The Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty known as START-1 runs out on Dec. 5 and negotiators have been working to prepare a new detailed treaty to be signed by the two nations’ leaders. US President Barack Obama and Kremlin chief Dmitry Medvedev agreed in July on the outlines of a preliminary deal to replace the landmark 1991 treaty but negotiators are still working through several technical issues.
“We are still optimistic about ... signing a new agreement this year which will imply huge progress for the world in this matter,” Arkady Dvorkovich, a top adviser to Medvedev, said at a World Policy Conference in Marrakesh.
“We have a very good and constructive dialogue right now on this matter. I think the obstacles are mostly technical and we can complete in time,” he said late on Saturday.
Talks on the pact may have been facilitated by US President Barack Obama’s decision to roll back the plans of his predecessor George W. Bush for a missile shield in Eastern Europe by deploying a radar in the Czech Republic and interceptor missiles in Poland.