The treaty expires on February 5, 2026

The treaty expires on February 5, 2026

On September 22, 2025, Russian President Vladimir Putin affirmed Russia's readiness to abide by the treaty’s quantitative limits for an additional year beyond its scheduled…

Dmitry Peskov stressed that it would negatively affect "global security and strategic stability"

The New START treaty, which limits strategic nuclear weapons, is to expire this week.

Top stories from the Russian press on Wednesday, February 4th

The New START Treaty was signed by the Russian and US presidents, Dmitry Medvedev and Barack Obama, in Prague on April 8, 2010

EDITORIAL. The expiration of the New START nuclear treaty between Russia and the US on Thursday signals the start of a worrying new era of nuclear deterrence, one that could lead…

The New Start treaty has limited the number of deployed strategic nuclear warheads for both countries.

The expiry of New START jeopardizes global nuclear stability, leaving the U.S. and Russia without binding arms control measures.

The expired agreement between Moscow and Washington came into effect in 2011

Russia plans to act cautiously and analyze the US steps, the Foreign Ministry says

Dmitry Peskov noted that Moscow views the expiration of the treaty negatively

Dmitry Peskov emphasized that Moscow would be guided primarily by its own national interests

WASHINGTON: The United States and Russia are closing in on a deal to observe the New START nuclear arms control treaty beyond its expiration on Thursday, Axios reported, citing…

The expiration of the New START Treaty on Thursday leaves no caps on the two largest atomic arsenals for the first time in over 50 years.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt noted that modernized treaty can last long into the future