Only presidents can push START through
Published: 06 July, 2009, 11:57
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (L) shakes hands with US President Barack Obama (AFP Photo / RIA Novosti / Kremlin Pool / Vladimir Rodionov)
(43.2Mb) embed videoTAGS: Meeting, Medvedev, Russia, Obama, Politics, USA
The absolute key to a successful negotiation is presidential intervention, insists Dr William Potter, the head of Non-proliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute of International Studies.
A new arms reduction treaty is to replace the current one, known as START, which ends in December.
RT: What are your hopes for this visit?
William Potter: OK, you asked ‘hopes’, not ‘expectations’. I have high hopes and somewhat more modest expectations. I think that the meeting is important because you have two relatively-new presidents meeting at a very important moment to discuss a vital issue, namely the START replacement treaty. I think that that treaty – or some kind of START replacement which has important verification provisions, is legally binding, and reduces further the number of nuclear weapons – is very much in the interests of both countries. And it is not that I'm optimistic. It derives from the fact that there is really a convergence of economic and strategic interests with respect to START replacement. It should be possible to conclude a START replacement treaty that satisfies both countries’ concerns. The devil, however, is in the details.
To learn more please watch the video of his interview.
Russia-US ties: roller-coaster ride through decadesThe much-anticipated visit to Moscow by President Obama is not the first time there’s been hope for a fresh start between Russia and the US. Medvedev-Obama |
“Obama could change juridical system in Russia”Electing a black American into office is at least as significant as the fall of the Berlin Wall, says Daniel Klein, an American international lawyer based in Russia. |











