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Does the Treaty, Either Directly or Indirectly, Limit the Missile Defense Options of the U.S.?

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Does the Treaty, Either Directly or Indirectly, Limit the Missile Defense Options of the U.S.?

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The fact sheet released by the White House describing the content of the treaty in general terms states that the treaty places no constraints on the U.S. regarding missile defenses. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, however, begs to differ. He has stated that if the U.S. exceeds current levels of missile defense systems, then the new treaty will cease to have force. Lavrov also asserts that the limitations on strategic defenses take a legally binding form under the treaty. Even if this is not the case—and that cannot be certain until the text of the treaty is released—informal linkages to missile defense from the treaty can, as a practical matter, be just as limiting as actual text in the treaty. For example, President Obama established precisely such a linkage by canceling a plan to field defensive interceptors against long-range missiles in Poland and associated radar in the Czech Republic last September. 2. Does the Treaty Limit U.S. Conventional Strategic Strike Systems? Agai

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