Contrary to the original Soviet proposal, which Kissinger considered totally unacceptable, the agreed text offered the United States “marginally useful” provisions[3], not specifically in the field of preventing nuclear war, but in the specialty of Kissingen`s Geopolitical Realpolitik: according to him, “it would be impossible for the Soviets to oppose NATO or the Middle East, without violating the agreement. And it even gave us some sort of legal framework to resist a Soviet attack on China. [2] However, Kissinger doubted that the deal was “worth it.” [2] (c) commitments made by a Party to its allies or other countries in treaties, conventions and other appropriate documents. The 1973 Agreement on the Prevention of Nuclear War contains eight articles. They recognize that the objective of the parties to the Agreement is to eliminate from international policy the risk of nuclear war and the use of nuclear weapons. First proposed in the early 1980s by President Ronald Reagan and finally signed in July 1991, the Strategic Arms Reduction Reduction Treaty (START I) forced the United States and the Soviet Union to reduce their strategic arsenals stationed to 1600 delivery vehicles that carried no more than 6,000 warheads, according to the rules of the agreement. The agreement required the destruction of surplus delivery vehicles, which were subject to intrusive control, including on-site inspections, regular exchange of information (including telemetry) and the use of national technical means (i.e. satellites). The entry into force of the agreement was delayed for several years due to the collapse of the Soviet Union and subsequent efforts to denigrate Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Belarus by returning their nuclear weapons to Russia and being part of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and start i agreements. The START I reductions were made in December 2001 and the contract expired on 5 December 2009. START II Signed on December 8, 1987, the FN Treaty obliged the United States and the Soviet Union to eliminate all ballistic missiles and ground cruise missiles with a range of between 500 and 5500 kilometers.
The FCI Treaty was characterized by its unprecedented intrusive inspection system, including on-site inspections, and laid the groundwork for the review of future START I. The FN Treaty entered into force on the 1st The two sides completed their reductions until 1 June 1991 and destroyed a total of 2,692 missiles. The agreement was multilateralized after the disintegration of the Soviet Union, and current active participants in the agreement include the United States, Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine. Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan are also parties to the agreement, but do not participate in contractual meetings or on-site inspections. The ban on medium-range missiles is unlimited. The agreement also provides that these consultations can be communicated to the United Nations and other countries, a clause that the United States naturally applies to its allies.