Senate Majority Supports the New START Treaty

Senate Majority Supports the New START Treaty

Senate Majority Supports the New START Treaty

With a bipartisan 67 to 28 vote in favor of the US-Russia nuclear arms agreement, the New START treaty now moves on to a final vote tomorrow.

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With a bipartisan 67 to 28 vote in favor of the US-Russia nuclear arms agreement, the New START treaty now moves on to a final vote tomorrow. The treaty mandates the US and Russia to cut their stock of nuclear weapons. This morning Jonathan Schell, The Nation‘s Peace and Disarmament Correspondent, talked with Amy Goodman on Democracy Now! about the foreign policy implications of the treaty, and the serious consequences of not passing it.

"It [would send] a signal out to the rest of the world that we’re going to be living in a nuclear armed world, and proliferation begins to step up," Schell explains. Still, the majority of Republicans opposed the bill. According to Schell, they’re trying to make the Democrats look weak by associating them with demilitarization. 

Jonathan Schell is the author of The Seventh Decade: The New Shape of Nuclear Danger. You can read more of his thoughts on nuclear disarmament in the Obama era here.

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