START II
START II, formally the Treaty between the United States of America and the Russian Federation on Further Reduction and Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms, was a bilateral arms control agreement signed on January 3, 1993, by U.S. President George H. W. Bush and Russian President Boris Yeltsin, intended to build upon the earlier START I treaty by mandating deeper reductions in deployed strategic nuclear warheads to between 3,000 and 3,500 per side.[1][2] The treaty prohibited multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) on intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), required the elimination of all heavy ICBMs and their silos, and imposed limits on strategic bombers and submarine-launched ballistic missiles, with provisions for verification through on-site inspections and data exchanges.[3][4] The U.S. Senate ratified START II on January 26, 1996, but the treaty never entered into force due to unresolved linkages with the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty and subsequent geopolitical shifts.[5] Russia conditionally ratified it in April 2000, tying its implementation to U.S. adherence to the ABM Treaty, which the United States withdrew from in June 2002 to pursue missile defense systems, prompting Russia to declare itself no longer bound by START II obligations later that year.[6][7] This failure highlighted tensions over strategic stability, with Russia viewing U.S. missile defenses as undermining mutual deterrence, while the U.S. prioritized flexibility against emerging threats beyond Russia.[8] Although START II achieved no formal reductions, its negotiations influenced subsequent arms control efforts, including the 2002 Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT, or Moscow Treaty), which set lower warhead ceilings without detailed verification, and later New START in 2010.[9] The treaty's emphasis on de-MIRVing and heavy bomber counting rules reflected first-principles concerns about stabilizing nuclear postures by reducing first-strike incentives, yet its collapse underscored the challenges of linking offensive arms limits to defensive capabilities in a post-Cold War environment marked by diverging security priorities.[10]Historical Background
Origins in START I
The Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty I (START I) laid the groundwork for START II by achieving initial reductions in strategic nuclear arsenals while leaving key destabilizing elements intact, prompting further negotiations. Signed on July 31, 1991, in Moscow by U.S. President George H. W. Bush and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, START I limited each party to 1,600 deployed intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), and heavy bombers, as well as 6,000 accountable warheads in total, with sub-ceilings of 4,900 warheads on ICBMs and SLBMs combined, no more than 1,540 on heavy ICBMs, and 1,100 on mobile ICBMs.[11][12] These provisions represented roughly a one-third cut from earlier levels under the unratified SALT II framework, alongside limits on ballistic missile throw-weight to 3,600 metric tons per side.[11][12] The treaty entered into force on December 5, 1994, following the 1991 Soviet dissolution and a 1992 Lisbon Protocol designating Russia as the legal successor state, with Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine agreeing to adhere to its terms or eliminate transferred weapons.[11] Despite these advances, START I did not prohibit multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) on land-based ICBMs, allowing missiles like the U.S. Minuteman III and Soviet SS-18 to deploy up to 10 warheads each under treaty sublimits.[11] This retention preserved large-scale counterforce capabilities, where a single MIRVed ICBM could threaten multiple enemy silos, heightening incentives for preemptive strikes in crises and undermining the stability of mutual assured destruction by complicating second-strike assurances.[10] U.S. and Soviet strategists viewed MIRVed ICBMs as particularly vulnerable to such dynamics due to their fixed, time-urgent launch profiles, unlike more survivable sea-based or bomber forces, thus necessitating deeper cuts to reduce first-strike temptations and proliferation risks in the post-Cold War environment.[13] START II negotiations thus originated directly from START I's framework, commencing in late 1991 and early 1992 amid U.S.-Russian cooperation under Presidents Bush and Boris Yeltsin, with the explicit goal of building on START I's verifiable reductions by eliminating all MIRVed ICBMs and slashing accountable warheads to 3,000–3,500 per side in two phases post-START I implementation.[14][12] This progression reflected empirical assessments of nuclear parity's sufficiency for deterrence, prioritizing the dismantlement of heavy, MIRV-laden systems like Russia's SS-18s to foster a more survivable, submarine-centric posture for both nations.[7] The U.S. State Department described START II as extending START I's "equitable and effectively verifiable" model to address remaining asymmetries and enhance global security through accelerated decommissioning.[14]Post-Cold War Strategic Context
The dissolution of the Soviet Union on December 25, 1991, marked the end of the bipolar Cold War rivalry and profoundly altered the strategic landscape for U.S.-Soviet nuclear arms control, with Russia assuming legal continuity for the Soviet Union's obligations under existing treaties like START I, signed on July 31, 1991.[15][12] START I mandated reductions to no more than 6,000 accountable warheads and 1,600 delivery vehicles by 1999, but the Soviet collapse dispersed nuclear assets across Belarus, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, and Russia, raising immediate risks of proliferation and command-and-control instability.[15][12] The May 1992 Lisbon Protocol addressed this by committing the non-Russian states to transfer weapons to Russia and accede to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty as non-nuclear states, supported by U.S. funding under the Cooperative Threat Reduction program, thereby consolidating arsenals under Russian control and enabling further bilateral reductions.[15] Russia's post-Soviet economic turmoil, characterized by hyperinflation exceeding 2,500% in 1992 and severe military budget constraints, rendered maintenance of the inherited Soviet arsenal—peaking at over 10,000 strategic warheads—unsustainable, prompting Yeltsin to prioritize verifiable cuts to alleviate fiscal burdens while preserving a credible deterrent.[7][12] For the United States, the diminished Soviet threat perception post-1991 shifted focus from sheer parity to enhancing stability by targeting destabilizing systems like multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) on intercontinental ballistic missiles, which incentivized preemptive strikes; START II negotiations, initiated under Presidents Bush and Yeltsin, aimed to halve START I limits to 3,000–3,500 warheads, de-MIRV fixed ICBMs, and promote a survivable, submarine- and bomber-heavy posture less prone to crisis escalation.[7][12] This context reflected a transitional era of U.S.-Russian cooperation amid asymmetry: America's conventional superiority and unipolar dominance contrasted with Russia's nuclear reliance as a great-power equalizer, yet both sides recognized mutual benefits in codifying reductions to prevent future arms races or accidental launches, with principles agreed at the June 1992 Washington summit paving the way for the treaty's signing on January 3, 1993.[7][15] Economic imperatives in Russia and U.S. strategic logic converged to view START II as a mechanism for predictability, though underlying asymmetries foreshadowed ratification challenges.[7][12]Role of MIRVs in Nuclear Strategy
Multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) enable a single intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) to deliver multiple nuclear warheads to distinct targets, multiplying the destructive potential and complicating ballistic missile defenses.[16] In nuclear strategy, MIRVs facilitate counterforce targeting—aimed at enemy military assets like silos and command centers—rather than purely countervalue strikes on population centers, thereby heightening incentives for preemptive attacks.[17] Land-based MIRVed ICBMs are particularly destabilizing because an aggressor could theoretically neutralize a large portion of an opponent's fixed silos with fewer launchers, as each MIRVed missile might carry 6 to 10 warheads, creating a "use it or lose it" dynamic that erodes mutual assured destruction (MAD).[10] This asymmetry prompted U.S. concerns over Soviet heavy ICBMs like the SS-18, capable of deploying up to 10 warheads, which amplified first-strike advantages.[10] START II addressed MIRV-induced instability by prohibiting MIRVs on all ICBMs, requiring the conversion or elimination of MIRVed ICBM launchers and limiting deployed warheads on such systems to promote single-warhead configurations.[7] This de-MIRVing measure aimed to enhance strategic stability at reduced force levels—capping total deployed strategic warheads at 3,000 to 3,500—by making ICBM forces less vulnerable to counterforce decapitation, as single-warhead missiles would demand a one-to-one exchange for targeting, preserving retaliatory capabilities.[16][14] The treaty permitted MIRVs on submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) but with sub-limits, such as no more than 2,160 warheads on deployed SLBMs, reflecting the greater survivability of sea-based systems that reduces first-strike temptations.[14] U.S. proponents argued this structure would lower escalation risks and arms race pressures, though Russian critics viewed the ICBM-specific ban as disadvantaging their land-heavy arsenal, where MIRVed systems comprised a larger share of forces.[6][10] By eliminating MIRVed ICBMs, START II sought to shift nuclear postures toward more survivable, less provocative deployments, aligning with post-Cold War goals of crisis stability where neither side perceives advantage in striking first.[16] This approach contrasted with earlier treaties like START I, which counted but did not ban MIRVs, allowing continued proliferation; START II's outright prohibition on land-based MIRVs marked a deliberate step to mitigate the "Hydra-headed" multiplication of threats from one launcher.[7][17] Implementation would have required Russia to dismantle systems like the SS-18 and SS-19, potentially necessitating costly single-warhead replacements, underscoring the treaty's emphasis on verifiable reductions over mere numerical cuts.[10]Negotiations and Agreement
Timeline and Key Participants
Negotiations for START II built directly on the framework established by START I, signed in July 1991, with formal talks accelerating in the post-Soviet context to achieve deeper reductions in strategic nuclear forces.[18] The process began in earnest on June 17, 1992, during a summit in Washington, D.C., where U.S. President George H.W. Bush and Russian President Boris Yeltsin signed a Joint Understanding committing to eliminate all MIRVed ICBMs and reduce deployed strategic warheads to no more than 3,000–3,500 by the year 2003.[19] [7] Intensive bilateral discussions followed over the subsequent months, addressing technical details on delivery systems, verification, and implementation timelines, culminating in the treaty's completion without major public impasses reported during the drafting phase.[20] On January 3, 1993, Bush and Yeltsin formally signed START II in Moscow's Vladimir Hall at the Kremlin, marking the agreement's entry into the ratification process.[20] [2] The primary architects were Bush and Yeltsin, whose personal summits drove the political will for the accord; Bush, in his final weeks in office, prioritized it as a capstone to Cold War-era arms control, while Yeltsin sought to demonstrate Russia's commitment to denuclearization amid economic turmoil.[10] U.S. negotiators, led by figures from the State Department and Joint Chiefs, coordinated with Russian counterparts from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Defense Ministry, though specific delegation heads like U.S. Ambassador Richard Burt emphasized de-MIRVing as a core U.S. objective.[18] No independent verification of lower-level participant roles beyond presidential oversight is detailed in primary diplomatic records, underscoring the top-down nature of the agreement.[21]Major Bargaining Points
Negotiations for START II, conducted primarily in 1992, were driven by complementary strategic interests: the United States sought the elimination of multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle (MIRVed) intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) to enhance crisis stability by reducing incentives for preemptive strikes, given Russia's heavy reliance on such systems for the majority of its strategic warheads.[22] Russia, facing economic constraints post-Soviet dissolution, prioritized deeper overall reductions in deployed strategic warheads beyond START I levels to manage maintenance costs while preserving a viable land-based deterrent.[22] A central U.S. demand was the complete ban on MIRVed ICBMs by January 1, 2003, targeting Russia's SS-18 and SS-19 missiles, which carried up to 10 warheads each and posed a perceived first-strike threat to U.S. fixed silos; Russia initially resisted due to the high costs of transitioning to single-warhead systems like the SS-25 Topol, estimated at three times the expense of adhering to START I limits.[10] As a compromise, the treaty permitted Russia to download 105 SS-19 ICBMs from six to one warhead without destroying reentry vehicle platforms, allowing their retention as single-warhead missiles deployable only in original silos until eventual elimination.[3] [22] The treaty imposed phased warhead limits—4,250 by December 5, 2001, and 3,000–3,500 by January 1, 2003—reflecting Russian advocacy for sub-START I ceilings, with sublimits including no more than 1,750 warheads on submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) in the final phase to address Russian concerns over U.S. sea-based advantages and potential rapid uploading of Trident II missiles.[22] The U.S. conceded on these SLBM constraints and relaxed downloading rules for its own Minuteman III ICBMs, while Russia agreed to eliminate all heavy ICBMs (SS-18s) and convert up to 90 SS-18 silos for single-warhead use only, under strict verification like 2.5-meter canister limits and on-site inspections.[3] [22] Heavy bomber warhead attribution proved contentious, resolved by counting based on maximum potential load but with a Memorandum of Understanding allowing actual equipped numbers (e.g., 100 for B-52s), alongside protocols for exhibitions and reorientation to conventional roles to prevent treaty circumvention.[3] Russian negotiators expressed unease over U.S. reconstitution potential via SLBMs—up to 2,500 warheads—versus Russia's limited 500-warhead upload capacity on downloaded SS-19s, advocating future irreversibility measures like warhead dismantlement, though these were deferred.[10] No direct financial aid was linked to implementation, leaving Russia to bear elimination costs for systems like SS-18s relocated from Kazakhstan.[22]Signing and Initial Reactions
The START II Treaty was signed on January 3, 1993, in Moscow by United States President George H. W. Bush and Russian President Boris Yeltsin, during a summit meeting that concluded negotiations begun under the prior administration.[7][3] The ceremony took place in Vladimir Hall of the Kremlin, symbolizing the post-Cold War commitment to deep reductions in strategic nuclear forces.[23] Both leaders expressed strong optimism about the treaty's implications for global security, with Bush describing it as a "monumental step" toward eliminating the most dangerous nuclear weapons and Yeltsin hailing it as a historic agreement that would reduce deployed strategic warheads by about two-thirds from Cold War levels.[24][23] In the United States, the signing was broadly welcomed by policymakers and arms control advocates as a continuation of the START I framework, with Bush noting that President-elect Bill Clinton had indicated support for steady progress in U.S.-Russian relations on nuclear issues.[23] In Russia, Yeltsin portrayed the treaty as a victory for cooperative security, submitting it to the Supreme Soviet for ratification on February 9, 1993; however, early signs of domestic division emerged, as Vice President Alexander Rutskoi displayed visible skepticism during the ceremony amid broader political infighting over economic and foreign policy.[10][25] Despite these tensions, the agreement was initially framed by both sides as a pragmatic response to the reduced strategic threats following the Soviet Union's dissolution, prioritizing verifiable cuts to multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) on intercontinental ballistic missiles.[26]Core Provisions
Limits on Warheads and Delivery Systems
START II imposed phased reductions on deployed strategic nuclear warheads, targeting intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), and heavy bombers. Each party agreed to limit total accountable warheads on these systems to no more than 3,800–4,250 by December 31, 2004, with a further reduction to 3,000–3,500 by December 31, 2007.[7] These ceilings built upon START I's 6,000-warhead limit, aiming for deeper cuts while preserving deterrence capabilities.[7][8] Sub-limits refined the distribution across delivery systems to address asymmetries, particularly Russia's reliance on land-based heavy ICBMs. Warheads on SLBMs were capped at 2,160 by 2004 and 1,700–1,750 by 2007; those on MIRVed ICBMs at 1,200 by 2004; and those on heavy ICBMs at 650 by 2004, with complete elimination of heavy ICBMs required by 2007.[7][8] Heavy bombers were attributed warheads based on actual equipment rather than maximum capacity, allowing flexibility for conventional reorientation of up to 100 bombers if they were never configured for nuclear armaments.[7] Delivery systems faced indirect constraints through warhead attributions and deactivation requirements. Excess strategic offensive arms beyond the limits were to be deactivated by December 31, 2003, via warhead removal or other verifiable means, ensuring reductions in operational ICBMs, SLBMs, and bombers.[7] Unlike START I's explicit cap on 1,600 delivery vehicles, START II emphasized warhead-focused accountability, with de-MIRVing provisions (detailed separately) compelling shifts toward single-warhead ICBMs to comply with sub-limits.[7][27]| Category | Intermediate Limit (by Dec. 31, 2004) | Final Limit (by Dec. 31, 2007) |
|---|---|---|
| Total Warheads (ICBMs, SLBMs, Heavy Bombers) | 3,800–4,250 | 3,000–3,500 |
| SLBM Warheads | ≤2,160 | ≤1,700–1,750 |
| MIRVed ICBM Warheads | ≤1,200 | N/A (MIRVs banned) |
| Heavy ICBM Warheads | ≤650 | 0 (heavy ICBMs eliminated) |
Ban on MIRVed ICBMs and Related Measures
The START II Treaty explicitly prohibited the deployment of intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) equipped with multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs), mandating that all deployed ICBMs carry no more than a single warhead.[16][7] This provision required both parties to eliminate or convert existing MIRVed ICBMs, such as Russia's SS-18 and SS-19 systems, through destruction of the missiles, launch canisters, and associated infrastructure, or by removing the post-boost vehicles enabling multiple warhead delivery.[14][28] The ban applied strictly to land-based ICBMs, preserving MIRV capabilities on submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) but capping SLBM-deployed warheads at 1,700 to 1,750.[5][7] A key sublimit targeted heavy ICBMs—defined as those with a throw-weight exceeding 5,500 kilograms—restricting deployed heavy ICBM warheads to no more than 650, which, under the single-warhead rule, equated to 650 missiles.[14][3] Heavy ICBM launchers were further capped at 65 for Russia during the initial reduction phase under START I integration, with full elimination of MIRV configurations by January 1, 2003 (later extended to 2007 via protocol).[3][28] Production of new heavy ICBMs was banned except as one-for-one replacements for existing systems, and all eliminated heavy ICBM silos required destruction to prevent reuse.[14][28] Related measures included a prohibition on "downloading," which barred reducing warheads below the maximum MIRV capacity on retained MIRV-capable ICBM or heavy ICBM systems without full elimination, to prevent concealment of reloadable warheads and ensure verifiable compliance.[8][29] Verification enhancements specified additional on-site inspections for heavy ICBM eliminations, including checks on missile stages, propulsion systems, and canister destruction, building on START I protocols.[28] These steps aimed to dismantle the most prompt and accurate components of strategic forces, though implementation favored U.S. reliance on SLBMs and bombers over Russia's land-based arsenal.[30][16]Verification Mechanisms
The verification regime for START II primarily incorporated the comprehensive mechanisms from the START I Treaty, as stipulated in Article V, which mandated that the provisions of START I—including on-site inspections, data exchanges, notifications of missile launches and facility changes, and the use of national technical means such as satellite reconnaissance—would apply to START II implementation, except where the treaty specified otherwise.[3][31] This approach ensured continuity in monitoring strategic offensive arms reductions, with START I allowing up to 12 short-notice on-site inspections annually to verify declared data on deployed warheads, launchers, and bombers, alongside telemetry data sharing from ICBM and SLBM tests to confirm compliance with limits.[3] To address START II's unique prohibitions, such as the ban on MIRVed ICBMs and requirements for eliminating heavy ICBMs like the SS-18, the treaty augmented the START I regime with targeted measures. These included additional on-site inspections to observe and verify the physical elimination of heavy ICBMs and their launch canisters, as well as the conversion of silos—such as pouring concrete to a depth of at least 5 meters and installing restrictive rings with a diameter not exceeding 2.9 meters to prevent reuse for MIRVed missiles—allowing inspection teams of up to 10 personnel to measure and document these processes.[3][28] Further enhancements involved protocols for heavy bomber verification, requiring exhibitions of B-52 and B-1B bombers within 180 days of the treaty's entry into force to demonstrate their reconfiguration for non-nuclear roles, followed by inspections to confirm arming configurations and ensure no nuclear capability remained.[3] Article V also established a Joint Compliance and Inspection Commission to oversee implementation, resolve disputes, and refine procedures as needed, building on START I's Bilateral Implementation Commission.[31] These provisions aimed to provide high-confidence assurance against cheating, particularly for irreversible steps like silo modifications, though critics noted potential challenges in distinguishing downloaded warheads from intact ones without more intrusive access.[3]Ratification Efforts
United States Process
The START II Treaty, signed on January 3, 1993, was transmitted by President Bill Clinton to the U.S. Senate for advice and consent to ratification following the entry into force of START I on December 5, 1994.[20] The Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC) reviewed the treaty through hearings that examined its alignment with U.S. strategic interests, including reductions in deployed strategic warheads to 3,000-3,500, the elimination of multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) on intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), and verification protocols building on START I.[1] Debates centered on the treaty's impact on U.S. force modernization, with administration witnesses from the Departments of State and Defense emphasizing enhanced strategic stability and mutual deterrence through symmetrical limits that preserved submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) advantages.[22] Opponents, including some Republican senators, expressed reservations about constraining U.S. MIRVed systems like the Minuteman III amid uncertainties in Russian implementation and the need to prioritize ballistic missile defense against limited threats from non-superpower actors. The resolution of ratification addressed these by incorporating conditions clarifying that START II did not limit U.S. rights under the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty to develop theater missile defenses or space-based sensors for boost-phase intercept.[22] The SFRC reported the treaty favorably with these conditions, leading to full Senate consideration. On January 26, 1996, the Senate voted 87-4 to approve the resolution of ratification, meeting the two-thirds majority requirement under Article II of the Constitution.[32] The conditions explicitly stated that U.S. ratification did not constitute endorsement of the ABM Treaty, permitted U.S. withdrawal from START II if the ABM Treaty were violated or if supreme national interests demanded it, and required congressional notification of any Russian ABM deployments exceeding treaty limits.[22][33] Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole underscored that the vote decoupled START II from ABM constraints, prioritizing offensive arms reductions without impeding defensive innovations.[33] This bipartisan approval—supported across party lines despite the Republican-led Senate—completed the U.S. domestic process, positioning START II for potential entry into force contingent on Russian ratification. However, subsequent U.S. policy shifts, including debates over ABM modifications, influenced bilateral dynamics without altering the Senate's consent.[22]Russian Duma Debates and Conditions
The Russian State Duma received START II for ratification on June 22, 1995, following its submission by President Boris Yeltsin, but debates were protracted amid economic turmoil and strategic concerns in post-Soviet Russia.[20] Lawmakers, particularly from communist and nationalist factions, argued that the treaty's ban on multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) on intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) disproportionately disadvantaged Russia, which relied heavily on land-based MIRVed systems for its deterrent, while pushing it toward more expensive sea-based and air-delivered forces that the strained Russian economy could ill afford.[34] Critics in the Duma contended that the provisions lacked sufficient verification measures and failed to account for emerging U.S. technological advantages, potentially eroding Russia's second-strike capability without reciprocal concessions.[35] Delays intensified after the U.S. Senate's ratification on January 26, 1996, with the Duma voting 166-72 on April 9, 1997, to postpone further consideration, citing unresolved asymmetries in force structures and the need for linkage to broader arms control frameworks.[36] By July 1995, the Duma's defense committee had already outlined preliminary conditions for approval, including demands for U.S. commitments on missile defense and economic assistance, reflecting broader suspicions of American strategic dominance.[37] These debates highlighted a lack of detailed Russian planning for post-ratification force modernization at the time of signing in 1993, exacerbating fears that compliance would accelerate the obsolescence of key Soviet-era assets without viable replacements.[38] Ratification occurred on April 14, 2000, by a vote of 226-13 after seven years of contention, but only with stringent conditions tying implementation to U.S. adherence to the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty in its existing form.[35] The Duma's federal law explicitly required U.S. ratification of the 1997 START II protocol—extending certain deadlines—and the ABM demarcation agreements delineating permitted theater missile defenses, while prohibiting any U.S. modifications to the ABM Treaty that could undermine strategic stability.[34] [39] Additional provisos mandated preservation of the ABM Treaty's core limits on national missile defenses, reflecting Duma insistence that START II's deep reductions presupposed mutual vulnerability under the ABM framework; non-compliance would suspend Russian implementation.[28] These conditions effectively stalled the treaty's entry into force, as U.S. policy shifts toward ballistic missile defense rendered them untenable.[40]Failure to Enter into Force
Linkage to ABM Treaty
The Russian State Duma's ratification of START II on April 14, 2000, explicitly conditioned its implementation on continued United States compliance with the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty, stipulating that Russia reserved the right to withdraw from START II if the U.S. violated or exited the ABM framework.[41][34] This linkage stemmed from Moscow's strategic assessment that deep cuts in offensive strategic forces under START II presupposed the mutual assured destruction (MAD) doctrine upheld by ABM restrictions on missile defenses, which prevented either side from achieving defense dominance that could undermine deterrence stability.[42] Russian legislators argued that U.S. pursuit of ballistic missile defenses, potentially eroding the ABM Treaty's limits, would incentivize Russia to retain multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle (MIRV) capabilities banned by START II, as single-warhead missiles would be more vulnerable to defenses.[43] The Duma's Federal Law on ratification further required U.S. Senate approval of the 1997 ABM Demarcation Agreements—intended to distinguish between limited defenses against accidental launches or rogue states and prohibited nationwide systems—as a prerequisite for START II's entry into force, reflecting concerns over U.S. interpretations expanding permissible defenses under ABM.[28] This conditionality effectively stalled the treaty, as the U.S. Senate had not ratified those agreements by 2000, amid debates over whether they constrained emerging technologies like theater missile defenses.[39] From a Russian viewpoint, the linkage preserved parity by tying offensive reductions to defensive restraint, though U.S. officials contended it politicized arms control by conflating unrelated domains and hindered adaptations to post-Cold War threats like proliferation from non-state actors.[44] The interdependence culminated in the U.S. notifying its intent to withdraw from the ABM Treaty on December 13, 2001, with the exit effective June 13, 2002, citing the need for robust defenses against asymmetric threats from states like North Korea and Iran.[20] In direct response, President Vladimir Putin announced on June 14, 2002, that Russia considered itself no longer bound by its ratification of START II, invoking the Duma's embedded withdrawal clause triggered by the ABM abrogation.[20][6] This sequence underscored how the linkage, while stabilizing in intent from Moscow's perspective, rendered START II untenable amid diverging U.S.-Russian priorities on defense-offense balance, ultimately preventing the treaty's implementation despite mutual ratification.[8]Russian Withdrawal in 2002
On June 13, 2002, the United States' withdrawal from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty took effect, six months after President George W. Bush's formal notification.[20] The following day, June 14, 2002, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a federal law declaring that Russia was no longer bound by its obligations under the START II Treaty, effectively withdrawing from the agreement signed in 1993.[6] [45] This action fulfilled a condition previously set by the Russian State Duma during its April 2000 ratification of START II, which stipulated that the treaty would lapse if the U.S. abandoned the ABM Treaty, as Moscow regarded the ABM framework as indispensable for preserving mutual vulnerability and strategic stability under the doctrine of mutual assured destruction.[20] [46] The linkage between START II and the ABM Treaty stemmed from Russian concerns that U.S. missile defense developments would erode the effectiveness of Russia's land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), which formed the backbone of its nuclear triad and relied heavily on multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs)—systems START II would have banned.[47] Putin emphasized in his announcement that the U.S. exit from ABM undermined the legal foundation for further deep reductions, rendering START II's stringent limits on deployed warheads (to 3,000-3,500) and delivery vehicles incompatible with evolving security realities.[6] Russian military analysts had long argued that START II imposed an asymmetric burden on Russia, given its greater dependence on silo-based MIRVed ICBMs compared to the U.S. emphasis on submarine-launched ballistic missiles and bombers, potentially forcing costly modernization or force restructuring without reciprocal advantages.[47] Russia's withdrawal removed domestic legal barriers to deploying additional warheads and MIRVs, allowing greater flexibility in maintaining its strategic deterrent amid perceived U.S. advances in defenses.[6] This step aligned with the May 24, 2002, signing of the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT, or Moscow Treaty) between Putin and Bush, which set looser, non-verified limits of 1,700-2,200 operationally deployed strategic warheads by December 31, 2012, without the detailed counting rules or MIRV prohibitions of START II.[48] The move marked the definitive end of START II's viability, as Russia ceased implementation efforts and shifted focus to bilateral understandings outside the treaty's framework, reflecting a pragmatic adaptation to the post-ABM strategic environment rather than ideological opposition to arms control.[27]Supersession by SORT
Provisions of the Moscow Treaty
The Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT), also known as the Moscow Treaty, required the United States and the Russian Federation to reduce and limit their operationally deployed strategic nuclear warheads to between 1,700 and 2,200 each by December 31, 2012.[49][50] This cap applied solely to warheads counted as operationally deployed on intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), and heavy bombers, without mandating the destruction of excess warheads or delivery systems.[51][52] Unlike prior arms control agreements such as START I and II, SORT contained no detailed definitions for strategic offensive arms, sublimits on specific delivery vehicles, or requirements for eliminating MIRVed missiles or mobile launchers.[49][53] The treaty's text, consisting of only five articles, emphasized numerical warhead limits over structural constraints, allowing each party flexibility in force posture, such as retaining warheads in storage rather than dismantling them.[54][55] Implementation relied on notifications exchanged between the parties regarding their strategic forces, without robust on-site verification or data exchanges akin to those in START treaties.[49] Article II established a Bilateral Implementation Commission (BIC) to meet at least twice annually to discuss and resolve compliance issues, facilitate transparency, and address any ambiguities in applying the warhead limits.[54][56] The treaty entered into force on June 1, 2003, following ratification by both parties, and was set to expire on December 31, 2012, unless extended by mutual agreement.[49] Either party could withdraw with six months' written notice, a provision that underscored the treaty's political rather than binding legal character in enforcement terms.[51][50]Strategic Shifts Post-START II
Following the failure of START II to enter into force, the United States and Russia adopted strategic postures emphasizing flexibility over the treaty's rigid elimination of MIRVed intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) and heavy ICBMs, which would have capped deployed strategic warheads at 3,000–3,500 while requiring destruction of excess delivery systems.[7] The 2002 Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT), signed on May 24, 2002, and entering force on June 1, 2003, marked a pivotal shift by limiting only operationally deployed strategic warheads to 1,700–2,200 by December 31, 2012, without mandating the dismantlement of launchers or upload restrictions, allowing both sides to retain infrastructure for rapid warhead reconstitution if tensions escalated.[15] This contrasted START II's verifiable, irreversible cuts, reflecting a post-Cold War emphasis on reversible reductions amid emerging threats like rogue state missile proliferation and U.S. missile defense ambitions. In the U.S., the shift aligned with the 2001 Nuclear Posture Review, which prioritized a responsive nuclear triad capable of addressing regional contingencies and WMD threats beyond mutual assured destruction against Russia, while reducing reliance on vulnerable land-based MIRVs.[57] The U.S. deactivated its 50 MX/Peacekeeper MIRVed ICBMs by September 19, 2005, but preserved 500 single-warhead Minuteman III ICBMs, downloaded from multiple warheads under START I compliance; submarine forces, centered on 14 Ohio-class SSBNs with Trident II D5 missiles, carried roughly half of deployed warheads (about 1,000 by 2007), enhancing survivability.[58] Bomber legs, including 18 B-2s and 76 B-52Hs, gained flexibility under SORT's non-counting of stored warheads, enabling potential uploads of up to 1,000+ from reserves, a hedge against uncertainties that START II's bans would have precluded.[27] Russia, economically constrained yet prioritizing cost-effective land-based forces over underdeveloped submarine capabilities, rejected START II's MIRV prohibitions—which would have forced retirement of its SS-18 heavy ICBMs and limited cheaper multiple-warhead options—and instead modernized toward survivable, MIRV-heavy ICBMs to offset perceived U.S. advantages in precision conventional strikes and missile defenses.[10] By the mid-2000s, Russia decommissioned legacy systems under unilateral reductions but fielded mobile Topol-M (SS-27 Sickle B) ICBMs, initially single-warhead but evolving into MIRVed variants, and began deploying the RS-24 Yars (up to 6 MIRVs per missile) from 2009, comprising over 70% of its ICBM force by 2010 to ensure penetration against defenses.[59] Submarine modernization lagged, with only Borei-class SSBNs entering service slowly (first in 2013), maintaining SS-N-18 and SS-N-23 SLBMs on aging Delta IV boats, while bombers like Tu-95MS focused on standoff cruise missiles rather than gravity bombs.[60] These divergent paths underscored asymmetries: the U.S. triad tilted toward sea- and air-based second-strike resilience with upload potential (total stockpile ~5,000 warheads in 2002, reduced to ~4,000 by 2010), enabling doctrinal adaptation to non-peer threats, whereas Russia's ICBM-centric posture (peaking at ~3,500 warheads deployed pre-SORT but stabilizing around 2,000–2,500) emphasized counterforce capabilities via MIRVs to deter U.S. conventional superiority, fostering mutual suspicions that eroded verification norms and presaged New START's 2010 framework.[15][27]Strategic Impact and Analysis
Effects on Bilateral Deterrence
START II aimed to enhance bilateral deterrence by reducing deployed strategic warheads to between 3,000 and 3,500 for each side while prohibiting multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) on intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) and eliminating all heavy ICBMs, such as Russia's SS-18.[27] [22] These provisions were designed to diminish first-strike incentives, as MIRVed ICBMs facilitate counterforce attacks against hardened silos, thereby promoting crisis stability under mutual assured destruction (MAD) by preserving a survivable second-strike capability.[22] U.S. analyses projected post-START II force survivability at approximately 44%, or 1,520 warheads, sufficient to maintain deterrence through a balanced triad of ICBMs, submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), and bombers.[22] From the U.S. perspective, the treaty would foster strategic parity by compelling Russia to shift toward more survivable platforms, such as SLBMs (limited to 1,750 warheads), reducing reliance on vulnerable land-based systems and thereby stabilizing the nuclear balance.[22] However, critics argued that START II could erode U.S. deterrence by enforcing irreversible cuts—such as eliminating all 50 MX missiles—while permitting Russian breakout options, including reloading up to 525 warheads on retained SS-19 MIRV platforms or reusing spare SS-18 boosters, potentially disrupting MAD equilibrium and enabling rapid rearmament.[61] Russian assessments highlighted asymmetries that undermined deterrence, as the MIRV ban would necessitate producing over 1,000 new single-warhead ICBMs by 2003—an infeasible task given annual production rates of only about 10 missiles and economic constraints—forcing greater dependence on submarine forces, which were deemed more vulnerable targets.[10] This restructuring was seen as weakening Russia's ability to deter regional threats, such as China's growing medium-range missile arsenal, while U.S. advantages in rearmament speed and actions like NATO expansion exacerbated perceived vulnerabilities in command-and-control systems, heightening risks of accidental escalation.[10] Although never entering into force, START II's framework influenced bilateral strategic discourse by underscoring tensions between arsenal reductions for stability and the preservation of credible deterrence amid differing force structures and geopolitical shifts, with U.S. irreversible reductions contrasting Russia's retained flexibility in stored warheads and convertible systems.[61] [10] Ultimately, these elements revealed limits in arms control's capacity to symmetrically bolster MAD without addressing proliferation risks or non-nuclear factors affecting nuclear thresholds.[61]Asymmetries in US and Russian Force Structures
The United States maintained a balanced nuclear triad during the START II negotiations, with approximately 30-40% of its strategic warheads deployed on land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), 50-60% on submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), and the remainder on strategic bombers as of the early 1990s.[62] In contrast, Russia's strategic forces were heavily skewed toward land-based ICBMs, which accounted for over 60% of its deployed warheads, with SLBMs comprising about 25-30% and bombers the rest, reflecting a legacy of Soviet emphasis on fixed, silo-based systems for rapid response and cost efficiency.[42] This structural disparity arose from differing geographic priorities: the U.S. leveraged its naval superiority for survivable sea-based deterrence, while Russia prioritized continental defense against perceived NATO threats, resulting in a higher proportion of vulnerable, fixed-site assets.[63] A core asymmetry lay in the prevalence of multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) on ICBMs. Russia deployed thousands of warheads via MIRVed systems like the SS-18 (up to 10 warheads per missile) and SS-19, with over 3,500 ICBM warheads in service by 1997, enabling high warhead-to-launcher ratios but increasing first-strike vulnerability due to fixed silos.[64] The U.S., having phased out many MIRVs earlier and relying less on ICBMs overall (e.g., Minuteman III with up to 3 warheads, totaling around 2,000 ICBM warheads), faced minimal disruption from START II's outright ban on MIRVed ICBMs, which would have required Russia to either download warheads—reducing efficiency—or retire numerous silos amid fiscal constraints post-Soviet collapse.[34][14] This provision, intended to enhance stability by discouraging counterforce targeting, disproportionately burdened Russia's modernization-limited arsenal, as it lacked the submarine production capacity to shift warheads seaward quickly.[26] Russia's SLBM force, centered on fewer, noisier Delta-class submarines (about 55% of U.S. SLBM warhead capacity), offered lower survivability compared to the U.S. Ohio-class fleet, exacerbating reliance on ICBMs for prompt counterstrike capabilities.[65] Bombers presented another imbalance: U.S. B-52s and B-1Bs provided flexible, air-breathing delivery with lower counting under treaty rules, while Russia's aging Tu-95s and Tu-160s were fewer and more maintenance-intensive, limiting their role in absorbing reductions.[16] These differences meant START II's 3,000-3,500 warhead ceiling, combined with MIRV elimination, would compel Russia toward a de facto dyad (ICBMs and SLBMs), potentially undermining deterrence confidence amid economic pressures, whereas the U.S. triad remained intact and adaptable.[10] Analysts noted this could widen qualitative gaps, as U.S. investments in precision and stealth outpaced Russia's, though Russian officials argued the treaty ignored asymmetries in conventional forces and missile defenses.[66]| Component | U.S. (Early 1990s) | Russia (Early 1990s) |
|---|---|---|
| ICBM Warheads (% of Total) | ~2,000 (30-40%) | ~3,500+ (60%+) |
| SLBM Warheads (% of Total) | ~5,000 (50-60%) | ~1,500-2,000 (25-30%) |
| MIRVed ICBM Reliance | Moderate (phasing out) | High (SS-18/19 dominant) |
| Submarine Fleet Survivability | High (Ohio-class quiet) | Moderate (Delta-class) |