Todays Top GSR Headlines
- BBC — Trump’s nuclear arms control push with Russia hinges on China (Feb. 5, 2026). U.S. efforts to replace New START face a major obstacle: Beijing resists trilateral limits, making any successor agreement slower, harder, and strategically more complex.
- Newsweek — War Won’t Solve Iran’s Nuclear Threat. This Could | Opinion (Apr. 25, 2026). The article argues the Non-Proliferation Treaty should be strengthened through stricter inspections and verification rather than military action against Iran’s contested nuclear program.
- AP News — Iran’s nuclear program takes focus as atomic treaty review starts (Apr. 27, 2026). A new NPT review session opened with Iran’s program at center stage, highlighting renewed friction over safeguards, disarmament commitments, and peaceful nuclear rights.
- GB News — New Start treaty: World enters grim new nuclear era after historic US-Russia pact expires (Feb. 4, 2026). With New START expired, the U.S. and Russia now operate without treaty limits, feeding concern over transparency losses, strategic instability, and renewed arms competition.
- USNI News — “STRATCOM CO: Chinese, Russian Build Up of Nuclear Weapons Will ‘Test’ U.S. Strategic Deterrence” (date not exposed in surfaced result). USNI’s archive highlights warnings that parallel Chinese and Russian nuclear expansion could strain U.S. deterrence credibility, modernization plans, and force-posture assumptions.
- War on the Rocks — Eurodeterrent: A Vision for an Anglo-French Nuclear Force (Mar. 30, 2025). The essay explores whether an Anglo-French nuclear framework could strengthen European deterrence as allies reconsider burden-sharing, sovereignty, and the future of transatlantic defense.
- Global Times — Chinese FM releases national report of China’s implementation of NPT (Apr. 19, 2026). China publicized its national NPT implementation report ahead of review diplomacy, presenting Beijing as supportive of non-proliferation and multilateral nuclear governance.
- Substack — Messages from Moscow (Apr. 8, 2026). This Substack post examines Russian strategic signaling and its implications for deterrence, escalation management, and Western interpretation of nuclear and geopolitical messaging.
- BBC — Fears of new arms race as US-Russia nuclear weapons treaty expires (Feb. 4, 2026). BBC frames New START’s expiration as a watershed moment ending decades of bilateral nuclear restraint, transparency, and inspections, while raising fears of a destabilizing arms race.
- AP News — The last US-Russian nuclear pact is about to expire, ending a half-century of arms control (Feb. 4, 2026). AP describes New START’s lapse as the end of the final U.S.-Russian nuclear constraint, removing caps on deployed warheads, missiles, bombers, and verification mechanisms.
