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The Last Nuclear Arms Control Agreement Between the US and Russia Just Expired. What's Next?

Feb 16, 2026
Corey Hinderstein, VP for Studies at the Carnegie Endowment and nuclear arms control expert. She explains what New START did and why its expiration matters. Short talks cover verification and onsite inspections. They discuss missed extension talks, immediate reactions from Washington and Moscow, and how China’s rapid buildup complicates future deals.
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INSIGHT

Numbers Plus Transparency

  • New START combined limits on warheads and platforms with verification like telemetry sharing and non-interference.
  • Its measures tracked deployed bombers, missiles, and submarines and allowed inspectors to confirm non-weapon declarations.
INSIGHT

Treaty Implementation Held Until 2022

  • Carnegie views New START as effective with no major disputes over central limits before 2022.
  • Implementation continued even after 2014 tensions until Russia scaled back inspections post-2022 invasion.
INSIGHT

Expiry Was Built Into The Deal

  • New START had a fixed end date and lacked a second extension clause, so expiry was inevitable.
  • Russia offered a voluntary extension of numerical limits that the U.S. did not accept.
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