MOSCOW, December 25. /TASS/. Statements by President Joe Biden-led outgoing US administration about the readiness for a dialogue with Russia over nuclear risk management contain nothing new, while the separation of arms control issues from the current military and political realities is unacceptable for Russia, Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told a news briefing.
Earlier, the first deputy assistant to the US president for national security affairs, Jonathan Feiner, said that the United States was ready to continue communication with Russia to maintain strategic stability and prepared to discuss nuclear arms control measures without preconditions.
"We see absolutely nothing new in these remarks by the American official you mentioned, if we compare them with other similar statements that were previously voiced by representatives of the outgoing administration. We commented on them accordingly. Russia has repeatedly responded to such approaches. Russia's fundamental position has not changed. Separating arms control issues from the current military and political realities is unacceptable for our country," she pointed out.
"By declaring [on the one hand] the intention to inflict a strategic defeat on Russia, and on the other hand, the readiness to discuss ways of maintaining stability, Washington deprives the hypothetical dialogue of a meaningful basis. This looks like some kind of dichotomy," Zakharova said.
Russian President Vladimir Putin announced on February 21, 2023, that Moscow had suspended compliance with the New START Treaty but did not pull out of it altogether. He emphasized that Moscow, before resuming the discussion of continuing activities under the treaty, should have an understanding how the New START Treaty would take into account the arsenals not only of the United States, but also of other NATO nuclear powers - Britain and France.
Under the terms of the treaty, either side is to reduce its strategic offensive arms so that seven years after the document enters into force and thereafter their total numbers will not exceed 700 deployed intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) and heavy bombers, 1,550 warheads on them, 800 deployed and non-deployed launchers of ICBMs, SLBMs and heavy bombers. The 10-year document expired on February 5, 2021, but can be extended by mutual agreement. In February 2021, Moscow and Washington extended the agreement, which Russian authorities described as the gold standard in the field of disarmament, for the maximum possible period of five years.