
The future of the US-Russia nuclear treaty hangs by a thread, as the Kremlin declared on Tuesday that renewed negotiations are nearly impossible without a major restoration of trust. With the New START treaty—the last remaining arms control pact between the two nuclear superpowers—set to expire in February 2026, the global security landscape faces fresh uncertainty.
Why the US-Russia Nuclear Treaty Matters
The New START treaty currently places crucial limits on nuclear arsenals. It caps each country at:

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1,550 deployed nuclear warheads
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700 long-range missiles and bombers
Signed in 2010, it has played a key role in maintaining strategic stability. But without a successor deal, the world could be staring down a new nuclear arms race.
Trust Has Collapsed
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov made it clear: there’s little room for dialogue.
“Given the current state of relations, imagining new negotiations is very difficult,” he said in a press briefing.
His comments reflect deepening political and military tensions between Washington and Moscow. The US-Russia nuclear treaty discussions are essentially frozen, with diplomacy on ice since 2022.
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What’s Blocking Progress?
Ukraine War Fallout
The war in Ukraine has shattered US-Russia relations. American military aid to Kyiv and sweeping sanctions on Moscow have strained ties further. From Russia’s perspective, the US is not a trustworthy partner right now.
Spy Allegations
Both nations have accused each other of violating arms control agreements. In 2023, Russia alleged US surveillance drone activity near its borders. Meanwhile, the US has accused Moscow of restricting on-site inspections under New START—raising transparency concerns.
Diplomatic Freeze
High-level talks have not resumed since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Channels once used for arms control discussions are now closed. Trust, once built over decades, is unraveling fast.
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Why This Should Alarm the World
Without an extension or replacement of New START, the US and Russia could start deploying unlimited numbers of warheads and missiles after February 2026. Experts warn this could lead to:
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Increased global tensions
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An expensive arms buildup
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Reduced transparency in nuclear capabilities
According to Arms Control Association, New START has helped avoid miscalculations between the two powers. Losing it would mark a dangerous shift away from decades of nuclear diplomacy.
Is There Any Hope?
Analysts say a last-minute deal is not impossible—but unlikely under current circumstances. Both sides would need to prioritize diplomacy over dominance.
Former US arms control negotiator Rose Gottemoeller said, “It will take courage, compromise, and creative thinking to craft the next treaty. The clock is ticking.”
For now, the Kremlin’s stance suggests no movement on the US-Russia nuclear treaty front anytime soon.
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