While Trump talks tough, US quietly cutting nuclear force

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Air Force is quietly shrinking its deployed  force of land-based nuclear missiles as part of a holdover Obama  administration plan to comply with an arms control treaty with Russia.  The reductions are nearing completion despite President Donald Trump’s  argument that the treaty gives Moscow an unfair advantage in nuclear  firepower.

The reduction to 400 missiles from 450 is the first for the  intercontinental ballistic missile, or ICBM, force in a decade — when  the arsenal came down from 500 such weapons. The Air Force says the  latest cut in Minuteman 3 missiles will be completed in April, leaving  the deployed ICBM arsenal at its smallest size since the early 1960s.

In 2014, President Barack Obama’s administration announced the  planned ICBM reduction to tailor the overall nuclear force, including  bombers and nuclear-armed submarines, to the New START accord that the  U.S. and Russia sealed in 2010. Both nations must comply with the  treaty’s limits by February 2018.

Full story from Associated Press on WOODTV.com.


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