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New Start Treaty

  • derek bomar
    Obama hasn't had an awful lame duck congress if this thing gets passed
  • ptown_trojans_1
    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101221/ap_on_go_co/us_us_russia_nuclear_94?loc=interstitialskip
    "I think it's going to pass and more than just pass," Bob Corker, one of the Republicans backing the treaty told reporters.
  • ptown_trojans_1
    Voinovich on the floor arguing for the New START Treaty, saying all concerns by him have been met by the miltiary, as well our European allies supporting the treaty.
    Way to go Voinovich.
  • ptown_trojans_1
    67-28 the Senate decided to move the treaty to a final vote tomorrow.
  • Belly35
    New Start Tready Senate Un-Consititional Act

    http://209.157.64.200/focus/f-news/2645950/posts

    Senators cannot renegotiate a treaty, only reject it ........... Follow the Fucking Rule

    Go back to Moscow and cut a deal that promotes American national security. The Constitution disfavors treaties that are not patently in U.S. interests, requiring a two-thirds Senate majority for approval — seven more than the 60-vote threshold generally required to move any contentious legislation through the upper chamber.
  • I Wear Pants
    How does this treaty not promote our national security?
  • ptown_trojans_1
    Belly35;609355 wrote:New Start Tready Senate Un-Consititional Act

    http://209.157.64.200/focus/f-news/2645950/posts

    Senators cannot renegotiate a treaty, only reject it ........... Follow the Fucking Rule

    Go back to Moscow and cut a deal that promotes American national security. The Constitution disfavors treaties that are not patently in U.S. interests, requiring a two-thirds Senate majority for approval — seven more than the 60-vote threshold generally required to move any contentious legislation through the upper chamber.

    Ok. This is BS. Come on.
    1. The Senate voted down all amendments that would have changed treaty text., all offered by R's. The D's are following the rules. It was the R's that didn't want to, according to your article.
    2. In addition to the treaty, the Senate offers a "Resolution of Ratification" a norm for all treaties. This is where usually amendments are offered. There will be some additions on missile defense and tactical weapon negotiations in the future.
    3. Going back to Moscow is not an option. Russia is happy with the treaty as well as the administration in its current form. It still maintains our credible deterrent, and still protects missile defense. Besides, we do not want to open up that can of worms on negotiation with the Russians. They could then disagree with a different part of the treaty, stalling it for months, not allowing the U.S. to inspect their sites.
    4. It is going to be ratified tomorrow, barring any sudden changes.
    5. Get off the talking points.
  • Writerbuckeye
    I don't know enough about this, or the subject itself, to have a good idea whether the treaty is good for the US or not.

    However, when the Russians like or agree to ANYTHING I get suspicious.

    I guess time will answer all questions. Let's hope they are the answers we wanted.
  • ptown_trojans_1
    Writerbuckeye;609418 wrote:I don't know enough about this, or the subject itself, to have a good idea whether the treaty is good for the US or not.

    However, when the Russians like or agree to ANYTHING I get suspicious.

    I guess time will answer all questions. Let's hope they are the answers we wanted.
    They liked IF, START 1, and the Moscow treaty and did not breach those treaties behind minor technical details that got resolved through the proper treaty channels.
    I agree that the Russians cannot be fully trusted, which is why I think the treaty is needed now. We have no way to verify what the Ruskies are doing now. This would allow us to effectively monitor their strategic arsenal.
  • Writerbuckeye
    Would this be the same "effective" monitoring that was done in Iran and N. Korea?
  • ptown_trojans_1
    Writerbuckeye;609461 wrote:Would this be the same "effective" monitoring that was done in Iran and N. Korea?

    No.
    That is/ was the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency).

    Our monitoring of the Ruskies is a joint State Department/ Department of Defense inspection system that allows for our inspectors to pretty much declare at random any specific base, any specific missile and any specific warhead to ensure compliance. It has worked pretty well since 1988, the INF Treaty and inspectors.
  • stlouiedipalma
    ptown's quote at the bottom of his post says it all. This gives us some verification.

    I have a suggestion about where we can shove at least one of the nukes...
  • ptown_trojans_1
    Final debates are being heard now, with ratification in an hour or two.
    Senate has agreed to several R amendments on missile defense and modernization related to the "Resolution of Ratification"
  • ptown_trojans_1
    Treaty is ratified. 71 for 26 against.
    Fantastic. The Ruskies already said they will move to ratify next week.
    Entry into force will be by the start of the year.
  • ptown_trojans_1
    Today, on December 22, 2010, the United States Senate voted 71-26 to give advice and consent to ratify the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START). This vote sends the arms control agreement to President Obama to sign, and will likely be followed by quick Russian ratification of the pact.

    New START received yes votes from the following Senators:
    * 58 Democratic Senators
    * 59: Scott Brown (R-MA)
    * 60: Bob Bennett (R-UT)
    * 61: George Voinovich (R-OH)
    * 62: Olympia Snowe (R-MA)
    * 63: Susan Collins (R-ME)
    * 64: Lamar Alexander (R-TN)
    * 65: Johnny Isakson (R-GA)
    * 66: Bob Corker (R-TN)
    * 67: Thad Cochran (R-MI)
    * 68: Lisa Murkowski (R-AL)
    * 69: Judd Gregg (R-NH)
    * 70: Mike Johanns (R-NE)
    * 71: Richard Lugar (R-IN)
  • Belly35
    Look at that list… I would rather pick up dog shit then shake any of their hands….

    Career politician ………… worthless dickwad (jackwagon)

    [video=youtube;JhlWddAXSRA] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JhlWddAXSRA [/video]
  • ptown_trojans_1
    Oh come on Belly.
    Countless current and former Defense and Missile Defense generals and officials supported this treaty.
  • derek bomar
    Belly35;610325 wrote:Look at that list… I would rather pick up dog shit then shake any of their hands….

    Career politician ………… worthless dickwad (jackwagon)

    [video=youtube;JhlWddAXSRA] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JhlWddAXSRA [/video]

    it's sad that all you can type/think/say is just talking points from one side
  • ptown_trojans_1
    I'll also say that I learned that some R's see missile defense not as an ideology, but a theology.
    Even though the technology for long range missile defense is very, very spotty, the speeches sounded like it was a proven fact.
  • stlouiedipalma
    Bend over and spread 'em, Belly.
  • I Wear Pants
    Belly, isn't "* 59: Scott Brown (R-MA)" like one of your tea party heroes or something?
  • Belly35
    Bottomline here is in the long run this Treaty will come full circle and bit America and our Allies in the ass... and when that time come many of you and I will dead and or have forgotten this Treaty converstaion on the OC.

    "talking points" that funny coming for the Liberal, Democrat .... the creater of talking points (during the Bush days)

    Are those experts and general the same ones that many of you Democrat and Liberal railed on over the Weapons of Mass Destruction or are these different general and expert that Obama installed from the Acorn rank. You take all the experts and generals you want but the bottomline is ..is this the best deal for the Sercurity and Defence of American

    One last point ....Career Politians are just that ... they will say (Tea Party) and do whatever gains them favor... however in the end they will be exposed for who they are .... case in point Obama ..

    Republician, Liberal, Democrat, Tea Party ..whatever assholes come in all parties attire
  • derek bomar
    dude - why can't you be honest? You don't like it because Obama likes it. It's ok to admit it.
  • ptown_trojans_1
    Belly35;611222 wrote:Bottomline here is in the long run this Treaty will come full circle and bit America and our Allies in the ass... and when that time come many of you and I will dead and or have forgotten this Treaty converstaion on the OC.

    "talking points" that funny coming for the Liberal, Democrat .... the creater of talking points (during the Bush days)

    Are those experts and general the same ones that many of you Democrat and Liberal railed on over the Weapons of Mass Destruction or are these different general and expert that Obama installed from the Acorn rank. You take all the experts and generals you want but the bottomline is ..is this the best deal for the Sercurity and Defence of American

    One last point ....Career Politians are just that ... they will say (Tea Party) and do whatever gains them favor... however in the end they will be exposed for who they are .... case in point Obama ..

    Republician, Liberal, Democrat, Tea Party ..whatever assholes come in all parties attire

    Just like the SALT, INF Treaty, or the START I Treaty, or the Moscow Treaty?

    Besides, we will still have 1,550 warheads, and all, repeat all, of our allies support the treaty.
  • ptown_trojans_1
    Senator Lugar's final speech before the passage:
    Mr. LUGAR. Mr. President, as the Senate approaches a point of
    decision on the New START treaty, I would like to offer a few
    concluding thoughts.
    My attitudes towards the enterprise of arms control have been
    affected by the time I have spent during the last two decades visiting
    remote areas of Russia in an effort to bolster Nunn-Lugar dismantlement
    operations. When one sees Russian SS-18 ballistic missiles being cut up
    at Surovatikha, or when one witnesses the dismantlement of a Typhoon
    ballistic missile submarine at the SevMash facility on the approaches
    to the Barents Sea, one gets a clear picture of the enormity of the
    problem that confronted us during the Cold War.
    With all the destructive power that was created during that era
    amidst intense suspicion and enmity between the United States and the
    former Soviet Union, we were extraordinarily fortunate to have avoided
    a mishap that could have destroyed American civilization. During the
    last two decades, we have circumscribed the nuclear problem, but we
    have not eliminated it. Our cities remain vulnerable to accident,
    miscalculation, and proliferation stemming from the Russian nuclear
    arsenal. And we still must pay very close attention to the disposition
    of Russian nuclear forces.
    Visiting dismantlement operations in Russia also underscores that
    arms control is a technically challenging endeavor. In these debates we
    generally focus on the balance of nuclear forces, deterrence theories,
    diplomatic maneuvers, and other aspects of high statecraft. But arms
    control is also a ``nuts and bolts'' enterprise involving thousands of
    American and Russian technicians, officials, and military personnel.
    Verification and dismantlement activities require tremendous
    cooperation on mundane engineering challenges, equipment and supply
    logistics, and legal frameworks that allow these activities to proceed.
    Ironically the exacting nature of arms verification and elimination
    may be a blessing. The challenges of this work and the amount of
    information that both sides are required to exchange have improved
    transparency and forced our countries to build productive partnerships
    over time.
    The Foreign Relations Committee held a hearing on June 24 in which
    Defense Department officials in charge of verification and
    dismantlement activities in the former Soviet Union testified. These
    officials oversee dismantlement work in Russia that occurs every day.
    Their agencies oversaw verification under START I before the treaty
    expired on December 5, 2009. They would oversee the verification work
    required under the New START treaty.

    They described in detail how verification operations are conducted
    and gave Senators a picture of how the United States and Russia
    cooperate on technically challenging nonproliferation goals. Only five
    members of the committee attended that hearing. I wish that every
    Senator could have attended, because the presentation underscored how
    much the START process links our two defense establishments and how
    critical the START framework is to nonproliferation activities.
    Mr. President, there is a maxim that has been popularized in American
    cinema, variants of which have sometimes been attributed to early
    political philosophers such as Sun Tsu or Machiavelli. It is ``Keep
    your friends close, but your enemies closer.'' I am not suggesting that
    Russia is an enemy. Our relationship with that country is far more
    complex. It is a relationship that is both wary and hopeful. We admire
    the Russian people and their cultural and scientific achievements,
    while lamenting continuing restrictions on their civil and political
    liberties. We recognize the potential for U.S.-Russian cooperation
    based on deep commonalities in our history and geography, even as we
    are frustrated that Cold War sensibilities are difficult to dislodge.
    Although we can and must make situational judgments to engage Russia,
    such engagement is no guarantee that we will experience a convergence
    of perceived interests or the elimination of friction.
    But one does not have to abandon one's skepticism of the Russian
    Government or dismiss contentious foreign policy disagreements with
    Moscow to invest in the practical enterprise of nuclear verification
    and transparency. In fact, it is precisely the friction in our broader
    relationship that makes this treaty so important.

    [[Page S10980]]

    It would be an incredible strategic blunder to sever our START
    relationship with Russia when that country still possesses thousands of
    nuclear weapons. We would be distancing ourselves from a historic rival
    in the area where our national security is most affected and where
    cooperation already has delivered successes. When it comes to our
    nuclear arsenals we want to keep Russia close. There are enough
    centripetal forces at work without abandoning a START process that has
    prevented surprises and miscalculations for 15 years.
    The New START agreement came about because the United States and
    Russia, despite differences on many geopolitical issues, do have
    coincident interests on specific matters of nuclear security. We share
    an interest in limiting competition on expensive weapons systems that
    do little to enhance the productivity of our respective societies. We
    share an interest in achieving predictability with regard to each
    other's nuclear forces so we are not left guessing about equal
    potential vulnerabilities. We share an interest in cooperating broadly
    on keeping weapons of mass destruction out of the hands of terrorists.
    And we share an interest in maintaining lines of communication between
    our political and military establishments that are based on the
    original START agreement.
    Over the last 7 months the Senate has performed due diligence on the
    New START treaty. Most importantly, we have gathered and probed
    military opinion about what the treaty would mean for our national
    defense. We have heard from the top military leadership, as well as the
    commanders who oversee our nuclear weapons and our missile defense. We
    have heard from former Secretaries of Defense and STRATCOM commanders
    who have confirmed the judgment of current military leaders. Their
    answers have demonstrated a carefully-reasoned military consensus in
    favor of ratifying the treaty. Rejection of such a consensus on a
    treaty that affects fundamental questions of nuclear deterrence would
    be an extraordinary action for the Senate to take.

    Moreover, the treaty review process has produced a much stronger
    American political consensus in favor of modernization of our nuclear
    forces and implementation of our miile defense plans. This includes
    explicit commitments by the President and congressional appropriators.
    In the absence of the New START treaty, I believe this consensus would
    be more difficult to maintain. We have the chance today not only to
    approve the New START treaty, but also to solidify our domestic
    determination to achieve these national security goals.
    I began the Senate debate on this treaty last week by citing a long
    list of the national security threats that currently occupy our nation
    and our military. Our troops are heavily engaged in Afghanistan and
    Iraq. We are fighting a global terrorist threat. And we are seeking to
    resolve the dangerous circumstances surrounding nuclear weapons
    programs in Iran and North Korea. We are attempting to address these
    and many other national security questions at a time of growing
    resource constraints reflected in a $14 trillion debt.
    In this context the U.S. Senate has a chance today to constrain
    expensive arms competition with Russia. We have chance to guarantee
    transparency and confidence-building procedures that contribute to our
    fundamental national security. We have a chance to frustrate rogue
    nations who would prefer as much distance as possible between the
    United States and Russia on nuclear questions. And we have a chance to
    strike a blow against nuclear proliferation that deeply threatens
    American citizens and our interests in the world.
    I am hopeful that the Senate will embrace this opportunity to bolster
    U.S. national security by voting to approve the New START treaty.
    I thank the Chair.