New START’s expiry risks pushing the world to unchecked nuclear rivalry

I now have sufficient facts from Tier 2 (UN) and Tier 4 (article excerpt) to write the study note. Proceeding to compose it.


New START's Expiry: Risks of Unchecked Nuclear Rivalry

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1972 SALT I (Strategic Arms Limitation Talks) — first US-USSR nuclear cap agreement; establishment of the framework era
1991 START I signed (Bush–Gorbachev); 15-year treaty with deep cuts to strategic warheads
1993 START II signed; never entered into force (Russia withdrew after US left ABM Treaty)
2002 SORT / Moscow Treaty — reduced warheads to 1,700–2,200; no verification mechanism
2009 US–Russia "diplomatic reset" under Obama–Medvedev creates conditions for New START
Feb 5, 2011 New START enters into force; 10-year treaty with 5-year extension option [S2]
2021 Both sides agreed to a 5-year extension (to Feb 2026) — the maximum permissible [S1]
Feb 2023 Russia suspends its participation, citing US support for Ukraine [S4]
Feb 5, 2026 Treaty expires; no successor framework in place [S1][S2]

Predecessors: SALT I (1972), SALT II (1979, never ratified by US Senate), START I (1991), START II (1993), SORT (2002).


4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Scientific / Technological

Historical

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. New START entered into force on 5 February 2011 — exactly 15 years before its expiry on 5 February 2026. [S1][S2]
  2. The treaty capped deployed strategic warheads at 1,550 per side. [S1]
  3. Delivery vehicle cap: no more than 700 deployed ballistic missile launchers and nuclear-armed bombers; 800 total (deployed + non-deployed). [S1]
  4. New START allowed 18 on-site inspections per year — a key verification mechanism. [S5]
  5. Both parties were required to reach treaty limits within 7 years of the treaty's entry into force. [S5]
  6. Russia suspended (did not withdraw from) New START in February 2023, citing US "proxy war" via Ukraine. [S4]
  7. The treaty's extension in 2021 was for 5 years — the maximum permitted under the treaty's own terms. [S1]
  8. New START was the successor to START I (1991) and effectively replaced the 2002 SORT/Moscow Treaty. [S2]
  9. The Bilateral Consultative Commission (BCC) was the dispute-resolution body created under New START. [S5]
  10. Russia's Sarmat heavy ICBM and Avangard hypersonic glide vehicle were successfully argued by the US to fall under New START counting rules; Poseidon and Burevestnik were not. [S5]
  11. For the first time since 1972 (SALT I), there are now no legally binding limits on US-Russia nuclear arsenals. [S2]
  12. The UN Secretary-General warned that nuclear-use risk is the highest in decades following New START's expiry. [S3]
  13. NPT Article VI obligates nuclear-weapon states to pursue disarmament — New START was the primary operational expression of this obligation for the US and Russia. [S1]
  14. US withdrawal from the INF Treaty in 2019 preceded the collapse of New START, establishing a pattern of arms-control architecture erosion.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-II (International Relations — bilateral/multilateral groupings, effect on India's interests) and GS-III (Security — nuclear weapons, arms control)

Syllabus headings: - GS-II: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India's interests; Important international institutions, their mandate, and functioning - GS-III: Security challenges and their management; nuclear strategy

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The expiry of the New START Treaty in 2026 marks a qualitative shift in global nuclear order. Critically examine the implications for international security architecture and India's strategic interests." (GS-II/III, 15 marks) 2. "Successive withdrawals from arms-control agreements — ABM Treaty (2002), INF Treaty (2019), and New START (2026) — suggest a structural breakdown in nuclear governance. What institutional reforms are needed to prevent an unchecked nuclear arms race?" (GS-II, 15 marks) 3. "How do novel strategic systems like hypersonic glide vehicles and nuclear-powered cruise missiles challenge the verification frameworks designed for Cold War-era nuclear arsenals?" (GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) New START was the primary Article VI implementation mechanism; its collapse undermines NPT credibility
Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) Russia revoked CTBT ratification in 2024 — parallel rollback of nuclear restraint norms
INF Treaty & its collapse (2019) Immediate predecessor in arms-control erosion; same US-Russia dynamic
India's Nuclear Doctrine (No First Use, credible minimum deterrence) India's doctrine is contextualised against global nuclear norms; escalation risk affects India
Hypersonic Missiles — global race Sarmat, Avangard, US/Chinese programmes — the new frontier of strategic competition New START could not address
UN Disarmament Commission & NPT Review Conferences Multilateral forum where India participates; post-2026 negotiations will play out here
Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW, 2017) Contrasting approach — India has not signed; useful for comparison question
Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) & deterrence theory Conceptual anchor for all arms-control analysis

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing suspension with withdrawal: Russia suspended (not withdrew from) New START in Feb 2023. The treaty formally expired on 5 Feb 2026 — these are two different legal events on different dates.
  2. Wrong warhead number: The cap was 1,550 deployed strategic warheads — not 1,500 or 2,200 (the latter was the SORT/Moscow Treaty limit).
  3. Mixing up START I and New START: START I was signed in 1991 and expired in 2009; New START entered force in 2011. They are separate treaties. There was no "START II in force" — START II was signed but never entered into force.
  4. Thinking New START covered all Russian novel systems: Sarmat and Avangard were counted under New START, but Poseidon (underwater drone) and Burevestnik (nuclear cruise missile) were NOT fully addressed — a common conflation.
  5. Overstating India's direct treaty role: India is not a party to New START (bilateral US-Russia); India's relevance is strategic/normative (NPT, CTBT context), not as a signatory.

11. Sources

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    A named Indian Navy anti-piracy operation with specific ship (INS Trikand — identified as a stealth frigate), vessel flag state (St. Vincent and the Grenadines), and location (Gulf of Aden) offers testable facts. India's maritime security operations are plausible Prelims hooks but appear occasionally, not frequently.

  • Union Minister Shri Shivraj Singh Chouhan launches nationwide ‘Viksit Bharat – G-Ram G Act’ from Andhra Pradesh with Chief Minister Shri Chandrababu Naidu and Deputy Chief Minister Shri Pawan Kalyan

    A newly named nationwide scheme launched by the Rural Development ministry that explicitly positions itself as moving 'beyond MGNREGA' is potentially testable. However, the excerpt lacks concrete numbers or statutory grounding, keeping it at 3 rather than 4.

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    MANAS is a named government digital initiative (national narcotics helpline) with a specific mandate under Nasha Mukt Bharat. Named government portals/helplines with specific functions are tested in Prelims, though this release is a backgrounder without new launch data.

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    The VB-G RAM G Act (likely a renamed/revised MGNREGA or rural employment guarantee framework) came into force across India from July 1, 2026. Key facts: national launch in Tirupati on July 2; revised wage rates notified with no daily wage below ₹300; national average wage increased by over 10%. A new central Act coming into force with specific wage figures is high-priority Prelims material.

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    DGCA approved India's first Private Point-in-Space (PinS) Instrument Approach Procedure for helicopter operations, implemented at Undavalli Heliport (developed by AAI). This is a named first in Indian aviation with a specific location and implementing body — classic Prelims material for science/tech and aviation sections.

  • 11 Years of Digital India: Better Healthcare & Digital Markets Making Lives Easier

    This release contains high-quality testable data: Greece is named as the 10th country to adopt UPI; every second real-time digital transaction globally is processed via India's UPI; 13 lakh Anganwadi workers connected via Poshan Tracker covering 9 crore beneficiaries. Multiple concrete facts that are prime Prelims material.

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    India has a 35.4% global market share in sustainable ship recycling. Three Indian ship-recycling yards are ready for EU recognition. India committed $8 billion to strengthen shipbuilding and recycling, with a target of recycling 16,000 ships. These are specific, verifiable figures in a sector where India leads globally — strong Prelims material on maritime/shipping sector.

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