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The Scouting Report | Number 13

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A Foreign Policy Event

The Scouting Report: Next Steps in U.S.-Russian Nuclear Arms Reductions

Arms Control, Nuclear Weapons, Russia, Foreign Policy, The Presidency


Event Summary

In April, President Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev announced they would work on a new agreement to limit offensive arms before the Strategic Arms Reductions Treaty expires in December. This week, U.S. and Russian officials met in Moscow to discuss a new strategic arms reduction treaty.

The Scouting Report

Event Information

When

Wednesday, May 20, 2009
12:30 PM to 01:30 PM

Where

Online Only
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Event Materials

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: scoutingreport@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

To assesses the considerations of both countries and offer suggestions for building a new framework to reduce strategic arsenals, Brookings expert Steven Pifer and Senior Politico Editor Fred Barbash took questions in this week’s edition of the Scouting Report.

Transcript

12:30 Fred Barbash-Moderator: Welcome all. Our guest today is Steven Pifer.

A former ambassador to Ukraine, Steve's career as a Foreign Service officer centered on Europe, the former Soviet Union and arms control. In addition to Kyiv, he had postings in London, Moscow, Geneva and Warsaw as well as on the National Security Council. He is focusing on Ukraine and Russia issues at Brookings.

In April, President Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev announced they would work on a new agreement to limit offensive arms before the Strategic Arms Reductions Treaty expires in December. This week, U.S. and Russian officials met in Moscow to discuss a new strategic arms reduction treaty. Steve will discuss that with us today.
 
Welcome to our participants and welcome Steve.

12:30 [Comment From Jason] With the current START treaty expiring in December, what are the mail goals of negotiations between the US and Russia? What can we hope to achieve with a new treaty?

12:30 Steven Pifer: The main goals for the negotiation which began yesterday in Moscow are to get an agreement that reduces U.S. and Russian strategic nuclear weapons and preserves the verification and transparency measures in the START treaty. We do not want to lose the strategic arms control framework when the START treaty expires in December.

Participants

Panel

Fred Barbash

Senior Editor
Politico


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