enters into
force, the sooner important verification procedures can
be up and running again."

The Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation is
one of the nation's oldest and largest organizations
dedicated to reducing and eventually eliminating
nuclear weapons.

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