San Francisco Chronicle

White House wants to re-engage Russia on nuclear arms control

- By Aamer Madhani

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion is ready to talk to Russia without conditions about a future nuclear arms control framework even while taking countermea­sures in response to the Kremlin’s decision to suspend the last nuclear arms control treaty between the two countries, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said Friday.

Russian President Vladimir Putin announced in February he was suspending Russia’s cooperatio­n with the New START Treaty’s provisions for nuclear warhead and missile inspection­s, a move that came as tensions worsened after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. Russia did say it would respect the treaty’s caps on nuclear weapons.

Sullivan said at the Arms Control Associatio­n’s annual meeting said that the United States is committed to adhering to the treaty if Russia also does and that Washington wants to open a dialogue on a new framework for managing nuclear risks once the treaty expires in February 2026.

“It is in neither of our countries’ interest to embark on opening the competitio­n in the strategic nuclear forces,” Sullivan said. “And rather than waiting to resolve all of our bilateral difference­s, the United States is ready to engage Russia now to manage nuclear risks and develop a post-2026” agreement.

The U.S. is willing to stick to the warhead caps until the treaty’s end. Figuring out details about a post-2026 framework will be complicate­d by U.S.-Russia tension and China’s growing nuclear strength.

China now has about 410 nuclear warheads, according to an annual survey from the Federation of American Scientists. The Pentagon in November estimated China’s warhead count could grow to 1,000 by the end of the decade and to 1,500 by around 2035.

The size of China’s arsenal and whether Beijing is willing to engage in substantiv­e dialogue will affect the future U.S. force posture and Washington’s ability to come to any agreement with the Russians, administra­tion officials said.

U.S.-Chinese relations have been strained by the shooting down of a Chinese spy balloon this year after it crossed the continenta­l United States; tensions about the status of the self-ruled island of Taiwan, which China claims as its own; U.S. export controls aimed at limiting China’s advanced semiconduc­tor equipment; and other issues.

Sullivan said that he had a candid exchange with his Chinese counterpar­t, Wang Yi, about arms control when the two met in Vienna last month for broad talks on the U.S.-Chinese relationsh­ip and that the Biden administra­tion has made clear to Beijing that it’s “ready to talk, when you’re ready to talk.”

“Simply put we have not yet seen the willingnes­s from the PRC to compartmen­talize strategic stability from broader issues in the relationsh­ip,” Sullivan said, using the acronym for the People’s Republic of China.

The White House push on Moscow on nuclear arms control comes the day after the administra­tion announced new steps in response to Russia suspending participat­ion in the treaty.

The State Department said it no longer would notify Russia of any updates on the status or location of “treaty-accountabl­e items” such as missiles and launchers, would revoke U.S. visas issued to Russian treaty inspectors and aircrew members, and would cease providing telemetric informatio­n on test launches of interconti­nental ballistic missiles and submarine-launched ballistic missiles.

It remains unclear that the Kremlin would be willing to engage with Washington on the issue at a moment when U.S.-Russia relations are at their lowest point since the Cold War.

The United States and Russia earlier this year stopped sharing biannual nuclear weapons data required by the treaty.

The treaty, which then-Presidents Barack Obama and Dmitry Medvedev signed in 2010, limits each country to no more than 1,550 deployed nuclear warheads and 700 deployed missiles and bombers and provides for on-site inspection­s to verify compliance.

The inspection­s have been dormant since 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Discussion­s on resuming them were supposed to have taken place in November 2022, but Russia abruptly called them off, citing U.S. support for Ukraine.

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