U.S. national security advisor Jake Sullivan will make the offer
in a speech to the Arms Control Association, the oldest U.S.
arms control advocacy group, the officials said on Thursday on
condition of anonymity.
Sullivan will say President Joe Biden's administration is open
to resuming unconditional talks with Moscow on managing nuclear
dangers, including replacing New START with a new pact, the
sources said.
He also will repeat that the U.S. is ready to begin a risk
reduction dialogue with China, which is expanding its nuclear
arsenal, a call that Beijing so far has rejected amid deep
strains with Washington.
"When political relations are at a low, when tensions are high,
we find that arms control and nuclear risk reduction to be most
important and we would argue that we find ourselves in that
moment today," said one official.
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Feb. 21 said Moscow was
suspending participation in New START, the last remaining pact
limiting U.S. and Russian strategic nuclear arms.
Putin demanded that Washington end its support for Ukraine's
fight against Russia's invasion, and bring France and Britain
into arms control talks.
The U.S. government declared Putin's move "irresponsible and
unlawful."
Signed in 2010 and due to expire in February 2026, New START
capped the number of strategic nuclear warheads the sides can
deploy at 1,550. It also limits the number of land- and
submarine-based missiles and bombers that can deliver the
warheads at 700.
Sullivan, the officials said, will offer U.S. adherence to those
limits through the treaty's expiration if Russia does as well.
He "will discuss the importance of maintaining what we have left
of New START, including the need for reciprocity, including the
continued adherence to the central numerical limits of the
treaty," said the second official.
While Sullivan will restate an openness to replacing New START,
that does not mean with the same curbs and weapons systems, the
official continued.
A new pact would have to account for China's nuclear arms
buildup, which the Pentagon says likely will more than triple
Beijing's arsenal to 1,500 warheads by 2035.
(Reporting by Jonathan Landay and Arshad Mohammed; Editing by
Christian Schmollinger)
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