Skip to main content
The Morning Star Shop
Washington and Moscow meet for nuke talks

Russia is talking to the US about agreeing the details a treaty that placed limits on deployed nuclear weapons and missile launchers, its Foreign Ministry has said.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov met his US counterpart Thomas Shannon in the Finnish capital Helsinki on Tuesday night to discuss implementing a provision of the 2010 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START) by the February 2018 deadline.

The treaty obliges the two biggest nuclear powers to limit the number of deployed warheads to 1,550 each, and 700 deployed missiles and bombers, by February.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
A Turkish missile is fired at Kurdish forces in Afrin
World / 9 February 2018
9 February 2018
United States / 9 February 2018
9 February 2018
South America / 9 February 2018
9 February 2018
South Africa / 8 February 2018
8 February 2018
Similar stories
Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks during a media conference at the end of the Nato Summit at the Hague, Netherlands, June 25, 2025
Features / 27 June 2025
27 June 2025

SOLOMON HUGHES explains how the PM is channelling the spirit of Reagan and Thatcher with a ‘two-tier’ nuclear deterrent, whose Greenham Common predecessor was eventually fought off by a bunch of ‘punks and crazies’

Protesters taking part in the Stop Trident protest march as
Features / 15 March 2025
15 March 2025
As Macron and Merz propose French nuclear-armed jets be stationed in Poland and Germany, the dangerous implications for peace and the possibility of nuclear confrontation grow, warns SOPHIE BOLT
AGAINST WAR: Demonstrators in Berlin demand Germany stop sup
Features / 2 November 2024
2 November 2024
In a call for a renewed peace movement, SEVIM DAGDELEN warns that US nuclear weapons deployments in Britain and Germany mark a dangerous return to cold war brinkmanship, carried out without democratic consent