START I treaty
Published: 08 November, 2009, 14:05
Edited: 09 April, 2010, 22:27
The full text of the START I treaty, signed by the United States and the Soviet Union on July 31, 1991.
breakingnews
30.12.2009, 01:09
13 comments
The change Barack Obama proposed for the ABM systems in Europe is much more tailored for the Middle Eastern missile threat, says policy analyst Ivan Oelrich, the president of the American Federation of Scientists.
13.06.2009, 05:31
9 comments
The Russian military plans to introduce a up-to-date analogue of the most powerful ballistic missile of all time - the RS-20, or SS-18 Satan by NATO classification.
22.12.2009, 21:31
2 comments
A new strategic arms reduction treaty between the United States and Russia will be a radically different agreement to the previous one, according to Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.
12.06.2009, 00:45
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Russia will play no part in helping the US build military systems aimed at Russia. Nor will it let US missile defense elements be put on its soil, the Russian Foreign Ministry has announced.
08.04.2010, 22:32
3 comments
The signing of START has created a highly positive momentum in the international community, Czech foreign minister Jan Kohout told RT.
12.08.2010, 12:36
12 comments
US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton has urged the Senate to ratify the new American-Russian nuclear arms reduction treaty, START. No access to monitor the Russian nuclear arsenal puts US security at risk, she said.
05.05.2009, 16:15
10 comments
Washington is prepared to cut strategic nuclear warheads and their means of delivery under the new strategic arms reduction treaty – but not the nuclear warheads kept in storage, a US State Department official says.
27.09.2009, 15:40
3 comments
Iranian state television is reporting on Sunday that Iran has test-fired short-range missiles as part of military exercises.
08.04.2010, 22:05
1 comment
The US should take Russia’s concerns over missile defense seriously if it wants to protect its own security interests in relation to Iran, says Tony Lloyd, chair of the Global Security and Non-proliferation.
07.10.2010, 23:57
5 comments
The newest Russian intercontinental nuclear missile Bulava has successfully been tested on Thursday. All warheads hit their targets on Kamchatka Peninsula.
Published: 08 November, 2009, 14:05
Edited: 09 April, 2010, 22:27
The full text of the START I treaty, signed by the United States and the Soviet Union on July 31, 1991.