US-Russia nuclear treaty to expire
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The last remaining nuclear treaty between the U.S. and Russia has expired, ending decades of arms control between the two countries with the largest nuclear arsenals.
The Kremlin says it regrets the expiration of the last remaining nuclear arms pact between Russia and the United States, while President Donald Trump declared he was against keeping its limits and wants a better deal.
The treaty between the U.S. and Russia limiting their deployment of strategic nuclear weapons has expired, leaving plenty of questions about what U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin intend to do next.
Berlin is considering developing its own atomic weapons to bolster Europe’s nuclear umbrella and the US’s own stockpile in the region, according to German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. Speaking before the German parliament Thursday,
On SiriusXM Radio, host Megyn Kelly is joined by Vice President JD Vance to discuss what the Trump administration does next in Iran, why they will avoid another Middle East "quagmire," what happens next with Greenland,
The Canadian Press on MSN
Ottawa remains opposed to acquiring nuclear weapons, minister says
OTTAWA — Canada has "absolutely no intention" of acquiring nuclear weapons, Defence Minister David McGuinty said Tuesday — rejecting the suggestion from former chief of the defence staff Wayne Eyre that Ottawa should not rule it out.
Ukrainska Pravda on MSN
Senior Russian official reveals conditions under which Kremlin would use nuclear weapons
Dmitry Medvedev, former Russian president and Deputy Chairman of the Security Council, has once again threatened the world with nuclear weapons, saying Russia would use them if it "came to the fate of the country".