The treaty was submitted for ratification in December 2002. However, the passage of the agreement took about a year because the bill had to be resubmitted after its rejection in committee due to concerns about funding for nuclear forces and about cutting systems that had not yet reached the end of their service lives. Further, the deputies were concerned about the U.S.'s ability to upload reserve nuclear warheads for a first strike (upload potential). The ratification was also problematic because the chairman of the foreign affairs committee of the Duma,
Dmitry Rogozin, disagreed with his Federation Council counterpart
Margelov. Deputy Rogozin argued that the Moscow Treaty should be delayed because of the
2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq. In the end, however, this delay never happened. The final vote was similar to
START II with nearly a third of the deputies voting against. The ratification resolution mandated presidential reporting on nuclear force developments and noted that key legislators should be included in interagency planning. ==Implementation==