‘Expiry of nuclear arms treaty alarming’
Web searches failed due to domain access restrictions. I will ground the note in the article excerpt (Tier 4, cited as S1) plus established facts from training knowledge on this treaty, which is well-documented in the public record.
Study Note: Expiry of the New START Treaty — Nuclear Arms Control Crisis
1. At a Glance
- New START (New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) is — or was — the last surviving bilateral nuclear arms control treaty between the United States and Russia, the world's two largest nuclear-weapon states. [S1]
- It expired on 5 February 2026, without renewal or replacement, ending three decades of continuous US-Russia strategic arms limitation architecture.
- Russia's senior security official Dmitry Medvedev (who signed the treaty in 2010 as President) warned its expiry would advance the "Doomsday Clock" — used as a gauge of existential risk — toward catastrophe. [S1]
- UPSC relevance: GS-II (international relations, global security regimes), GS-III (nuclear security, technology governance), Prelims (treaties, signatory years, limit numbers).
2. Why in the News
- 5 February 2026 (Thursday): New START treaty officially expired without extension. [S1]
- US President Donald Trump (second term) declined to accept Moscow's offer to voluntarily extend the caps on strategic nuclear weapon deployments. [S1]
- Medvedev (Deputy Chair, Russian Security Council) issued a public warning on ~3 February 2026, stating: "I don't want to say that this immediately means a catastrophe… but it should still alarm everyone." [S1]
- His remarks explicitly referenced the Doomsday Clock and warned "the clocks are ticking and they obviously have to speed up." [S1]
- The lapse marks the first time since 1972 that the US and Russia exist without any mutually binding strategic nuclear arms control treaty.
3. Background & Evolution
Strategic Arms Control — Chronological Milestones
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1963 | Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (PTBT) — first multilateral nuclear restraint instrument |
| 1968 | Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) opened for signature; entered into force 1970 |
| 1972 | SALT I (Strategic Arms Limitation Talks I) + ABM Treaty — US-USSR |
| 1979 | SALT II signed (never ratified by US Senate) |
| 1987 | INF Treaty — eliminated intermediate-range missiles; US withdrew 2019 citing Russian violations |
| 1991 | START I signed — limited US and USSR to 6,000 warheads, 1,600 delivery vehicles; expired 2009 |
| 1993 | START II signed — never entered into force |
| 2002 | SORT (Moscow Treaty) — limited warheads to 1,700–2,200 each |
| 2010 | New START signed — Prague, 8 April; Obama & Medvedev; replaced SORT |
| 2011 | New START entered into force — 5 February |
| 2021 | Biden administration extended New START by 5 years to 5 February 2026 |
| Feb 2023 | Russia "suspended" (not withdrawn from) New START participation, citing Western support for Ukraine |
| Feb 2026 | Treaty expires; Trump declines extension [S1] |
4. Core Static Facts
Treaty Basics - Full name: New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START / SORT II) - Signed: 8 April 2010, Prague - Signatories: USA (President Barack Obama) and Russia (President Dmitry Medvedev) [S1] - Entered into force: 5 February 2011 - Original expiry: 5 February 2021; extended 5 years to 5 February 2026 - Nature: Bilateral verification treaty with on-site inspection rights
Key Limits (per party) - 1,550 deployed strategic nuclear warheads - 700 deployed ICBMs, SLBMs (submarine-launched ballistic missiles), and heavy bombers equipped for nuclear arms - 800 total deployed + non-deployed launchers (ICBMs, SLBMs, bombers)
Verification Mechanism - Up to 18 on-site inspections per year per party - Mandatory data exchanges every 6 months - National Technical Means (NTMs) — satellites and other monitoring
Predecessor Treaties - START I (1991–2009); SORT/Moscow Treaty (2002–2011 — replaced by New START)
Doomsday Clock - Maintained by the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists since 1947 - Metaphorical clock: midnight = global catastrophe - January 2023: moved to 90 seconds to midnight (then-closest-ever) - January 2025: moved to 89 seconds to midnight (closest in history at time of setting)
Nuclear Arsenals (approximate) - Russia: ~5,580 total warheads (~1,588 deployed strategic) - USA: ~5,044 total warheads (~1,700 deployed strategic) - Combined US-Russia share: ~88% of all nuclear weapons globally
India's Position - India is not a signatory to NPT (nuclear-weapon state outside NPT) - India maintains No-First-Use (NFU) doctrine - India is member of Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) — pending full membership
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Expiry leaves no legally binding cap on US-Russia strategic nuclear deployments for the first time since 1972, removing a key pillar of strategic stability. [S1]
- Russia's suspension of participation (Feb 2023) — not formal withdrawal — was linked to the Ukraine war; expiry now converts suspension into permanent absence of constraint.
- Trump's refusal signals a preference for unconstrained nuclear modernisation over arms control diplomacy, reversing the Biden administration's extension rationale.
- Opens risk of unchecked nuclear arms race between the two largest nuclear powers; other states (China, India, Pakistan, North Korea) could recalibrate postures.
- China factor: US increasingly wants any successor treaty to include China, which Beijing rejects as its arsenal (~500 warheads) is far smaller and it has no bilateral treaty with either power.
Legal / Constitutional
- New START was a legally binding executive agreement (ratified by both legislatures); its expiry is automatic — no unilateral withdrawal step needed.
- Successor requires fresh negotiation, Senate (US) ratification (two-thirds majority), and Russian Duma ratification — politically difficult in current climate.
- NPT Article VI obligates nuclear-weapon states to pursue disarmament "in good faith" — expiry without replacement invites criticism that P5 (especially US/Russia) are violating NPT spirit.
- Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW, 2017) — already in force; US and Russia are non-signatories; expiry may strengthen calls for broader adherence.
Scientific / Technological
- Without inspection rights, verification of arsenal sizes becomes dependent entirely on intelligence (National Technical Means) — less reliable, more adversarial.
- Nuclear modernisation programmes (Russia's Sarmat ICBM, Poseidon underwater drone, Burevestnik cruise missile; US's B21 Raider, Columbia-class submarines) proceed unconstrained.
- Hypersonic glide vehicles (HGVs) — Russia's Avangard, US developing equivalents — were not fully covered by New START; expiry removes even partial oversight.
Historical
- The US-Russia arms control architecture built since SALT I (1972) — surviving through the Cold War, its end, and post-Soviet turbulence — has now fully collapsed.
- Analogous precedent: US withdrawal from ABM Treaty (2002) under George W. Bush; Russia cited this as a long-term driver of strategic instability.
- INF Treaty collapse (2019) + Open Skies Treaty US withdrawal (2020) + New START expiry (2026) = complete dismantling of the post-Cold War arms control framework within 7 years.
Ethical / Governance
- Doomsday Clock at 89 seconds (2025) reflects the scientific community's assessment that existential risk is at a historic high. [S1]
- Global advocacy groups (ICAN — Nobel Peace Prize 2017) argue nuclear-weapon states are failing their disarmament obligations under international law.
- Moral hazard: other nuclear aspirants (North Korea, Iran) may interpret the US-Russia breakdown as validating nuclear deterrence over diplomacy.
Environmental
- Any large-scale nuclear exchange would produce nuclear winter — soot in upper atmosphere blocking sunlight, causing global agricultural collapse, estimated to kill billions via starvation even among non-combatant nations.
- Even a limited regional nuclear exchange (e.g., South Asia) could reduce global food production by 7–50% (studies by Rutgers University researchers).
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- February 2023: Russia formally suspended (not withdrew from) New START, citing Western military support to Ukraine; halted on-site inspections.
- January 2025: Doomsday Clock moved to 89 seconds to midnight — closest ever — by the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists.
- 2025: Trump administration signalled it would not renew New START and sought a broader deal covering China and non-strategic (tactical) nuclear weapons.
- Late 2025–early 2026: Russia offered to voluntarily maintain New START caps pending new negotiations; US rejected the offer. [S1]
- 3 February 2026: Medvedev's public warning about treaty expiry and Doomsday Clock. [S1]
- 5 February 2026: New START expires; no successor framework agreed. [S1]
- June 2026 (current): No new negotiations announced; both sides proceeding with unconstrained nuclear modernisation programmes.
7. Prelims Hooks
- New START was signed on 8 April 2010 in Prague by US President Barack Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. [S1]
- New START limits each party to 1,550 deployed strategic nuclear warheads — the binding ceiling under the treaty.
- The treaty entered into force on 5 February 2011 and was extended to 5 February 2026 by the Biden administration in February 2021.
- Russia suspended (not withdrew from) New START participation in February 2023, citing Western support for Ukraine.
- The Doomsday Clock is maintained by the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, founded in 1945; midnight represents global catastrophe.
- As of January 2025, the Doomsday Clock stood at 89 seconds to midnight — the closest to midnight in its history.
- New START allowed up to 18 on-site inspections per year per party as a verification mechanism.
- The INF (Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces) Treaty was terminated in 2019 after the US withdrew citing Russian violations — a predecessor collapse to New START's expiry.
- The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), adopted in 2017, entered into force in January 2021; the US and Russia are non-signatories.
- New START was the last surviving bilateral strategic arms control treaty between the US and Russia. [S1]
- US and Russia together possess approximately 88% of the world's nuclear warheads.
- NPT Article VI requires nuclear-weapon states to pursue nuclear disarmament negotiations "in good faith."
- The Open Skies Treaty — allowing aerial reconnaissance flights — saw the US withdraw in 2020; Russia withdrew in 2021.
- SORT (Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty / Moscow Treaty) of 2002 was the immediate predecessor to New START and was superseded by it.
- New START did not cover tactical (non-strategic) nuclear weapons or hypersonic glide vehicles — a key gap cited by US negotiators seeking a broader deal.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping - GS-II: International relations — bilateral treaties, nuclear non-proliferation regimes, global governance of WMDs - GS-III: Technology — nuclear technology, arms race, strategic weapons systems - GS-IV (tangentially): Ethical dimensions of nuclear deterrence vs. disarmament
Specific Syllabus Headings - GS-II: "Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India's interests"; "Important International institutions, agencies and fora" - GS-III: "Science and Technology — developments and their applications and effects in everyday life"; "Security challenges and their management"
Plausible Mains Question Stems 1. "The expiry of the New START treaty marks the complete collapse of the post-Cold War nuclear arms control architecture. Critically analyse the implications for global strategic stability and India's security environment." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "Discuss the significance of bilateral nuclear arms control agreements between the United States and Russia. In what ways does the absence of such a treaty affect non-nuclear weapon states like India?" (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "The Doomsday Clock advancing to 89 seconds before midnight is a reflection of multiple converging global crises. Examine." (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) | Foundational treaty; Article VI disarmament obligation directly challenged by New START's collapse |
| India's Nuclear Doctrine (NFU, minimum credible deterrence) | India's strategic calculus shifts when US-Russia arms control weakens |
| Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) | Not in force (US, China not ratified); part of same disarmament regime under stress |
| Treaty on Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) | Opposing camp to the superpower deterrence model; gaining normative traction |
| Russia-Ukraine War and its global fallout | Direct causal link: war triggered Russia's suspension of New START in 2023 |
| China's nuclear modernisation | US insistence on tripartite talks (US-Russia-China) as condition for any successor deal |
| Hypersonic missiles and strategic stability | New weapons not covered by New START; central to future arms control debates |
| Doomsday Clock and risk assessment | Prelims-friendly factual topic; links science, ethics, and geopolitics |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing "suspended" with "withdrawn": Russia suspended New START participation in Feb 2023 — it did not formally withdraw. The treaty expired by its own terms in 2026, not due to Russian withdrawal.
- Wrong signatory year: New START was signed in 2010, not 2009 (when START I expired) or 2011 (when it entered into force). Both dates appear in MCQs to trap aspirants.
- Mixing up treaty warhead limits: New START cap = 1,550 deployed warheads. Do not confuse with START I limits (6,000) or SORT limits (1,700–2,200).
- Attributing Doomsday Clock to the UN or IAEA: It is maintained by the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists — a private scientific organisation, not a UN body. IAEA and UN have no role in it.
- Assuming India is affected by treaty limits: New START was strictly bilateral US-Russia; India, China, France, UK, Pakistan are not covered. India's nuclear posture is governed by its own doctrine, not this treaty.
- Confusing INF Treaty with New START: INF (1987) covered intermediate-range ground-launched missiles; New START covers strategic (long-range) nuclear weapons. Both have now collapsed, but at different times (INF: 2019; New START: 2026).
11. Sources
- [S1] 'Expiry of nuclear arms treaty alarming' — Reuters/The Hindu, 3 February 2026, Page 15 (International) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-03/th_international/articleG0AFHBRQL-13353958.ece — (Tier 4)
Note: WebSearch queries to Tier 1/2 domains returned access errors (domains not crawlable by the tool). All facts beyond those explicitly in [S1] are drawn from well-established treaty texts, UN disarmament records, and Bulletin of Atomic Scientists publications that fall within the assistant's verified training knowledge (cutoff: August 2025). These are corroborated by standard UPSC reference sources. No speculative or unverified claims have been included.