Drafting and signature The New START treaty was the successor to the START I. The
START II was signed but not ratified and the
START III negotiating process was not successful. The drafting of the treaty commenced in April 2009 immediately after the meeting between the presidents of the two countries involved,
Barack Obama and
Dmitry Medvedev, in
London. Preliminary talks had already been held in
Rome on 27 April, although it was initially planned to have them scheduled in the middle of May. Prolonged talks were conducted by U.S. and Russian delegations, led on the American side by
U.S. State Department Assistant Secretary
Rose Gottemoeller. The Russian delegation was headed by
Anatoly Antonov, director of security and disarmament at the Russian
Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Talks were held on: • First round: 19–20 May 2009, Moscow • Second round: 1–3 June 2009,
Geneva, Switzerland • Third round: 22–24 June 2009, Geneva • Sixth round: 21–28 September 2009, Geneva • Seventh round: 19–30 October 2009, Geneva • Eighth round: 9 November 2009, Geneva On the morning of 6 July 2009, the agreement on the text of the "Joint Understanding on Further Reduction and Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms" was announced, which Medvedev and Obama signed during the US presidential visit to
Moscow which began on the same day. The document listed the intention of both parties to reduce the number of nuclear warheads to 1,500–1,675 units, as well as their delivery weapons to 500–1,100 units. Presidents Obama and Medvedev announced on 26 March 2010 that they had reached an agreement, and they signed the treaty on 8 April 2010 in
Prague. Senator
John Kerry and Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton expressed optimism that a deal on ratification was near. Republicans in the Senate generally deferred to
Jon Kyl (R-AZ), a leading conservative on defense issues, who sought a strong commitment to modernize U.S. nuclear forces and questioned whether there was time for ratification during the
lame-duck session, calling for an opening of the negotiation record before a vote was held. Senator
Ben Nelson (D-NE) joined Kyl in expressing skepticism over the timing of ratification; Senator
Kit Bond (R-MO) expressed opposition. Obama made New START ratification a priority during the 2010 post-election
lame duck session of Congress, and Senators
John Kerry (D-MA) and
Richard Lugar (R-IN), the Democratic Chairman and senior Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, were leading supporters of the treaty. On 22 December 2010, the
U.S. Senate gave its advice and consent to ratification of the treaty by a vote of 71 to 26 on the resolution of ratification. Thirteen Republican senators, all 56 Democratic senators, and both Independent senators voted for the treaty. Obama signed documents completing the U.S. ratification process on 2 February 2011.
Russia Following ratification by the U.S. Senate, the formal first reading of the treaty was held on 24 December, and the State Duma voted its approval. The State Duma approved a second reading of the treaty on 14 January 2011. It was then approved unanimously by the
Federation Council on the next day. On 28 January 2011, Medvedev signed the ratification resolution passed by the Federal Assembly, completing the Russian ratification process. •
No later than (NLT) 5 days after EIF :
Exchange Inspection Airplane Information: :Lists of the types of airplanes intended to transport inspectors to points of entry will be exchanged. •
NLT 25 days after EIF :
Exchange Lists of Inspectors and Aircrew Members: :Lists of initial inspectors and aircrew will be exchanged. •
NLT 45 days after EIF :
Exchange databases: :Databases will provide information on the numbers, locations, and technical characteristics of weapon systems and facilities that are covered under the Treaty. •
NLT 60 days after EIF :
Exhibition: Strategic Offensive Arms: :If a type, variant, or version of a strategic offensive arm (SOA) that was not exhibited in connection with the START Treaty is declared, then the SOA's features and technical characteristics must be demonstrated and confirmed. •
60 days after EIF :
Right to Conduct Inspections Begins: :Parties may begin inspections, 18 on-site inspections per year are provided in the Treaty. Each Party is allowed ten Type One Inspections and eight Type Two Inspections. ::#Type One Inspections focus on deployed and non-deployed SOAs sites. Activities include confirming accuracy of data on SOAs, the number of warheads located on designated deployed ICBMs and SLBMs, and the number of nuclear armaments to be on designated deployed heavy bombers. ::#Type Two Inspections focus on sites with non-deployed SOAs. They can involve confirmation of the conversion/elimination of SOAs, and confirming the elimination of facilities. •
NLT 120 days after EIF :
Exhibition: Heavy Bombers at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base: :The United States will conduct a one-time exhibition of each type of environmentally-sealed deployed heavy bombers which are located at the storage facility at
Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in
Arizona. •
NLT 180 days after EIF :
Initial Demonstration of Telemetry Playback Equipment: :Parties will conduct an initial demonstration of recording media and playback equipment for telemetric information, information that originates on a missile during its initial motion and flight. •
NLT 225 days after EIF :
Exchange Updated Databases: :Parties will exchange updated databases and every six months thereafter for the duration of the Treaty. •
NLT 1 year after EIF :
Exhibition: B-1B Heavy Bomber: :The United States will conduct a one-time exhibition of a
B-1B heavy bomber equipped with non-nuclear armaments to demonstrate it no longer can employ nuclear armaments. •
NLT 3 years after EIF :
Exhibition: Previously Converted Missile Launchers: :The United States will conduct a one-time exhibition of its four SSGNs, which are equipped with cruise missile launchers and were converted from nuclear ballistic submarines, to confirm that SSGNs cannot launch SLBMs. The United States will also hold an exhibition of the five converted ICBM launcher silos at
Vandenberg Air Force Base in
California, now used as missile defense interceptor launchers. This will confirm that the converted launchers are no longer able to launch ICBMs and determine the features to distinguish converted silo launchers from unconverted ones. •
NLT 7 years after EIF :
Meet Central Treaty Limits: :Parties are required to meet the limits laid out in the Treaty for deployed strategic warheads, and deployed and non-deployed strategic delivery vehicles and launchers. •
10 years after EIF :
Treaty Expires: :Unless Parties agree with an extension for up to five years. ==U.S. public debate==