Hey folks, sorry for the long absence. Xiamen is fantastic … much more exciting than the blue glow of my laptop. What little time I’ve spent online has been sunk on my book, a forthcoming article and, you know, managing the atom.

Anyway, I came all the way to China to learn something about Russia.

Seems like there is some movement toward negotiating another Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START), or at least some arrangement to continue the verification protocols that expire with the treaty in 2009

I mentioned this as a looming issue back in December 2004 (See: “IC Can’t Verify Moscow Treaty”), when the intelligence community produced an estimate that revealed it would not be able to verify Russian compliance with Moscow Treaty after 2009. The debate restarted this summer, when Vladimir Putin called for new negotiations to continue to the START process:

We want our dialogue on the most crucial disarmament issues to be resumed. We call on our American partners to launch a negotiating process to replace the START.

(You can watch Putin’s address here—p.s. you gotta use IE.)

Inside Defense reported that Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Robert Joseph and Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Kislyak planned to meet in Washington in mid-September.

Details from the meeting are hazy; Wade Boese summarizes
the limited information that has leaked regarding the talks.

The Bush Administration hasn’t seemed eager to restart such talks—“We’re like ‘Arms control, what’s that?’”—so I wonder about the impetus for change. There is some murmuring that STRATCOM Commander James Cartwright has been able to make a real difference on this front—he has, at least, been talking about getting JDEC up and running with the Russians and inviting the Chinese to participate.

Anyway, this post is mostly a summary—an invitation to gossip, as it were.

The main issues associated with resuming the START process haven’t received too much attention beyond a new article in Arms Control Today (Anatoli Diakov and Eugene Miasnikov, “ReSTART: The Need for a New U.S.-Russian Strategic Arms Agreement,” Arms Control Today, September 2006) and a recent Carnegie Endowment Conferenc with Alexei Arbatov, Vladimir Dvorkin and John Steinbruner (Beyond Nuclear Deterence: Transforming the US-Russia Equation, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, September 20, 2006).

As I say, I hope to get a little more gouge on this subject.