Site last updated: Friday, May 1, 2026

Log In

Reset Password
MENU
Butler County's great daily newspaper

Nuke treaty with Russia in works

President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown finish a joint news conference today at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London.
Obama working to repair relations

LONDON — The United States and Russia, striving to ease strained relations, announced jointly today they will try to put a new nuclear arms reduction deal in place before the existing treaty expires in December.

In advance of their first sit down, President Barack Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev issued a joint statement saying the “era when our countries viewed each other as enemies is long over.” They pledged to work together to limit the world’s two largest nuclear arsenals, and the White House also announced Obama was accepting Medvedev’s invitation to visit Moscow this summer.

“Over the last several years, the relationship between our two countries has been allowed to drift,” Obama told reporters after his meeting with Medvedev. “What I believe we’ve begun today is a very constructive dialogue that will allow us to work on issues of mutual interest.”

Striking a similar tone with the U.S. president at his side, the Russian president said: “I am more optimistic of the successful development of our relations.”

As for nuclear arms control, the two said in a joint statement that “we are instructing our negotiators to start talks immediately on this new treaty and to report on results achieved in working out the new agreement by July.”

Their newly professed commitment to reinvigorate arms-control initiatives that have lain dormant for years caused a stir at the London site of a G-20 summit that seemed otherwise transfixed on a deepening worldwide recession.

Obama trumpeted the new arms undertaking as representing “great progress” between Moscow and Washington on areas where the two have mutual interests, although he also said he wouldn’t try to minimize differences.

“What we’re seeing today is the beginning of new progress in U.S.-Russian relations,” he said.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs noted the two countries have not settled on a new cap for nuclear arms. The soon-to-expire START (strategic arms limitation) treaty from 1991 limits the world’s two largest nuclear arsenals to between 1,700 and 2,200 warheads.

Obama’s administration has reached out to Russia during its first two months in power, trying to repair a rift that emerged over the United States’ plan to build a missile defense system in Eastern Europe that Moscow vehemently opposes. Obama called a new arms control treaty push “a good place to start” in rebuilding a partnership with Russia.

Answering questions at a news conference with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Obama lamented tensions and “drift” between Moscow and Washington in recent years. He told reporters, “I have no interest in papering those over,” but he also said the two countries share many interests, including reducing the threat of terrorism and stabilizing the world economy.

The president said his country wants to “press the reset button,” a phrase that has been used by other top members of his administration — initially by Vice President Joe Biden — in addressing U.S.-Russian relations.

The Kremlin has made clear it believes it is up to Washington to open the effort with concessions.

U.S.-Russia relations have deteriorated in recent years to lowest point since the early 1980s.

More in International News

Subscribe to our Daily Newsletter

* indicates required
TODAY'S PHOTOS