Search

Events News

Cooperative Security, Arms Control and Disarmament

Exploring New Approaches to Arms Control in the 21st Century: Building Lessons from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty and Presidential Nuclear Initiatives (PNIs)

October 30, 2018 - November 1, 2018

Oslo, Norway

The international arms control regime is in peril, concluded a meeting of leading arms control
officials, scholars and policy advisers from the US, Europe and Russia. This group was brought
together by a consortium of international think tanks—Toda Peace Institute, NUPI, Chatham
House, Clingendael and the Council on Strategic Risks—in a track 1.5 workshop held in Oslo,
Norway in October 2018.

Following President Trump’s announcement that the US will withdraw from the 1987 INF
Treaty, based on its assessment that Russia has violated its terms, there are major concerns that
this could poison the atmosphere for arms control and make it difficult to agree to extend the
New-START (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty). With little left of the 20th century bilateral arms
control framework, the nuclear weapons states would have no progress to show under Article
VI at the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference in 2020, which would endanger the
future of that treaty too. Such a breakdown in arms control would remove constraints on
already planned nuclear weapons modernisation that is underway in the US and Russia, and
stimulate further nuclear proliferation worldwide.

The meeting discussed a wide range of proposals to deal with this situation and concluded that
a new approach to arms control is needed for the 21st century. This calls for new thinking on
strategic stability to take account of the evolution of a multipolar nuclear order and new
technological developments that are blurring the distinction between conventional and nuclear
weapons. In the past, bilateral arms control was based on numerical limits of missiles and
delivery systems in categories defined by range and purpose. Now, a new framework is needed
for strategic stability. It should encompass a global agreement to eliminate nuclear-armed
cruise missiles, further reductions in strategic nuclear weapons and a range of trust-building
and risk-reduction measures.

The US and Russian Presidents should renew President Reagan’s and Gorbachev’s 1987
declaration that ‘nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought’. Leaders of other
countries that possess nuclear weapons and their allies could join the declaration. The nuclear
weapons possessor states need to develop new crisis management and risk reduction
mechanisms, adapted to the changed geopolitical environment, to reduce the risk of a crisis
escalating to the use of nuclear weapons.

To read the full report on this meeting please click here.