
From Popular Mechanics:
As Russia's actions in Georgia strain America's relationship with Russia, a report in the Wall Street Journal today indicates that nuclear disarmament negotiations may be in jeopardy. And while both countries' arsenals are shrinking, new and improved nuclear weapons are here to stay.
Arms control efforts may become a casualty as the Russian invasion of Georgia deepens mistrust between the United States and Russia. The Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) expires at the end of 2009, and the first talks on its renewal were scheduled to begin this month. However, Secretary Condoleezza Rice agreeing with a statement from NATO explaining that relations with Russia could no longer be "business as usual" has spurred a debate over START's renewal. With the White House asserting that the relationship between the two nations needs to be evaluated, the SMART talks could be delayed, or even cancelled. While both U.S. presidential candidates count support for a new framework for START among their high-tech proposals, this sour mood is likely to extend beyond the Bush administration's term.
The good news is that there are far fewer nuclear warheads in both nations' arsenals. During the Cold War the Soviet Union and the U.S. obsessed over counting warheads as a metric for national security. Since the dissolution of the communist government, the number of warheads on both sides has steadily declined from the U.S. high of 31,700 warheads in 1966 and Russia's 45,000 in 1986. The U.S. currently has about 5400, while Russia has about 5200, according to tallies by the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists (see graphic above).
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