"Arms control and nonproliferation efforts are two of the tools that the United States has
occasionally used to implement its national security strategy. Although some believe these tools
do little to restrain the behavior of U.S. adversaries, while doing too much to restrain U.S.
military forces and operations, many others see them as an effective means to promote
transparency, ease military planning, limit forces, and protect against uncertainty and surprise.
Arms control and nonproliferation efforts have produced formal treaties and agreements, informal
arrangements, and cooperative threat reduction and monitoring mechanisms. After the end of the
Cold War, the pace of implementation for many of these agreements slowed during the Clinton
Administration. The Bush Administration usually preferred unilateral or ad hoc measures to
formal treaties and agreements to address U.S. security concerns. The Obama Administration
resumed bilateral negotiations with Russia and pledged its support for a number of multilateral
arms control and nonproliferation efforts, but succeeded in negotiating only a few of its priority
agreements. The Trump Administration withdrew the United States from the INF Treaty and the
Open Skies Treaty. It did not support the full five-year extension of the New START Treaty but
did seek to negotiate a short-term extension during the latter half of 2020. These talks failed to
produce an agreement. It also advocated discussions on a future treaty that would limit all types
of U.S., Russian, and Chinese nuclear weapons, but most arms control analysts doubt that China
would participate in this process. The Biden Administration supported the full five-year extension
of New START and reached an agreement with Russia that took effect on February 3, 2021.
The United States and Soviet Union began to sign agreements limiting their strategic offensive
nuclear weapons in the early 1970s. Progress in negotiating and implementing these agreements
was often slow, and subject to the tenor of the broader U.S.-Soviet relationship. As the Cold War
drew to a close in the late 1980s, the pace of negotiations quickened, with the two sides signing
treaties limiting intermediate-range and long-range weapons. But progress again slowed in the
1990s, as U.S. missile defense plans and a range of other policy conflicts intervened in the U.S.-
Russian relationship. At the same time, however, the two sides began to cooperate on securing
and eliminating Soviet-era nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons. Through these efforts, the
United States has allocated more than $1 billion each year to threat reduction programs in the
former Soviet Union. These programs have recently reached their conclusion.
The United States is also a prominent actor in an international regime that attempts to limit the
spread of nuclear weapons. This regime, although suffering from some setbacks in recent years in
Iran and North Korea, includes formal treaties, export control coordination and enforcement,
U.N. resolutions, and organizational controls. The Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) serves
as the cornerstone of this regime, with all but four nations participating in it. The International
Atomic Energy Agency not only monitors nuclear programs to make sure they remain peaceful,
but also helps nations develop and advance those programs. Other measures, such as sanctions,
interdiction efforts, and informal cooperative endeavors, also seek to slow or stop the spread of
nuclear materials and weapons.."
Arms control
Tuesday, April 26, 2022
Arms Control and Nonproliferation: A Catalog of Treaties and Agreements
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