Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty Договор о сокращении стратегических наступательных вооружений | |
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Type | Strategic nuclear disarmament |
Drafted | 29 June 1982 – June 1991 |
Signed | 31 July 1991 |
Location | Moscow, Soviet Union |
Effective | 5 December 1994 |
Condition | Ratification of both parties |
Expiration | 5 December 2009 |
Signatories | |
Parties | |
Languages | Russian, English |
START I (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) was a bilateral treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union on the reduction and the limitation of strategic offensive arms. The treaty was signed on 31 July 1991 and entered into force on 5 December 1994.[1] The treaty barred its signatories from deploying more than 6,000 nuclear warheads and a total of 1,600 intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) and bombers.
START negotiated the largest and most complex arms control treaty in history, and its final implementation in late 2001 resulted in the removal of about 80% of all strategic nuclear weapons then in existence. Proposed by US President Ronald Reagan, it was renamed START I after negotiations began on START II.
The treaty expired on 5 December 2009.
On 8 April 2010, the replacement New START Treaty was signed in Prague by US President Barack Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. Following its ratification by the US Senate and the Federal Assembly of Russia, the treaty went into force on 5 February 2011, extending deep reductions of American and Soviet or Russian strategic nuclear weapons through February 2026.[2][3]