Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
February 5, 2026
How Arms Control Went Out The Window

Today the last nuclear treaty between the the United States and the Russian Federation expired. It is the first time in 64 years that there will be no limits on each side’s nuclear forces.

The New START Treaty had been limiting the number of deployed strategic nuclear weapons and weapon carriers. Other nuclear related treaties like the Anti Ballistic Missile treaty, the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty and the Open Skies Treaty have previously been ended by various U.S. presidents.

Russia had offered and asked for prolonging the New START Treaty but the U.S. had, until today, not responded to that request.

Most of these treaties were designed to limit the number of weapon system on both sides to roughly equal numbers. They prevented arms races where one side would produce an overwhelming amount of weapons to destroy the other side in a surprise attack. They guaranteed Mutual Assured Destruction as both sides would be destroyed in an all out nuclear war.

But the real value of these treaties were in their verification elements. Verification allowed to build trust between both sides:

To enforce the [New START] treaty, each side had to notify the other of any activity involving its strategic weapons, including missile test launches and heavy bomber movements, share data about the numbers of deployed missiles and delivery systems, and allow on-site inspections.

One example is that under the treaty all strategic bombers of each side had to be parked in the open, not in shelters, so that the other side could see them in satellite pictures. It guaranteed that there were no ‘secret forces’ hidden somewhere. (Ukraine abused this feature when it launched drone attacks against Russia’s strategic bombers.)

The U.S. has never given any good reason why it wanted the treaties to end.

The Bush administration claimed that the ABM treaty was hindering building missile defenses against ‘rogue states’. In reality it wanted to build a missile defense system that would disable a Russian nuclear attack and thereby give the U.S. the capability for a first strike which Russia would not be able to answer.

Russia, in consequence of the ending of the treaty, build new weapons like the Poseidon nuclear-powered underwater vehicle as well the Sarmat missile, which can not be stopped by missile defenses.

When the first Trump administration withdrew from the Intermediate-Range treaty it claimed, without providing evidence, that one specific Russian missile test had exceeded the range limits defined in the treaty. Russia responded to the end of the treaty by developing and deploying the Oreshnik system as a new intermediate range missile.

The U.S. excuse for leaving New START is that a new strategic weapon treaty is needed which will have to include limits on China’s strategic missile forces. China rejects to be part of such a treaty because it has less than 20% of the strategic nuclear weapons that Russia and the U.S. each deploy.

It is unlikely for now that the end of New START will lead to a race to acquire more and more strategic nuclear weapons even as the military-industrial complex will demand more missiles.

But the end of the treaty will lead to less knowledge of what the other side is doing and will over time erode any trust in ones own capabilities as the real capabilities of the opponent will be increasingly unknown. This insecurity and what might follow from it is the real danger.

Over the last hour news has come out of an informal prolongation of the parameters of the New START treaty:

President Trump’s envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner negotiated on New START with Russian officials on the sidelines of Ukraine talks in Abu Dhabi.

The treaty will still formally expire on Thursday, and the extension will not be legally formalized, a U.S. official said. “We agreed with Russia to operate in good faith and to start a discussion about ways it could be updated,” a U.S. official said.

Another source said the practical implications were that both sides would agree to observe the deal’s terms for at least six months, during which time negotiations on a potential new deal would take place.

If I were in Russia’s position I would not trust the U.S. to stick to any such informal commitment. Any such agreement will need to be verified.

Russia should test if the U.S. is willing to allow for the verification of its informal commitment to New START limits.

Comments

@ Posted by: SOS | Feb 6 2026 7:20 utc | 165
 
“it’s use-or-lose at some point.”
 
For sure that part of the triad has been getting use!
 
RF therefore have experienced aircrew, new weapons configurations – the whole shebang of being forged by the fire of Actual Real Combat – unlike the natzos and US, MCI bombers and their crews; except a few crews, in illegal bombing Palestine and Syria, Yemen and other such targets. Either without any army or airforce or navy or a isis/Zionist infiltrated occupation.
Meanwhile
Iran Holds,
Cuba and Venezuela Hold,
Most of all PALESTINE HOLDS.
 
WasNeverReal however will soon FOLD qnd it’s illegal quarter aliens can fuck it back to their ziolands of the Waste.
 
Also @ Posted by: Krollchem | Feb 6 2026 8:26 utc | 170
 
Well put thanks.

Posted by: DunGroanin | Feb 6 2026 16:14 utc | 201

Krolchem
Regarding nuclear winter, unfortunately our planet rotates. So a nuclear winter in the United States – lofting masses of soot and ash into the stratosphere –  will swiftly become a nuclear winter for the entire northern hemisphere.

Posted by: Alex Cox | Feb 6 2026 16:28 utc | 202

@ Posted by: Carlos Marques | Feb 6 2026 14:43 utc | 196
 
 
You complain (?) about the early post which stated :
 
“ *it’s this arena wherein all the other blatant criminality of the West becomes justified: Russia bad, China bad, look at the Wiggers and the Holodomor, “
 
To which you respond:
 
“if most can’t even correctly spell the name of the people being attacked by us?”
 
I don’t think you got the gist of that commentator – go read the short post again as I did to check your citation of it.
 
If you apply the /sarc possibility you will find that it makes more sense. As much as most of your does!
 
I didn’t know 10 years ago how to pronounce Uyghur! Didn’t know where it was, but had heard of it because apparently it tens of thousands had been encited by money to leave to go to Malaysia and then Turkey to be trained as head choppers deployed into Syria ! By our Natzios!
 
Wigger is how it is pronounced. The poster doing so that the readers here can do now too! It has no other conitation that I can see in that comment.
 
Their point being that both the Uighers and the khokols (that’s how I pronounce Ukropian banderist idiots btw ) were being associated with FAKE accusations of genocide by the Chinese and USSR respectively.
 
You kind of seem to have a grasp of the fascists/Zionists by the rest of your comment. However I gotta question your ending crie de couer:
 
“Make America/Europe Decent Again!”
 
MAD / MED I wholly agree would be a desirable development for both the batshit crazy ziofascist ‘continents’.
 
At least they should finally JOIN the older Human Civilisational Peoples in DECENCY, finally, never mind ‘Again’ – you can’t put that cart before the horse!

Posted by: DunGroanin | Feb 6 2026 16:33 utc | 203

Why Not Another Half Trillion Dollars For War?
 
https://worldbeyondwar.org/why-not-another-half-trillion-dollars-for-war/
 
“…The United States government spends by far the most money in the world on its military. Even ICE, its domestic paramilitary, costs more than the military of most countries. Adding another half trillion to the trillion-dollar annual military budget is unspeakable madness.
 
Already, per capita, the US government spends more on its war machine than any other except Israel, whose war machine is of course heavily subsidized by the US government.
 
This latest insane proposal from Washington, however, will place both US military spending and US per-capita military spending far above and off any chart on which the rest of the world could appear.
 
The failure of any member of the United States Congress to take every possible step to block the spending of another dime on the so-called ‘homeland security’ military aimed at the US itself, or on the military aimed at the other 96% of humanity, is the most immoral failure that could be engaged in at this time.”
 
‘Shine, perishing republic…’

Posted by: John Gilberts | Feb 6 2026 16:55 utc | 204

Alex Cox @ 202
Correct.  But at least there will be less soot generated in Eurasia from US/Israeli nuclear warheads. 
The first-order effects of the nuclear fireballs and secondary fires would result in more poisonous air over the US.  How many US people have gas masks for carbon monoxide and sulfur dioxide?
As you point out, the lofting of fine soot into the upper atmosphere and sulfur dioxide from the atomization of gypsum would be chilling for decades.

Posted by: Krollchem | Feb 6 2026 19:26 utc | 205

Why Not Another Half Trillion Dollars For War? 
Posted by: John Gilberts | Feb 6 2026 16:55 utc | 204
 
Watched a video yesterday by Wolfe– He pointed out that Trump wants to increase the military budget by 600 billion and so far his tariffs have  brought in 200 billion .

Posted by: arby | Feb 6 2026 20:09 utc | 206

I didn’t know 10 years ago how to pronounce Uyghur! 
SNIP
Wigger is how it is pronounced. 
 
Posted by: DunGroanin | Feb 6 2026 16:33 utc | 203
 
*************************
 
Well… You still don’t know how to pronounce ‘Uyghur’.  I went to Xinjiang around 25 years ago, and the local Uyghur people proudly pronounce their ethnicity as “wee-curs”. The ‘uy’ is a long eee, with very little emphasis on the ‘w’, and the gh is a soft ‘c’ as in case, rather than a hard ‘g’ like in gate. (Someone adept with phonetics could explain this properly!).
 
Now, care to have a shot at pronouncing the capital city of Xinjiang, Ürümqi??
 
It’s a real doozy!

Posted by: General Factotum | Feb 6 2026 21:03 utc | 207

Xinjiang native speaker  pronounces Uyghur:
 
https://www.tiktok.com/@uyghuryouth/video/7326663819923639585?lang=en
 
 

Posted by: General Factotum | Feb 6 2026 21:24 utc | 208

More on pronunciation:
In the US MIC, “over budget” is pronounced as “dividend”…

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Feb 6 2026 21:32 utc | 209

Vladimir Putin has set up a new drone squad that is reportedly bigger than the entire British Army. 
Russia‘s newly formed Unmanned Systems Forces are supposedly comprised over 87,000 soldiers, a report by the Institute for the Study of War has claimed.
The elite regiment, which was presented during the May 2025 Victory Day Parade in Moscow, currently consists of seven regiments, 25 battalions, one division and three detachments. 
But, the ISW said Russia plans to raise one brigade, four regiments, 96 battalions, two divisions, and 82 companies in 2026. 
Moscow also boasts another 1,000 troops in its Rubikon Center for Advanced Unmanned Technologies and hundreds more in its Bars-Sarmat Unmanned Systems Special Purpose Centre.
In comparison, the British Army has shrunk to its smallest size in over 200 years, following a series of brutal cutbacks which have ravaged its numbers.

Posted by: Jo | Feb 7 2026 10:46 utc | 210

@ Posted by: General Factotum | Feb 6 2026 21:03 utc | 207
 
We live and learn … or we ought to.
There are many who just take received knowledge and opinion as their own.
 
 
My understanding of the Uyghur pronunciation came from a Brit who had been teaching in China for many years. Given their first hand knowledge I have been pronouncing it that way since. 
 
Your version is not too far away from that.
 
There is Uyghur ‘restaurant’ nearby – I have never had need to go in there; maybe I’ll pop in and call them ’wee currs’ for a laugh. 
Seeing that most Uyghurs have been brought to London/U.K. as the tools of the FO and their never ending Great Game! 

Posted by: DunGroanin | Feb 7 2026 12:26 utc | 211

Posted by: Jo | Feb 6 2026 14:32 utc | 194
 
Holy shit. It’s as if he was transported from 1914 or 1862 to the present. Clueless. 

Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Feb 7 2026 15:14 utc | 212

Posted by: DunGroanin | Feb 7 2026 12:26 utc | 211
 
The Uyghurs would never have had a home in Xinjiang if the Manchurian Qing Dynasty had not destroyed the Mongolian Dzungar Khanate then offered them to move there.  The Great Game on behalf of UK and US, but the Genocide in GAZA has stopped US from now making the spurious claims about China and genocide of Uyghurs as they did in the past.
 
 
 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Feb 8 2026 3:57 utc | 213

GREAT

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Posted by: Htos1av | Feb 9 2026 14:57 utc | 215