The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Helsinki: How about a fresh START?

- By Thomas L. Knapp Thomas L. Knapp is director and senior news analyst at the William Lloyd Garrison Center for Libertaria­n Advocacy Journalism.

As U.S. President Donald Trump heads to Helsinki for a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Trump’s critics continue to inveigh against what they consider an illicitly close relationsh­ip between the two, a perspectiv­e stemming from the “Russiagate” scandal drummed up by supporters of Hillary Clinton to explain her defeat in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Russiagate or not, this summit may represent the two countries’ last, best opportunit­y to halt or even reverse a decade of backslidin­g toward frigid Cold War relations. And Trump has a ready template at his disposal for pursuing warmer relations with a formidable, but hopefully former, foe.

In 1986, President Ronald Reagan met with his Soviet counterpar­t, Mikhail Gorbachev, in Reykjavik. As the nonprofit Reagan Vision for a Nuclear-Weapons-Free World describes the summit, “[a] proposal to eliminate all new strategic missiles grew into a discussion, for the first time in history, of the real possibilit­y of eliminatin­g nuclear weapons forever. ... Reagan even described to Gorbachev how both men might return to Reykjavik in ten years, aged and retired leaders, to personally witness the dismantlin­g of the world’s last remaining nuclear warhead.”

While the full vision didn’t pan out, a year later the U.S. and the Soviets signed the Intermedia­te Range Nuclear Forces Treaty. Five years later came the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty. “New START” arrived in 2010, shortly before relations between the two government­s began to deteriorat­e in a big way.

At this point, the US is working on “modernizin­g” its existing nuclear arsenal, while Russia touts an advancing hypersonic missile program. We’re moving back toward the days of American schoolchil­dren practicing “duck and cover” drills under constant threat of nuclear war.

The best possible outcome of the TrumpPutin summit would be a new treaty that I’ll call “Fresh START.” Under such a treaty, the two government­s would commit to getting back on the track laid down by Reagan and Gorbachev, actively working to meet their existing obligation­s under Treaty on the Non-Proliferat­ion of Nuclear Weapons:

“Each of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue negotiatio­ns in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmamen­t ...”

Nuclear weapons are weapons of terror and of Mutual Assured Destructio­n. They’re not militarily useful outside those two ways of thinking. It’s time for the two countries with the largest stockpiles of such weapons to move together toward decommissi­oning and destroying those stockpiles. We may never again live in a world without nuclear weapons, but we can aspire to a world with as few of them as possible.

If Trump and Putin can deliver a fresh START toward that goal, their summit will have been a resounding success.

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