Everything about Strategic Arms Limitation Talks totally explained
The
Strategic Arms Limitation Treaties refers to two rounds of
bilateral talks and corresponding
international treaties between the
Soviet Union and the
United States—the
Cold War superpowers—on the issue of
armament control. There were two rounds of talks and agreements:
SALT I and
SALT II. SALT II later became
START.
Negotiations started in
Helsinki,
Finland, in 1969 and focused on limiting the two countries' stocks of nuclear weapons. These treaties have led to START (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty).
START I (a 1991 agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union) and
START II (a 1993 agreement between the United States and Russia) placed specific caps on each side's number of nuclear weapons.
SALT I
SALT I is the common name for the
Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty Agreement, also known as
Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty. SALT I froze the number of strategic ballistic missile launchers at existing levels, and provided for the addition of new
submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) launchers only after the same number of older
intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) and SLBM launchers had been dismantled.
The strategic nuclear forces niche of the Soviet Union and the United States were changing in character in 1968. The U.S.'s total number of missiles had been static since 1967 at 1,054 ICBMs and 656 SLBMs, but there was an increasing number of missiles with
multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle (MIRV) warheads being deployed. One clause of the treaty required both countries to limit the number of sites protected by an
anti-ballistic missile (ABM) system to two each. The Soviet Union had deployed such a system around
Moscow in 1966 and the United States announced an ABM program to protect twelve ICBM sites in 1967. A modified two-tier Moscow ABM system is still used, probably with missile interceptors equipped with conventional instead of nuclear warheads. The U.S. built only one
ABM site to protect
Minuteman base in North Dakota where the "
Safeguard Program" was deployed. Due to the system's expense and limited effectiveness, the Pentagon disbanded "Safeguard" in 1975.
Negotiations lasted from
November 17,
1969 until May 1972 in a series of meetings beginning in
Helsinki, with the U.S. delegation headed by
Gerard C. Smith, director of the
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. Subsequent sessions alternated between
Vienna and Helsinki. After a long deadlock, the first results of SALT I came in May 1971, when an agreement was reached over ABM systems. Further discussion brought the negotiations to an end on
May 26,
1972 in
Moscow when
Richard Nixon and
Leonid Brezhnev signed the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and the
Interim Agreement Between The United States of America and The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics on Certain Measures With Respect to the Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms. A number of agreed statements were also made. This helped improve relations between the USA and the Soviet Union.
SALT II
SALT II was a second round of talks from 1972 to 1979 between the U.S. and the
Soviet Union, which sought to curtail the manufacture of strategic
nuclear weapons. It was a continuation of the progress made during the SALT I talks. SALT II was the first nuclear arms treaty which assumed real reductions in strategic forces to 2,250 of all categories of delivery vehicles on both sides. SALT II helped the
U.S. to discourage the Soviets from arming their third generation ICBMs of
SS-17,
SS-19 and
SS-18 types with many more
MIRVs. In the late 1970s the USSR's missile design bureaus had developed experimental versions of these missiles equipped with anywhere from 10 to 38
thermonuclear warheads each. Additionally, the Soviets secretly agreed to reduce
Tu-22M production to thirty aircraft per year and not to give them an intercontinental range. It was particularly important for the US to limit Soviet efforts in the INF forces rearmament area. The SALT II Treaty banned new missile programs (a new missile defined as one with any key parameter 5% better than in currently deployed missiles), so both sides were forced to limit their new strategic missile types development although US preserved their most essential programs like
Trident and
cruise missiles, which President Carter wished to use as his main defensive weapon as they were too slow to have first strike capability. In return, the USSR could exclusively retain 308 of its so-called "
heavy ICBM" launchers of the
SS-18 type.
An agreement to limit strategic launchers was reached in
Vienna on
June 18,
1979, and was signed by
Leonid Brezhnev and
President of the United States Jimmy Carter. Six months after the signing, the Soviet Union deployed troops to Afghanistan, and in September of the same year some senators like "Mr. Boeing" (
Henry M. Jackson) unexpectedly discovered the so-called "Soviet brigade" on Cuba. As such, the treaty was never
ratified by the
United States Senate. Its terms were, nonetheless, honored by both sides until 1986 when the Reagan Administration withdrew from SALT II after accusing the Soviets of violating the pact.
Subsequent discussions took place under the
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (
START) and the
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.
Further Information
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