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Russia, U.S. cut arsenals to comply with START-1
December 5, 2001

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia and the United States said Wednesday they had slashed their strategic weapons stockpile down to the levels required by the START-1 treaty, signed by the United States and the Soviet Union in 1991.

A Russian Foreign Ministry statement said the number of vehicles had been reduced to 1,136 and the number of nuclear warheads to 5,518, well below the ceilings of 1,600 and 6,000 established by the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty.

"The United States and Russia each now maintain fewer than the treaty's mandated limits of 1,600 deployed strategic delivery vehicles and 6,000 accountable warheads," U.S. State Department spokesman Philip Reeker added in Washington.

"We're marking an important milestone today in dismantling the legacy of the Cold War. The treaty's final ceilings came into effect today and they have been met," he told a briefing.

The treaty was signed by former President George Bush, father of the current U.S. president, and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.

The Russian statement said: "The full and timely fulfillment of the provisions in the START-1 treaty establishes good conditions for working out an agreement on further radical reductions of strategic offensive weapons."

The United States added in a written statement: "As we cooperate in building this new strategic relationship and as we move beyond the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) treaty, we will make further reductions in strategic nuclear forces."

Russian President Vladimir Putin and President Bush announced substantial cuts in nuclear arms stockpiles during Putin's visit to the United States last month, bringing them to the lowest level since the 1950s.

At the summit, Bush announced plans to cut U.S. strategic offensive weapons from 7,000 warheads to between 1,700 and 2,200. Russia has said it is ready to cut the number of its strategic warheads to about 1,500.

However, Russia has complained that Washington has so far failed to make clear whether the United States intends to destroy nuclear warheads or simply remove them from their delivery vehicle and store them.

The two countries have also failed to agree on the future of the 1972 ABM treaty, which the United States sees as a relic of the Cold War and an obstacle to the missile defense tests it wants to carry out.

Russia still sees the treaty, which bans large-scale missile defenses, as a cornerstone of strategic stability.

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